In the driver's seat: KU graduate Robert Eaton is leading Chrysler through a new era. Section Two, Page 1. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS KANSAH STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA KS 66612 VOL.103, NO.77 TUESDAY JANUARY 11, 1994 (USPS 650-640) ADVERTISING:8644358 NEWS:864-4810 The pathto elimination January - November 1992 — KU initiates and completes program review. November 1993 — Council votes to eliminate the B.G.S. degree in computer science and the B.A. in atmospheric science; to make into a concentration the B.A. in Italian and the B.A. in comparative literature; and to keep the B.A. in computer science, the B.A. in humanities and the M.S. in atmospheric science. Dec. 31, 1993—Chancellor Gene Budig declares all seven programs discontinued. Degree cuts anger faculty legislators Decision was "short sighted," a state representative says By Jamie Munn Kansan staff writer A recent decision by KU administrators to cut seven degree programs has prompted criticism by legislators and faculty. The discontinuances, effective Dec. 31, 1993, were made despite discussions and recommendations by the University Council in November. The discontinued programs are the bachelor of arts degree in comparative literatures; bachelor of arts and bachelor of general science degrees in computer science; bachelor of arts in Italian; and the bachelor of arts, bachelor of general studies and master of science degrees in atmospheric science. David Shulenburger, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said the discontinuances were made because there was not enough money available to keep the programs strong Shulenburger also said he thought the Regents would approve the decision because recommended cuts in the spring had been accepted. State Rep. Phil Kline, R-Overland Park, called the decision "extremely short sighted" and said he was worried that the Board of Regents would "rubber stamp" the decision. "I have always held the University of Kansas extremely high in regards as a university and felt that they were really fulfilling their mission," Kline said. "But this recent action and recommendation has significantly reduced my admiration for KI." Kline said he thought it was ridiculous that atmospheric sciences would be called "peripheral" by university officials. Other universities, like the University of Oklahoma, recognized the importance of atmospheric sciences, Kline said, while KU was scrambling the master's program. Kline said he would communicate with the Regents to urge them to disregard the administration's recommendation. "But I'm only one person." he said. Joe Eagleman, professor of meteorology, said dropping the master's degree in atmospheric science, the only one in the state, would eliminate possibilities for research, and therefore affect the program's ability to draw students. State Rep. Barbara Ballard, D-Lawrence, said she agreed the programs were important but didn't think it was the Legislature's place to make a decision regarding educational programs. "It's not a popular decision," Eagleman said. "It's not one that the people would support." Eagleman said he hoped the Regents would overturn the University's decision. There are thriving programs in the surrounding states." Eagleman said. "We will be one of the few that doesn't have one." Although several programs will be completely eliminated, some discontinuances will live on in other departments. Bachelor's, master's and doctoral degrees in computer science will continue to be offered in the School of Engineering. Comparative literature classes will continue in the department of English, and Italian courses will move to the department of French and Italian. No new students will be able to enroll in the discontinued programs, but students currently enrolled will be able to finish their degrees. Tom Leininger / KANSAN INSIDE BURGUNDY BELGIAN CHRISTIAN HISTORICAL MUSEUM Sweet revenge Kansas last night avenged its home loss last year to Oklahoma by crushing the Sooners 94-84 in front of a packed Allen Field House. Page 11. BASED ON THE PHOTO Steve Sheldon, an employee of Lunker Inc., 947 E. 23rd St., a fishing and hunting store, said the store did not stock new assault rifles but did stock hunting rifles. There has always been an interest in assault rifles, he said, but it has increased in the last months. He said assault weapons weren't popular because most people in Lawrence could not afford them. By Angelina Lopez Citizens not worried about guns ALEXANDER T. KIRBY Kansan staff writer Editor's note: This is the first in a series of articles in The University Daily Kansas that address the effects of violence in ou r community. The number of guns in circulation in the United States, more than 210 million, almost equals the U.S. population. Statistics such as this have driven Americans into a gun-control treasury. The Brady Bill and Treasury Secretary Lloyd Bentens's proposed increase of license fees will regulate gun dealers and who they sell to. Many cities are trying to control their citizens by offering gun-buyback programs, in which a person can turn in a gun in exchange for goods or cash. In Lawrence and at the University of Kansas, however, many feel removed from the violence taking place around the country. There might be a drive-by shooting in Topeka, but many KU students feel safe walking home at night in Lawrence. "I'm not really concerned about gun violence in Lawrence," said Greg Kutey, St. Louis graduate student. "I don't think of Lawrence as having it." Sgt. Richard Nickell, Lawrence police, said that violence in Lawrence had increased since he had been on the force, but he blamed that on the increase in population. He said that the rate of violent incidents in Lawrence had not out-paced the rate of population growth. The number of gun incidents on the KU campus also is low, said Sgt. Rose Rozmiarek, KU police. However, that does not mean it is not a problem. With the increasing number of weapons more will be seen on campus, Rozmiarek said. To get a handgun in Lawrence, a person must be over 21, have proof of Kansas residency and wait three days, said Steve Sheldon, employee at Lunker Inc., $47. E. 23rd St., a fishing and hunting supply store. An ordinance passed in March 1986 imposed the three-day waiting period on potential gun buyers so police could check their backgrounds. This allows the gun buyer a "cool-down" period, a time to think through his or her feelings before doing something irrational with a gun. The ordinance was enacted after a 21-year-old KU student committed suicide with a gun she had bought two hours earlier. The Brady Bill, which includes a mandatory five-day waiting period, will take the place of the ordinance. However, many feel that it will not affect the gun violence on the streets. "There's too many guns out on the streets that can't be controlled by laws," said Carin Martin, Kansas City, Mo., senior. She also said that she believed people who bought guns with the intention of violence had thought out their plans and were not buying them in the heat of the moment. Jack Jacobs, owner of Lawrence Pawn and Shooters Supply, 718 New Hampshire St., said that it was the guns bought on the streets and not the ones bought legally that were the problem. "But I don't know how to solve that problem, and if I did, I'd probably be a politician," he said. Whether the Brady Bill and others like it will be effective is a concern to Lawrence residents and KU students. Although many feel safe now, some are uncertain about the future. Carmen Phelps, St. Louis, Mo., senior, said she felt gun violence would close in on Lawrence eventually. "Since Lawrence is growing, I can't see it staying纯," she said. "No place can stay that way for long." University selects two deans EDUCATION Karen Gallagher brings to KU experience in reorganization By Roberta Johnson Kansan staff writer Karen Gallagher, the incoming dean of education, never misses an opportunity to teach. Next month she plans to return to Portugal with her husband. Pat, to work on WILLIAM J. MORRIS improving the country's education system. The couple teaches educators at the preschool and primary levels about curriculum, how to evaluate what they are doing and how to create change through the bureaucracy. "With as much central control as they have, they don't see themselves as being able to communicate with different groups in the government," she said. Karen Gallagher Gallagher serves as professor of educational administration at the University of Cincinnati and associate dean of academic affairs at Cincinnati's College of Education. She will become the KU dean of education on July 1. Gallagher was senior policy consultant and staff director for the Ohio General Assembly's Commission on Educational Improvement in 1900 and 1991. She received a bachelor's degree in political science from Western Washington University in 1967. She had planned to go to law school, but instead married and had to put off her education. After a few years in business in Seattle, Gallagher decided she wanted to make a career change and went into education. She received a master's degree in communication from the University of Washington Gallagher taught language arts and social sciences in the Seattle area and then became director of instructional resources in North Carolina. She later moved to Lafayette, Ind. in 1972. "I began to recognize they have lots of problems in common despite geographic area and social class," she said. "They lack community support, and the parents are not satisfied but aren't quite sure what they're dissatisfied about." PHARMACY She earned her Ph.D. educational administration at Purdue University. After being at Cincinnati for eight years, Gallagher chose to come to Kansas for a number of reasons. Both universities are members of the Holmes group, a group of more than 100 universities that are committed to reforming education. "The Ph.D. is designed to make scholars and researchers," she said. "I didn't see many opportunities in the public schools, but my skills would be rewarded in a university." The School of Education also is considering reorganization. Gallagher was a member of a reorganization task force at Cincinnati, but she said she is not coming to KU strictly for that purpose. "They were the ones who raised the question," she said. "I'll take a look at it, but it's not what I'm coming here to do." She also said that KU was a leading institution of higher education and that her family, which includes a son, Sean, is excited about its arrival in Kansas. Gallagher said that she would rather focus on bringing faculty and students closer together. "We got our box of memorabilia today from the University," she said. "We're trying hard to be real Jayhawks. We've been watching basketball games and reading books and everything." Jack Fincham says pharmacists vital to salvaging health care By Roberta Johnson Kansan staff writer Jack Fincham wants to be involved in the School of Pharmacy. Fincham, 42, will become dean July 1 replacing acting dean Gary Gruney He was appointed to the position last week. Fincham serveas both associate dean of KU's School of Pharmacy and Allied Health and as a professor of administrative and social sciences at the University of PETER A. BERTHA Jack Fincham Creighton. He also conducts several research projects. At Creighton, Fincham is studying the outcomes of drug therapy, which include adverse drug reactions and patient compliance with doctor's orders. "I've found that 50 percent of people don't understand how to take the drugs they're prescribed," he said. He said pharmacists could save the health-care system money by the appropriate use of pharmaceuticals. For example, a pharmacist could choose a less expensive drug over a similar, more costly one and not prescribe a drug that a patient may not need. Fincham wants to continue his heavy schedule as a dean at the University of Kansas. Although he said realized that he may not be able to do the amount of research he would like, Fincham said teaching would remain a priority. "I like to teach," he said. "I think it is important that people see the dean in the classroom, too." He said he would like to get to know both student and faculty and wanted to encourage student-faculty communication. "I hope to be known for helping people solve problems, including students and faculty, and for being a good listener," he said. Finchan said he chose KU because it was a good opportunity. "It is an excellent university and a first-class school," he said. "I want to make sure it remains one of the top in the country." Fincham earned a bachelor's degree in pharmacy at the University of Nebraska in 1975 and a doctorate in social and administrative pharmacy at the University of Minnesota in 1983. He has taught at universities in Georgia, Mississippi and Alabama. He has also owned a community pharmacy. "He is just a very poised person with an excellent background," said Val Stella, professor of pharmaceutical chemistry and head of the pharmacy search committee. "He is able to relate to students and faculty as well as pharmacists in the state." Stella said that Fincham had been ranked highly by the search committee, which sent three prospects to David Shulenburger, vice chancellor for academic affairs. Fincham said he copes with the stresses of his busy schedule by running and bicycling. He has a wife, Melinda, a son, Derek, 14, and a daughter, Kelie, 12. Tuesday, January 11, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Staircase-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60454, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 6044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stlauser-FlintHall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045. ON CAMPUS The Lowest CD Prices In Town! Current, Popular CDs for $5.95! Buy 5 or more CDs for $4.95! Also available, special selection CDs $3.95! Buy 10 or more CDs for $2.50 each! For the Best Values in Town Visit Lawrence Pawn 843-4344 718 New Hampshire 910 KENTUCKY 832·2484 ADULT BIKES ONLY bik coYote Amnesty International will meet at 6 p.m. today at Alcove A in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Danielle Myron at 842-5407. LesBiGayS OK encourages anyone who is lesbian, gay, bisexual or unsure to call Headquarters at 841-2345 or KU Info at 864-3506 about confidential meetings. KU Pro-Choice Coalition will meet at 6 p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread. For more information, call Stephanie at 842-6894. KU Dr. Suess Club will meet at 7:30 tonight at Alcove G in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Jessica Perinchief at 841-2558. Ecumenical Christian Ministries will sponsor a forum, "Sexuality in the People's Republic of China," by Dr. Dennis Dailey, at noon tomorrow at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread. For more information, call Thad Holcombe at 843-4933. St Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. tomorrow in Danforth Chapel. KU Libertarians will meet at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Allen Tiffany at 842-2411. KU Gamers and Roleplayers will meet at 5:30 p.m. tomorrow on the third floor of the Burge Union. For more information, call Alex Baker at 864-7316. KU Champions Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. Thursday at Parlors A, B and C in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Erik Lindsay at 841-4585. Icthus Christian Outreach will meet at 8:30 p.m. Thursday at the Big 8 Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Mark Winton at 843-2260 or Noel Storey at 749-5848. LesBiGaySOK will meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. United Students will hold a get-together, "Whack!" at 8 p.m. Thursday at The Granada Theater, 1020 Massachusetts. For more information, call Jon-Paul Shores at 864-6473. A caption on the front page of section two of the Dec. 9 Kansan contained incorrect information. In the photo, Dorothy Steites CORRECTION holds a photo of her brother, Christopher Bread, who was killed by a hit-and-run driver in March 1990. WEATHER Omaha: 31°/20° Weather around the country: Atlanta: 49°/42° Chicago: 29°/19° Houston: 67°/50° Miami: 74°/68° Minneapolis: 12°/7° Phoenix: 68°/41° Salt Lake City: 39°/25° Seattle: 52°/43° LAWRENCE: 33°/25° Kansas City: 35°/25° St. Louis: 33°/27° Wichita: 41°/26° Tulsa: 45°/30° TODAY Tomorrow Thursday Partly cloudy High: 33° Low: 25° Dry High: 42° Low: 25° Dry and cooler High: 40° Low: 22° Source: The Associated Press KANSAN ON THE RECORD $941 was stolen from a cash drawer Saturday at J.C. Penney's, 1801 W. 23rd St., Lawrence police report. Two men and a woman entered the store, distracted a clerk and took a set of keys to a cash register. One of the men then took the money from the till. The suspects were arrested shortly after the theft. ny dollars were stolen Saturday from a residence in the 1000 block of Kentucky, Lawrence police reported. A concrete birdbath was taken Saturday from a yard in 2000 block of Vermont, Lawrence police reported. A car was taken Saturday from the 1000 block of W.29th Terrace, Lawrence police reported. Police found the car Sunday abandoned in a ditch. A money collection consisting of seven Eisenhower dollars, 1000 yen and 10 Susan B. Antho- The University Daily Kansan Card...a semester of savings for just $1.00 CLIP A COUPON! FREEBEDROOM! RENT A TWO BEDROOM AND GET THIRD BEDROOM FREE NEWLYREMODELED! GREATLOCATION JAYHAWK BUS ROUTE RESTAURANTS THEATERS SHOPPING 843-6446 South Point 2166 W26th (26th & IOWA) awrence thletic club (formerly Junkyard's Jym) - Over 100 Stations * Naulius Equipment * Stationary Bikes * Free Weights Men $95 per semester Women $60 per semester Monthly rate S25 1410 Kasold 842-4966 Hours 6 a.m.-10:00p.m. M-F 8a.m.-8:00p.m. Sat. 11a.m.-6:00p.m. Sun. BRITCHES CORSE WINTER CLEARANCE HALF PRICE SALE UP TO HALF PRICE ALL WINTER CLOTHING 843 Mass 843- Exciting classes for Men, Women & Children. KENNEDY TAEKWONDO CLUB You've Always Wanted to Try Tae Kwon Do! 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BEST PRICES BEST SERVICE MORE USED BOOKS BEST BOOK SELECTION BEST SUPPLY SELECTION REBATE ON PURCHASES FREE LAWRENCE BOOKS FREE COLLEGE COUPONS TWO UNION LOCATIONS BEST CLOTHING SELECTION OPEN UNTIL 7p.m. Jan. 11-13 A division of the Kansas Union Memorial Corporation, a not-for-profit entity operated by the Students, Faculty, Staff and Alumni of KU, which receives no state tax dollars for operations. Not affiliated with the privately-owned Jayhawk Bookstore or the University Bookshop. KU K'U BOOKSTORIES Kansas, Union 804-640 Burmese Union 804-607 KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store offering rebates to KU students Visa, MasterCard, Discover and American Express Accepted. *(Credit purchases ineligible for rebate).* 1 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Tuesday, January 11, 1994 3 Legislators expect budget Washburn to be top issues Death penalty discussions also anticipated in Statehouse By Stephen Martino Kansas staff writer The last year of Gov. Joan Finney's term will see a flurry of activity for the Kansas Legislature, but some legislators hope it is not an avalanche. "It is the budget, budget, budget," said State Rep. Betty JJo Charlton, D-Lawrence. "There will be a lot of things going on, but it all comes down to cost and money sources. It is always a problem." issues Charlton and her colleagues will address. The governor and the Board of Regents' proposal to introduce Washburn University into the Regents' system appears to be one of the first issues Charlton and her colleagues In December, a proposal, introduced by the Regents and agreed to by Finney, scheduled Washburn's admittance into the Regents' system for 1997. The proposal also included adopting the Plan for Excellence, which would bring Regents professors' salaries equal to the average of the universities' peer institutions. The two plans are linked to the same proposal. But Charlton said she questioned the wisdom of linking the two plans. "The problem with the proposal is that it makes Topeka residents continue to pay property tax for Washburn even after it is brought into the Regents' system," she said. Topeka residents pay an 18-mill property tax to support Washburn. The proposal to be introduced to the Legislature does not eliminate the tax. legislators are more dedicated to their constituents and eliminating that tax in the regents' system," she said. "I have a feeling that some Topeka Charlton said that unless the plans are separated into two pieces of legislation, they might have a difficult time passing as one. She said she was opposed to Washburn becoming a member of the Regents and planned to vote against the proposal. State Rep. Forrest Swall, D-Lawrence, said that when everything was done, not much would have been accomplished to prevent crime. Crime and the death penalty are two other issues the Legislature will discuss. "It is an issue that sounds impressive to the voters, but we constantly fall to look at the history of what we have done." he said. Changes in sentencing guidelines have reduced Kansas's prison population, but plans floating around the Statehouse include building more prisons and still more changes to the sentencing guidelines. "When the guidelines were first proposed they were considered as being hard on crime," said State Sen. Mark Parkinson, R-Olathe. "Now, the popular opinion seems to be that they are too soft." Today, Parkinson and 14 co-sponsors plan to introduce legislation to reinstate the death penalty. He said that it was a necessary weapon prosecutors should have against crime. "Some people have a problem with the state going around and killing people," he said. "Before the governor said she would support this legislation, I considered this issue a waste of my time, but it is not now." Bills stalled by Student Senate; absences approved by StudEx By Heather Moore Kansan staff writer Bills providing funding for Student Union Activities lecture series and for LesBiGay Services of Kansas Awareness Week were passed at an emergency Student Senate Executive meeting held Dec. 10. The StudEx meeting was called after bills funding the events could not be passed at the Student Senate meeting on Dec. 8. At that meeting, 33 senators were present when a first count was taken, but several left before the second count to call quorum. Because 32 senators must be present to call quorum and vote on bills, LesBiGaySOK and SUA nearly lost funding for their events. Eric Moore, Lawrence senior and director of LesBiGay Awareness Week, said he was relieved LesBiGaySOK received $3,365 for the week. "I was upset after the Senate meeting because we would have had to wait another four or six weeks," Moore said. "I was pleased that StudEx met to consider the bills." Moore said the event would be held to educate the community and to reify the gay, lesbian and bisexual community. Renee Speicher, Hutchinson graduate student, co-sponsored an SUA lecture bill that would bring Dr. Ruth Westheimer to campus before Spring Break. At the emergency meeting the group received $5,000. SUA still is talking to Westheimer's representatives about details, Speicher said. Speicher said she was surprised senators were not able to vote on the bill at the Senate meeting on Dec. 8. "I didn't realize there wouldn't be a quorum," she said, "I realize it was at the end of the semester, and as an exsenator, I understand the pressures they are under. We pushed it through StudEx anyway. Absentee list Out of 62 senators, 21 were absent or left without being excused at the Dec. 8, 1993, Student Senate meeting. John Altevogt Afonso Canedo Mike Gusemple Ovinio Hijinjo Harybay Ken Martin Kathrin McMichelle Ray Kelly Staples Left without excuse: Left/wrong excuse: Chaudi Booger Catherine Bubb Mike Moyer Gonzales Redding Mike Moyer Shannon Newton Ann Perry Michelle Rofe Brad Stasilius Trevor Thompson Jill Tibbetts Andrea Toll KANSAN "To be serious, I don't know if it would've passed because it is such a large chunk of money," Speicher said. "StudEx was much more approachable. The key is to know how the system works. Many people wouldn't have known to go to StudEx." John Shoemaker, Senate president, said he was disappointed about the lack of attendance at the meeting on Dec. 8. "I was upset that we didn't have a quorum," he said. "I thought that the senators were derelict in their duties. One hour a week is not a terrible demand. I didn't understand why people were gone." "I hate to sound overly critical, but we need a system that requires members to go," he said. "I think that attendance should be mandatory or heavily emphasized." David Stevens, co-sponsor of the SUA lecture series bill, said he thought senators had an obligation to perform certain duties. Moore said he agreed that the senators should attend meetings. "There is some irresponsibility involved." he said. "There are no time clocks to punch. Anyone who has attended a senate meeting knows it's not pleasant to sit there for a long time and not get the money you need." Flu bug bites KU early and often By Ashley Schultz Kansan staff writer Asprin, fluids recommended First the bad news: It is too late to get a flu shot. Now for worse news: Flu season struck early this year, and it will be sticking around through April. So said Elaine Houston, immunization coordinator for the Lawrence Douglas County Health Department. She said that a Jan. 3 release showed that as of mid-December, 38 states had reported influenza type A, and 19 of those have isolated the type A Bearing strain. Flu is a virus, not a bacterial infection and as such cannot be treated with antibiotics, Houston said. The virus is transmitted person-to-person often by coughing and sneezing or hand contact with germs. The increased amount of time spent with others in close quarters is one reason cases increase during the winter months. The flu epidemic has not arrived on "There's no question that as people come back to school, I'm sure they'll bring the influenza with them," he said. "There's no reason to believe that we'll escape what everybody else has seen in tremendous numbers. I suspect we'll see it before the weekend. campus yet, but it will, said Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Health Center. "Influenza tends to be sort of like weather patterns," Yockey said. "They're predictable from year to year. In other words, what Europe had last year, the United States will have this year." Last year, scientists were able to accurately predict this year's onslaught of the influenza A Beijing strain and make up the vaccine accordingly, Yockeysaid. In part because of extensive press and early outbreaks, Watkins gave more flu shots in 1993 than ever before and ran out of shots around Nov. 10. Yockey said. Watkins gave over 1,000 flu shots at $6 a piece, three times more than it usually does. Some patients who get the flu shot think they won't get sick all winter despite the hundreds of other flu-like He said that students should get plenty of rest, fluids, pain relievers such as ibuprofen or aspirin and decongestants to fight the flu. viruses. Yockev said. There is a pill that students can take within 48 hours of getting hit with true influenza, Yockey said. Amantavine is an anti-viral drug that will cut symptoms and duration in half. The drug doesn't kill the virus, but it helps the body's immune system do the job. He said that all suspected cases of influenza reported within 48 hours are treated with the drug, which costs about $5. The clinic usually sees the flu from about Jan. 20 until Spring Break, Yockev said. Yockey advises students not to eat or drink after other people and not to share toothbrush holders or hand towels. "People are contagious for about three days before they become ill," Yockey said. "So if you share a drink with a friend today who looks perfectly healthy, and she has the flu tomorrow, you'll have it on Friday." He said that the average case has been running a four-to-five day course in other places. It's Flu season The flu has come on stronger than normal this year. The symptoms of true influenza are: - Abrupt onset - High fever - Sore throat - Severe headache - Non-productive cough - Intense body aches Source: Charles Vockey, chief of Staff, Watkins Memorial Health Center Dave Campbell / Kenan It's Flu season Janice Early-Weas, director of community relations at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, said that both the number of patients being seen and the percentage admitted started rising right before Christmas. Admissions for the past two Sundays have been twice the normal rate of about seven patients. "One of the emergency physicians I talked to said when he worked his shift Sunday, he would estimate two-thirds of the people had viruses or flulike symptoms," Early-Weas said. THE CITY OF NEW YORK Tom Leininger / KANSAN Ready and reading Philip Wells, professor of botany, read a book on Latin America yesterday at the bookstore in the Kansas Union. Wells said he was well prepared for the spring semester, which starts today. Crimson Girls win cheerleaders place third at Nationals The KU Crimson Girls took first place in the pompon division of the Cheerleading and Pompon National Collegiate Championship in Dallas last Wednesday. Last year the Crimson Girls finished second and the cheerleaders fifth. KU's cheerleading team, the other half of the spirit squad, finished third in the cheerleading part of the competition, which also was held in Dallas. The ten-member team beat 15 other teams that qualified for the finals, said Elaine Brady, spirit squad adviser. Brady said the two teams had been successful in the competition in the past. CAMPUS BRIEFS Woman reports kidnapping, rape A 21-year-old Lawrence woman reported that she was kidnapped and raped Jan. 6. The woman told Lawrence police that at approximately 11 p.m. she went to her car near her home to get something. Three men wearing stocking caps appeared and forced her into a van. She reported that the men drove her around Lawrence all night while one of the men raped her. They left the woman at her home in the 2600 block of Ridge Court the next morning, according to the police report. No arrests have been made. Ex-student charged in shooting A trial has been ordered for a 23-year-old former KU student who has been charged with attempted first degree murder in a Johnson County court. Caroline Castleberry is accused of shooting and critically injuring her father, Charles Castleberry, of Lake Quivira, a suburb of Kansas City, Kan., last September. At the preliminary hearing Caroline's sister, Catherine, testified that their father was abusive to them, especially to Caroline. He refused to allow her to have any boyfriends at KU, forced her to spend every weekend at home and required her to give him lengthy massages in the bedroom that often lasted until 3 a.m. Caroline is free on $100,000 bond and staying with friends in Lawrence. According to testimony, the shooting occurred after Caroline informed her father that she was moving out of the house. No trial date has been set. G Compiled from Kansan staff reports IMPERIAL GARDEN 聚豐園 Mon.-Sat $4.95 Sun. $5.95 11:30-2:30 AND ALSO NOWHASADAILY LUNCHBUFFET! A DAILY DINNER BUFFET 7 Days a Week $6.95 5:00-9:00 25 items including... Soups, salads, appetizers, fruit, entrees and dessert. 2907 W.6thStreet 841-1688 WE HONOR 111111 66 66 66 66 66 66 66 66 66 66 Off Mass., but not out of sight. SPECTRUM OPTICAL $40 OFF ALL PRESCRIPTION EYEWEAR FREE ADJUSTMENTS Not valid in conjunction with other coupons. Offer good thru September 15. 1993 Save big on designer fashion eyewear. Save big on designer fashion eyewear Over 1,000 frames in stock! Ralph Lauren, Logo, Calvin Klein, Guess, Geoffrey Beene, Roy Tower, and marv others! Come in and register for a free pair of eyeglasses! 4 East 7th (Downtown) • Lawrence, 841-1113 66 66 66 66 66 66 66 66 66 NEED MONEY FOR COLLEGE? TRY KU'S CASHE-PLUS SCHOLARSHIP SEARCH! CALL OR DROP BY FOR DETAILS UNIVERSITY SCHOLARSHIP CENTER 33 STRONG HALL 864-5439 864-5439 4 Tuesday, January 11, 1994 OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VIEWPOINT Decision allowing skater to compete is right one The International Committee of the U.S. Figure Skating Association acted wisely Saturday night when it voted unanimously to allow Nancy Kerrigan to compete in the Winter Olympics in Lillehammer, Norway. Kerrigan was injured last week when an attacker clubbed her above the right knee, and she was unable to skate in the U.S. Figure Skating Championships. Though the committee's decision bumped 13-year-old Michelle Kwan from the Olympic team, Kwan will still be the alternate and will skate in the event that Kerrigan's injuries do not heal sufficiently to allow her to compete at the Olympics. Both Kwan and her coach were comfortable with the decision. Kerrigan is a stronger skater than Kwan and has a better chance of winning an Olympic medal. She won a bronze medal in the 1992 Winter Olympics and is the 1993 U.S. national champion. She is familiar with the pressure of international competition and has the years of experience that Kwan lacks. Her exclusion from the Olympics would have been a serious handicap for the United States. The Kerrigan attack bears a grim resemblance to the assault on tennis superstar Monica Seles last April. By allowing Kerrigan to skate, the committee has taken the power of deciding the skater's future away from her assailant. The committee's decision allows Kerrigan to fulfill a dream for which she has spent a lifetime preparing. Years of discipline and sacrifice have carried her to the top of her sport and have earned her the right to compete in the Olympic Games and vie for the highest honor in skating. KRISTIN BRUMM FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD Political correctness not a solution to bigotry Animal welfare officer. Nondiscretionary fragrance. Even if you are unsure of the exact meanings of these phrases, it is obvious that they reek of political correctness. We have all heard the contorted catch phrases of the P.C. movement. As quickly as such expressions were coined, the political correctness crusade was out of control. Originally political correctness had a noble goal. It sought to make our language kinder and more sensitive. It made gains in recognizing diversity. But any headway that was made has been overshadowed by the ridiculous restrictions political correctness has placed on our daily language. Too often an attempt to use politically correct language stifles the free thinking and the free exchange of facts and ideas. Political correctness was born out of a need for harmony. The world was and is too full of bigotry and intolerance. Political correctness, as it exists today, does not address these issues. Instead, it focuses too much on changing language when the internal roots of hatred and ignorance still need to be changed. What then is the answer? We should be polite, not political. Instead of learning whole new vocabularies, we should concentrate on courtesy. Deep internal problems are solved by understanding, not external linguistic tricks. Political correctness should be replaced by consideration and courtesy in speaking and in listening. If I call an animal welfare officer a dog catcher, I hope he or she will forgive me. Because, as it stands, the whole political correctness confusion has a nondiscretionary fragrance. Translated: It really stinks! MATT HOOD FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD KANSAN STAFF BEN GROVE, Editor LISA COSMILLO. Managing editor. BEN GROVE, Editor TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser LISA COSMILLO, Managing editor JUSTIN GARBERG Business manager BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator JENNIFER BLOWEY Retail sales manager Editors JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser Assistant Managing Editor...Dan England Assistant to the editor ...J. R. Clairborne News ...Kristi Fogler, Katie Greenwald, Todd Selft Editorial ...Colleen McCain Nathan Olson Campus ..Jess DeHaven Sports ..David Doresy Photo ..Doug Hesse Features ..Sara Bennett Business Staff Campus sales mgr ... Jason Eberly Regional Sales mgr ... Troy Tarwater National & Co-op sales mgr ... Robin King Special Sections mgr ... Shelly McConnell Production mgr ... Laura Guth Gretchen Kochtenkollnch Marketing director ... Amy Casey Creative director ... John Carton Classified mgr ... Kelly Connexsy Teartools mgr ... Wing Chan **Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 230 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's The Kansas reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas newroom, 111 Stauffer Flint Hall. Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed. Opinion.page editors outline philosophy for the semester The staff of the Kansas changes every semester, and with it, so does the philosophy. Changes are less important for reporters, who are taught to be objective. But for Opinion page writers, philosophy is very important. Therefore, we feel it is important to explain our ideas about the Opinion page this semester. First, the name of the page is crucial. We do not report the news, we give opinions about the news. The two divisions of the paper — news and opinion — are independent of one another. Columnists' opinions are theirs alone and aren't necessarily supported by the editors or reporters. Editorials represent the majority opinion of the editorial board. The editorial board consists of ten people, and more than half of them aren't journalism students. Our basic goal in constructing the page is interaction. The Opinion page is the only page where students can truly be heard. In order for them to be heard, they have to write to us. Essen- COLLEEN NATHAN McCAIN OLSON Editorial Co-Editors A few words about opinions are necessary, though. Sometimes columns receive intense criticism. A case in point concerned one columnist's assertion that the displacing of Native Americans in this country was, for all intents and purposes, an example of Darwin's theories. Many people were upset about the column. Some said the editor shouldn't have printed the column. Others suggested that the columnist be fired. Their protests missed the point. Students won't agree with everything written in this page simply because everyone has an individual opinion, but calling for someone's column not to be printed cuts off discussion. The tally, we would like the page to be a continuing dialogue with students. quantity and eloquence of the responses to the column in question were much more valuable, and much more educational, than not running the column in the first place. Our second major point concerning opinions is that we do not want students to think our opinions are the only ones that matter. As a second case in point, one Kansan editorial last fall criticized President Clinton for meeting with Salman Rushdie. Coincidentally, the lead editorial in the New York Times the same day praised Clinton for the meeting, and in fact criticized him for not standing by Rushdie more completely. Clearly, opinions aren't designed to be the final word on subjects; sometimes, they are meant to be the Initial word. Our desire is not to further a single political agenda. Even-handedness will be a dominant factor in how we set up the page. Many perspectives should be represented in the page. But again, in order to do this, we need readers to respond to us, whether by writing letters or guest columns. We do have a few simple guidelines on corresponding with us. Letters to the editor are effective and probably the most widely read portion of the paper. We request that letters be no longer than 200 words. Letters longer than this length may be edited for space reasons. When writing, please include your name, phone number, year and major. Guest columns should be no longer than 600 words. As with letters, guest columnists should include their name, phone number, year and major. The Opinion page will be stronger as more and more people correspond with us. We hope the Opinion page will be a page in which everyone can participate and from which everyone benefits. Colleen McCain is a Salina sophomore majoring in journalism. Nathan Olson is a Colby graduate student in English. AND I SUPPOSE YOU'RE HERE WITH A PATERNITY SUIT! CLINTON'S AFFAIRS EXPOSED PRESIDENT HOOD 0DK '94 To stop crime, buy a horse Americans are upset about crime, it has become such a serious problem that even the U.S. Congress has taken precious time away from campaign fund raising to pass a tough anti-crime bill, which will make the streets safer for decent, law-abiding citizens by imposing harsh mandatory minimum penalties on Sen. Bob Packwood. But government action alone is not the answer. To fight this crime wave we need to remember what our pioneer foreparents did when they were settling the Wild West. In those days, ordinary civilians sometimes had no choice but to form posses, saddle up their horses and bring lawbreakers to justice at the end of the barrel of a gun. I realize what I'm about to say is controversial, but maybe it's time we did the same thing. If the police can't protect us, maybe it's time we exercised our constitutional right to keep and bear — horses. Criminals are going to think twice about entering your bedroom if they know there's a horse in there. Another option is to buy a handgun. Let me state up front that whatever YOU think about the handgun issue, it is my firm belief that you are 100 percent correct. But what opinion we jointly hold, we need to consider the implications of a handgun-related news item that was reported recently COLUMNIST DAVE BARRY by Tom McNiff of the Ocala (Fla.) Star-Banner. This item, which I am not making up, describes a tragic incident involving a Marion County, Fla., commissioner named Norm Perry, whose wife, Betty, was getting ready for a weekend visit to Miami. Needless to say, Norm was nervous about this, because Miami has a reputation for having a bad crime problem. I live in South Florida, and the crime situation down here is really not that bad, as long as you take certain precautions — locking your doors, avoiding poorly lit areas, moving to Idaho, etc. But life down here can be unnerving. For example, we rented one of those warehouse storage lockers, so we could store some of our stuff in there for a couple years before throwing it all away. The rental guy asked me to sign a piece of paper, and he said (this is a real quote): "This just says you're not going to use it to store any, like, drugs or human bodies." Here's another true Miami story: On Thanksgiving Day, some workers were trying to fix a clogged toilet at a rental duplex, and they found A PERSON IN THE SEPTIC TANK. (This person was deceased. Fortunately for him.) Police don't know how the body got there, but it's a safe bet that it wasn't an accident, unless we're talking about one of those EXTREMELY high-suction toilets. But getting back to commissioner Perry and his wife. The Star-Banner reports that, at Commissioner Perry's suggestion, Mrs. Perry was planning to take a handgun with her to Miami. As she was packing, however, she discovered that the gun was jammed; so she brought it to Commissioner Perry, who was standing in front of his closet, deciding on what to wear. He was working on the gun when suddenly, unexpectedly, it went off. The bullet — in yet another of the senseless tragedies that we read about all too often these days — went through nine of Commissioner Perry's dress shirts. "Those shirts are $25 to $30 apiece," he told the Star-Banner. A terrible waste, you say? Yes. But sometimes you must pay a price for vigilance. In today's crime-ridden society, there could very easily have been a criminal hiding in the back of Commissioner Perry's closet, planning to steal enough money to afford air fare to Miami. And this criminal could easily have been penetrated by Norm's bullet, which would have meant that he or she (the criminal, also the horse, if Commissioner Norm kept one in there) would no longer be roaming the streets and victimizing innocent people. Instead, he or she would be successfully suing Commissioner Perry for millions of dollars. So let me just state how grateful I am to Commissioner Perry for caring enough about his wife's safety to want to send her down here with a hand-gun. The one thing we need more of down here is armed people, which is why, on behalf of the Chamber of Commerce, I am urging EVERYBODY who is thinking of visiting South Florida to feel free to bring the weapon of his or her choice, although we do remind you that, before you travel with a gun, you should take the standard precaution of test-firing it in Commissioner Perry's closet. Also, flush with care. Dave Barry is a syndicated columnist for the Miami Herald. LETTER TO THE EDITOR Teacher's own beliefs necessary for learning After reading Russell Abbot's letter to the editor on Dec. 3, one would think that Ann Jurcyk is the only teacher to express her own beliefs during a class or to teach from a certain perspective. Everyone who has attended classes at any level at any institution knows that all instructors who wish to teach coherently and meaningfully present their material within some sort of context. If they merely act as robots and repeat the reading material, what purpose do they serve? During my years at KU, I have heard Marxism, Capitalism, and Monarchism all extolled as ideal systems of government. I have heard lectures offered from extremely feministic to extremely male-chauvinistic viewpoints. I have heard virtually every religion's praises sung, with the exception of Christianity (until now). In fact, this semester alone I have been told in lectures that Christianity was Abbott states that "Jureyk must have realized that her beliefs would be challenged." I'm sure she did. responsible for scientific ignorance, that the Catholic Church persecuted and tortured the mentally ill, and that mystics and prophets were simply outdated terms for schizophrenics. All these remarks were expressed by instructors without any fear of offending the "cultural sensitivities of diverse students." Am I complaining about this atmosphere? Quite the contrary. I think it's what university life is all about. Every good instructor looks forward to having their students question and challenge their own opinions as well as the instructor's. I have heard many viewpoints and agendas expressed at this university since I came here. I have not agreed with them all, but all that were expressed with conviction and spirit have certainly been a catalyst to provoke thought and questioning of my beliefs. I applaud Ms. Jurcyk. This is what true learning is about. Erin L. Nix Lawrence junior --- UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Tuesday, January 11, 1994 5 91 92 93 94 10000000000 $ \partial^ {7} $ $ \varepsilon $ Sentencing guidelines under scrumity by state dy Stephen Martino Kansan staff writer The issue was clear to the Kansas Legislature: criminals were serving a fraction of their time. There was no uniform sentencing across the state for the same crimes, and color of skin might affect time in prison. "If we both committed a burglary, and you got off on the second floor of the courthouse and I got off on the seventh, you might spend only two years in prison, and I might get seven," said State Rep. Kathleen Sebelius, D-Topeka. "The process was horribly inconsistent." Enter the 1992 Legislature, which passed the Sentencing Guideline Act. The purpose of the legislation was two-fold, Sebelius said. "It was to give planning and control to the Legislature and the Department of Corrections of who would be in the jail space," she said. "And gives Kansas patterns of sentencing that eliminated regional and racial bias." The act that was passed separated drug-related offenses from others. The severity of the crime and the defendant's past criminal conduct were what determined the length of a person's sentence. The statute mandated the time to be served as well. Only mitigating or aggravating circumstances will allow a judge to deviate from guidelines. The release of Lisa Pfannenstiel has brought the guidelines under increased scrutiny. Pfannenstiel was sentenced from six to 15 years in prison for her participation in the 1989 kidnapping and murder of an elderly Topeka couple with her ex-boyfriend, Tyrone L. Baker. She plea bargained her first-degree murder charge down to aggravated burglary and conspiracy to commit aggravated burglary. Pfannenstiel was released because the sentencing guidelines have been applied retroactively. Because her sentence would have been less because of the guidelines, Shawnee County District Judge James Buchele said he had no choice but to release Pfannenstiel. Not so, said state Sen. Mark Parkinson. The Olathe Republican said that the guidelines provided opportunities for judges to keep the very worst of people in jail. He said that Buchele had the opportunity to keep Pfannenstiel in jail but chose not to use it. Parkinson said that before the guidelines criminals could count on serving half of their minimum sentences. If someone was sentenced from five to 10 years, he said, 2 1/2 years was the average. Sebellius said that any public anger with Pfannenstiel's release would be better directed at the prosecutor who allowed that plea bargain instead of the legislature that passed the guidelines. "Most of the people that are coming out early are folks that would be out within a year or two anyway," she said. "I think the Legislature took a responsible position, even though politically it's not." Legislature's slush fund becoming political issue TOPEKA—There are more polite words for it, but the Legislature operates its own slush fund. By John Hanna The Associated Press The fund does not exist on paper, but it sometimes represents hundreds of thousands of dollars legislative leaders can dole out with a signature on a voucher or two. On July 1, 1993, the fund amounted to almost $625,000. Nothing particularly sneaky or underhanded is going on because the extra money has been part of the Legislature's annual budget for years. But the slush fund exists, and Democrats are hoping it becomes an embarrassment to Republicans in the 1994 campaign for House seats. "It's a game that's being played at the expense of the Kansas taxpayers," Nichols said. Much of the ruckus so far is being raised by freshman state Rep. Rocky Nichols, D-Topeka, who says the slush fund is an outrage. The reason for the slush fund is rather simple. Over the past 10 years, the Legislature, in setting the state budget, has appropriated more money to itself than is needed. Also, many legislators do not scrutinize their own budget, which ANALYSIS is prepared by legislative leaders. And the executive branch does not out of respect for the separation of powers. "What we do is kind of an unwritten policy," said State Sen. Gus Bogina, R-Shawnee, chairman of the Senate Ways and Means Committee. The amount varies from budget year to budget year. For example, on July 1, 1985, the beginning of fiscal 1986, the Legislature rolled over a whopping $981,372, or 17.5 percent of its total budget. Part of the desire for a slush fund is in the need for flexibility. Although the Kansas Constitution sets the length of the Legislature's annual session at 90 days, it can run much longer. Each day in session can cost the state between $45,000 and $55,000. And having the additional money allows the Legislature to maintain the Statehouse by renovating committee rooms, offices and even the House and Senate chambers themselves. Some Democrats complain that the extra funds allow Republican leaders, namely House Speaker Bob Miller of Wellington and Senate President Bud Burke of Olathe, to spend money on items against the full Legislature's wishes. DARTS boards flites cabinets PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 huge selection—great prices 1029 Massachusetts phone 841-PLAY (7529) You gotta check us out! Confidential Free pregnancy tests Birth control Sliding fee scale STD screening Planned Parenthood Quality reproductive health care for men and women Now Open in Lawrence 1420C Kasold Drive (Orchards Corners) 832-0281 CITY OF LAWRENCE RECYCLING INTERNSHIPS CREDIT/UNPAID ELIGIBLE MAJORS: EDUCATION -ART&DESIGN JOURNALISM AND MASSCOMMUNICATION RADIO/TV JOURNALISM ENVIRONMENTALSTUDIES BEAU'S 545 Minnesota (East of the Yacht Club) Import Auto Service 842-4320 CONTACT PATRICIA OR SCOTT IN THE RECYCLING OFFICE 832-3330 APPLY BY JANUARY 28,1993 Quality Maintenance and Repair Nationally Certified Mechanics Swedish·German·Japanese Autos Specializing In: TUNE-UPS•BRAKES AC•CLUTCH•TRANSMISSION ENGINE REBUILDING•OIL &LUBE•COOLING SYSTEMS VISA MasterPro MasterCaro Serving Lawrence Since 1974*32 Years Experience Ti Tired of the hassles of moving? Try renting!! RENTCO USA 749-1605 Dorm Size Frig. 25/month! Free Delivery • Student Discount • TV's • VCR's Stereos • Appliances • Computers • Furniture Order by phone or Come in Across from Dillons on Mass 1741 Massachusetts The University of Kansas Opera presents Music and Dance WE HONOR KANNY MIKADO by Gilbert and Sullivan 7:30 p.m. January 13 - 15, 1994 For general admission tickets, call the KU box offices (Murphy: 913/864-3982, Lied:913/864-ARTS); 2:30 p.m. January 16, 1994 KU student tickets are available through the SUA Office, Kansas Union; public $6, Swarthout Recital Hall/Murphy Hall students $3, senior citizens $5; VISA/MasterCard accepted for phone orders. connex PART-TIME POSITIONS AVAILABLE (with full-time benefits) Connex International, a leader in the communications industry for over a decade, is looking for you to join our growing team. We are searching for several part-time people (flexible schedules available) Monday-Friday for our busy operations center in downtown Lawrence. Positive attitudes and good phone skills a must. NO SALES INVOLVED! We offer a paid training program for qualified applicants. Starting wage: $6.00/hour. To learn more, join us on: To learn more, join us on: WEDNESDAY, JAN. 12, 1994 6:30 PM INTERNATIONAL ROOM, KU UNION or stop by ourtable in the KU Union on Fri. January 14, from 9:00a.m.-3:00p.m. Teller's Long Island Teas $2.25 on Thursday 746 Massachusetts 843-4111 BENCHWARMERS DRINK SPECIALS free pool Tue.- $1.00 off imports free pool Wed.- $1.50 Longnecks Sat. - 2 for 1 Wells Mon. - $3.75 Pitchers Fri. - $2.00 Long Island Ice Teas Thur. - $ .25 Draws Sun. - $2.00 Bloody Marvs Screwdrivers Greyhounds Live Entertainment Jan 13- Turquoise Sol Jan 14- Monterrey Jack Jan 15- Milhouse Nixons Jan 17- NO SCHOOL! KU vs K-STATE The Squibcakes Jan 18- From the Horde Tour Band Jan 20 - Deep Blue Something Jan 21 - T.B.A. Jan 22 - They Came in Droves Jan 28 - The Wake Jan 29 - L.A. Ramblers Jan 18 - From the Horde Tour The Dave Mathews BENCHWARMERS MINORITY SCHOLARSHIP STUDENT LEADERSHIP SEMINAR CPSY 106 Minority scholars are invited to participate in a course which can strengthen their leadership skills and allow them to put leadership theory into practice. CPSY 106 provides an unusual taste of graduate seminar-style learning for minority scholars which can enhance their educational experience through interactive discussions and presentations. This unique educational experience will enhance the retention and success of those who participate. CPSY 106 (line #65739) is offered this spring semester on Thursdays, 9:30-11:20 in Bailey Hall, Room 116-J. Tuesday, January 11, 1994 For All Your Glass Needs Kennedy Glass All automotive glass replacement & insurance claims handled. 730 New Jersey 843-4416 Learn to Fly Lawrence Air Services Instruction-Charter Service-Rental 842-0000 The rate of extinction of species from this earth was 1 every 4 years from 1600 to 1900. It's now estimated to be 1000 per year. KANSAN You should know; Since 1972 Lawrence's foremost name in outdoor clothing and camping equipment. SUNFLOWER OUTDOOR & BIKE SHOP 804 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas 843-5000 SPECIAL PRICES FOR STUDENTS, STAFF AND FACULTY Come Back to School with the latest in computer technology! MTech V433S-D33 VESA Local Bus Bundle Specifications MECH - Intel 486DX-3M Processor * IBM RM, 256K Cache 1. 44MB 3.5" Floppy Disk Drive --- - 1.2MB 5.25" Floppy Disk Drive - 1.2MB 5.25s Floppy Disk Drive *245MB IDE Hard Disk Drive - 1MB VESA Local Bus SVGA Windows Accelerator * Pentium P24T Upgradeable ZIF Socket * 14"SVGA Color Monitor Non-Interfaced - 6 16-Bit ISA Slots, 2 32-bit VLB/16-Bit ISA Slots - 10* Key Enhanced Keyboard * Microsoft Mouse II - Microsoft Works for Windows 3.0 - Microsoft Works for Wind * Novell NetWare Certified - Novell NetWare Certified * IBM QOS Certified - Microsoft Windows Certified / Your Price: $1794 Same system available through state contract for University purchase. MICROTECH COMPUTERS 2550 Iowa St. Tower Plaza next to Applebees (913) 842-2667 WELCOME BACK EARN CASH $15 Today $30 This Week Plus a $3 Bonus Plus a $3 Bonus By donating your blood plasma Show your current student ID card between January 11 and January 28 and receive an extra $3 bonus on your second visit of the month. Lawrence Donor Center Walk-ins welcome NABI The Quality Source $ Hours: M-F 9-6 Sat 10-3 816 W.24th Behind Laird Noller Ford 749-5750 See our ad in the classified section NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN MANASSAS, Va. Bobbitt trial attracts attention from media and special groups Lorena Bobbitt is charged with malicious wounding for cutting off her husband's penis on the night of June 23. If convicted, she could be sentenced to 20 years in prison. Her lawyers have argued that she was driven by an "irresistible impulse" caused by prolonged abuse, including forced sex the night of the attack. John Wayne Babbitt, who is seeking a divorce, contends his wife attacked him because she was angry over his plans to leave her. In the same courthouse in Prince William County, he was acquitted in November on a charge of marital sexual assault. Lorena Bobbitt's trial was expected to last three days. The trial drew several hundred reporters and technicians. TV satellite trucks blocked the street leading to the courthouse in this historic town near Washington. The case has been cast by many as a battle of the sexes. The case has been clear; Mary is a battle winner. Women's groups have said they believe Lorena Bobbitt's story of battery, but they don't necessarily endorse her action; instead, they hope the trial will lead to more dis Men's rights groups have also weighed in, complaining emasculation is an侵权者source of humor. cussion about violence in marriage. Bobbitt's penis was reattached after the attack. Bobbitt can urinate, but it may be two years before doctors know if full sexual function will return, said Dr. David E. Berman, one of the surgeons. Government clears drug for HIV-infected WASHINGTON paitents to aid in preventing pneumonia In clinical trials, patients given a double-strength tablet of the antibacterial drug daily came down with pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP) less often than those who received aerosolized pentamidine, the company said. The drug Bactrim has been cleared by the government for sale to prevent HIV-infected patients from getting a deadly form of pneumonia, the manufacturer, Hoffmann-La Roche Inc., said Monday. "By preventing PCP we may help to increase the life span of patients," said Dr. Miklos Salgo, a Hoffmann-La Roche research director. The Food and Drug Administration had previously approved Bactrim to treat actual cases of PCP. Bactrim also is prescribed for urinary tract infections. Pik love dyhunik Great selection of original KU artwork available as a matted print or as a card. Vormehr Gallery ART Riverfront Plaza Suite 321, across from Bass 749-0744 928 Mass. Downtown The Etc. Shop Red Lyon Tavern A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence 944 Mass. 832-8228 "Your Book Professionals" LION Jayhawk Bookstore "At the top of Naismith Hill" Hrs: 8-7 M-Th., 8-5 Fri. 9-5 Sat. 12-4 Sun. 843-3826 Welcome back! The Campus Software Set for Macintosh. KU The Campus Software Set for Macintosh. KU It's time to begin another busy semester, so start the semester off right by burying your head in a book...the Macintosh PowerBook 145B. The power is its portability. Take full advantage of your free time wherever you go.Write papers in the morning at the bus stop, over lunch at Union Square, or even during halftime at Allen Fieldhouse.And now is the best time to look at a PowerBook 145B because the Union Tech Center has it at its lowest price ever.Macintosh.It does more. It costs less. It's that simple. Macintosh PowerBook L45b + 80 with the Campus Software Set. $1265^{00} KU KU Macintosh. The Power to be your Best at KU. union union technology center KU Apple Academic Computer Supplies & Equipment Burge Union Level + 3 *91384-6890* 12 14 16 18 20 22 24 26 28 30 32 34 36 38 40 42 44 46 48 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 7 Tuesday, January 11, 1994 BONN, Germany Talks yield cease-fire but battles still rage in central Bosnia Croatia and the Bosnian government reached a tentative accord yesterday on a cease-fire for central Bosnia, a Croatian diplomat said. The agreement came during talks in Bonn between President Franjo Tudjman of Croatia and President Alajaz Izetbegovic of Bosnia, said Zalko Plavnik, representative of the Croatian Embassy in Bonn. Fighting between the two former allies raged yesterday in central Bosnia despite the peace talks. Countless cease-fires have failed to halt the war in Bosnia, which began nearly 21 months ago. Plavnik said the commanders of the Bosnian government and Bosnian Croat armies would meet today or tomorrow to discuss silencing their guns. Bosnian government forces have made advances recently and their leaders oppose a peace plan that would divide the former Yugoslav state along ethnic lines, giving Muslims control of about a third of its territory. The war in Bosnia began after Bosnian Serbs rebelled over a vote by Croats and Muslims to secede from Yugoslavia. More than 200,000 people are dead or missing from the war. TABA, Egypt TABA, Egypt Israel-PLO withdrawal talks stall Israel and the PLO are unlikely to meet an April 13 target date for a military withdrawal from the Gaza Strip and the West Bank region of Jericho, Israeli leaders said yesterday. It would be the second deadline the negotiators missed in the Israel-PLO agreement on the first stages of Palestinian self-rule. The Israelis were scheduled to begin their withdrawal on Dec. 13 but balked over unresolved security issues. Israeli delegation head Gen. Amnon Shahak said after the talks yesterday that he was optimistic but "cannot point to any impressive progress reached." He said the talks, which resume today, will take as long as necessary to reach agreement. Environment Minister Yossi Sarid said the talks may drag out for as long as two months. After weeks of talks between teams led by Shahak and The last Cairo round added an element of confusion and mistrust to the differences because the z-des disagreed about whether an understanding had been reached. Nabil Shaath failed to reach agreement on implementing the accord, higher-level delegations moved their discussions from Oslo to Paris to Cairo. The unresolved issues include control of international border crossings, the size of the Jericho autonomy zone and security of Jewish settlements in Gaza. MEXICO CITY, Mexico MEXICO CITY, Mexico Mexican rebels continue Bombings Police stepped up patrols and public buildings required visitors to register Monday but the capital rejected district requests to deploy the army to protect against spreading rebel violence. Chiapas state, site of the new year's uprising, was generally quiet Monday. But a spate of bombings in the capital and other regions and rebel threats of a widening war prompted officials in Mexico City to tighten security in government and other public buildings and banks. Manuel Aguilera Gomez, head of Mexico City's government, rejected requests by the heads of the capital's 16 administrative districts for soldiers to patrol the streets. Bombs have exploded in recent days in Mexico City, and in the resort city of Acapulco. The bombings apparently are tied to the uprising by the Zapatista National Liberation Army that began in Chiapas, one of Mexico's poorest states. The Zapatistas have claimed responsibility for some of the bombings, but it was unclear whether others had been set off by sympathizers. SYDNEY, Australia Bushfires almost under control By nightfall, all but two major fires were in check. At least 185 homes were destroyed, 113 severely damaged and 30 other buildings lost. Four people, including two firefighters, were killed, and thousands were treated for smoke inhalation. Police believe more than half the fires, which started breaking out more than a week ago, were started by arsonists. Eleven people have been arrested. NATURAL WAY Natural Fiber Clothing 820-822 Mass. 841-0100 NATURAL WAY SUNSHINE HOME It's Time To Check Under Your Hood A-1 Automotive 20 Years Experience TIME TO RESPOND 842-0865 - Transmission Specialist - High Quality Work -All Car Repairs (Foreign and Domestic) 1501 W. 6th Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Lied Center Presents A Special Event The Children's Theatre Company of Minneapolis in Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm Co-Sponsored by Payless ShoeSource 8:00 p.m. Thursday, January 13, 1994 Lied Center Partially funded by the National Endowment for the Arts, Mid-America Arts Alliance, KU Student Senate Activity Fee. Friends of the Lied Series, and the Kansas University Endowment Association. Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office (864-ARTS); Murphy Hall Box Office (864-3982); and any Ticketmaster outlet (913) 234-4545 and (816) 931-3330; public $15 and $13, KU, Haskell and K-12 students $7.50 and $6.50, senior citizens and other students $14 and $12; KU student tickets available through the SUA office, Kansas Union; phone orders can be made using MasterCard or VISA; all seats reserved. 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Free shoe rental for league bowlers Four Leagues Available: Monday Mixer Tuesday Varsity Mixer Wednesday Mixer Thursday Mixer Located on Level One of the Kansas Union 864-3545 --- DOS HOMBRES RESTAURANTE Welcome Back Students Drink Specials Tuesday: $1.50 Strawberry Margaritas $.95 Well Drinks Monday: $6.95 Pitchers of Margaritas $3.25 Pitchers of Beer Friday: $8.95 Pitchers on Saturday 2 for 1 Well Drinks $1.50 Amaretto Sours Thursday: $1.25 Margaritas Wednesday: 2 for 1 Drinks (anything in bar) Saturday: 2 for 1 Well Drinks Friday: $8.95 Pitchers of Margaritas Sunday: $2.00 Mexican Imports Karaoke Every Wednesday Night The fun starts at 10 p.m. 815 New Hampshire·841-7286 MUSIC 4 LESS® RIGHT MUSIC...RIGHT PRICE...RIGHT NOW!!! Buy it, Try it! SOUND ADVICE WARNING The following music is guaranteed to expand your musical horizons. If you are not completely satisfied, bring it back (with your receipt within 2 weeks) and you can exchange it for another Cassette or CD of equal value. SOUND ADVICE Buy it, Try it! WARNING The following music is guaranteed to expand your musical horizons. If you are not completely satisfied bring it back with your receipt within 2 weeks and you can exchange it for another Cassette or CD of equal value. CASSETTE 7.99 CD 13.99 THE SCREENING CHURCH MUSIC CASSETTE 7.99 CD 13.99 Counting Crows August and Everything After Featuring: Rain King · A Murder Of One · Mr. James · Osmha CASSETTE 7.99 CD 13.99 CASSETTE 6.99 CD 11.99 JAMES LAUD "KONFIRMET AND NOT CONFIRMED" WARNING The following music is guaranteed to expand your musical horizons. If you not completely satisfied, bring it back (with your receipt within 2 weeks and you can exchange it for another Cassette or CD of equal value) SOUND ADVICE Last Splash CDNC3 DR. 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Wolff tube beds Wolff lights 10 min lighting beds 30 min facial beds Personal Stereos Certified staff Open 7 days a week Phones in all rooms Competetive prices Wide lotion selection Trained staff to clean beds Lighted make-up counter Clinton called the denuclearization agreement with Ukraine a "hopeful and historic breakthrough." He said that when combined with the Partnership for Peace, "We have taken two giant steps toward greater security for the United States, for Europe and the world." The proposal limits the East Europeans to joining the alliance in military exercises, peacekeeping missions and crisis management. In turn they must accept criteria on human rights, democracy, civilian control of their militaries and respect for frontiers. In the absence of consensus for tougher action, the leaders moved toward renewing their unfulfilled threat of air strikes against the Serbs if they continue to shell Sarajevo and block U.N. humanitarian relief convoy. NATO summit yields accords Ukraine has been hesitant to surrender its weapons as long as Russia retains a sizable arsenal. Promises of U.S. assistance and bargain-priced oil and gas deliveries from Russia helped overcome Ukraine's resistance. French President Francois Mitterrand urged reinforcement of U.N. troops in Bosnia. However, Clinton cautioned that if NATO renews its military threat, "We have to mean it... Call For Your Appointment Today 842-5096 Ukraine nuclear arms dismantled as part of agreement The Associated Press BRUSSELS, Belgium — President Clinton claimed "two giant steps" for global security yesterday with a breakthrough agreement for dismantling Ukraine's nuclear arsenal and NATO approval of a plan for unprecedented cooperation with former foes in Eastern Europe. The upbeat mood at the 16-nation NATO summit was clouded by lingering division over how far the West should go to stop the war in Bosnia, which has claimed 200,000 lives. Yet Poland's President Lech Walesa complained anew that the partnership idea does not go far enough. He urged NATO to start imposing conditions on Russia to test its credibility as a future participant. Ukraine, its economy wracked by 60 percent-a-month inflation, had held out for billions of dollars. U.S. officials said Ukraine would receive about $1 billion for the uranium in the warheads it is turning over to Russia for dismantling and $177 million in congressionally approved funds for implementing the 1991 Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty. The partnership plan says only that NATO is ready to consult with any East European nation that "perceives a direct threat to its territorial integrity, political independence or security." NATO Secretary-General Manfred Woerner said the message for Eastern Europe was clear: "We shall not leave you alone. We care about your security." The centerpiece of the NATO summit was the U.S.-sponsored "Partnership for Peace" offering military and political cooperation with former Warsaw Pact rivals — but not full membership in the Western military alliance. The membership ticket would extend NATO's security protection to nations such as Poland, Hungary, the Czech Republic and others concerned about the rise of Russian ultranationalists and communists who want to reassemble Moscow's empire. If the situation does not improve, the alliance must be prepared to act." Hair Experts Design Team Start the semester in style 25th & Iowa Holiday Plaza 841-6886 $5 Off Hair Design Not valid with any other offer EXPIRES 3/31/94 MCAT Are you prepared? We are. -SMALL CLASSES GROUPED BY TEST-TAKING ABILITY - GUARANTEED SCORE IMPROVEMENTS -VALUABLE TEST-TAKING TECHNIQUES COMBINED WITH A THOROUGH REVIEW OF THE CONCEPTS TESTED ON THE MCAT BEGIN PREPARING NOW!! Register TODAY and get FREE MCAT Review software. Classes are forming now for the April exam. THE PRINCETON REVIEW Questions? Please call our office at (800) 865-7737 health Choose carefully Does your condom provide the best protection against HIV? By Cathleen Siechta Kansan staff writer When Sean Stagg bought condoms in high school, he worried about their reliability, but he never looked into which condoms were most effective. had been on the market for so long and had a good reputation," the Lenexa senior said. "I used to work with the Douglas County AIDS Project, and that was the brand that they recommended, too." But do Trojan brand condoms offer the best protection against HIV, the virus that causes AIDS? Condoms are in the news these days thanks to a new federally-funded ad cam- I usually bought Trojans just because they look good on the workbench and wear. motes condom use to prevent the spread of HIV. But effectiveness may vary depending on what kind of condom the consumer chooses. Since the increase in cases of sexually transmitted diseases and HIV, the Federal Drug Administration has launched a program of more extensive testing for the effectiveness of condoms. A 1989 study published in Consumer Reports magazine tested different brands of condoms for effectiveness. Two types of tests are used. In a standard water test, condoms are filled with water and checked for leakage. In an air burst test, condoms are inflated until they break. The maximum volume and pressure withstood by each condom is monitored. In the leakage test, LifeStyles Extra Strength with Nonoxynol-9 and LifeStyles NudaPlus brand condoms both showed thin spots near the tips when filled with water, suggesting potential for breakage. Since the Society, Aksel, inc., the manufacturer of LifesStyles condoms, has issued a voluntary recall for defective lots of Life-Styles Extra Strength with Nonoxynol9. "We used to hand out only LifeStyles brand condoms, but since that report, we have started handing out Sheik brand condoms," said Janine Demo, coordinator of Health Education for Watkins Memorial Hospital. "Sheik seemed to be higher on the list." Among the condoms that scored highest in the air burst test were Gold Circle Coin condoms and several Trojan brand condoms. Trojans also proved to have a low risk of breakage in laboratory tests. The study estimated that about one in every 140 condoms breaks. However, condom breakage is not the only way that the the nd G t res only way that the AIDS virus and other sexually transmitted diseases can be spread. "Skin" condoms made from the large intestine of a lamb have crisscrossing fibers that can cause pores in the condoms up in the condoms up to 1.5 microns mid "Lambskin condoms are porous to many viruses, but not sperm." Demo said "They are for contraception more than disease prevention. Latex condoms, when intact, are consistent barriers against disease." Although some brands of lamskin condoms proved in laboratory tests to be as strong as latex condoms, the permeable membrane is enough reason to keep the FDA disease prevention label off of such condoms. smaller than the size of sperm, but 10 times the size of the AIDS virus. Condoms that come with Nonoxynol-9 spermicide in the lubricant were also proven to be highly effective. Nonoxynol-9 is an ingredient in most over-the-counter spermicides that has been 4.21309 mg 071952 10% patients that cause short sexually transmitted diseases, includ- 11 HIV But consumers should be wary of putting all their faith in Nonoxynol-9 "New research from the Centers for Disease Control says that spermiicide may be less effective than we had hoped," Demo said. "They still encourage the use of spermiicide, but it is messy." important to have an intact latex condom. The spermicide is seen as kind of a boost in protection." How effective is your condom? Some condom brands held up better than others in air burst testing. Projected maximum failure rate of KANSAN Gold Circle Coin Trojan Plus 2 Koromex with Nonoxynol-9 Sheik Elite Projected maximum fail- ure rate of 4% Saxon Ribbed Lubricated Ramses NuFORM Mentor Projected failure rate of more than 10% LifeStyles Extra Strength with Nonoxynol-9 LifeStyles Nuda Plus Source: Consumer Reports magazine "The last condoms I bought had a spermicide on the inside and outside." Miller said. David Miller, Shawnee senior, said that he would use "anything that helps." cide on the inside and outside," Miller said. Even though condoms with spermicide are sometimes more expensive than regular condoms, Miller said that cost is not an issue when buying condoms. er said. music Could Lawrence be the next Seattle? By Kevin Hoffmann Kansan staff writer Certain cities somehow become associated with certain things. People connect Boston with clam chowder, Milwaukee with beer and Los Angeles with movie stars. Seattle recently has been connected with the newest and best in rock music. Lawrence quickly is gaining a reputation for being the "next Seattle." Lawrence gained that title when the New York Times magazine and the Kansas City Star recently described the city as a stepping stone for new rock bands. As more and more local bands get national recognition, the buzz around Lawrence continues to grow. But some local people connected to the music scene resent the label. "I think its stupid that anyone would want to be the next Seattle," said Chris Batte, who owns the Hideaway, 106 North Park. "We should want to be the first Lawrence." Batte agrees that an abundance of local bands are becoming more and more recognizable. "There are a lot of good bands in town," he said. "There are a lot of diverse bands in town. Lawrence is definitely recognized." Seattle gained notice after Nirvana made it big with its 1991 "Never Mind" compact disc. Pearl Jam and Alice In Chains soon followed. Phrases such as "the Seattle sound" became common sound" became common. Lawrence attained national recognition when local group Paw signed a record deal with A&M Records last spring. Later, bands such as Tenderloin and Stick signed with smaller labels. Many factors attract quality bands to lawrence. Batte suggested that the com- ated with the rock scene for 20 years. Wilson said a combination of factors led to Lawrence's boost in recognition " "We should want to be the next Lawrence." "One reason is the big increase in the number of venues," Wilson said. "Ten or so Steve Wilson, manager of Kief's Discount Records & Stereo Supply, 2429 Iowa St., is a singer and songwriter for the local band Mahoots. Wilson said he has lived in Lawrence "forever," and has been associ- Chris Batte Co-owner of The Bottleneck "Outside of the music aspect, Lawrence is a good place to shop," he said. "It has a nice downtown area, the university and all. That helps to make bands want to play here." munity itself draws bands to Lawrence. years ago, you didn't have as many places to play," he said. One band's recognition tends to snowball in recognition for other area bands, Wilson said. Wilson credited KIHK and KLZR radio stations and the magazinesPitch andNote as helping to solidify Lawrence's rock 'n' roll scene. Other aspects of the local music industry are benefiting from Lawrence's recognition. Independent record companies are popping up around the city. Matt Hydre, 23, recently started Lotuspool Records out of his Lawrence apartment. Brian Byers began Mercy Records out of his home a few "A lot of it had to do with two bands signing major record labels. That being Paw and Stick." he said. years ago and now has his own recording studio. Byers' company now records local bands. Byers sees his company as a stepping stone to the national labels. "We can be a local goal for bands," Byers said. "We don't have a lot of money or big prizes to offer, but we can bring a band into the studio and put an album out. It's not the American dream, but it's a step closer." Byers said success in the rock business required more than a popular hometown. "It itkes writing music that sells. It doesn't have to be grunge or a certain kind of music, as long as there's a market for it," Byers said. "They must have the stamina to keep playing every night, and be rejected now and then, and just keep playing. That's what the Midwest is known for." Byers released the "Loaded in Lawrence" compact disc, a compilation of 16 local artists in the fall of 1993. The disc gave rock fans a taste of different Lawrence bands. Barry Osbourn is a member of the Salty Iguanas, a Lawrence group that will be releasing its first compact disc Feb. 11 at The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St. Osburn said he did not think Lawrence's See LAWRENCE,Page 10. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN KULife People and places at the University of Kansas. WEIRD LEAD STORY In December, Dominique Gosbout, of Abitibi, Quebec, petitioned the legislature to restore a provision of the province's old Civil Code that was changed in the new 1992 Code. Article 441 now lists the only obligations of married persons as "respect, fidelity, care and help." For the first time in 200 years, "love" is no longer required, and Gosbout wants it back. THE LITIGIOUS SOCIETY - In July, retired Air Force Maj. Bill Smith filed a lawsuit in Fort Worth, Texas, against the estate of Elvis Presley, charging that the estate has been "perpetrating a fraud" that Presley died in 1977. Smith says the estate's claim interferes with his attempts to sell his books on Elvis' current whereabouts. -Vicki Jo Daily, 36, filed a lawsuit in July in Jackson, Wyo., against the widow of the man she collided with and killed in a February accident. The 56-year-old victim's snowmobile had suddenly cut in front of Dally's pickup truck, and he died at the scene. Police said Daily was free of blame, and she now wants money from the widow for the "grave and crippling psychological injuries" she suffered by watching the man die. -In December, a New York appeals court rejected Edna Hobbs' lawsuit against the company that makes the device called the Clapper. Hobbs claimed she hurt her hands because she had to clap too hard in order to turn her appliances on. "I couldn't peel my potatoes when my hands hurt. I never ate all so many baked potatoes in my life. I was in pain," she said. However, the judge said Hobbs had merely failed to adjust the sensitivity controls. November 1992 homeless couple Darrell -In September 1992, homeless couple Darryl See WEIRD. Page 10. RENT TO OWN CENTER Call and Compare- Rent bu Phone PUBLIC HOSPITAL - Fast Free Delivery - No Credit Needed - Short or Long Term - Retail Sales *Maintenance Included* *Flexible Terms* Students Rental Rates on Most Items New Larger Location •2204 Haskell• At 23rd & Haskell Behind Ampride Formerly In Downtown 842-8505 Beds ●Beds ●Futons - Small Refrigerators - Sofas-LoveSeats - Television - Washer-Dryers Much More Begin Your New Year at Body Boutique SAVE $ 139 Wine Bar Special rates for graduating seniors! Absolutely NO joining fee! 749-2424 925 Iowa BODY BOUTIQUE The Women's Fitness Facility - you can stop your membership over spring break! 10 Tuesday, January 11, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN CD/DVD ROM NEC Ready 486ES NLC Ready 486ES w/ Fusion CD 16 Sound System • 486X, 25MHz • Internal CD-ROM (380ms) • 4Mb, 170Mb, Mouse • 16-bit Sound Card • SVGA Color Display • Stereo Speakers • DOS, Windows • CD Software • Add Multimedia to your existing PC for just $599 installed. • Norton Desktop ... $75⁰ • Quattro Pro/Windows ... $49⁰⁵ • CentralPoint AntiVirus ... $49⁰⁵ • Turbo C++ ... $49⁰⁵ Many more titles available! ConnectingPoint® COMPUTER CENTER 813 Mass • Downtown Lawrence • 843-7584 only $2,199 BENCHWARMERS BENCHWARMERS NEW New Management New Staff New Attitude New Drink Specials NNN - 21 New Imports •Samuel Adams Boulevard Wheat on Tap 2 New Pinball Machines 1601 W.23rd St. 841-9111 You'll Walk Away From Our Sale Wishing You Were A Centipede. Fact is, you'll need a hundred pairs of legs to take full advantage of our Clearance Sale. Just come on down to The Athlete's Foot. You won't be able to walk away empty-footed. Reebok asics. NIKE CONVERSE LAWRENCE: The next Seattle? EMC OVER Max Cord V-24 Athlete's The Foot COOMERES The Athlete's Foot Continued from Page 9. UNICover New York VISA Osbourn said he enjoyed the local club scene. recognition could ever match that of Seattle. 914 Mass. 841-6966 Hours: Sun. 12-5:30 M-Sat. 9-5:30 Thurs. 9-8:30 "Seattle is a huge city," he said. "Lawrence just doesn't have the resources or the economics available to be that big." ty at San Luis Obispo, claiming that he was improperly dismissed as a student in the teaching certificate program. Demirjian claims the real reason for his ouster was "unsubstantiated rumors" that he ate cookies around the department in a sloppy manner, and that he had a flatulence problem. According to the lawsuit, "There is no physical evidence that any gas was passed, or ... any authentication as to (its) point of origin." It also meant Lawrence may not fall into the trap of producing only a certain kind of music — a problem many see with Seattle. "I've played in over 70 clubs," he said. "I've played on the West coast and everywhere from Chicago to Austin. Mainly I've played in the four-state area, though, and I would put The Bottleneck in the top five." "I don't know if Lawrence will ever have its own sound," Osbourn said. --According to the December State Legislatures magazine, Kansas is poised to toughen its worker compensation laws because a former insurance commissioner was awarded $95,000 in benefits last year. The commissioner's physician also filed a claim, alleging that he suffered injuries from having to sit so often on a cramped witness stand, testifying in worker compensation cases. Osboun said he thought the people of Lawrence allowed bands to play their own kind of music which encourages new bands. Continued from Page 9. WEIRD: Cookies get man fired - Ernesto Mota, 32, who suffered brain damage when he swallowed the contents of a bag of cocaine in a police station so that it could not be used against him as evidence, filed a $7 million lawsuit against the city of Oak Forest, Ill., recently. Mota claims the police should have stopped him, or failing that, should have called medics more quickly. Washington and Maria Ramos were injured when a train plowed into them as they were having sex on a mattress on the tracks at a New York subway station. Injuries were not severe, thanks to a quick-acting motorman. Nonetheless, according to a December 1993 story in the New York Daily News, the couple has filed a lawsuit against the transit authority charging it with carelessness, recklessness and negligence "Homeless people are allowed to have sex too," the couple's attorney said. In November, a court in Vancouver, British Columbia, awarded David Mattattall $632 in medical costs and other expenses stemming from a car accident in 1991. Mattattall had sued his mother for closing her car door on the paw of Mattattall's cat Daisy. The court's decision means that Mattattall's mother will lose her 40 percent safe-driving discount. Daisy will not benefit from the money, since she was subsequently run over by another car. -In September, John L. Demirjian filed a law suit against the California Polytechnic Universi- NATURALWAY Natural Fiber Clothing • Natural Body Care Products SAMANTHA LEE 20% - 50% off Sale Cotton Lace Velvet - Linen Chiffon Skirts 820-822 Lawrence 841-0100 Are recycle you recycle enjoying recycle the recycle paper? 486DX/40Mhz *486DX/40Mhz, 256K Cache *4MB RAM - CD-ROM Double Spin •Sound Blaster Pro & Speakers •14" SVGA NI Color Monitor •250MB Fast Hard Drive •1.44MB & 1.2 MB Floppy Drives •2S, IP, 1G Ports/Enhanced Keyboard •Minitower or Desktop •MS-DOS 6.2, Windows 3.1 •Mouse, Encyclopedia CD ... 486DX/ 40Mhz 745 New Hampshire St. Lawrence, KS 60644 843-3282 $ 1795^{00} $ CENTRAL DATA COMPUTER SYSTEMS KANSAS & Burge Unions One Stop Shopping. UNION EXPRESS Two convenient locations on campus to serve you. Avoid the hassle of driving all over town. Visit the newly remodeled Kansas Union on Jayhawk Boulevard and the Burge Union on Irving Hill Road. KU BOOKSTORES - Charge at the Unions' Food Services, KU Bookstores * Present your KUID at the Banking window to get set up - Complete textbook selection - Jayhawk clothing and premium items - Union Tech Center for computers at the Burge Union STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES • Movies, trips, educational forums, live comedy • Concerts like Pearl Jam and George Winston JAYBOWL - Bowling, billiards, video games, engraving - Wildemess Discovery for camping equipment rental UNION FOOD SERVICE - Union Square offers cafeteria dining - Hawk's Nest for snacking and treats - Hawk Stop, complete dinner at Burge - Prairie Room, restaurant-style service - Cafe LeHawk Espresso Bar at the Hawk's Nest KU CONCESSIONS * Providing vending services all around campus BANKING SERVICES • Personal check cashing • Accessible ATMs 24 hours a day S All your Needs. All on Campus. d campus KU KU KU ® ku KU KU KU IL Jayhawk logos are trademarks of the University of Kansas. Unauthorized use is prohibited. ©1994 The University of Kansas Memorial Corporation 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Tuesday, January 11, 1994 11 Kansas defense overpowers Oklahoma Tom Leininger / KANSAN KJ Oklahoma player taunts fans spurs KU's 11-2 run in first half By Gerry Fey Kansas forward Richard Scott an Oklahoma forward Jeff Webster batted one another during most of last night's 94-84 Kansas victory. By Gerry Fey Kansan sportswriter Kansas improved to 16-1 overall and 1-0 in the Big Eight Conference, while Oklahoma dropped to 8-4 and 0-2. It took an unlikely source to raise the intensity level of the Allen Field House crowd in No. 3 Kansas' 94-84 victory against Oklahoma last night. The crowd intensity translated to a comeback for the Jayhawks. Oklahoma senior center Ken Conley motioned for more noise from an already hostile crowd while at the free throw line with 3:17 left in the first half. The Sooners were ahead 44-38 at that point , but Conley missed the free throw. Kansas senior forward Patrick Richey said that the gesture did not bother him or his teammates; instead it may have helped them. After Conley's gesture the Jayhawks went on an 11-2 run and took a 49-46 run at halftime. "He's trying to get you off your game," Richey said. "If he wants to play like that that's fine, but the bottom line is we won the game. He made the crowd mad, and they got behind us a little more. We feed off our crowd, especially on defense." "I think that was a big key for us because it gave us a little confidence and probably shook their confidence a little bit," Kansas coach Roy Williams said. "We came out early and made a couple toug by eight or 10." During that run, Kansas senior guard Steve Woodberry had four of his team-high 26 points and three of his nine rebounds, both tying career highs. "We need Steve Woodberry to score" for us." Williams said. "He has that ability. If he doesn't score he usually does the other things to really help the team a lot, too. He stepped up tonight." After halftime, Kansas continued its run and built a 58-48 lead with 14:15 left. The Jayhawks never let go of the lead, and the Sooners were no closer than four points the rest of the game. Richey scored Kansas' first five points in the second half, including a three-pointer. He finished with 11 points and nine rebounds. Williams said Richey's rebounding, along with junior center Greg Ostertag's 14 rebounds, were essential in the victory. Kansas out-rebounded Oklahoma 57-41. "We shot 37 percent in the second half, and we missed a lot of ones three or four feet from the basket," Williams said. "But I think at the same time we were so good on the backboards. I thought Patrick Richey, for one individual, was really good in the second half. It was maybe his best rebounding game, as far as chasing the ball, that he's ever played for us." Oklahoma coach Billy Tubbs agreed that rebounding was the key to the game, and said Woodberry's play elevated Kansas in the second half. Oklahoma shot 42 percent from the field, while Kansas shot 44 percent. "We had problems rebounding the ball," Tubbs said. "We out-rebounded us convincingly. We had the right defense, but we couldn't get the ball when they missed." Richey said he was impressed with Oklahoma forward Jeff Webster, who led all scorers with 30 points. "All those off balance shots are tough to make." Richey said. "He scored a lot here last year. I think he likes it here." Kansas avenged the Sooners' victory last year at the field house. Williams said he used that game as motivation for the Jayhawks. Last year's defeat ended a 20-game home conference win streak for Kansas. "I really believe they were looking forward to playing against them tonight because they beat us last year here," Williams said. "I said, 'It has nothing to do with tonight, except I didn't like the taste of that.' I still had it in my mouth from them beating us last year." Thirty-point effort by Webster fails to earn win for Sooners By Mark Button Kansan sportswriter It would not be surprising if Oklahoma senior forward Jeff Webster's back is sore today. After all, he carried the Sooner team for much of last night's 94-84 Kansas victory against Oklahoma. The 6-foot-8, 232 pound Webster scored 30 points, most of them coming from his fade-away jump-shot. "I just come out and try to play hard every game," Webster said. "I try to do the things that I do best and tonight was one of those nights when I had to carry the team." "We tried to do a little bit better job on Jeff Webster, to cut down his percentage," said Kansas coach Roy Williams. "The first half he was 7 for 12 and he ends up 13 for 25. Still, Jeff's a heck of a player." Webster's performance, especially his 17 first-half points, impressed many of the Jayhawks, including their coach. At halftime, Kansas made a defensive adjustment to combat the red-hot Sooner. The Jayhawks switched to a 1-3-1 trapping zone for much of the second half. "When they changed to a zone, they started denying me the ball," Webster said. "It really slowed us down, but I didn't get frustrated because I knew we had good shooters outside." Kansas senior forward Richard Scott guarded Webster for most of the game. "It was tough," said Scott, who scored 13 points. "I give him credit. He hit a lot of hard shots, a lot of shots that normal players don't make. I think he had one of those nights when 12 Frenzied fans fuel Kansas victory Record crowd at Allen watches as women defeat No.4 Colorado For now, the Kansas women's basketball team can lay claim to early season Big Eight bragging rights. A Big Eight Conference record crowd of 13,532 watched the No. 12 Kansas women's basketball team pull out a 59-57 victory against No. 4 Colorado Sunday in Annale Field House. Kansas forward Angela Aycock reacts to Kansas '59-57 victory against Colorado. In Sunday's game, which drew a record crowd of 13,532, Aycock became the ninth Kansas player to score over 1,000 career points. The attendance, which broke the conference record of 8,521 set last year in Boulder, Colo. and shattered the former Kansas record of 3,750, played a key role in the Jayhawks' victory. By Matt Siegel Kansan sportswriter Tom Leininger / KANSAN "It was an unbelievable feeling." said junior forward Angela Aycock. "There was a lot of hype before the game. We were really looking forward to the game because we could show eight, nine, 10,000 people that we're capable of playing with a top national ranked team." In yesterday's Associated Press poll, Kansas vaulted to No. 9 while Colorado fell to No.8. Kansas coach Marian Washington said the players were able to feed off the crowd's enthusiasm. Kansas improved to 11-1 overall and 2-0 in conference play. Colorado dropped to 12-2 overall and 1-1 in the conference. Aside from the field house crowd, Channel 62 televised the game in the Kansas City area. The Kansas marketing department, in coordination with corporate sponsor Payless Shoe Source, distributed free tickets to the public. Senior center Lisa Tate's two free throws with 22 seconds left put the Jayhawks up 59-54. However, Colorado junior guard Shelley Sheetz hit a three-pointer to pull the Buffaloes to within two. "When I go into the locker room I have to get them motivated from time to time," Washington said. "My job this afternoon was to try to get them down." "When she hit that NBA three I started to get a little worried," Kansas senior guard Ericka Muncy said. work hard. Using an aggressive defense, the Jayhawks accomplished both objectives by pressuring Colorado into turning the ball over 20 times, 12 of which where Kansas steals. his game was on, hitting a lot of fade-aways, and that helped them out a lot." Aycock also missed the front end of the one-and-one, but Colorado was unable to get a final shot off, as an errant last second pass sailed out of bounds. Muncy missed the front end of a one and one with 11 seconds left. Colorado had the tying possession in their grasp, but Aycock came up with one of her five steals. The Jayhawks opened the game with a 8-1 burst. However, Colorado stormed back to take a 10-9 lead when Sheetz hit a three-pointer. Kansas then went on a run of its own, scoring seven straight points to take a 16-10 lead, a lead they never relinquished. Sheetz, although finishing with 14 points and four assists, was five for 18 from the floor. She entered the game leading the conference in three-point field goal percentage at 49.2. Out of 11 Webster and Scott were teammates last summer during the World University Games in Buffalo, N.Y. three-point attempts she made only four. She said that Kansas guards Muncy and Tameke Dixon were able to disrupt Colorado's offense. Washington said that a big part of the defensive game plan was to deny the passing lanes and to make preseason All-American point guard Sheetz "I have been guarded by quicker, taller guards with longer wingspans before, but they put a lot of pressure on me," Sheetz said. "They're great players." Sampson said that the game came down to desire. Kansas sophomore guard Charisse "We just never give up." Sampson said. "We wanted it more, especially in the last three or four minutes. For us to beat the number four ranked team in the country is just amazing." Aycock and Dixon led the Jayhawks with 13 points each. Aycock also had two assists, two blocks, and a team "I knew Richard is a tough guy and a good competitor," Webster said. Kansas 94. Oklahoma 84 Player fgm/tga ftm/tta tp Minor 4-13 0-0 10 Webster 13-25 3-4 30 Conley 5-11 5-8 15 Lewis 1-4 0-0 2 Alexander 2-3 1-5 6 Ontjes 1-3 0-0 2 Yanesh 0-2 0-0 0 Curry 7-18 2-2 19 Mayden 0-0 0-0 84 Totals 33-79 11-19 04 Halftime Kansas 7,49 Oklahoma 16-3 point goals Oklahoma 7-20 (Minor 2,5) Webster 1,1-Alexander 1,2-Curry 3-10, Lewis 0,1) Kansas 6-18(Richey 2,4 Pearson 1,2) Gurley 1,Vaughn 0,1, Woodberry 2-6) Robbins Oklahoma 4 (Minor 1,0) Kansas 5 (Ostertag 1,4) Aeslain Oklahoma 26 (Lewis 10) Kansas 17 (Rayford, Woodberry 4) Total fouls Oklahoma 25, Kansas 16 Attendance 15,800 KANSAS (16-1, 1-0) Player Vaughn 1-3 fgm/fga ftm/taa tp Woodberry 8-16 8-12 26 Richey 4-9 1-2 11 Scott 5-14 3-8 13 Ostertag 4-11 3-4 11 Pollard 3-4 2-2 8 Rayford 0-1 1-2 1 Gurley 1-4 0-0 3 Pearson 4-6 1-1 10 Proud 0-0 2-2 2 Williams 1-4 0-0 2 Whatley 1-1 0-0 2 Weichbrodt 0-0 2-2 2 Totals 32-73 24-38 94 Kansas 59, Colorado 57 COLORADO(12-2.1-1) KANSAS(11-1.2-0) Player fgm/fga ftm/fta tp Weathers 0-4 0-1 0 Scholz 5-11 1-2 11 Lang 6-13 5-6 17 Palmer 1-4 4-4 7 Sheetz 5-18 0-1 14 Thomas 1-9 0-0 2 Scott 0-4 0-0 0 Whitt 1-3 2-2 5 Slokar 0-1 0-0 0 Totals **21-71** **10-14** **57** Ackerson (11-2, 2-7) Aycock 6-17 1.3 13 Trapp 2-7 1.2 5 Tate 1-6 2.3 4 Sampson 1-4 4.4 6 Muncy 4-6 0.1 8 Dixon 4-11 4.6 13 Slatter 3-8 1.3 7 Halbleib 0-4 2.3 2 Canada 0-0 0.0 0 Leathers 0-0 1.2 0 Totals 24-59 13-21 63 Hairtime 34-28 (Kansas) 3-point goals Colorado 15-9 (Sheett 4-11, Palmer 1-3, Thomas 0-3, Lang 0-1, Weatheris 0-1), Kansas 1-3, Dixon 1-2; Sampson 0-1). Rebounds Colorado 47 (Lang 1,1) Wide Receivers (Scholz 2) (Scholz 2), Kansas 13 (Sampion 6) Total fouls Colorado 23 Kansas 19 Attendance 13,532 high five steals. She finished the game with 1,000 career points. Colorado coach Ceal Barry downplayed the importance of the national rankings entering the game. "Everybody outside the Big Eight votes for us," Barry said. "Everybody inside the Big Eight votes for Kansas. I think it is well known that Kansas has some players." JAYHAWK SPIRIT --- JAYHAWK SPIRIT 20% OFF storewide sale Check out our back-to-school sale! Some items in stock include: KU Gifts T-Shirts Jackets Final 4 Shirts Sweatshirts Fitted Caps Offer good only from Jan. 11 - 18 935 Massachusetts Open Mon.-Sat. 9:30-5:30 Thu. until 8:00; Sun. Noon-5:00 Six Flags Over Mid-America 1994 AUDITION TOUR JANUARY 16 ADAMS MARK HOTEL 1-70 EAST & BLUE RIDGE CUTOFF KAMSAS CITY, MO JANUARY 22 & 23 REGAL RIVERFront HOTEL 200 SOUTH 4TH ST. LOUIS, MO JANUARY 29TH HOLIDAY INN HWY 61 & MARKET ST. HNBALIAN, MOB JANUARY 30TH SHERATON INN & CONFERENCE CENTER 3333 S. GLENSTONE SPRINGFIELD, MO - Open call for dancers, singers and actors will take place from 9 a.m. - 1 p.m. at every audition location. No registration after 1 p.m. Singers should bring sheet music in their key (one up-tempo, one ballad) and be prepared for a movement evaluation. Actors and actresses should have a two-minute, comedic monologue prepared and bring sheet music in their key. Dancers should come prepared for a movement evaluation and bring sheet music in their key. All callbacks will take place the same day. No a cappella auditions or tap/recorded accompaniment, please. Applications and interviews for technical positions will also be available. For More Info, call (314) 938-5300 Ext. 260, 364, or 370 Six Flags is an Equal Opportunity Employer © 1993 SIX FLAGS IN THE PARKS, INC. OPEN UNTIL 7 PM TODAY THROUGH THURSDAY KU KU BOOKSTORES Aksha, Bkla 804-6440 Nurse Ina, Bkla 804-6477 Textbooks available at both Union locations KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store that offers rebates to KU students 12 Tuesday, January 11. 1994 --- UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN USE KANSAN CLASSIFIED spring air twin mattress 6995 Bobbis Bedroom 842-7378 DICKINSON THEATRE Dickinson 6 541 8000 2,239 South Awns 5r. Grunge Old Man PG-13:40-12; 7:20;9:50 Wayne's World II PG-13:40-12; 7:25;9:40 Beethoven's 2nd PG-4:15*1; 7:15;9:35 Sister Act II PG-4:25*1; 7:10;9:45 Ghost in The Machine R*4:05*1; 7:00;9:45 American Cynic R*4:30*1; 7:05;9:40 story idea? 864-4810 Prime Time Show List of Meeting Dobby Senior Citizen Anime Anytime Sadier Stereo story idea? 804-4610 Crown Cinema BEFORE 4 PM ADULTS $3.00 UNDER 12 TERMED. SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00 VARSITY (1) 7:30 AM, (2) 9:30 AM 681-5199 Pelican Brief PG-13 8:00, 8:00 HILLCREST 925 KOWA 681-5199 Air Up There PG 5:00, 7:30, 8:30 Heaven and Earth R 5:00, 8:00 Remains of the Day PG 5:00, 8:00 Tombstone R 4:50, 7:15, 8:45 Mrs. Dougfire PG-13 7:15, 8:45 Rudy PG 5:00, 7:30, 8:45 CINEMA TWIN (1) (DOWA 821-519) $1.25 Cool Runnings PG 5:00, 7:30 Robo Cop 3 PG-13 9:45 SHOW TIMES FOR DAY ONLY Jayhawk Bookstore "Your Book Professionalate 'At the top of Haternell Hmz: Hr 7-8 M-T, 8-9 Fri, 8-9 Sat, 12-4 Sun." *Note:* Put your hair in our hands. A Cut Above Mall's Shopping Center 711 W.23rd 842-1144 ULTIMATE TAN Get that sunny beach feelin' How to rid the Winter Whites. The Ultimate Tan solution: le week Super Bed Special; 3 Tans for $5 only! In one of our 8 New 36 Bulb Double Facial Beds - Free Facial beds - Largest Salon in Lawrence with 16 Wolff System Beds - Professionally serving Lawrence for 6 years 49 Iowa Suite O Lawrence, KS • 842-494 (Just south of Molly McGees) 2449 Iowa Suite O Lawrence, KS·842-4949 (Just south of Molly McGees) Heather Lofflin / KANSAN WE HONOR KANSAN AIA Erik Jorgensen, Lodi, Calif., freshman, swims laps during team practice at Robinson Center. Monday morning's practice will prepare the team for the next swim meet against Minnesota and Arkansas on Jan. 15 at home. Confident swim teams look to next competition By Andrew Gliman Kansan sportswriter A top-20 ranking in both men's and women's swimming would lead some teams' to contentment. This is not the case with the KU swimming team. "Our kids deserve respect," said coach Gary Kempf. "I think they're underrated." Both the men's and the women's teams are currently ranked 17th nationally, but the team views the ranking in a different light. Senior Krista Cordsen said she thought the rating did not reflect the team's abilities. "It doesn't mean much, but we know we're better." Cordsen said. "Seventeenth is below where we should be," said Dave Lewis, a senior from who specializes in freestyle and breast stroke The Jayhawks will test their national ranking this weekend when they play host to a dual meet. The women's team will face Arkansas, and the men will take on Minnesota. "Minnesota is one of the top-ranked teams in the country," Kemp said. "They won the Minnesota Invitation. They're always excellent, but I think we can swim with them. Arkansas will put up a great meet. Coach Martin Smith always does a great job." The Kansas women's team finished second, and the men finished fourth at Minnesota. Cordsen swam a season's best 4:27:08 in the 400-meter individual medley at the invitational. Lewis swam a 1:05 in the 100-meter breast stroke and recorded his best time of the year. "We're a little concerned with our past performances," Lewis said. "But when you look at the meet event by event you realize we have a chance. We know we have what it takes." Cordsen said the women's team had little difficulty with Arkansas in the past, but she added that it would be good to be back in competition again. With the heart of the schedule still ahead, the Jayhawks are focusing on Big Eight Conference competition. The Jayhawks are the two-time defending conference champions on the women's side. The men's team finished second in the conference last season behind Nebraska. "Our goal is to obviously win the Big Eight," Cordsen said. "Last year we were hoping to win it. This year we know we will." The men's team has equally high hopes. "We're very excited about the Big Eight," Lewis said. "Nebraska is our only competition. Missouri is a lot better, but they're below our level. Iowa State has talent, but they don't have the depth we have." Kansas defeated Missouri earlier this season and will face both Nebraska and Iowa State in dual meets before the Big Eight championships in February. The women's team lost a key contributor when sophomore Katie Chapeau, who was an All-American freestyle as a freshman, left the team and returned to her home in Omaha, Neb., in December. "She was struggling and was not happy with how she was performing," Kemp said. "There was some frustration on her part." "We'll miss her," Cordsen said. "But she's not irreplaceable. We have others who can step up, like Kristen Carlson. We're prepared. "I think people are continuing their excellence. Our team goal is to get as many people qualified for nationals as possible." UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP Prescription Pad 1116 West $ 23^{\mathrm{rd}} $ st. 749-5206 Dr. Mike Symptoms: Shortness of cash, low school spirit, depleted school supplies and little energy. Prescription: A heavy dose of used books to keep your cash flow in check. Plenty of school supplies to replenish your thirst for learning. Ample amounts of Jayhawk clothing & gifts. Take: ake: Plenty of books priced so low that your wallet will survive as well. School supplies so that you aren't subject to mid-semester withdrawal. Jayhawk apparel for your sagging school spirit. And a short trip to University Book Shop, where you'll find everything you need to get back into shape for this semester. 25% less than new books USED BOOKS Come see me at the University Book Shop for great Back to School Savings! Dr. Mike SPORTS EMPORIUM & FUNDRINKERY JOX Choose from over 15 appetizers, all under $3.95. Super Bowl and Spring Break round trip airfare contests,ask for details. NTN Trivia, the newest game in town. ( ) Billiards, darts, and a big screen TV. Daily drink and shot specials. CHIEFS GAME SPECIAL 22 oz. Bud and Bud Light bottles $2.25 and daily food special. Sun, Jan 16. BRAINS& BRAWN PLAY THE MOST EXCITING LIVE TV COMPETITIONS IN HISTORY. TRIVLA A panel of experts developed the ultimate fun trivia contest that pits your skill and knowledge against other players here in our place and players all across the country. We Hold the Total Package 601 Kasold Suite D-102 QB1 QB1 For the first time in history, you can actually interact with live TV football games via satellite right here. Compete with other players here and nationally by anticipating live 865-4040 --- 4 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Tuesday, January 11, 1994 13 FURNITURE SALE Great selection of chairs,couches, lamps tables,and more to enhance your dorm room apartment,or house. SAVE SA SA THRIFT STORE 1818 Massachusetts Classified Directory 100s Announcements 105 Personal 110 Business Personal 120 Announcements 120 Entertainment 140 Lost and Found 200s Employment 205 Help Wanted 225 Professional Services Services 235 Typing Services Classified Policy The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, color, nationality, or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or 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, race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or disto perform custodial duties from 3 pm - 9 pm, M-F. This position will take place in a professional environment with a major Lawrence company. If interested please apply immediately. Manpower Temporary Services,211E $^8$.749-2800.EOE Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs housing advertised in this newspaper are available. I 100s Announcements 110 Business Personals 300s Merchandisu WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO Really Listen Call or drop by Headquarters We're here by we care. 841-2345 1419 Mass. We're always open DONALD G. STROLE TRAFFIC-DUI'S Fake ID's and alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters 400s Real Estate 405 Real Estate 430 Roommate Wanted Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey 16 East 13th 842-1133 Urgent Care (Additional Charge) Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm Sunday 8am-4:30pm - Kansan Classified: 864-4358 - WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500 Regular Clinic Hours Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm Saturday 8am-11:30am AIRLINE HOTLINE 841-7117 KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services 305 For Sale 340 Auto Sales 360 Miscellaneous 370 Want to Buy - Spring Break Packages BusCharters Pharmacy Hours Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm Saturday 8am-12pm Sunday 11am-3pm Job Interviews TRAVEL CENTER TRAVEL CENTER Southern Hills Center 1601 W.23rd.M-F9-5:30 Sat. 9:30-2 Located By Perkins Social Events Student Discounts LOWEST FARES 120 Announcements COMMUTERS. Self Serve Car Pool Exchange Main Lobby, Kansas Union L NEED A RIDE/RIDER Use the Self Serve Car Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union. TIME MANAGEMENT AND SUPPY SKILLS Workshop. Start the semester off right, get control of your time and your life. Wed, 11月 7; 5:00-8:30 PM Time Management! Presented by the Student Assistance Center. TUTORS: List your name with us. We refer students to you. Student Assistance Center, 132 Strong Street WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 133 Strong Hall. TIME MANAGEMENT AND STUDY SKILLS WORKSHOP Get control of your life FREE! Wednesday, Jan 12, 7:00-8:30 pm 330 Strong Hall Presented by the Student Assistance Center CASH-PLUS SCHOLARSHIP SEARCH SCHOLARSHIP OPPORTUNITIES! INTERNSHIP OPPORTUNITIES! GRANTS AND LOANS! CALL OR DROP BY FOR DETAILS 33 STRONG HALL 864-5439 Hobby Town USA is looking for responsible people to help in our new Lawrence franchise store; PT/FT Apply by writing to H.T.U., P.O. Box 11433, Leawood, KS 80570-1633. UNIVERSITY SCHOLARSHIP CENTER 140 Lost & Found I found a ketter in Carlos D' Kelly's parking lot. Call me at 749-4872. 200s Employment Men and Women ACADEMIC AIDE POSITION AVAILABLE. (1) German Reader. Duties include: Reading textbooks and other materials for students who are blind or have reading disabilities. $4.25/hr. Applications available at the Student Assistance Center, 301 W. 77th St., New York, NY 10016; online deadline Tuesday, January 18, 1994. 5:00am *ATTENTION COLLEGE STUDENTS! Need financial help? School can be extremely expensive *hidden costs* ? We can help! Call Faith Mathews details about making BIG MONEY 24 hr on 1-800-327-9656 BabySitters needed for the spring semester for a research grant. $4.35/hour must have experience with children and infants and references. Apply at 4037 Dole. Adams Abuhlent Center is now hiring part-time bantu servers, day-time availability & professional attitude. Apply in person across from Kansas Union. 8645-4672. Office help needed. Student hrjy $45/hr, 20 microsoft skills. Resumes for job applications in 2003 on Engg Deg. Done by a U.S. Citizen. Evening and weekend CNA's needed to work with clients in their homes. Reliable transportation necessary. Call Sharon at Douglas County Visiting Nurses 843-3738. EARN CASH ON THE SPOT PART-TIME EVENING DELIVERY PERSON Must have own car. Apply in person Peking Restaurant (23rd and Iowa behind Hastings). 789- 0003 Manage PC and Mac local area networks, student computer lab; purchase/maintain hardware and software; train/consult staff. Required: Bachelor's degree; knowledge/experience with PC and MAC LANs; proficient PC/Mac user; communication skills. 850,000 annual, minimum. ForCOMMUNICATIONS, SPEAKING, ENGLISH Center; 204 Lippincott Hall; University of Kansas; Lawrence, KS 86045; Fax: (913) 864-4555; Phone: (913) 864-4560. Applications must be postmarked by January 18, 1994, EO/AA Employer. 205 Help Wanted Open interviews for asst. property manager to be employed at Bradford School Acute, 101 Colorado Ave., Bradford, NY 10507. Phillips 68 seeks cashiers to work the following shifts-5pm-6am; 12am-8am. Must be neat, clean and enjoy working with the public. Apply in person to Phillips 68 - 900 Iowa Cruise line, entry level, onboard positions available, great benefits. Summer or year round. (813) Computer Systems Specialist $15 Today $30 This week 816 W24th 749-5750 By donating your life saving blood plasma WALK-INS WELCOME! NABI Biomedical Center Tennis Jobs-Summa Children's Camps-Northeast-Men and women with good tennis background who can teach children to play tennis. Good salary, room & board, travel allowance. Women call or email (415) 233-7690 or (415) 2333-(617) 934-6536. Men call or write: Camp Wainton, 2255 Glades Ridge, Suite 400E, Boca Raton, FL-32431 (409) 979-5500. We will be on campus in the morning and 4pm on 6/3/18 in the Gread and Real estate lot. Student hourly office assistant assigned for 15 hours a week at a $40/hr. Must have computer and office experience and be a current KU student. Apply at 407 Dole. Deadline Jan. 18:50am. WALK-INS WELCOME! The Lawrence Bus Company is now taking applications for SAFE DRIVES. must have, clean driving record, and be familiar with driving. Up to 10 hrs/wr. if interested call 862-0544 The Princeton Review is seeking dynamic people with high standardized test scores to teach part-time. No teaching experience necessary, high test score on the SAT/GE/TGAT/LSAT or MOCAT a place on the New York City High School take place on Jan 13 in Kansas City. For more information, please call Rebecca at 800-865-7737. MANPOWER TEMPORARY SERVICES Mature individual desired to perform custodial duties from 3 pm - 9 pm, M-F. This position will take place in a professional Duke University Talent Identification Program For free consultation call Rick Frydman, Attorney 823 Missouri 843-4023 Resident Advisor and Teaching Assistant positions with TIP for a 3-week summer program at the University of Kansas. Programs also held at Duke, Davidson, and the Texas A&M and Duke Marine Labs. If you have a science background, ask about Scientific Field Studies. For information, write or call: Duke University TIP Box 90747 Durham, NC 27708-0747 (919) 684-3847 Apply by January 31, 1994 LiP EARN CASH OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense Apply by January 31, 1994. Hours: M-F9-6 816 W.24th Behind Laird Noller Ford 749-5750 $ ATTORNEY B. COLEPLE Attorney at Law General Practice Traffic Tickets, Misdemeanors, Landlord/Tenant 719 Massachusetts 749-5333 NABI The Quality Source Donor Center DV-1 green card Program Sponsored by the U.S. Immigration Department. Green cards provide permanent resident status, Citizens of almost all countries are allowed to take part. Students, tourists, anyone may apply. For info and more: New Era Legal Services, 2021 Slag St., Canoga Park CA 225 Professional Services Internet Made Easy $15 Today $30 This Week Plus a $3 Bonus By donating your blood plasma Walk-ins welcome Lawrence Tel; (818) 900-4435, Fax; (818) 900-6821 Research Assistance - MS/MLS information specialist available to assist with term papers, theses, dissertations, research projects. 818-4230. INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS Your Key to the Internet Voice 842-6699 Data 842-7744 Slip is Available Access KU and the Internet SEMESTER SPECIAL Call DATABANK 235 Typing Services Looking for a good type? *Papera, Applications, spreadsheets, Charts *Laminated with your proof's *Grammar and spelling free *18 years experience call Jack at Makin 'the Grade' 8053 300s Merchandise 305 For Sale Beds, desks, bookcases,chest of drawers. Everything But Ice 986 Mass. MacBook 20 SE, DYS 7. Excel, upgraded memory, 995/osb Gallib GBI-78M1841811 ask for MKR X Super single waterbed. Watten, maitress, heater and accessories. $125/wob. B32-8145 340 Auto Sales 86 Preslide. SI 110k Hwmi mP. Power saureo & wifi 48 Preslide. SI 430k options, 810 Call at Sens47 7080 MUST SELF 400s Real Estate meadowbrook COMPARE 405 For Rent - Convenience - Location - Apartment Size - Cost Per Month - Lifestyle (Sorry, No Pets) Surroundings M-F8-5:30 Sat 10-4 Now leasing for Spring! - "Dine Anytime" with - Front Door Bus Service we're making life easier! Weekly Maid Service OFFERS Dine Anytime will MASTERCRAFT EQUAL HOUSING Unlimited Seconds COMPLETELY FURNISHED 1-2-3-4 Bedroom Apartments Designed with you in mind! 842-4200 - Laundry and Vending Facilities SUBLEASES AVAILABLE Open Daily 9 A.M-5 P.M. HANOVER PLACE 841-1212*14th & Mass. REGENTS COURT - Free Utilities REGENTS COURT 749-0445 * 19th & Mass. SUNDANCE 841-5255 * 7th & Florida TANGLEWOOD 749-2415 * 10th & Arkansas CAMPUS PLACE 841-1429 * 1145 Louisiana ORCHARD CORNERS 749-4226 * 15th & Kasold 842-4455 NAISMITH Naismith Drive Available immediately! bdm apt, a1212 Ohio St, bwn downtown and campus. Close to GS-Corbin, no pets, $275 dep, plus electric. 841-1207 Available. A-birmingham. Call 841-1207 Campus Locations Newer 1, 2, and 3, available for August '94. Washer/dyer, dishwasher, microwave, private patio/balconies. Avoid the Reserve your place now! 811-649-600 or 749-1562. Leasing until the end July '94 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 500 square feet. Woods management 851-5195, Ask for a room. Studio apartment now available close to campus. Williams paid $455. 6 month lease available. 841-295-3100. http://www.studioapartment.com Nice, 1 bedroom, close to campus. Hard wood furniture. Free parking. Street parking. Day 74-281 Evenings: 92-307-5977 430 Roommate Wanted THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN a room for 3rd roommate for little room in it a room with near campus, *10* / 1 utilities, call: 749-2683. Now to schedule an ad: 2 female roommates desperately needed for a bathroom. WE HAVE TO MOVE! Call 841-7697 or WE HAVE TO MOVE! Call 841-7697 or Female roommate, comfortable 3 bedroom townhouse on bus route, $250 + util, no pets, no smokers. Available Jan 1, 749-2888 or 681-5808. Male roommate, comfortable 3 bedroom townhouse on bus route, $250 + util, no pets, no smokers. Available Jan 1, 749-2888 or 681-5808. 1 $ 2 share spacious house, completely furnished, walking distance campus, $350/month + utili- ties. 1 Female needed, spacious 2 bedroom apt. for spring sem. On bus route. $335 Ml. + 1/2 utility. As phone may be in billed in your MintCard or VISA card. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made. * in advance: 119 Stiffner Flat NSF w/ small dog needs a responsible NSF to share 2敏Rdnt for spring school. $10/mo. $25/mo. Wanted: Female roommate to share new large condo with 3 other female college students. Walking distance to campus. 6 month lease available. Rent $265/month. Call 749-8980 or (215) 384-8443. Stay by the Kansas State Buffalo 8 a.m. & 8 p.m. on Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on masterCard or Visa. You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansan offices. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. All that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before your expiration date. assumed rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of days the ad occupies). 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Rates new than new day Please print your ad one word per box. | 1X | 2-5X | 4-7X | 8-14X | 15-28X | 30+X | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 2.99 | 1.85 | 1.65 | .86 | .76 | .50 | | 1.99 | 1.15 | .80 | .79 | .65 | .45 | | 1.85 | 1.85 | .75 | .80 | .69 | .49 | | 1.75 | .90 | .66 | .80 | .69 | .45 | Classifications 165 personnel 118 business persons 129 announcements 130 entertaining 140 last & found 185 help needed 185 help needed 225 professional services 225 trainee services 865 for sale 340 put sales 380 miscellaneous 370 want to buy 485 for rent 433 roommate wasted Phone: 1 | | | | | | 2 | | | | | 3 | | | | | 4 | | | | | 5 | | | | | Name: _ ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAM POLICY Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print: Date ad begins:___ Total days in paper ___ Total ad cost:___ Classification:___ VISA Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □ Visa (Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansas) Furnish the following if you are charging your ad: Account number: Print exact name appearing on credit card: Expiration Date: MasterCard The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence. KS. 66045 THE FAR SIDE By GARY LARSON J.J. Professor Ferrington and his controversial theory that dinosaurs were actually the discarded "chicken" bones of giant, allen picnickers. 1 1 14 Tuesday January 11, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Chiefs take a break before rematch with Oilers The Associated Press KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Kansas City coach Marty Schottenheimer comes from the old school — you know the one: if your leg is broken, just rub some grass on it and get back in there. He could not understand all the fuss about the below-zero wind chill Saturday when his Chiefs pulled out an overtime victory against Pittsburgh in an AFC wild card game. With the victory, the Chiefs earned the right Sunday to go to Houston and face the Oilers in the second round. "It was a nice day out there," he said. "It was beautiful." Now it turns out that Schottenheimer is a softy at heart. His players didn't practice in pads the past two weeks. And he gave them both Sunday and Monday off ahead of what will be the biggest game of the Carl Peterson-Schottenheimer era in Kansas City. "Maybe I've been too overbearing in terms of the amount of work that we do," Schottenheimer said, "I'm a detail freak anyway. Maybe I try to put too much information into the minds of the players." Schottenheimer has taken the Chiefs to the playoffs four straight years now, but a victory Sunday It would avenge a 30-0 beating the Oilers administered in the second game of the season — a game Joe Montana missed because of injury. The Chiefs committed five turnovers during the game, including three interceptions by back-up quarterback David Krieg. would represent a significant step for the franchise. But more importantly, beating the Oilers would leave the Chiefs one game away from the Super Bowl. The Super Bowl has been the goal since Kansas City signed Joe Montana. Schottenheimer had Montana and Marcus Allen stand up during a team "I wanted to know for myself what it was like," said Schottenheimer, one of the NFL's most successful coaches, but one who has never played for it all. meeting last July and talk about what it was like to play in the Super Bowl. "I think we've got a number of players with playoff experience." he said. "I don't want to dump it all on Joe and Marcus. You would certainly want to draw from (the others) as you would from Joe and Marcus. "In terms of playoff experience, it's the teams that play and play well and cut down on their errors or at least manage their errors efficiently. The The margin was very slight in the home game against Pittsburgh. margin of difference between teams in the playoffs is not that great." Montana and the Chiefs played terribly in the first half and found themselves in a 17-7 hole. They did their part, though, in a weekend of great playoff games to forge a 24-24 tie on a 7-yard pass from Montana to Tim Barnett with 1:43 to play. A blocked punt by Keith Cash had put the Chiefs in position. Nick Lowery, the most accurate kicker in NFL history, missed a game-winning field goal in regulation but came back from 32 yards in overtime. It added up to deep anguish for the Steelers, who were the last team to make the playoffs by taking a hard-fought 16-9 victory from Cleveland in the last game of the season. The anguish could be seen on coach Bill Cowher's face. It could be heard in the voice of quarterback Neil O'Donnell, who played hurt most of the year. It could be felt by looking at the almost empty Steelers clubhouse. "I don't have any statement to make. You saw it." Cowher said. "We came to win a football game, not to play a close game," O'Donnell said. "It's tough. 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HAIR ZONE AT • BEAUTY • WAREHOUSE Rusk $20 OFF 12 hours a day, minimum, includes sale items BEAUTY WAREHOUSE Hours: M-F 9-8 Sat, 9-6 Sun. Noon-4 520 West 23rd 041-5885 Largest Beauty Supply Selection in the Midwest! Professional advice from professionals. OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK. VISIT OUR SALON FOR A NEW LOOK! BEAUTY WAREHOUSE & HAIRZONE S M "Juvenile age 1993" $200 OFF This business maximum, excludes sole owner. BEAUTY WAREHOUSE Hours: M-F 9-6 Sat, 9-6, Sun, Noon-4 523 West 23rd 541-5885 Red Lyon Tavern A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence 944 Mass. 832-8228 "Universal since 1993." HARBOR CENTER AT & BEAUTY WAREHOUSE Rusk MUSEUM 842-2922 M-F 7-6 SAT. 8-4 903 N. 2nd Street VISA MAIL OR CARD Don't Get Caught With Your Battery Down! Happy MAINTENANCE-FREE AUTO Ray-Ban DESIGNED BY BAUSCH & LOMB The world's finest sunglasses. Sunglasses @RAY-BAN.COM 928 Mass. 843-0611 The Etc. 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Our lower cost futon are foam core, not all cotton like most others available! vs. Premium Ice Cream 50¢ OFF Orchards Corners BLUE HERON Louisiana Purchase 23rd & 843-5500 Louisiana Purchase generic futons twin 95 full 120 queen 135 Half the Calories! 80% Less Fat! 33% More Protein! --- Plus, I Can't Believe It's Yogurt offers Nonfat and Sugar Free flavors that have No Fat or Cholesterol! a medium or large serving! I Can't Believe It's Yogurt! ® We Put A Smile On Your Taste 937 Mass. St. Lawrence, KS. (612) 841-9442 913 641-5445 LOVE SEA & SKY INSTITUTE FOR SONIC REVERBERATION STUDIES GARDEN Your Interplanetary Command Post for Sonic Pleasure *Vast selection of used CDs-buy, sell & trade 7 days a week *Space-age-store within-a-store;new alternative LPs, CDs, & tapes *T-shirts,posters + books *Fast, friendly special orders! 10-7 Mon-Fri 10-6 Sat 12-5 Sun Love Garden Sounds 936 1/2 Mass. St. (upstairs) 843-1551 2 "in the heart of downtown" HAVE A SONNY SEASON JAYHAWKS! Welcome Back KU students TOPEKA 232-6427 SONNY HILL SONNY CHEVROLET·OLDSMOBILE·GEO LAWRENCE (913)843-7700 3400 S. IOWA LAWRENCE,KS 66048 KANSAS CITY 831-9535 1 3. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SECTION TWO TUESDAY, JANUARY 11, 1994 MUJANA INITIATIVE Marc Greenberg, assistant professor of Slavic languages and literatures, recently returned from a six-month stay in Slovenia. Jim Schultz, owner of Hunters. 91.9 Massachusetts St., is closing his doors after three years of owning the business. He said that one of the reasons the store was closing was increased competition from the two Lawrence outlet malls. KU professor sees changes in Slovenia Slovenia declared its independence from Yugoslavia on June 25, 1991, after a four-day military occupation by the Yugoslav People's Army. It has maintained peace since then, but two of its neighbors, Bosnia-Herzegovina and Serbia, are involved in a civil war. Marc Greenberg, assistant professor of Slavic languages and literature, has visited Slovenia several times over the past ten years. His wife, Marta, was born in Slovenia. This last trip was the first time he visited the country since it became an independent nation. Changes in the language were not the only differences Greenberg had a chance to study during his trip abroad. By Susan White Kansan staff writer Greenberg's main purpose for the trip was to do research at the Slovene Academy of Arts and Sciences in Ljubljana for a book he is writing about Slavic dialects. He will use data collected from the academy's dialect archives to reconstruct the changes the Slovene language has undergone from the medieval period to the present. Media images of civil war in the former Yugoslavia often dominate views of that region, but a KU professor saw a different perspective during a recent trip to Slovenia. "Society is changing. Suddenly you have people with a lot of very extreme opinions coming out of the woodwork," he said. "They were suppressed before. You didn't have racism before. Views were not expressed in newspapers. Now it is quite acceptable." "I didn't expect there would be so much of it," he said. "I knew it was there, but I didn't know that it was so vehement." The civil war in the former Yugoslavia has had less of an effect on the country, he said. Slovenia has remained neutral throughout the war, but about 30,000 Bosnian refugees live in the country. Instead of focusing on the war, the Slovenes have focused on building a democratic government and capitalist economy. This has led to several changes during the transformation process, Greenberg said. People have become concerned with making money and spend more time working and less with their friends and family than they had in the past. SALE "It was surprising how busy people were. They had no time to relax and enjoy life anymore," he said. "It is hard to go from a society where everything basically was taken care of for you. Health insurance, disability benefits and pensions were all paid for. They were living really well." The Slovenes now must make sure they can provide for the basic needs of their families because the government no longer takes care of everything, Greenberg said. INSIDE Merchants evaluate mall's sway SRS Opinions are mixed about Tanger's effect Since last May, the Douglas County unit of Social and Rehabilitative Services has increased its staff levels but still faces budget cuts. Page 3. By Cheryl Cadue Kansan staff writer Jim Schultz, owner of Hunters in downtown Lawrence, began his going-out-of-business sale Sunday. Hunters, 919 Massachusetts St., has sold clothes in Lawrence since 1984. But competition with area chain stores finally cut into Schultz's profits. Heather Welborn, an employee for The Wallet Works in the Riverfront Plaza, said that she noticed more people buying higher priced items and that the store was busy through Christmas. Caring costs "There is not another downtown in the whole Midwest that hasn't been decimated by strip centers, shopping centers and the addition of good highways that enable people to drive to other towns," Schultz said. Schultz, who has owned Hunters for three years, said his profit shrank slightly from last year's Christmas because competing with new stores and the Tanger Factory Outlet Center, 1035 North Third St., has meant cutting prices and spending more money on advertising. But Melissa Padilla, assistant manager for Bass Shoe Factory in the Riverfront Plaza, said the new mall might have hurt business in the old mall. shoppers away from the downtown shopping areas. The impact of the Lawrence Riverfront Plaza, 1 Riverfront Plaza, which opened in 1990, and Tanger, which opened in November 1993, had concerned downtown merchants when plans for the centers were announced. They worried the malls would draw business from downtown. In other cities across the nation, malls have drawn "When the Riverfront opened, it hurt us for about a year," Schultz said. "When the newness of that mall wore off, we even started getting people from Topeka." "I know a lot of people go downtown because of the unique shops, though I think parking might be a problem," Welborn said. "According to the merchants I've talked with, a greater number of people are shopping downtown Lawrence," Moody said. But Linda Lester, owner of The ETC Shop, 928 Massachusetts St., said that the Riverfront Plaza had not affected downtown Lawrence and that she did not expect Tanger to hurt downtown businesses. Lester said mall management and downtown businesses had developed a good relationship. "It's a different type of person that shops at the mall than downtown Lawrence," Lester said. "Downtown Lawrence is unique, different and unusual, and people do come from out of town to shop." Bob Moody, city commissioner, said the relationship between downtown merchants and the outlet stores had been very good so far. "We had heavy traffic all month, but I think our percentage might have been higher if not for the Tanger Outlet," she said. POLICE 911 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS POLICE Officer training John Gamble/KANSAN Ron Anderson, Saline County Sheriff's Department, left, backs slowly toward two police cars while Michael Terry, McPherson Police Department, right, and other officers cover Anderson's car. Anderson was playing a felon during a simulation at the University of Kansas Law Enforcement Training Center south of Hutchinson. The officers were part of the 128th graduating class from the academy, which trains all police officers in Kansas. See story, Page 3. The man in the driver's seat KU graduate Robert Eaton described as a "nuts and bolts" guy, rolls up his sleeves and leads Chrysler through a new era in Detroit as Lee Iacocca's successor as chairman and chief executive By Brian James Kansan staff writer chiet executive officer. In the spring of 1992, Chrysler Corp.'s board of directors took that advice one step further. In a surprise move, it hired Robert Eaton to replace the 68-year-old Iacocca, who was stepping down after 14 years as the head of the Big Three automaker Throughout the 1980s, the cigar chomping, former Chrysler chairman Lie Iacocca told television viewers, "If you can find a better car, buy it." Eaton, who graduated from the University of Kansas in 1963 with a mechanical engineering degree, took the wheel at Chrysler as chairman and chief executive officer in January 1993. Many close to the auto industry say that Eaton has been a driving force in helping Chrysler — and Detroit, for that matter — rebound from a rocky past. "Having the chance to lead Chrysler at this point in time has to be the best job in the whole auto industry, period," Paton said. Iacocca repeatedly has asserted that Eaton was the right man for the job. ★ "in my book, Bob Eaton has everything it takes to continue the moment A PROFILE OF Bob Eaton tum we have started at Chrysler and to build an even stronger company for the future," Iacocca said in March 1992 at the press conference announcing Eaton's appointment. But make no mistake about it: Chrysler was not searching for another Jacococe — a celebrity representative and chairman who appeared in advertising campaigns and became a household name. Chrysler's board members wanted a "nuts-and-bolts guy," someone who could relate to the production and manufacturing end of the business. They wanted someone who could get under the hood and work. They wanted Bob Eaton. Eaton, 53, is not flamboyant. He's not Mr. Rock n' Roll, as one industry analyst noted. And Eaton shies away from any thought of becoming a polished pitchman like the telegenic lacoca. "I doubt I'd have the appeal" to emulate a camera on camera, Eaton said. But Eaton is a giant in his own right. Recruited from General Motors Europe, where he was president, Eaton knows the car business. He considers his versatility and experience two of his greatest strengths. "With the exception of finance and sales, I've been in essentially every part of the business," he said. Car curiosity Born in 1940 in Buena Vista, Colo., Eaton moved with his family at age 4 to Arkansas City, Kan., a small town of about 12,000 people near the Oklahoma border. Eaton was tinkering with engines by the time he was 9 years old. As a junior high student in the early '50s, he dismantled a 1935 Ford, and in the course of three to four years he fixed or replaced every significant part. "I learned a lot when I was your age." Eaton said during a speech in May at the Arkansas City High School Commencement. "But if I'd quit learning then, I probably wouldn't be able to change the oil filter on a car today." Eaton's interests in engineering mechanics and problem-solving led him to the University, where he studied engineering, eventually earning a Bachelor of Science in mechanical engineering in 1963. He remembers KU professors George Forman and Robert Holnitz as among his most influential mentors. George Forman, professor emeritus of mechanical engineering, recalls Eaton as a strong "B" student. "Bob was a good student, very likable, personable. He had a strong grasp of engineering." Forman said. Robert Umholtz, associate professor of mechanical engineering, said that Eaton had earned A minuses in two engineering courses he had taught in 1961 and 1962. Eaton said he had gained more from Umholt than solid grades. "I had a particular problem in one of Umholtz's classes, and he restored my confidence in myself," Eaton said. "That was crucial." Forman remembers that Eaton was a respected and talented individual. a respected and talented individual. "Bob had good judgment, not only with school, but with leadership decisions." Forman said. Eaton served as vice president of the Engineering Student Council, as president of two professional groups 2. > See CHRYSLER, Page 9. 2 Tuesday, January 11, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Welfare officials cling to hope amid scrutiny By David Stewart Kansan staff writer Editor's note: A series of articles published in the University Daily Kansan last May discussed problems in the Douglas County unit of Social and Rehabilitative Services. The Kansan also outlined how the growing needs of SRS clients for social services had outpaced the department's budget, which is the second largest expense to the state behind education. This article looks at the some of the changes since then: increased staff levels, a greater awareness of SRS problems in the legislature and the possibility of future budget cuts in the program. The name of the child, "Bobby," has been changed. Against a world of broken homes and families torn apart, Marge Kellner and her husband, Dennis, have fought quietly to make a difference. Having taken more than 50 foster children into their home during the past five years, the Kellners have worked on the front lines for SRS. With the return of their foster son Bobby from treatment for emotional adjustment problems at the Marillac Center in Kansas City, Kan., and the adoption of a 2 1/2-year-old daughter in September, the Kellners have helped to write two happy endings for the state's social welfare programs. "You just wish you could more to help the kids," Marge Kellner said. "We love them dearly. They're our lives. We want the very best for them that the taxpayers' money could give." The cost of caring Supporters of SRS said that while the duties of the department varied, all services of the department had one need in common: money. But success stories like the Kellners' have relied upon a system that has come under increased scrutiny by politicians and the public for its high cost and sometimes unclear results. Of SRS' budget for fiscal year 1994, which ends June 30, $104 million was allocated for youth and adult services. Those services include adoption, foster care and family counseling. Medical Services 55.8% Cash Assistance 12.9% Mental Health and Retardation Services 5.7% Employment Preparation Services 4.4% Administration 4.4% Income Support 3.7% Rehabilitation Services 2.9% Alcohol and Drug Abuse Services and Capital Improvements 1.8% TOTAL: $1.244 billion Beyond taking on more clients, SRS has come under increased pressure from some state representatives who had eyed this year's allocation of $1.2 billion to SRS as a prime target for budget cuts. HOGD SRS Since the articles ran in the Kansan seven months ago, the agencies and budgets of SRS have received increased attention, especially after the settlement of a lawsuit against SRS last July, said Chris Petr, assistant professor of social welfare. He said the lawsuit came from allegations that children in Kansas' foster care system had not received the proper attention. Details of the settlement were not available. "The settlement will improve the system, which had been improving anyway," Petr said. "SRS should be commended for making some serious attempts to improve areas of care." Source: Department of Social and Rehabilitative Services Matt Hood/KANBAN Robert Byers, supervisor of the Douglas County SRS agency overseeing child protection, family services and family support, said he received an increase in funds last summer for staffing. need and the cry that we don't have the staff to do all this," Byers said. "But it is enough staff?" No." "I think the legislature heard the Others have noticed the effects of increased staff levels along with a more concerned legislature. Among them is Tom McDonald, associate professor of social welfare and local director of Kids Count, a collection of indicators on child welfare nationwide. McDonald said he thought the Kids Count report he helped generate had a significant impact on the legislature. In order to better serve Kansas residents using SRS, politicians such as state Sen. Sandy Praeger, R-Lawrence, want to refocus the energies of SRS to curtail the need for social services. keeping them in the home when possible." Praecer said. State Rep. Barbara Ballard, D-Lawrence, said budget decisions affecting SRS tended to receive heavy criticism, especially from SRS clients. "I'd like to redirect our SRS programs from institutionalizing kids to "You have to cut someplace," Ballard said. "Whenever you have limited revenue and you have so many requests and only so much money, not all those requests could be made." Advertise in The Daily Kansan for Quick Results TOWN CITY FABRIC MACHINE If You Want To Read On, RECYCLE! So We'll Have Something To Print On. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Natural Fiber Clothing & Body Care 820-822 Mass. St., Lawrence, Kansas 66044 (913) 841-0100 --presents NATURAL WAY 32 Toppings to choose from!!! Rudy Tuesday 2 Pizzas EAT MORE TACOS. FINALLY A RESOLUTION YOU ACTUALLY WANT TO KEEP. 2 toppings 59c 79c 99c 59c 79c 59c 79c 99c TACO BELL CROSS THE BORDER Original ountry, hard shell Taco. Delicious, Juicy Soft Taco. Each for under a back. Only at Taco Bell. 99¢ BENCHWARMERS NEW --- New Attitude New Management New Staff New Drink Specials 21 New Imports. 2 New Pinball Machines 1601 W.23rd St. 841-9111 --presents THE VHARBOURLIGHTS Home of the original 32 on Jam Jar Monday...$1.00 Draws and $1.25 Premium Draws Tuesday...$2.50 Premium Jam Jars Wednesday...$1.50 Wells LIVE MUSIC ALL NIGHT Thursday...$1.50 Jam Jars Friday...$1.50 Miller Highlife Bottles Saturday...$2.75 Big Import Bottles Sunday~...$1.75 Margaritas and Bloody Marys Open 7 days a week noon until 2am 1031 Massachusetts BREAK THE FAST FOOD CHAIN HABIT Vista has 49¢ HAMBURGERS JUST DO IT 100% Pure Kansas Beef served with ketchup, mustard, pickles and onions. For just a little more, top off with cheese and bacon. Offer good for a limited time. Vista DRIVE IN 1527 W. 6th flint hills FOODS, INC. Quality Meat Products Since 1965 SAVOR FEED Jayhawk Bookstore TV The Etc. Shop TM "Your Book Professionals" "At the top of Nalsmith Hill" Hrs. 8-7 M-Th., 8-5 Fri., 9-5 Sat, 12-4 Bun. 843-3826 SERENGETI. DRIVERS Jayhawk Bookstore 928 Mass. Downtown Park in the rear University Forum Sexuality in the People's Republic of China Dr. Dennis Daily, Professor of Social Welfare at KU,will share his understanding of sexuality within the Chinese culture. In 1993, Daily traveled to China as a member of the first delegation of sexologists from outside the country to visit. He participated in the national conference on sexology in Chengdu. Wednesday, January 12, 12:00-1:00* *optional soup/salad served 11:30-12:00 for $3.50 reservations by 2 pm on Jan 11, call 843-4933. University forum sponsor: Presbyterian Church (USA), United Church of Christ, Church of the Brethren denominations, and First Presbyterian, West Side Presbyterian, Lone Star Church of the Brethren, and Plymouth Congregational church congregations in Lawrence, Kansas. Upcoming University Forum Topics Jan 19: Juvenile Crime and Gangs, Judge Jean Shepherd Jan 24: Religion Is More Than Being "Religious.", Father Vince Kirsche Feb 2: What Are Implications for the Community of Learning in a Context of Cheating? Dr. Robert Shelton Feb 9. "We Will Build Great Ships..." (Elements for successful 21st Century communities.) RoderickBremby . UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Tuesday, January 11, 1994 --- 3 KU POLICE HD Grande Victoria Lester Newey, Riley County Police Department, argues with Randall Ritchie, Hutchison Police Department, as he is cuffed. Newey, playing a felon, had a concealed handgun that Ritchie failed to find. Training to be the best THE BACK OF THE MAIN LINE IS ONLY VIEWED FROM THIS POINT. *Mary Poppins*, the "murdered" mannequin, lies on the floor as William Pushee, Riley County Police Department, takes notes on the scene. Blood covered Mary Poppins' lifeless body as she lay on her bedroom floor. But Officer William Pushee laughed as he wrote her name into his notebook. Were Mary Poppins a real person instead of a mannequin, and the blood real instead of fake, Pushee might have been more serious. Pushee and 55 other officers from various cities in Kansas participated in the University of Kansas Law Enforcement Center's criminal investigation simulation. The center annually trains approximately 300 police officers. All new officers must complete at least 320 hours of basic training during their eight weeks at the center. Most of the time is spent in the classroom learning the laws of the state, but during the last week of classes officers deal with realistic problems they might encounter in the field. In addition to the murder investigation, officers participate in a felony car-stop simulation. These are more dangerous than regular traffic stops because the officers deal with more serious criminals. The criminals are played by classmates who attempt to complicate the situation. Tricks some classmates use to hide handguns and handcuffs include placing them near their crotch or between their breasts, where police are less likely to search. The center was established in 1968 by the Kansas Legislature to standardize police officer training in the state. It is run by the Division of Continuing Education and is funded entirely by criminal court docket fees. Photos and story by John Gamble GENERAL INFORMATION: STATE OF CIRCUIT: NEW YORK CITY OF CIRCUIT: HAMPTON CIRCUIT ADDRESS: 127 WEST 46TH ST. CIRCUIT BLOCK: 3A CIRCUIT NUMBER: 1000-0001 ATTN.: JOHN S. MAYER DATE OF ACTING: JUNE 19, 2021 PROPERTY ID: 1234567890 Evidence from the murder scene must be properly tagged and accounted for at all times. If the officer loses track of a piece of evidence for even a short amount of time, a defense attorney can raise doubts about whether the evidence has been handled properly. AURORA & JUANA An officer puts down one of his classmates before placing him into his police car, which was once the property of the KU police. When KU police received their new cars, the University of Kansas Law Enforcement Training Center received the old ones for training purposes. MILITARY UNION William Pushee, Riley County Police Department, holds his hands above his head as David Cox, Republic County Sheriff's Department, practices taking him into custody. 4 Tuesday, January 11, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Brother, can you spare a dollar? The Kansan proudly introduces the best Collegiate Savings Card program in the Nation! SAMPLE CARD NOT VALID Valid Through July 31, 1994 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN C A R D - SAVE hundreds of dollars at 60 of your favorite Lawrence restaurants, bars and stores. - Exclusive offers for Kansan Card holders only. - Good all semester long--through July 31, 1994! - *UNLIMITED USAGE! No coupons required! - Your Kansan Card is good nationwide at merchants displaying the NCCS symbol: N NCC5 So, go ahead ... Spend a little,to save a lot. PICK UP YOUR KANSAN CARD AT THE FOLLOWING LOCATIONS: University Daily Kansan Business office; KU Bookstores, Kansas and Burge Unions; University Book Shop and Jayhawk Bookstore RESTAURANTS & BARS MERCHANDISE & PRODUCTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN CLOTHIERS Tuesday, January 11, 1994 5 The following offers are available exclusively through the Kansan Card program... SERVICES THESE DISCOUNTS AND OFFERS ARE GOOD THROUGH JULY 31, 1994! JUST SHOW YOUR CARD...USE AS OFTEN AS YOU LIKE! Britches Corner • 843 Massachusetts • 843-0454: Buy 1reg. price Tommy Hilfiger, get the 2nd of equal or lesser value at 20% off Cleopatra's Closet • 743 Massachusetts • 749-4664: 15% off everything in store (excluding sale items) The Etc Shop • 928 Massachusetts • 843-0611: 20% off Etc Shop brand sunglasses Harper's Fashions • 835 Massachusetts • 749-0626: Additional 20% off all regular price merchandise KU Bookstore • Kansas and Burge Unions • 864-4640: $5 off any gift or clothing purchase of $25 or more Natural Way Natural Fiber Clothing • 820 Massachusetts • 841-0100: 15% off all regular priced clothing Outfitters Clothing Co. • 740 Massachusetts • 843-3933: 15% off the regular price of guy's and gal's jeans Outfitters Clothing Co. • 740 Massachusetts • 843-3933: 10% off of tuxedo rental University Bookshop • 1116 W 23rd St • 749-5206: 20% off all clothing (except sale items) Weavers Department Store • 901 Massachusetts • 843-6360: 20% off all lingerie, hosiery, or intimate apparel American Bistro·701 Massachusetts·841-8349: 10% off any entree (limit one) American Bistro • 701 Massachusetts • 834-834-76 % of all entree (limit one) Bonanza • 2329 Iowa • 842-1200 All-you-can-eat-Freshasticks Food & Desert Bar for $2.99 Bonanza • 2329 Iowa • 842-1200: All-you-can-eat-Freshtasticks Food & Desert Bar for $2.99 Brantford • 2329 Ontario • 842-1200: Breadsticks Food & Desert Bar for $2.99 Dos Hombres VI·815 New Hampshire · 841-7286: Buy 1 menu item, get the 2nd for 1/2 price Fifi's Restaurant· 925 Iowa · 841-7226: 10% off any entree (limit one) Imperial Garden • 2907 W 6th St • 841-1688: 10% off any dinner entree (limit one) Dunkin Donuts * 521 W 23rd * 749-5015: 15% off any purchase lohnny's Tavern • 401 N 2nd St • 842-0377: Buy a cheeseburger w/ fries at reg. price, get the 2nd for $1 (Good Mon - Fri, 4pm to 9pm) Perkins Family Restaurant • 1711 W 23rd • 842-9040: $1.00 off any entree, anytime, 24 hours a day Pizza Shuttle • 1601 W 23rd • 842-1212: 1 carryout, 1 topping pizza w/ a lg. coke for $4.00 Pyramid Pizza • 507 W 14th St (under The Wheel) • 842-3232: $4 sm-$6 med-$8 lg-ea add topping 75¢ (Void w/ other offers) Shoney's Restaurant • 2412 Iowa • 843-3519: FREE salad bar w/ any purchase of a sandwich and fries Vista Drive In • 1527 W 6th St • 842-4311: FREE reg, French Fry w/purchase of a Vistaburger & drink The Athlete's Foot • 914 Massachusetts • 841-6966: $10 off a shoe purchase of $65 or more The Athlete's Foot • 914 Massachusetts • 841-6968. $10 on a shoe purchase of $85 Community Mercantile • 901 Mississippi • 843-8544. 15% off any coffee purchase Cycle Works · 1601 W23rd · 842-6363: FREE lock set w/ new bike purchase Francis Sporting Goods 731 Massachusetts 824/4191 15% off all Champion Sportwear Francis Sporting Goods • 731 Massachusetts • 843-4191: 15% off all Champion Sports Your Party: 1601 W 23rd, 740 R 245E. Pursue 2 greeting cards and get 1 FREE Englewood Florist • 939 Massachusetts • 841-2999: 3 FREE latex balloons with any purchase of $20 or more Englewood Florist • 721 Massachusetts • 841-2999: 30% off all Charming Spacescapes Level Kansas Union 884-3345 FREE shoe renting open bowling Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826: Get an extra 5% CASH back during Semester Buyback *K-452* by Loyal Park 103-684-3545. EREE shoe rental during open bowling. *Jawhowl* *Level 1-Kansas Union* *864-3545*. Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826: Save 10% on Computer Softwear EVERYDAY! wk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826: Blue Books for 10¢ Javhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826: 20% off Blank Computer Diskettes Junior's Farm • 924 1/2 Massachusetts • 842-3344: Buy 2 CD's at reg. price, get the 3rd (equal or lesser value) at 50% off Kansas Sports Club·837 Massachusetts·842-2992: 20% off KU sweatshirts Laser Lazer·865-0505: 20% Off Revised Paper Toner Cartridges (EFRF pick up and delivery) Laser Logic • 865-0505: 20% Off Recycled Laser Printer Toner Cartridges (FREE pick-up and delivery) Miracle Video · 1910 Haskell. 841-7504/910 N 2nd St. 841-8903: Rent 1 video, get 2nd FREE (Sun thru Thurs) Aracle Video • 1910 Haskell, 841-750-1605, 841-8503 Rent Video, get 2nd FREE (Sunthru Thai) Rentco USA • 1741 Massachusetts • 749-1605: 25% off all rentals Sports Fan-Attics *942 Massachusetts* *842-2323: 15% off everything in store (excluding sale items & leather jackets) Stereo Lane *2024 W. 23rd* *865-2677:* $10 off any purchase of $50 or more Stereo Lane·2024 W 23rd·865-2677:$10 off any purchase of $50 or more Union Technology Center • Level 3-Burge Union • 864-5690: 10% off any accessory (disks, diskholders, cables, paper, surge protectors, etc.) Vormehr Studio & Gallery •1 Riverfront Plaza, Ste 321 •749-0744: 15% off of framed prints of KU and sororities The Auto Medic · 3631 W 10th St · 842-0384: 20% off any service call B. C. Automotive • 510 N 6th St • 841-6955: 20% off tune ups and brake repair Copy Co • 1401 W23rd • 832-2679: 10% off all merchandise or services Enterprise Rent-A-Car * 3030 Iowa * 842-8040: 10% off car rental Fantastic Sam's • 2223 Louisiana • 749-1976: 15% off any regular price service or product NailTique • 2449 Iowa, Ste N • 832-2900: $3.00 off any service Planned Parenthood · 1420 Kasold-Orchards Corners · 832-0281: 25% off initial or annual visit plus 12 free condoms Sonny Hill Chevrolet-Geo-Oldsmobile 3400 S Iowa 843-7700: 10% off all parts and service Ultimate Ian *2494 Iowa, Ste 0 *842-4949: 1 FREE session with the purchase of a 9-session package ($5 Value) The University Delray Kaugaen *Stuffer Flint Hell *864-4358: 10% off any party classified advertisement The University Daily Kansan · 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall · 864-4358: 10% off any private party classified advertisement Terms and conditions. The following terms and conditions relate to cardholder's use of the University Daily Kansas Card (DRC) at participating Merchants (PM). 1) The DRC must be signed to be valid, is non-transferable, and PM may request identification, confiscating the Card if used by anyone other than the cardholder. Cardholder's signature or use of the DKC shall constitute cardholder's account to be bound by these terms and conditions of the Directory of PMs. 2) DKC Special Offers/Discouns. a) are not valid with other offers or special promotions of PMs; b) do not apply to taxation of purchase; c) apply only to cardholders reasonable personal purchase to the total purchase (as determined by PM); if non-DKC purchases are part of the total purchase, d) are only available at the listed addressed lines of PMs; e) may be discontinued, at PM's sole discretion, on Special event days/evenings; f) are valid only to DKC cards through July 31, 2014. 5) Discounts off "regular" price do not apply to what are commonly known as "Sale" or "Promotional" items. 4) Cardholder must be 21 or older to order purchase alcohol beverages in Kansas, and some PM may entry to persons under 21. 3) If an individual purchases alcohol beverages in Kansas, the purchaser is subject to certain restrictions associated with the University of Kansas CompuSource Marketing Group, or any individual, group, or entity involved in the marketing or sale of the DRC, liable for any damages caused as a result of PM's breach of contract or for any other damages caused by an action of a PM or any other group or individual associated with the DRC program. 7) Should misunderstanding occur in relation to any of the DRC program, all parties agree to binding arbitration by a member of the American Arbitration Association. B Jayhawk Bookstore 1420 Crescent Road · 843-3826 Kansas and Burge Unions • 864-4640 UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP 1116 W 23rd St·749-5206 KU KU BOOKSTORES THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall • 864-4358 } 6 Tuesday, January 11, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Former players are recognized during halftime reunion 'Hawks pay tribute to basketball history By Gerry Fey By Gerry Fey Kansan sportswriter The portraits of former Kansas basketball players and coaches hang on the wall outside the Allen Field House court as reminders of an age gone but not forgotten. Today's fans remember Kansas basketball history, and Saturday night a capacity crowd of 15,800 packed the field house for the Jayhawks' 91-59 victory against Southern Methodist and a lettermen's reunion. More than 120 former basketball players and coaches returned for the weekend's festivities, which included a banquet Friday night. Former players Paul Endacott and Clyde Lovellette and former coach Ted Owens received the biggest crowd reaction when they were introduced at halftime. Lovellette said he was pleasantly surprised with the crowd response. Seeing players from different decades was fun, he said. "You see a lot of ball players who have pictures on the wall," Lovellette said. "You see the older players, and you see newer players that played after you. It's a camaraderie with all the KU ball players whether you're in the '20s or in the '90s." Lovellette was a Jayhawk from 1950 to 1952. He led his team to an 80-63 victory against St. John's to win the 1952 NCAA national championship and is the second all-time leading scorer in Kansas history with 1,888 points and a 24.5 points a game average. Lovellette never played in the field house during his career—the Jayhawks used to play home games in Hoch Auditorium—but he said the fans were no different than the fans of yesterday. He said the game had changed, but the players had not. "When we played in front of 3,000 people it was just as rabid as if you had 16,000 here," he said. "They just make a little bit more noise now. "It's getting faster. There's more fast breaking rather than setting up. But I think we could adapt to the game today. Of course, if we were playing today in this era of basketball we'd be equipped." Endacott and his teammate Tusen Ackerman represented the 1920s. Endacott played at Kansas from 1921 to 1923. His senior season, the Jayhawks won a Missouri Valley Conference title, finished with a 17-1 record, and were recognized by the Helms Foundation as national champions. F. C. "Phog" Allen, then the Kansas coach, called Endacott the greatest player he had ever coached. Endacott said he wasn't able to attend as many games as he would have liked to. "It was impressive, sentimental you might say," Endacott said. "I left in 1923. That was 70 years ago. I get back for reunions and things like that." Kansas coach Roy Williams said the reunion showed the tradition behind Kansas basketball. The weekend's events and the reunion were Williams' idea. He said he wanted his current players to know about the history behind the Jayhawks. "Kids nowadays, when you say tradition, they don't know what that is," Williams said. "They think Julius Erving invented the game. I told everybody in the locker room, you should be proud to wear that 'K' on your shirts." Center Scott Pollard said he was starting to understand Kansas tradition. "We had a banquet last night, and that was a big deal," Pollard said. "As a freshman, I have a hard time realizing the tradition, but I kind of stepped into it. All these guys that played years and years ago come back and still care about us. It was amazing to see." Owens, who coached Kansas from 1964 to 1983, said Kansas basketball history was unmatched anywhere. "I know there are some terrific basketball schools, but it is a special, special place," he said. "It was terrific. Just being around so many people that have been such a part of Kansas basketball." 1923 player of the year attends reunion TIM HARRIS Douz Hesse / KANSAN 'Phog' Allen called Endacott the best By Gerry Fey Kansan sportswriter Endacott, 91, returned Friday to Lawrence for a lettermen's reunion as one of only two players from the 1920s era. The other was his teammate, 92-year-old Tusten Ackerman. Paul Endacott, Kansas basketball player from 1921 to 1923, was one of many former Kansas lettermen honored at the men's basketball game Saturday. It was 70 years ago when Paul Endacott ended his college basketball career at Kansas. At that point, then coach F.C. "Phog" Allen called him the best player he had ever coached. More than 120 former letter winners were honored Saturday during halftime of the Kansas-Southern Methodist game. Endacott is from Bartlesville, Okla., which makes it hard for him to attend Kansas basketball games. He said he gets back to Lawrence for reunions and special occasions. Kansas coach Roy Williams said he was happy to see Endacott and Ackerman at the game. "You look down there and see those players from 70 years ago," Williams said, "and they're still watching games. That's what sets this place apart." Endacott lettered in basketball from 1921 to 1923. He captured the 1923 team and led Kansas to a 17-1 overall record and 16-0 Missouri Valley Conference record. In a time before the NCAA existed, the 1922 and 1923 teams were recognized by the Helms Foundation as national champions. The foundation also named Endacott the National Player of the Year in 1923. Those teams were coached by Allen, who is known as "the father of basketball coaching." Allen coached Kansas from 1907 to 1909 and from 1919 to 1956 and compiled a 590-219 record. Endacott said Allen was the backbone of that success. Now, the banner spread across Allen Field House that says, "Pay heed all who enter, Beware of the Phog," pays tribute to him. "Of course he was a terrific guy," Endacott said. "He would play upon your emotions and get you worked up. You'd think the world was in your hands. He was a magician at keeping people in shape. He would get you up to play when it was almost impossible." In Endacott's era, players shot a leather ball into a peach basket. He said the team never thought about what the future of basketball would be like. "We never dreamed about the future much," he said. "We had so much on our hands at the time, we just didn't think about it." change in basketball. "They were commenting on how the only similarities between the game was a ball and there were five guys on the court," Pollard said. "They had ladders and peach baskets. They cut a hole in the bottom of it. About the only similarity was that the peach basket was 10 feet high." Endacott said there have been many changes and many improvements in the game. "It's speeded up," he said. "Lots of rules changes. Things have been done to interest the spectators." TAKE TO REDKEN SHADES Q EARN CASH $15 Today $30 This Week By donating your blood plasma Walk-ins welcome Lawrence Donor Center Hours: M-F9-6 Tat 10-3 NABI See our ad in the classified section "I'm Carol Wirthman, and I want to be your student loan officer! 'Service, service, service! That's the motto at Mercantile Bank of Lawrence. We originate and service your loan right here in Lawrence until you graduate. If you want service in addition to your PLUS, SLS, or Stafford loans, want Mercantile! 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Call now: 865-0278 MERCANTILE BANK 9th and Massachusetts Member FDIC Lender ID # 804609 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Tuesday, January 11, 1994 Jayhawks victorious in holiday hoops Overtime thriller against Indiana highlights break By Gerry Fey Kansan sportswriter Entering Big Eight conference play, Kansas is 15-1 and ranked No. 5 by the Associated Press. The Jayhawks won all of their games during winter break, including the Golden Harvest Classic and an overtime victory against Indiana. Kansas won 11 straight games heading into its match up against Oklahoma yesterday. DEC.11 KANSAS 98, ARKANSAS-LITTLE ROCK 63 Dec. 11: Senior forward Patrick Richey scored a team-high 20 points and five Kansas players scored in double figures while leading the Jayhawks past Arkansas-Little Rock. The Kansas defense held the Trojans to 31.3 percent from the field, while the Jayhaws shot a season-high 58.6 percent themselves. The evening was capped off in the second half when freshman guard Jacque Vaughn drove into the lane, faked a behind-the-back pass and laid the ball up over his head. He made the basket, was fouled and later made the free throw. Kansas coach Roy Williams said he did not mind Vaughn taking the shot as long as it went in. "I think he has a tremendous flair for the game," he said. "I liked it, but I don't have to do cartwheels over there." KANSAS 89. GEORGIA 79 DEC.18 Kansas defeated Georgia at the Georgia Dome, the site of this year's Super Bowl, and improved its record to 9-1. Seniors Richard Scott and Steve Woodberry led Kansas with 23 points each. Freshman guard Jacque Vaughn had a career high 17 points and freshman center Scott Pollard added 11 in the effort. Pollard contributed eight points in the first half, helping Kansas to a 41-34 halftime lead. Georgia never led, but the Jayhawks had to survive a run by the Bouldings in the second half. Kansas retaliated with a 17-5 run, making the score 75-59. In that time, Woodberry had six points and one assist. DEC.20 KANSAS 101. FURMAN 60 The Jayhawks scored more than 100 points for the first time this season and improved its record to 10-1. Kansas had six players score in double figures and Richard Scott led the team with 14 points. Kansas shot 61.9 percent from the field and 53.8 percent from threepoint range. Junior Greg Gurley made three of three three-pointers and finished with 13 points. Defensively, Kansas held the Paladins to a 34.4 field goal percentage. The Jayhawks also caused 22 turnovers. DEC. 22 KANSAS 86. INDIANA 83 DEC. 22 The finish was not the way Kansas coach Roy Williams wanted to end Kansas' 86-83 overtime victory against Indiana on Dec. 22, but freshman Jacue Vaughn's last-second ending wasn't bad. "Special people are put there to do special things, and Jacque is one of those people," Williams said. "It was a hugger. You hug everybody and don't care how sweaty they are." Williams said he wanted another overtime to battle against his adversary, Indiana coach Bobby Knight. He said he respected Knight and wanted the game to continue. But Vaughn would not let that happen. First, Vaughn passed to senior Steve Woodberry who nailed a jump shot, giving Kansas a 83-80 lead with 38.1 seconds left in overtime. Indiana responded with a threepointer by Hoosier standout Damon Bailey, over the outstretched arm of Woodberry, which left Kansas with 18.3 seconds. Bailey ended with 36 points, but he would not be the star of the night. KANSAS 34 TURMAN Kansas' last play was set up for Woodberry, but he could not get open on either wing. Vaughn ended up with the ball on the right side as the clock ran down. Guarded closely by Indiana guard Todd Leary, Vaughn headfaked and shot a three-pointer that went in cleanly to win the game. Indiana had 0.2 seconds left, but the inbounds play didn't work. After the game, Vaughn ran victory laps around the court, while senior Richard Scott walked on press row tables. Kansas sophomore Sean Pearson, who hit his own clutch basket late in overtime to give the Jayhawks an 81-80 lead, said he was supposed to pick the player guarding Woodberry on the last play. Woodberry had seven of Kansas' 31 overtime points. "Steve was going to come out either side," Pearson said. "Steve got in foul trouble early. We knew that somebody had to step up until Steve could do something." Williams said the experience will be good for Kansas and Vaughn. "What it does is it gives you confidence that you can execute down the stretch," he said. "He prayed and it was answered. What he did tonight, he will remember for the rest of his life." Doug Hesse / KANSAN Kansas forward Richard Scott goes up for two points against Furman. DEC.29-30 THE GOLDEN HARVEST CLASSIC KANSAS 73, RHODE ISLAND 60 KANSAS 84, SOUTHERN METHODIST 64 Kansas won the holiday tournament led by the inside scoring of senior forward Richard Scott, who scored 17 points in both games. Freshman guard Jacque Vaughn also scored 17 against SMU. Senior guard Steve Woodberry made 10 assists, and junior center Greg Ostertag pulled down 24 rebounds during the two-game tournament. Scott was named the Most Valuable Player of the tournament, and Vaughn also made the All-Tournament team. Junior guard Greg Gurley continued his solid shooting by making all three of his field goal attempts which included a three-pointer. Gurley is shooting 51 percent from the field after 45 games, the highest shooting percentage of any of the Kansas guards. KANSAS 90, NORTH CAROLINA ASHEVILLE 44 Every scholarship player scored for the Kansas, as the Jayhawks rolled over the Bulldogs. JAN. 5 Senior guard Steve Woodberry made seven of nine field goals and led the Jayhawks with 16 points. Junior guard Calvin Rayford scored eight points and tied a career high with eight assists. Sophomore guard Sean Pearson made two of four three-pointers for his six points, and senior center Greg Ostertag finished with 10 points and 10 rebounds. utes, and walk-on guards T.J. Whatley and Blake Weichbrodt played a season-high five minutes. No starter played more than 21 min- Weichbrot failed to score, but contributed an assist. Whatley, however, awed the crowd by driving the lane, making the lay-up, and drawing the foul. Whatley made the free throw to complete the three-point play. JAN. 8 KANSAS 91, SOUTHERN METHODIST 59 The Jayhawks won their 11th game in a row by holding the Mustangs to 33.3 percent shooting from the field. Kansas senior forward Richard Scott led all scorers with 22 points and junior center Greg Ostergt added 14 points and nine rebounds. Kansas defeated SMU a week earlier in the Golden Harvest Classic, 84-64. The Jayhawks turned up the defensive pressure at 14:53 in the first half. At that point, Kansas went on a 23-0 run and led 47-21 at halftime. Scott, normally a 48 percent free-throw shooter, was six for eight from the line. Sophomore Calvin Rayford, an 11 percent three-point shooter, was two for two from the three-point line. Rayford ended with 10 points and six assists. "We're exactly where we want to be," Kansas coach Roy Williams said. "We're better than we were at the beginning of December." SAVE UP TO 30% ON USED BOOKS FROM Jayhawk Bookstore only at the top of Naismith Hill! 1420 Crescent Road Lawrence, KS 66044 843-3826 OPEN UNTIL 8:00P.M. JANUARY 11, 12, & 13 FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE 30 MINUTES FREE STORE SIDE PARKING PLUS ADDITIONAL SAVINGS BELOW $10 BOOK BUCK UP TO $10.00 OFF $1.00 OFF EACH TEXTBOOK $10.00 OR MORE (MAXIMUM $10.00 OFF) Jayhawk Bookstore only at the top of Naismith Hill! NOT VALID WITH ANY OTHER COUPON OR OFFER. LIMIT ONE PER CUSTOMER. MUST BE PRESENTED AT TIME OF PURCHASE. EXPIRES JANUARY 13, 1994 SHARK'S SURF SHOP BACK TO OLD SKOOL SALE 30% Off Flannel Shirts (All Brands Included) 50% Off Selected Items Lawrence 701 W 9th (9th and Indiana) Kansas City Mission,KS Bannister Mall 6518 Martway SHARK'S SURF SHOP BACK TO OLD SKOOL SALE 30% Off Flannel Shirts (All Brands Included) 50% Off Selected Items Lawrence 701 W 9th (9th and Indiana) Kansas City Mission,KS Bannister Mall 6518 Martway Tuesday, January 11, 1994 --- UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Jayhawk Bookstore "Your Book Professionals" "At the top of Nalmith Hill" Hrs: 8-7 M-Th., 8-5 Fri, 9-8 Sat. 12-4 Sun. 643-3820 Total Look Care Coupon $3.00 off any service of$16.00 or more (expires 1/18/94) Good with Lisa, Carrie, Julie, Tara, and Jennifer total look! 842-5921 Lower the numbers and raise your odds. Controlling your blood pressure can reduce your chances of heart disease. Have your blood pressure checked. And keep it in check for life. American Heart Association WERE FIGHTING FOR YOUR LIFE 12 T Rent.A.Center Special rates for students special rates for students • furniture • electronics • computers $20 off first month's rent with this coupon expires: 2-19-94 842-8890 711 W. 23rd in The Malls RAC --- Fake ID Theft Tax Evasion Assault & Battery Criminal Trespass Legal Services for Students 148 Burge 864-5665 FREE ADVICE For All KU Students STUDENT SENATE Fake ID Theft Tax Evasion Assault & Battery Criminal Trespass DUI MIP Open Container GO TO JAIL STUDENT SENATE GO TO JAIL Looking for a place to live that offers a quiet, comfortable atmosphere,and much more? Well picture this... - Spacious 2 Bedroom Apartments - Knoxy Kitchens with ceiling fans - Large cities or Balconies - Laundry facilities in each building - Swimming Pool - Close to Campus on NU Bus Route VILLAGE SQUARE apartments Stop by or simply give us a call: 842-3040 850 Avalon #4 Lawrence, KS 66044 Stouffer residents set goals Even though the Stouffer Place apartments are closer to the intersection of 23rd and Iowa streets than to Strong Hall, residents have no reason to feel isolated from the University. By Frank McCleary Kansan staff writer The Stouffer Neighborhood Association, formed in 1979, gives the residents a chance to express their concerns to the department of student housing. The apartments were designed to house students with spouses and children. The association represents all residents of the apartments and is composed of a president, vice president, secretary, treasurer and six representatives. Bill Griffith, Wichita graduate student and Stouffer Neighborhood Association president for the 1993-94 school year, said the association's purpose was to improve the general living conditions of the complex and foster a community spirit. Past goals have included placing coin machines in the laundry rooms and having the neighborhood streets resurfaced. "The goals change from year to year," he said. The current renovation project is the largest issue now facing the association. Griffith said. Because Stouffer Neighborhood Association is a member of the Residential Programs Advisory Board — made up of representatives from all KU student housing organizations, faculty members, Student Senate and the housing department — Stouffer Place residents have a say on proposed rent increases. The residents have been opposed to any general rent increases in the past, Griffith said. He said a general increase would provide the money quicker and allow for renovations to be completed sooner. "The problem with renovations is, how do you pay for it?" Griffith said. "Do you increase rent for the entire complex and put it in a general fund, or do you do it on a building-to-building basis?" But that is not how all the residents see it, he said. "Here, the basic student interest is to pay the cheapest rent," Griffith said. "Some say, I'm going to live here for two years and pay the least amount of rent possible." But that attitude conflicts with Griffith's personal philosophy. "As a president, I want to do what is best for the community," he said. "When I leave here, I want to leave the complex as good as possible." Ken Stoner, director of student housing, said the family atmosphere of the association provided alternative insights to University issues. "They have a lot of different concerns and approaches to issues at the University." Stoner said. PENN STATE Tom Leininger/KANSAN Catch up on a little reading Lawrence mayor and University of Kansas professor, John Nalbandian, reads a paper during halftime of the Kansas women's basketball game. He was one of the 13,532 people attending Sunday's game at Allen Field House. No. 12 Kansas defeated No. 4 Colorado 59-57. Climbing Hill every day may keep doctor away Walking Mount Oread yields great benefits, few leg, foot injuries By Ashley Schultz Kansan staff writer Despite the many students who find themselves sucking air as they ascend it, Mount Oread helps more than it hurts. Really. Before his knee began aggravating him eight years ago, James Reeves, doctor of pediatric medicine, spent a lot of time at the University of Kansas running hills to train for long distance running. Reeves, who said he has been a member of the Lawrence Track Club for about 13 years, has encountered several patients at his Lawrence clinic who were injured on hills. "In training, I usually would stay away from KU except on days when I was specifically wanting to train hills, because you can't go anywhere on campus without getting on a hill." Reeves said. Downhill running is more severe on the legs than uphill, Reeves said. "Going up a hill, you have to be able to flex your foot up more, so a lot of times you may have people that may get a sore problem reticulum that way," Reeves said. Reticulum is a term that refers collectively to the ligaments on the inside of the ankle. "Going downhill, you're going to have more foot slap, or you're going to have to extend further in that direction," Reeves said. "So your muscles in the front of your leg sometimes get sore." Over rotation of the leg also concerns downhill runners. Moderate hill training worked into a regular exercise regimen provides excellent aerobic exercise, Reeves said, but hill training usually comes back to haunt anyone who overdoes it. Jane Whitley, Leawood sophomore, alternates Jayhawk Boulevard with other jogging routes. She has been jogging the Hill off and on for the last six months. She said that KU wouldn't be KU without the Hill. "If this school was not on a hill, it would be so stereotypical Kansas. I don't think that there would be as many people who would be attracted to the campus or going here in the first place," Whitley said. Walking the Hill also provides some cardiovascular benefit with almost no risk of injury, Reeves said. He said running shoes were ideal for walking the Hill because of their cushioning, traction and stability. Another consideration for students in their daily treks up the Hill is how much weight they carry with them and how they carry it. The more weight a person carries up the Hill, the more stress is placed on the legs, said Larry Magee, coordinator of the sports medicine clinic at Watkins Memorial Health Center. He said that wear and tear from climbing the Hill would show up in the ankles and knees. Though complaints related to the Hill are rare, Magee said that the most common injuries associated with hill climbing are tendinitis in the knee and ankle and inflammation of the knee joints. "The odds are the best way to avoid injury is to have the strength in your legs before you have to climb the Hill," Magee said. Walking up the Hill is useful in strengthening the leg muscles, Magee said. It is not as useful as an aerobic or cardiovascular exercise because it is widely believed that exercise must be maintained for 20 to 30 minutes for it to yield substantial benefits. TERRIFIC THUSDAY ONLY GOOD WITH THIS COUPON Buy 1 Large PYRAMID PIZZA With two toppings for only $7.99 and get 1 liter of pop for no buck$ no buck$ no buck$ TERRIFIC TUESDAY PYRAMID 842-3232 CARRY OUT, DELIVERY OF EAT AT THE WHEEL ONLY GOOD WITH THIS COUPON In case of emergency ...get help and get help quickly. 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LAWRENCE'S LARGEST BILLIARD PARLOR MORE TABLES LESS WAITING! 28 pool tables Two full bars Full service kitchen Daily food and drink specials • Billiard supplies • Private Parties Pinball Videos Foose Ball Electronic and steel darts Large screen TV's Jayhawker night (Wednesday) Gusto mugs (33.8 oz)...$1.50 Kansas' only 8 pocket right angle table 749-5039 OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 11:00 - 2:00 am 925 Iowa Hillcrest Shopping Center 8 8 4 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Tuesday. January 11. 1994 9 CHRYSLER: Eaton builds on his current success with a vision for the future Continued from Page 1. and as social director of Kappa Sigma fraternity. In the early 1960s, Eaton used his leadership qualities to persuade about 25 fraternity brothers and other KU students to work at a pea cannery in Athena, Ore. Eaton served as night manager at the cannery for several summers. Larry Forman, Forman's son and a biology professor at Rockford College in Rockford, Ill., was one of the students who accompanied Eaton in the summers of '61 and '62 to Oregon. Eaton was easygoing, Larry Forman said, but he knew how to get the most out of his workers. "I think I was impressed because even as a college student, this guy knew how to get the job done right," Forman said. Eaton said the experience had helped him grow up and grow out of a small-town environment and philosophy. One goal. one interview "So for someone from a small town, I guess I had a broader view of the world than most people might have had." "I came from a very narrow background," he said. "But on the other hand, by the time I got out of college, I had worked in Oregon, Washington and California. Throughout college, Eaton said, he was sure that he would go into the automotive business. So sure, in fact, that he didn't bother searching for jobs in other fields. "At that point in time, many companies came to KU and interviewed," he said. "Well, you know how a typical senior applies with a lot of companies and has a lot of interviews? I had only one. And that was with General Motors." Eaton signed with General Motors Corp. in 1963 as a college graduate-in-training with Chevrolet's engineering center in Warren, Mich. Eaton said he appreciated the willingness of the company to expand his role. "I suspect it is reasonable to say I demonstrated leadership capabilities fairly young," he said. "Within the first two years I was at GM, I was on design teams. I was in a laboratory — a proving ground of sorts — three manufacturing plants and an engineer's office. So very quickly I got a broad view and a fairly good understanding of the automotive business." The division managers at GM gave him increasing responsibilities early in his career. They trusted him. While he was a senior research engineer at Chevrolet not exactly a management position—he was in charge of a group of 15 people. "I had a lower title than they did, and I made a hell of a lot less than they did," Eaton said. "But there wasn't any question among any of the 15 who was running the show." When he began his career, Eaton said, he never imagined that he eventually would shift from engineering and designing to managing teams and entire divisions. "There was never a specific decision point — I'd say the shift was a natural progression," he said. "It was never a conscious thing. I don't believe." Eaton advanced quickly with GM. In 1982, for example, he was appointed vice president of GM's advanced engineering staff, not even a full year after being named Oldsmobile's director of quality and reliability. Six years later, Eaton became president of GM Europe, which is based in Zurich, Switzerland. There, Eaton would attract Chrysler's attention by turning record profits and revitalizing the European sale of cars produced by American companies. There are many similarities between today's Chrysler and the GM Europe that Eaton took over in June 1988. That division had fallen on hard times in the late '70s. Things were so bad that German schoolchildren derided its German-made Opel car, chanting a rhyme that went in part: "Every yoke driver an Opel." But when Eaton arrived, GM Europe was already on the mend — as some analysis thought about Chrysler when Eaton became CEO. Cars began to show profits, even the belittled Opel. During Eaton's tenure, GM Europe's market share grew to 11.7 percent in 1991, up 1.3 percent from 1988. And although GM's total losses in 1991 were about $4.5 billion, Eaton's GM Europe division racked up its fifth straight year of profits — netting $1.89 billion, a margin of 7 percent on sales of $25.4 billion. Iacocca, who led the effort to get Eaton out of Europe and to Chrysler's executive round table in Highland Park, Mich., credited Eaton with boosting GM Europe's auto Trimming expenses and developing cost-efficient lines of cars were crucial elements in Chrysler's decision to hire Eaton. "He fits in with the management and team philosophy that we've built here at Chrysler," Iacocca said at the press conference announcing Eaton's appointment. quality by 50 percent and making it Europe's lowest-cost producer. "I would always take all of the responsibility that anyone would give me," he said. Eaton, in looking back on his career, said that he had set and followed his own rules. "On the other hand, if you're focused on money and positions, you've not focused on anything that is of value to the company, and you probably won't progress." Job Eaton's rise up the corporate ladder March 15, 1992 — Chrysler vice chairman, chief operating officer and a member of the board of directors 1986 — Vice president of GM advanced engineering staff 1970 — Assistant chief engineer at Oldsmobile 1973 — Executive engineer of GM engineering staff 1963 — Graduated from KU and joined GM as a trainee in Chevrolet's Engineering Center in Warren, Mich. Jan. 1, 1983 — Chairman and chief executive officer of Chrysler Corp. June 1988 — President of General Motors Europe 1982 — Director of quality and reliability at Oldsmobile 1975 — Chief engineer of GM's Corporate Car Programs 1971 — Manager of GM Passenger Car Planning Source: Chrysler Corp. Joe Harder/KANBAI A life of intensity Eaton, like any CEO of a multinational corporation, is a busy man. A large amount of his time is spent traveling to receptions and auto shows or giving speeches. On days that he is in the office, "he's in at 7:30 and doesn't leave until 6:30 at night," said a Chrysler representative who arranges Eaton's interviews. "I travel way too much," Eaton said. "I would suggest — it's less than when I was in Europe — I'm averaging four to five flights a week." When asked if his travel took away from the time he spent at home in Bloomfield Hills, a Detroit suburb, with his wife, Connie, Eaton paused. "Yes and no. Some of that travel is out and back the same day, therefore I'm home in the evenings. On the other hand, I'm gone a few days per week." he said. But not all of that travel time is spent on business. Eaton, who admits having "more hobbies than time," is an outdoor enthusiast. He said he had three rules regarding the outdoors that he followed every year. "I try to ski one week, scuba dive one week and hunt for at least one week. "I've got far, far far too many hobbies. And I'm not terribly proficient at any of them." The impression Eaton gives, though, is that he plays as hard as he works. In mid-November, he spent a week deer hunting in northern Michigan and spent the next duck hunting in Canada. To Eaton, time out of the office is precious — so precious, in fact, that it doesn't matter what the destination, just so long as it's outdoors. Chrysler's decision to look outside the corporation for a new chairman was met with mixed reactions in the automotive industry, not to mention inside Chrysler. "I've made it a point not to cut back on any of my hobbies since I've been here," he said. Bittersweet success In recruiting Eaton, Chrysler board members skipped Brad Stertz, automotive editor of The Detroit News and a former reporter for The Wall Street Journal, said that Eaton's appointment might have bruised Lutz's ego for a short time. "I think it's safe to say Lutz was a little jealous," Stertz said. "But he probably thought it would have been pointless to fight it or leave. over President Robert Lutz, 61, considered the favorite to succeed Iacocca. "He only has three or four years to go until retirement anyway. He figured, 'What's the point?' Stertz said that Eaton had smoothed the transition by letting Lutz handle marketing projects, like the hot-selling "LH" sedan line, which includes the Chrysler Concorde, Dodge Intrepid and Eagle Vision. Chrysler sold 138,723 "LH" units in the first model year. Eaton, on the other hand, is more interested in manufacturing and production at Chrysler, Stertz said. "It's just like Eaton that, whenever he has questions or wants input on engine testing, for example, he'll roll up his shirt sleeves and go and check it out with the engineers," he said. Although recovery already was under way at Chrysler before Eaton arrived, thanks to several new lines of cars and cost-cutting measures that were in place, Chrysler still has a way to go. Stertz said. "Chrysler's problems, though, are suited to Eaton's talents: keep studying a system and learn how to do things efficiently while demanding quality." Stertz said. And Chrysler numbers have improved every quarter since Eaton took over. Chrysler earned about $1.8 billion last year and expects a $2.1 billion profit this year. Just two years ago, Chrysler reported a net loss of more than $665 million. Ford Motor Co. and GM also have reported rising sales, a stark contrast to even a year ago. Eaton, along with Ford's Alex Trotman and GM's Jack Smith, have brought a new ideology and a renewed vigor to Detroit. The December issue of Time magazine credited the CEOs with building a "different Detroit... "Modesty, humor (especially of the self-defating variety), open discussion, candor and team play are all in. Pomp, protocol, pretension, and paperwork are distinctly out." For too long, Eaton admits, American automakers have taken it on the chin from critics, consumers and a multitude of foreign competitors. That, Eaton said, is changing. "A nice fella" holds his ground In September, Eaton appeared on NBC's "Today" show and talked with host Bryant Gumbel about the Neon, Chrysler's new four-cylinder compact car that was on display in Germany at the Frankfurt Auto Show. Gumbel pressed Eaton three or four times for details about the vehicle price, which had not been released. Eaton wouldn't budge. Eaton's composure and resolve impressed Larry Forman. "You could see Bob getting a little defensive—not trying to be difficult—but rather, holding his ground, not letting anybody get the better of him," he said. "Bob is tough." But refusing to talk about issues in Detroit has seldom been the case, especially at Chrysler. Eaton, like lacocca, is vocal about issues that affect any Big Three automaker. Trade is a particularly significant issue to Eaton. Eaton considered the North American Free Trade Agreement a "watershed" and "a giant step in the right direction for America. "Chrysler will be adding jobs because of NAFTA. We will be exporting 12 to 15 times more vehicles next year, compared with 1993." He said that if a trade agreement could not be reached soon with Japan, the United States would have to impose unilateral sanctions to reduce the trade gap. "Sometimes you need to set those rules yourself," he said. Eaton gave the remarks during a speech to the International Relations Council in early December at a downtown Kansas City, Mo. hotel. Earlier in the evening he had attended a KU Engineering Society reception at a downtown club. Holly McQueen / KANSAN 2019 KU graduate Robert Eaton, chief executive officer or Chrysler, speaks to the Kappa Sigma fraternity. Eaton is a member of the fraternity. Carl Locke, dean of the School of Engineering, said Eaton had kept in touch with the school, at one time serving on the school's advisory board. He said Eton was responsible for GM's five-year, $200 000 grant to the school to create these computer labs. Locke said Eaton remained sincere and dedicated to keeping his ties with the school open. "He is just a high quality individual," Locke said. "You always like to see people following through with their talents, and to have the CEO of Chrysler be a graduate of KU is something special." Those close to Eaton were not surprised by his appointment as CEO of Chrysler nearly two years ago. Nor have they been surrised by the results. Steve Ross, a longtime friend and one of Eaton's fraternity brothers at the University, is one of those people. The time spent with Eaton in college was valuable, Ross said. "Bob always liked a challenge," said Ross, who lives in Arkansas City. His college buddy went "out of his way," Ross said, to make him feel special. "He would offer to double date with me since I didn't have a car," he said. "Other times he helped me with other stuff I might have been having trouble with. "Bob's just a nice fella." Ross also was one of the fraternity brothers who went with Eaton to work at the Oregon cannery. "To tell you the truth, I never expected a friend of mine who worked with me at a pea cannery would end up leading Chrysler," Ross said. "But then again, it doesn't surprise me. "Bob has been an influence on me because of who he is personally. And I'm sure that's the case with others around him. "The guy has such a great enthusiasm for life." Eaton, during his address in May at Arkansas City High, offered advice to the graduates who grew up in his home town. The words pride and responsibility were mentioned more than a dozen times in the speech. "Some people go through life ducking responsibilities," he said. "They think of them as burdens they want to avoid." "Others spend their lives actively seeking them. They can never get enough. They see each responsibility as a new opportunity. They want responsibility and accountability because they want the rewards that come with it. "They are usually called winners." --- CLASSIC SENSITIVE DIMENSIONAL ANCHUK CLASSIC SENSITIVE DIMENSIONAL ANCHTIC MAJESTIC Sponsored by THE ART PRINT & POSTER SALE TODAY thru SATURDAY, Jan. 15 Kansas Union Gallery/Level 4 Kansas Union 9-5 pm Mon. - FrL/10 - 4pm Sat. THE BIG JANUARY DISCOUNT SALE!!! RELATIVE ENDANGERED DREAD-LOCKED SEEDY COMMERCIAL ROBERT DOISNEAU SUAK THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS RELATIVE CRAFTSMAN DREAD-LOCKED MALENDA COMERCIAL M M SEEDS VHARNET LAKES The Etc. Shop 928 Mass. Downtown Park in the rear VHARNETT FRANCE Paradise Cafe & Bakery Paradise Cafe & Bakery Open Early Breakfast Specialties 728 Massachusetts • 842 5199 Lawrence's Newest COLLECTIBLE USED BOOK STORE 8500 Old Books VAGABOND BOOKMAN 1113 Mass 842-BOOK Hours : Mon-Sat 10-6 We buy and sell old hardback books WE'VE GOT IT ALL! POSTNET FORTAL & BUSINESS SERVICES We've Got R All At One Location - UPS Authorized - PYRUS Distribution - Priority Mail Collection - Personal & Business Packaging Supplies 2540 Iowa St., Suite J NE 141814 Fax Services (Sand) Receive 30hrs Notary Service Panoport Photos & Applications Pharmac (913) 865-3636 Fax: (913) 843-9905 - Next to Applebee's - 10 Tuesday, January 11, 1994 NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Women say job loss due to being straight The Associated Press NEW PORT RICHEY, Fla. — When the Late Show Night Club went gay, out went four female employees who were not. "It's the twist of all twists, a gay bar fireing straight women," said Todd Simmons, representative for a statewide gay rights group that has taken up their cause. "Sexual orientation has no bearing on your capacity to mix drinks or serve them," said Simmons, a leader of the Tampa-based Human Rights Task Force of Florida. "Discrimination is wrong whether it's directed against gays and lesbians or straights." Bar manager Lenny Credico said the crowd would be mostly gay men who would prefer having gay men serve them. The women said the lounge switched to a gay club two weeks before Christmas, and owner Audrey McGillivray told them they fired because they were not gay and would not fit in. Simmons helped steer the women to lawwer Kav Morgan. Morgan plans to file a complaint with the Florida Human Rights Commission and eventually take the case to court claiming sex discrimination on the behalf of Carolyn O'Neill, Kathy Shappell, Judy Whyte and Julie Meindersma. Such a case would be reminiscent of the strategy used by Ruth Bader Ginsburg, now a U.S. Supreme Court justice. In the 1970s, Ginsburg won many of her women's rights victories before the high court using male plaintiffs to attack gender-based stereotypes. Florida has no state law banning discrimination based on sexual orientation. Nor is there any prohibition in this city near the Gulf Coast, north of St. Petersburg. Two men employed at the classy downtown lounge were not let go. "It's a gender issue — we cannot have straight women working in this bar, but we can have straight men," Morgan said. "It shows a real lack of understanding to think the gay community would think this is OK. You're against discrimination on one side, you're against discrimination on the other side." Lounge owner McGillivray said the Late Show operated at a loss during the seven months she owned it, and it came down to a choice: close it or go gay and hope business picks up. She said she has nothing against the women personally and even gave their names to other proprietors looking for help. The fate of the club still is uncertain. McGillivray hired two gay bartenders, but business was slow over the holidays. "I might yet have to close," she said. Join in politics through TV Parties in search of new members The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Coming soon to a cable channel near you: a Christian Coalition telethon. Such a program is part of an ambitious membership drive planned this year by the coalition. The conservative grassroots organization was founded by religious broadcaster Pat Robertson after his unsuccessful 1988 presidential campaign. Ralph Reed, the group's executive director, says the Christian Coalition's membership and fund-raising His 1994 goal: add 500,000 more people to the organization's rolls before this November's elections. list has surpassed 950,000 and should reach 1 million by February. To that end, he said the coalition is putting aside $1 million for television time this year. Some of it will be spent on 60-second spots promoting the coalition's conservative agenda and urging viewers to join. Also in the works is a 30-minute program about the organization, to be aired on cable stations and include periodic breaks, similar to teletowns, where viewers will be urged to call and join. 1 The Christian Coalition won't be the o.lly political organization using the airwaves to seek new members this year. Ross Perot's United We Stand America organization plans a TV membership drive of its own, most likely through a six-week ad campaign to begin in March and run through April 15 — tax day. The membership effort is on the agenda next month when Perot brings the new state leaders of the organization together for the first time. Perot has invited the organization's 50 state executive directors — all hired by his organization in Dallas — and the group's 50 elected state chairs to a three-day conference in Dallas the first weekend in February. The goal is to develop a national election-year agenda for Perot's group while offering the state activists the chance to attend a number of organizing, media and other political workshops. --ter — now forecast at an annual rate of 4.2 percent — would carry over into 1994. "I'm sure we're going to come out of there with pretty clear goals in mind," said Pat Muth, the organization's director in Florida. The Republican Party again is turning to former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher to help it raise money. Thatcher will be the keynote speaker at the Republican National Committee's annual fund-raising gala, set for Feb. 3 in Washington. The program is designed as a birthday tribute to Ronald Reagan, who turns 84 on Feb. 6. Reagan also is scheduled to attend and deliver remarks. Economists: New year brings new growth The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Many of the nation's top economists say the economy in 1994 will post its strongest performance in five years, although it won't be as robust as the final months of 1993. The consensus of 51 economists polled early this month by Blue Chip Economic Indicators was that the economy would grow by an inflation-adjusted 3 percent this year. The survey results were released yesterday. If the economists are right, it would be the biggest increase since a 3.9 percent increase in 1988. Robert J. Eggert, editor of the Sedona, Ariz., newsletter, said many of the survey participants attributed the stronger growth to a belief that the economic momentum evident in 1993's final quarter — now forecast at an annual rate of 4.2 percent — would carry over into 1994. The gross domestic product — the total output of goods and services produced in the United States — expanded 2.5 percent in 1989 and 1.2 percent in 1990 before shrinking to 0.7 percent in 1991 as the recession was ending. The economy then picked up 2.6 percent in 1992 and, according to the Blue Chip consensus, grew 2.8 percent last year. The government will report the 1993 GDP figures Jan. 28. "However, it is worth noting that the top 10 average of the group sees a 3.3 percent gain, while the bottom 10 foresees economic growth of only 2.1 percent in 1995," Eggert said. "Perhaps the good news is that none of the panel members currently expects 1995 to be a recession year." The Blue Chip panelists' initial look at 1995 foresees more moderate growth of just 2.7 percent. "Strength in housing, autos and other consumer durables, as well as business spending for ... equipment, is expected to persist into the new year," Eggert said. "First quarter real GDP is expected to grow at an annual rate of 3 percent." Eggert said some price pressures are expected to emerge next year as capacity utilization rates rise and the economy moves closer to full employment. The Blue Chip consensus predicts an unemployment rate of 6.4 percent in 1994, falling to 6.2 percent in 1995. The Labor Department reported Friday that the jobless rate was 6.4 percent in December, the lowest since January 1991. Recycle Your Daily Kansas The World is Ours to Share. Futon Couch w/8" F/C Mattress $239.95 Bobbi's Bedroom 842-7378 "Your Book Professionals" EVERYTHING BUTICE EVERYTHING BUT ICE •Beds •Desks •Chest of Drawers •Bookcases 936 Mass. Jayhawk Bookstore "At the top of Naismith Hill" Hrs: 8-7 M-Th., 8-5 Fri. 9-5 Sat. 12-4 Sun. 843-3826 • Beds • Desks The Etc. Shop The Etc. 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JBL Winning Models Dollar Value PSB - (ALPHA) Ea.125 BOSTON - (HD-8) 150 SIGNET - (SL-260) 225 KLIPSCH - (KG-4.2) 375 SNELL - (TYPE-EIII) 525 B & W - (DM-640) 750 KEF - (104.2) 1,225 MIRAGE - (3Si) 1,450 ALON - (IV) 1,695 B & W - (801 SERIES) 2,775 168 Manufacturers Considered Receivers of the Year Top 10 Brands Winning Models Dollar Value 1. DENON ONKYO - (TX-910) 250 2. YAMAHA YAMAHA - (RX-360) 275 3. SONYES DENON - (DRA-345R) 325 4. NAKAMICHI NAD - (701) 375 5. ONKYO DENON - (DRA545R) 385 6. NAD NAKAMICHI - (RE-3) 425 7. KENWOOD NAD - (705) 500 8. SONY YAMAHA - (RX-770) 575 9. H.KARDON DENON - (DRA-835R) 800 10. PHILIPS DENON - (DRA-1035R) 1,050 41 Manufacturer Considered 250 275 325 375 385 425 500 575 800 1,050 Cass Decks of the Year Top 10 Brands 1. NAKAMICHI 2. DENON 3. SONY ES 4. YAMAHA 5. ONKYO 6. NAD 7. LUXMAN 8. SONY 9. H.KARDON 10. PHILIPS ONKYO-(TA-201) 250 NAKAMICHI-(DR03) 425 SONYES-(TC-K707ES) 489 ONKYO-(TA-R301) 300 DENON-(DRR-730) 350 YAMAHA-(KX-R425) 400 ONKYO-(TA-RW313) 275 YAMAHA-(KX-W262) 325 DENON-(DRW-840) 425 SONY-(TC-WR901E5) 650 38 Manufacturers Considered Winning Models Dollar Value CD Player of the Year Top 10 Brands 1. DENON 2. YAMAHA 3. SONY ES 4. CAL. AUDIO 5. ADCOM 6. NAD 7. NAKAMICHI 8. ONKYO 9. LUXMAN 10. SONY 225 275 525 875 325 350 450 550 650 850 ONKYO- (DX-710) 225 DENON- (DCD-595) 275 NAD- (5000) 525 CAL-AUDIO - (ICON-MKII) 875 YAMAHA- (CDC-735) 325 DENON- (DCM-340) 350 YAMAHA- (CDC-735) 450 SONYES- (CDP-C701ES) 550 ADCOM- (GCD-600) 650 NAKAMICHI- (MB-2) 850 4A Manufacturer Considered A/V Surround of the Year Top 10 Brands Winning Models Dollar Value 1. YAMAHA ONKYO-(TX-SV313) 400 2. DENON YAMAHA-(RXV-470) 475 3. ONKYO DENON-(AVR-1000) 600 4. NAKAMICHI SONY ES-(STR-GX69ES) 650 5. SONY ES NAKAMICHI-(AV-2) 800 6. LEXICON DENON-(AVR 2000) 850 7. ADCOM YAMAHA-(RXV-870) 900 8. PIONEER DENON-(AVR-3000) 1,325 9. KENWOOD YAMAHA-(DSPA-2070) 1,850 10. NAD LEXICON-(CP-3) 2,775 Products of Special Merit Top10 Brands VELODYNE MITSUBISHI SONYXBRII DENON YAMAHA CAL.AUDIO LAB DENON TARALABS AUDIOQUEST STRAIGHTWIRE WinningModels DollarValue SUBWOOFER - (F-1500) 1,500 VIDEOTVMON - (40" ) 4,500 VIDEOTVMON - (32" ) 1,975 COMP.SYS. - (D-80) 1,000 COMP.SYS. - (YST-99CD) 450 CD PLAY. - (TERCET-MKIH) 1,500 SURR.AMP. - (AVC-3030) 1,275 INT.CONN. - (QUANTUM) 65 SP.CABLE. - (CRYSTAL) 6.75/ft MEGALINK DIGITAL 135 All Manufacturers Considered KIEF'S AUDIO/VIDEO 24th & Iowa St. P.O.Box 2 Lawrence, Ks. 66044 AUDIO VIDEO ~ CARSTEREQ ~ CDS & TAPES 913*842*1811 913*842*1438 913*842*1544 10 1. √ Sports: Freshman guard Tamecka Dixon shines for the No. 8 Jayhawks. Page 11. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOL.103.NO.78 THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA KS 66612 ADVERTISING:864-4358 WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 12. 1994 (USPS 650-640) Additional plan threatens Washburn By Jamie Munn Kansan staff writer Topeka may soon add its university to the Kansas Board of Regents, but that plan might face an uphill climb if an attached plan to increase higher education funding is rejected. Gov. Joan Finney has recommended that the Legislature incorporate Washburn University into the Regents' system. But she said last night in her State of the State address that she would not approve that action unless the Partnership for Excellence also was passed. Ray Hauke, director of planning and budget for the Regents, said he had expected two separate bills — one for Washburn and one for the Partnership — to be proposed in the state legislature this session. But if Washburn is accepted and the Partnership is not, "it is likely to become an issue that would divide the state." Hanke said. The Partnership for Excellence is a proposal that would increase tuition costs for the state's universities, said Bob Friauf, head of KU's University Council. The revenues would go specifically to faculty salary increases instead of a general state fund. David Monical, executive assistant to Hugh Thompson, president of Washburn, said the university was looking forward to the two ideas. Incorporating Washburn in the Regents' system also would strengthen Washburn's academic programs, he said. "Given that Washburn already receives $6.3 million in state general funds, including them would result in better jurisdiction of the state investment and management of that money," Hauke said. "From our prospective, it's important that all of the pieces be passed," Monical said. Monical said that although Washburn has been a public institution since 1941, it has never been integrated entirely into the Regents' system. But he also said that Washburn had received state funding since 1961. The integration of Washburn also would allow the university to offer more academic resources in Topeka, Monical said. But Friauf said he was concerned that Washburn might be accepted without increased funding from the Partnership proposal. Although Washburn and KU have the only two law schools in the state, Friau said the two universities probably would not fight over students. However, they might compete for funding, he said. "If Washburn is accepted but not the Partnership for Excellence, it's going to be very bad," he said. Friedau said that although tuition has increased at KU over the past 10 years, faculty salaries were, in general, only about 85 percent of the average of its peer institutions. Passage of the Partnership plan would increase faculty salaries up to 100 percent of the average within two to three years, Friau said. NEWS: 864-4810 Monical said the two bills would need to be approved by both houses of the Legislature before any action was taken. "This is not something that will be done in a few weeks," he said. The proposal to incorporate Washburn was approved by the Regents at their last meeting Dec. 15. Finney's speech raises doubts In addition to KU, the Regents preside over Emporia State University, Fort Hays State University, Kansas State University, Pittsburgh State University and Wichita State University. THE DEATH OF SISTER JUDY BROWN Governor sets agenda in final state address Amy Selt / KANSAN Joan Finney, in her State of the State address last night, supported the inclusion of Topeka's Washburn University into the state's Regents system By Stephen Martino Kansan staff writer Depending on which side of the aisle you were sitting on last night, the chambers of the Kansas House of Representatives were either comfortable or a little chilly. Democrats warmly embraced Gov. Joan Finney's last State of the State address. But Republicans were cool, saying it lacked leadership and direction. Finney outlined a legislative agenda that included the addition of Washburn University into the Board of Regents and support for the Partnership for Excellence, a proposal to increase the salaries of Regents' professors to the average of peer institutions. She is also seeking the legalization of casinos on Native American reservations, establishment of initiative — means for the public to introduce and pass legislation by statewide vote — and the creation of an elected state auditor position. Finney said that the Partnership was necessary because Kansas was failing to attract and keep the best educators for its universities. Finney's fiscal year 1995 budget calls for an 5.1 percent increase in financing for higher education, the largest increase since fiscal year 1990. She earmarked $34.4 million for the Partnership, of which $14 million would come from increased student tuition and $20.4 million from the state general fund. "Students agreed to the increase, and they realized their tuition was lower than students at most other state universities," she said. The Student Advisory Committee, composed of student body presidents, endorsed the plan to the governor, which will result in a 9 percent tuition increase for the University of Kansas, Kansas State University and Wichita State University students and a smaller increase to other Regents university students. All nonresident students will see a 13 percent increase in tuition if the legislation passes. Republican legislative leaders said that was far from certain. "This plan could spend us into a big problem," said Senate President Bud Burke, R-Olathe. He said that numbers presented in the governor's budget did not appear to add up with the state's income and fixed expenses. "We can do this for one year, but our dilemma is in the second and third years." Burke said. Speaker of the House Robert Miller, R-Wellington, said he was surprised by the plan's expense. "I thought it would be half of the $25 million proposed," he said. "It is going to be awfully hard for the Legislature to come up with that money. I think the price tag is too high for the Partnership for Excellence right now." Miller was critical of what he called a lack of leadership in the governor's speech. "It was disappointing that she blew an opportunity to set an agenda in her last year," he said. "She has spent more time promoting Indian gaming than on education and health care." Finney's speech was interrupted nine times by applause, mostly coming from the Democratic side of the room and the gallery, where her family was sitting. "The governor announced last year she wasn't seeking another term because she didn't want the important issues to become political bombshells," said House Minority Leader Tom Sawyer, D-Wichita. "The governor knows what she wants to accomplish in her last year and I think you will see her take a more active role in seeing that her goals for the state are met." But Miller said he was not discounting Finney as an active participant in the Legislature this year. "The governor has been very unpredictable throughout her term," he said. Local legislators critique speech Kansan staffwriter Lukewarm speech and staged applause was what State Sen. Sandy Praeger, R-Lawrence, said she thought about Gov. Joan Finney's State of the State address last night. Yet, despite her views toward the speech, Praeger said that she was reserving judgment on Finney's proposal to include Washburn University in the Regents system and begin financing of the Partnership for Excellence. "I don't believe that the speech shows an aggressive agenda whatsoever." Praeger said. "It makes me very uncomfortable that the Partnership for Excellence is tied to Washburn," she said. Praeger said that student support for the Partnership was vital to its success. "KU will be hurt the most because it has the largest number of out-of-state students," she said. State Rep. Barbara Ballard said she agreed that caution with regards to Washburn and the Partnership would be the best policy for now. "I am always concerned when we take on new plans without being able to fund our current needs at appropriate levels," she said. Ballard was much more complimentary of Finney's speech, saying it was a good job and a positive overview of her accomplishments. Still, she said she did not know what would be the end result of the Washburn/Partnership issue. "Bills aren't one way or the other," Ballard said. "They are not black or white." New loan process limits lines By Denise Nell Kansan staff writer Students who receive federal Stafford and federal FLS loans were greeted by fewer lines when they went to fee payment this semester. A new system called Electronic Funds Transfer allows the University to transfer the lump sum of students' Stafford or FLS loans directly into their accounts at KU, making it necessary for students to stand in only one line. Diane Del Buono, director of the Office of Student Financial Aid, said that in the past the loan recipients had to stand in line for fee statements first. If students owed money, they would have to stand in a cashiers line. If not, they would have to stand in line to have their checks endorsed and then they would go on to a refund line. The old process included the possibility of standing in as many t as three lines. Del Buono said that the new process also made a significant difference in the amount of time the financial aid staff needed to process the checks. With increased efficiency, Del Buono said, the staff is available to process new loan applications, which could mean more money for more students in the long run. Del Buono said that 45 percent of students who received loans were getting Stafford or FLS loans. Although Mercantile Bank of Lawrence is the only lender participating in the EFT program, Kathe Shinham, director of the Office of Comptroller, said she was optimistic that more lenders would soon begin using the system. By next fall, she said, most campus-based loans from participating lenders — including Perkins loans and loans for Health Professional students and disadvantaged students — should be using the system. Bill Green, Chico, Calif., senior, has been receiving Stafford loans for four years. He said the shorter lines were not worth having the University control his loan money. "If you at all, the school any money at all, KU can take it out of your check," he said. "It's not worth it." But Angle Calton, Lawrence sophomore, said she thought anything that would shorten lines was worth trying. "It was awful," she said. "Last year I think my line was over an hour, and then I had to go to another one. It must have been a fire hazard in that place." Del Buono said the EFT system was popular with most students. "I was very pleased with the response we got from students at fee payment," she said. "We had a couple who made a point of coming up to us and saying 'we really like this much better.'" INSIDE 12 KU Opera's production of "The Mikado" offers humor and romance in an exotic Japanese setting. Page 9. Fun at the Opera Determination cures Study Abroad costs By Angelina Lopez With dreams of gazing at Paris from the top of the Eiffel Tower and studying French with a gorgeous French professor, many students run up the steps of the Office of Study Abroad. However, cold reality dashes their dreams when they discover the price tag of a year in France: $7,900. Kansan staff writer Before they throw up their hands, students should realize that money is available for those that want to study abroad as long as they have tenacity to search for it. "A lot of what it takes to be able to go abroad is creativity," said Mary Elizabeth Debicki, director of OSA. She suggested that a person receiving a scholarship contact the group he or she is receiving the money from and ask them to double it. A student also could go to a local newspaper and offer to send them a story a week in exchange for the paper sponsoring his or her studying abroad adventures. The first step OSA takes in assisting a student, Debicki said, is figuring out a typical budget for a student studying abroad. This includes tuition and fees, room and board, travel, personal expenses, books and passport. The office compares that budget against the student's budget at KU. "When you figure out the cost of a study abroad program and what you're paying here, it isn't that much more," Debicki said. She said certain programs only cost $2000 more than a student's regular KU budget. For a non-resident student, spending a semester abroad may be cheaper than spending a semester at KU. A non-resident student pays an average of $5,325 a semester, while a semester in Costa Rica costs only $3,750. The next step is to visit the Office of Student Financial Aid. Although a student may not have qualified for financial aid while he or she was at KU, Debicki said, the extra money needed to participate in the program may allow him or her to qualify for "We hate to advise students to take out loans because loans never go away," Debicki said. Instead of loans, she suggested applying for scholarships and grants. loans while studying abroad. Through the financial aid office, students may be eligible for loans, grants and scholarships. The Institute of International Education is offering $8000 per semester to students who study languages and cultures that are less commonly chosen for study abroad. For example, Debicki said, if a student wanted to go to Paraguay, he or she would have to study Guarani, the native language, rather than Spanish. Kirk Hardinger. Overland Park senior, If worse comes to worst, students can always turn to the old-fashioned way of getting money: working for it. Departmental scholarships from the Kansas University Endowment Association, averaging $500, also are available for foreign study, and Watson Library has several books that list study abroad scholarships. Foreign currency The following types of aid are available from the Office of Student Financial Aid to students who want to study abroad: Pell Grant Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grant Perkins or NDS Loans Stafford (GSL) 务 Supplemental Loan for Students Parent Loan for Undergraduate Students 寿 KU Endowment of Departmental scholarships (Awarded by Department and OSFA) Source: Office of Study Abroad KANSAN worked 40 to 50 hours a week last summer at a lumber yard in order to go to Alicante, Spain, last fall. "It was worth it," he said. "I needed a break. Now I'm back, and everything's new." 2 Wednesday, January 12, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Buy your Kansan Card TODAY...only The University DailyKansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, KC 60454. --- "Home of the Pocket-Za" .357 Special Wednesday carry out only $3 small 1 topping $5 medium 1 topping tax $7 large 1 topping not included RUDY'S PIZZERIA 749-0055 Now located at 704 Mass. RUDY'S PIZZERIA 749-0055 --- The Lowest CD Prices In Town! Current, Popular CDs for $5.95! Buy 5 or more CDs for $4.95! Also available, special selection CDs $3.951 Buy 10 or more CDs for $2.50 each! ON CAMPUS For the Best Values in Town Visit Lawrence Pawn 843-4344 718 New Hampshire University Forum will sponso "Sexuality in the People's Republic of China," by Dr. Dennis Dalley, at noon today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread. For more information, call Thad Holcombe at 843-4933. KU Gamers and Roleplayers will meet at 5:30 p.m. today on the third floor of the Burge Union. For more information, call Alex Baker at 864-7316. St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today in Danforth Chapel KU Environs will meet at 6 p.m. tonight at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Amy Trainer at KU Habitat For Humanity will meet at 7:30 tonight at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread. For more information, call Heather Morgan at 832-0244. Watkins Memorial Health Center will sponsor an eating disorders support group from 7:30 to 8:30 tonight at the second floor conference room in Watkins. For more information, call Sarah Kirk at 864-4121 or 749-5725. 841-4484 KU Libertarians will meet at 8 tonight at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Allen Tiffany at 842-2411. ON THE RECORD A KU parking permit and two cassettes were stolen from a KU student's car located in lot 50 of the KU campus, Lawrence police reported. A Texas license plate was stolen from a KU student's car on the 400 block of North Second Street, Lawrence police reported A parking sticker was stolen from a KU student's car on the 2000 block of West 26th Street on Monday, Lawrence police reported. The discharge of a firearm within city limits was reported at 2:52 a.m. Monday, in the 1300 block of Tennessee, Lawrence police reported. The Etc. Shop TM Are recycle you recycle enjoying recycle the recycle paper? - 928 Mass. 843-0611 Ray Ban SALE SALES BY The world's largest the world's largest Sunglasses for DRIVING WEATHER WEATHER Omaha: 36°/20° Weather around the country: Atlanta: 52'/43' Chicago: 31'/47' Houston: 61'/44' Miami: 79'/66' Minneapolis: 22'/1' Phoenix: 68'/42' Salt Lake City: 39'/23' Seattle: 51'/44' LAWRENCE: 43'/27° Kansas City: 42'/23° St. Louis: 39'/25° Wichita: 42'/26° Tulsa: 48'/29° TODAY Tomorrow Friday Partly cloudy High: 43' Low: 27' Dry High: 42' Low: 25' Colder High: 25' Low: 10' Sun Sun KANSAN THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN HOW TO REACH US Call 864-4810 for the newsroom: ■ News tips — Campus Desk ■ Comments/Complaints/Corrections — Ben Grove, Editor or Lisa Cosmino, Managing Editor Call 864-4358 for advertising: ■ Classified Department Comments/Complaints — Kelly Connealy, Classified Manager Display Advertising Comments/Complaints — Justin Garberg, Business Manager 11.1 Stauffer-Flint Hall for: *Placing announcements of meetings or events of campus groups for the "On Campus" calendar. Announcements will be posted by 5 p.m. two days prior to desired day of publication. No submissions will be taken, by telephone. - Submitting "Letters to the Editor." See the Opinion page for details. fax number — 913-864-5261 University Daily Kansas SPRING LEAGUES ARE FORMING NOW AT THE Jaybowl KANSAS UNION Jaybowl KANSAS UNION Sign up in person, or by phone Pay for 13 weeks in advance get two weeks free Free shoe rental for league bowlers Four Leagues Available: Monday Mixer Tuesday Varsity Mixer Wednesday Mixer Thursday Mixer Located on Level One of the Kansas Union 864-3545 🌞 SUNKISSED TANNING At Sunkissed Tanning we offer the most technologically advanced equipment on the market today. By utilizing this "Cutting Edge" tanning equipment you will see results faster than ever before. We offer only the best. 2540 IOWA (Next to Applebee Grand Opening Special 6 Tanning Sessions $10 Wolff tube beds Wolff lights 10 min lighting beds 30 min facial beds Personal Stereos "Your Book Professionals" "At the top of Naismith Hill" Hrs. 8-7 M-T-h, 5-6 F-r, 9-8 S-tat, 12-4 Sun, 843-3826 Trained staff to clean beds Lighted make-up counter Certified staff Open 7 days a week Phones in all rooms Competetive prices Wide lotion selection Call For Your Appointment Today Jayhawk Bookstore 842-5096 Jayhawk Bookstore RKEYSTONE BEER 899 24 PACK. 120Z GANS LIMIT 1 ADDITIONAL PURCHASES 24% Q $70 KEYSTONE BEER 180Z CANS FRESH CRISP BUNCH BROCCOLI OR HEAD CAULIFLOWER 78¢ EA. ICEBERG HEAD LETTUCE 49% ALL NATIONAL BRAND POP & BEER 24 PACK – 12 OZ. CANS CHECKERS INVOICE COST + 50¢ EVERYDAY DAILY SPECIAL BANANAS 19¢ KEYSTONE DRY, KEYSTONE LIGHT, OR KEYSTONE BEER 899 24 PACK 12 OZ. CANS LIMIT $970 ADDITIONAL PURCHASES 24% OF KEYSTONE BEER 12OZ CANS CUT FROM PORK BUTT COUNTRY STYLE SPARE RIBS 128 LB. FAMILY PACK FRESH CRISP BUNCH BROCCOLI OR HEAD CAULIFLOWER 78¢ EA. ICEBERG HEAD LETTUCE 49¢ SPLIT FRYER BREASTS WITH RIB BONE 119 LB. FAMILY PACK FRYER THIGHS OR DRUMSTICKS 39¢ LB. FAMILY PACK BONeless BEEF SIRLOIN TIP STEAK OR ROAST OR RUMP ROAST 168 LB. FAMILY PACK TEXAS RUBY RED GRAPEFRUIT 29¢ EA. LARGE 32 CT. SIZE NAVEL ORANGES OR WASHINGTON RED DELICIOUS APPLES 288 EA. 10 LB. BAG WEIGHT WATCHERS DESSERTS OR ENTREES 158 EA. 411 OZ. PKG. ASST. VARIETIES WEIGHT WATCHERS BREAKFAST, 3 1/2 OZ. PKG. SUPERBOWL PARTY TRAYS FROM CHECKER'S DELI & BAKERY AS LOW AS $1.00 PER PERSON ORDER EARLY! MID-AMERICA FARM SWEET CREAM BUTTER 96¢ LB. PTRS MARQUEE PREMIUM COLA OR DIET COLA 198 12 PACK 12 OZ. CANS MOOSE BROTHERS PIZZA SINGLE TOPPING 2 500 8 OZ. SIZE ATLANTIC PERCH FILLETS 249 LB. FAMILY PACK FROM THE BAKERY FRESH BAKED ONION BAGELS 98¢ 6 OZ. PKG. FROM THE BAKERY FRESH BAKED SUGAR FREE CHERRY PIE 199 8 OZ. SUGAR CREEK'S OLD COURTHOUSE BACON 88¢ 1 LB. PACKAGE SUCED OR SHAVED TURKEY BREAST 198 LB. FAMILY PACK IMPORTED FROM FINISH LAPPU CHEESE $3 99 LB. Checkers LOW FOOD PRICES 23RD & LOUISIANA LAWRENCE AMBASSADOR CARDS 25% OFF EVERYDAY FRESH KANSAS RAISED BUFFALO DAILY PRICES REFERENCES JANUARY 19 PARKWAY & BURR FRI. JUN 14, 7am ANAS 19¢ CUT FROM PORK BUTT COUNTRY STYLE SPARE RIBS TEXAS RUBY RED GRAPEFRUIT 29¢ P.A. LARGE 12 ET. 3822 MID-AMERICA FARM SWEET CREAM BUTTER FRESH LEAN PORK STEAK 98¢ LB. FAMILY PACK FRESH LEAN PORK 70% LEAN FRESH GROUND BEEF FRYER THIGHS OR DRUMSTICKS 39¢ LB. FAMILY PACK VERYDAY 70% LEAN FRESH GROUND BEEF 88¢ LB. JUMBO PACK WEIGHT WATCHERS DESSERTS OR ENTREES 158 EA. 4-11 OZ. PKG. ASST. VARIETIES WEIGHT WATCHERS BREAKFAST, 3 TO 5 OZ. PKG. $1.09 EA. BONELESS BEEF SIRLOIN TIP STEAK OR ROAST OR RUMP ROAST 168 LB. FAMILY PACK SUPERBOWL PARTY TRAYS MOOSE BROTHERS PIZZA SINGLE TOPPING FOR 500 8 OZ. SIZE SUGAR CREEK'S OLD COURTHOUSE BACON Checkers LOW FOOD PRICES AMBASSADOR CARDS BUYTIME EVERYDAY WE WELCOME FORTUNE AND SAVING WEEK ACCOUNTS FRESH KANSAS RAISE FALLOY DAILY PRINCE BREVOCATION JANUARY 94 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 --- CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, January 12, 1994 3 Death penalty haunts legislators House, Senate confront bills By Stephen Martino Kansan staff writer In the past 14 years, Kansas governors and legislators often have been uneasy partners in a careful dance to reinstate the death penalty. Today, they may not be holding hands, but they seem to be moving in the same direction. Two bills have been introduced in both the House and the Senate to return execution of criminals back to Kansas for the first time since the U.S. Supreme Court struck down all death penalty laws in 1972. State Sen. Mark Parkinson, R-Olathe, introduced one bill with 13 co-sponsors yesterday. Monday, the Legislature's first day, State Rep. Greg Packer, R-Topeka, joined by 30 of his colleagues, introduced a similar proposal. In past years, attempts to pass death penalty legislation have been thwarted by one body of the Legislature or sunk by a gubernatorial veto. However, Gov. Joan Finney said in her State of the State Address last night that she would allow the bill to become law without her signature. I have said consistently and repeatedly I will not sign a death penalty bill," she said. "However, I do believe that a majority of Kansans support the death penalty." House Minority Leader Tom Sawyer, D-Wichita, said he thought a death penalty bill had a 50-50 chance of passing the House this year. "The death penalty doesn't have anything to do with crime," he said. "There is no evidence that supports it as a deterrent." However, Packer said it was time for the death penalty in Kansas. "We as a society allowed people to do whatever they want. It is time to punish people for what they do," he said. Packer's bill allows prosecutors to seek the death penalty for first-degree murder and felony murder, which is a murder that occurs during the commission of a felony crime. It provides an automatic appeal to the Kansas Supreme Court and would ban executing anyone 15 years and younger and anvowe developmentally disabled. Parkinson's bill is drawn more narrowly. Only persons convicted of first-degree murder would be eligible for execution. No Democrats co-sponsored either of the bills introduced. Sawyer said most Democrats would oppose the bills. However, it is not strictly a partisan matter. State Sen. Dick Bond, R-Overland Park, will lead the charge to kill the bills in Senate. He is considered one of the Senate's most influential members. "A majority of people in a casual poll say they favor the death penalty," he said. "After it is explained to most people about costs, $2 million or more to put someone to death, support is substantially reduced," he said. The steps to the death penalty A bill to reinstate the death penalty was introduced yesterday in the Kansas Senate and assigned to the Judiciary Committee. Before the bill becomes a law, it must pass through several steps and can be killed at any step in the process. Senate Judiciary Committee House Judiciary Committee Full Senate If the House passes a different version of the Senate's bill, a conference committee will iron out the differences. Full House Conference Committee If the compromise bill differs from the version one house originally passed, it will be sent back to that house. If it is different from both original versions, it will be sent back to both houses. Otherwise, the bill goes to the governor's office. Finney has said that she would allow the bill to become law without her signature. Gov. Joan Finney Detention center construction may start next month Facility for juveniles received minimal resident opposition Joe Harder/KANSAN By Liz Chadwick Kansan staff writer Craig Weigand, Douglas County administr, said he hoped construction for the new juvenile detention center planned for North Lawrence, could start at the beginning of February. weather conditions permitting. The detention center is scheduled to open next November. The center, 330 Industrial Lane, will be located behind the Bismark Inn, 1100 North Third St., said Pam Weigand, juvenile defense director for northeast Kansas. Up to 16 juvenile offenders, both male and female, could be housed in the center. Weinaug said the decision to build the center was made by the state to meet a federal mandate to keep juveniles and adults separate. Weinaug said housing juvenile offenders was more expensive than housing adult prisoners in a Douglas County jail. It costs $150 a day to house each juvenile prisoner. We're mandated by the state to provide schooling, recreation facilities and extra supervision, both male and female," he said. In contrast, adult prisoners in jail cost $30 to $40 a day. The center will be modeled after a school, Weinaug said. Males and females will be separated for most of the day but will be allowed to interact at certain times. "The facility will be designed to provide the separation that is required in housing both male and female offenders," he said. Weigand, who worked at a juvenile shelter and detention center in Hutchinson before coming to Lawrence in May 1992, said holding males and females together rarely caused problems. Weigand and Weinaug both said the North Lawrence residents generally were receptive to having the detention center in their neighborhood. Weinaug said he received one negative letter in opposition to the center, but the person who wrote the letter did not live in North Lawrence. When North Lawrence was proposed as a location for the new juvenile detention center, the Douglas County juvenile judge, Sheriff Loren Anderson, and members of the Douglas County Commission met with the North Lawrence Neighborhood Association to discuss the issue. The estimated cost of construction for the center is $1,443.000, she said. There are 10 juvenile detention centers in Kansas, four regional facilities for each county and four metro locations in Topeka, Wichita and Johnson and Wyandotte counties. Weigand said the center in Lawrence would house juveniles from Kansas and any extra overflow from other centers in the state. I am sure you will see me as an optimist. I believe in the power of imagination and creativity to bring life to our world. I am a believer in the importance of community and social responsibility. I am a believer in the power of storytelling to connect people with each other and with the world around us. I am a believer in the power of art to express my thoughts and feelings to the world. I am a believer in the power of music to lift people up and inspire them to be more beautiful and wonderful. I am a believer in the power of nature to heal and nurture the earth. I am a believer in the power of science to understand the world and improve our lives. I am a believer in the power of history to learn from the past and build a future that is more sustainable and resilient. I am a believer in the power of love to share and spread joy and compassion. I am a believer in the power of hope to see that even in the darkest times, there are always possibilities for light and brightness. I am a believer in the power of faith to trust in God and believe in His promises. I am a believer in the power of justice to stand up for what is right and fair. I am a believer in the power of integrity to keep your principles intact. I am a believer in the power of forgiveness to make others feel heard and understood. I am a believer in the power of generosity to help others in need. I am a believer in the power of self-realization to know yourself and become who you are. I am a believer in the power of purpose to achieve your goals and dreams. I am a believer in the power of purpose to make a difference in the world. I am a believer in the power of purpose to contribute to society and change the world. I am a believer in the power of purpose to show the world why we matter. I am a believer in the power of purpose to give back and help others. I am a believer in the power of purpose to live a life of joy and beauty. I am a believer in the power of purpose to live a life of peace and tranquility. I am a believer in the power of purpose to live a life of love and compassion. I am a believer in the power of purpose to live a life of gratitude and thanks. I am a believer in the power of purpose to live a life of curiosity and discovery. I am a believer in the power of purpose to live a life of creativity and imagination. I am a believer in the power of purpose to live a life of passion and energy. I am a believer in the power of purpose to live a life of freedom and independence. I am a believer in the power of purpose to live a life of self-reflection and introspection. I am a believer in the power of purpose to live a life of adventure and exploration. I am a believer in the power of purpose to live a life of resilience and strength. I am a believer in the power of purpose to live a life of positivity and joy. I am a believer in the power of purpose to live a life of love and compassion. I am a believer in the power of purpose to live a life of gratitude and thanks. I am a believer in the power of purpose to live a life of curiosity and discovery. I am a believer in the power of purpose to live a life of creativity and imagination. I am a believer in the power of purpose to live a life of passion and energy. I am a believer in the power of purpose to live a life of freedom and independence After finishing his book, "Time, Politics, and Policies," about the 1988-89 Kansas Legislature, Burdett Loomis, professor of political science, relaxes at his home. Jennie Zeiner / KANSAN Photo unites time, politics in new book By Susan White Kansan staff writer Burdett Loomis, professor of political science, got the idea for his new book from an old photograph. "This book began with a hazy remembrance from an old photo — that of state legislators, perhaps from Louisiana, physically holding back the hands of their chamber's clocks," said Burdett Loomis, professor of political science, in his new book, "Time, Politics, and Policies." The book, which went on sale yesterday, describes the nature of time in relation to the workings of the 1988-89 Kansas Legislature. Loomis was on sabbatical from the University during that year and watched the Legislature closely. Loomis said the concept of time in policymaking could be seen yesterday, the first day of the 1994 Legislature. "That Legislature will run for 90 days and at the end of 90 days it will be over," he said. "Everyone knows about when it is going to end, and so a lot of decisions are made toward the end. At a certain point, someone has to figure out what's going to be made and what is not." Loomis said he used newspaper clippings, interviews and snatches of conversation he overheard during his visits to the Capitol in Topeka. While observing the Legislature, Loomis said, he learned much about the Legislature's use of time that he had not been aware of. For instance, he discovered that the view some political scientists have of policymakers being more concerned with getting reelected than getting their job done did not apply to the Legislature. In fact, most legislators worked quickly to move legislation through the system. In addition, Loomis said he learned that important policy issues such as highway projects sometimes did not receive much debate time on the floor of the Legislature. He also said the Legislature made Kansas seem small. "On the state capitol everybody knows everybody else," Loomis said. "You do see a fair amount of closeknit alliances. People who knew each other in college or high school. There are also a lot of formal relationships. People with cousins or people who marry into a family. It comes out in conversations all the time. There are linkages there that do not appear on the surface." Russell Getter, an associate professor of political science who read a draft of the book while it was still in the processing stage, said he gave Loomis only minor suggestions. "I think it is a timely and important work in political science," he said. "I think it is relevant to the political process, and it illustrates the difficulties that legislators and governors must go through to coordinate various problems and issues to guide them through the political process." Loomis, who is on sabbatical this year, has been a professor at the University of Kansas since 1979. During that time, he has worked on various research projects, and he wrote his first book in 1988. NEW! ZENITH DATA SYSTEMS Z-STAR 433VL NOTEBOOK COMPUTER - Cx486SLC/33mhz Processor - Cx486SLC/33mhz Processor - 170 mb Hard Drive - 4mb RAM - 3.5" 1.44mb Floppy Drive - 9.5" Backlit LCD Video - PCMCIA, Type II slot - Zenith Total Care Warranty - Integrated J-Mouse MS-DOS 6.0;Windows 3.1 pre-installed;1.7AHr NiCad battery;AC adapter/Charger and full documentation $1,500.00 Jayhawk Bookstore only at the top of Naismith Hill! 1420 Crescent Roadalawrence KS 66044 M 1420 Crescent Road Lawrence,KS 66044 843-3826 DOS HOMBRES RESTAURANTE Welcome Back Students Drink Specials Monday: $6.95 Pitchers of Margaritas $3.25 Pitchers of Beer Tuesday: $1.50 Strawberry Margaritas $.95 Well Drinks $1.50 Amaretto Sours Wednesday: 2 for 1 Drinks (anything in bar) Thursday: $1.25 Margaritas Friday: $8.95 Pitchers of Margaritas Saturday: 2 for 1 Well Drinks Sunday: $2.00 Mexican Imports Karaoke Every Wednesday Night The fun starts at 10 p.m. 815 New Hampshire•841-7286 DOS HOMBRES RESTAURANTE 4 Wednesday, January 12, 1994 OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VIEWPOINT President should disclose Whitewater documents Watergate it ain't. President Clinton's dealings in a failed Arkansas business venture are hardly fodder for a respectable Washington scandal. Clinton needs to keep it that way. By supporting the appointment of an independent counsel and cooperating with that individual, Clinton can keep his presidency on track and pull the plug on Whitewater for good. The first step toward quelling the controversy appointing independent counsel is not Clinton's to take. But it is a move he should endorse. With a bill designed to provide guidelines for such appointments already approved in the Senate and moving through the House, the question isn't will there be an independent investigation, but when? The answer should be. "Now. The disclosure of all documents related to the Whitewater venture should come next. Although these papers were given to the Justice Department, their subpoenaed status has elicited calls of cover-up from Clinton's critics. By making the papers public, he could please the press and quiet the Congressional cannibalism that is running rampant in Washington. As Clinton nears the end of his first year as president, retaining his credibility has never been so important. With a list of first-year accomplishments second only to that of President Eisenhower, there are many things he still would like to do. He will get them done, but not without the support of Congress and the American people. And not without their trust. So let the counsel be selected. Let the papers be inspected. With the truth about Whitewater out in the open, the speculation and accusations will disappear like water down the drain. SAMANTHA ADAMS FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD Commercials should stress condom's failure rates By producing and airing new commercials promoting condom use, the national Centers for Disease Control and the major television networks have shown a commitment to public safety. However, the issue these commercials fail to address is that condoms are not fool-proof and the only 100 percent sure means of protection from AIDS is abstinence. With condoms marching across television screens all over the country, it is apparent that the times are changing. We have entered an era where it is not only practical, but absolutely necessary that people be educated about protecting themselves from AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases. Abstinence is mentioned only briefly in the new safe sex commercials. The public is led to believe that as long as condoms are used, all is well in the world. Although CDC research shows that latex condoms are 98 percent effective against HIV when used correctly and consistently, it is a fact that condoms are consistently used incorrectly. People need to be informed that even though they think they are protecting themselves, they may still be taking a risk. Although abstinence may not be realistic for many, the new commercials should emphasize it as the most effective means for avoiding AIDS. If people are going to gamble with their lives, they need to know what their odds are. For information on protecting yourself from AIDS call the CDC's toll-free information hotline at 1-800-342-2437. DONELLA HEARNE FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD KANSAN STAFF BEN GROVE, Editor LISA COSMILLO, Managing editor TOM EBLEN General manager. news adviser BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator Editors EDITOR Assistant Managing Editor...Dan England Assistant to the editor...J. R. Clairborne News...Kristi Fogler, Katie Greenwald, ...Todd Selfert Editorial...Colleen McCain ...Nathan Olson Campus...Jess DeHaven Sports...David Dorsey Photo...Doug Hesse Features...Sara Bennett JUSTIN GARBERG Business manager JENNIFER BLOWEY Retail sales manager JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser Business Staff Campus sales mgr ..Jason Eberty Regional Sales mgr ..Troy Terwester National & Co-op sales mgr ..Robin Kring Special Section mgr ..Shelly McConnell Production mgr ..Laura Guth Gretchen Kootenherlschin Marketing director ..Amy Casey Creative director ..John Carlton Classified mgr ..Kelly Connexsy Teamshoot mgr ..Wang Chen Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and homework, or faculty or staff position. Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be 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 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Valentine's gifts won't rekindle spark when love goes wrong Love will rejuvenate the economy. "How so?" you wonder. Read on. I have a story to tell. The Place: Oak Park Mall, a commercial utopia. The Time: a little after 1 p.m. on Jan. 2, 1994. The Players : your humble writer and her shopping companion, X. We are here for the inevitable postChristmas task. Refunds, exchanges, whatever you do, it's a hideous experience. COLUMNIST ALISHA ARORA While braving angry swarms of militant shopper, X and I decide to stop by Hallmark to pick up some thank-you cards for the gifts that I thankfully no longer possess. Upon entering, I am confronted by a smiling raconc. A red mask is tied coyly over its plastic eyes, and "I luv you!" is tattooed to it's stomach. Looking past this bit of wildlife, I see rows of glittering red cards proclaiming "LOVE." The crimson walls hold more furry creatures which come in unnatural variations of red, and curiously enough, they all sport ecstatic grins on their synthetically furry faces. Something is obviously wrong on Planet Earth. Christmas lights are still wrapped around trees and houses, people are still recuperating from New Year's and stores are already trying to exploit another holiday. I knew something was up when I got spritzed with two perfumes and one cologne at Dillard's. I'm afraid to even approach Victoria's Secret now. I don't need middle-aged men stumbling over their beer guts trying to see if I'm their "wife's size" while I'm lingerie shopping. scent. As the astute reader can probably guess, X and I left. When I reached home, I sat down in the La-Z-Boy and reclined. The mall merchants gave the impression that if you truly love your honeybunch, you would purchase a ball of fur and a bottle of "Say it isn't so!" I cried to no one in particular. Then I reviewed the relationships of several close friends for a clue as to what love is, how it endures and where blatant marketing tactics fit in. I concluded that love defeats definition, it doesn't always endure and business is profitable mainly for business people. For example, X, whom you met earlier, recently ended a three-year relationship with Y. Over a series of holidays, they accumulated presents ranging from the well-intentioned, but not quite what X needed, elephant candle to elegant wristwatches. But Y was a bit too fervent in showing X how bottomless Y's bank account was and didn't quite hear what X was saying. So X left. Had Y cooled off with the love tokens, X might not have felt trapped and ignored. Last I heard, X hooked up with Z, who showed X with attention, not objects. True love comes from within, apparently, and not from the wallet. Retail businesses encourage materialism and create a false sense of reality (*News Flash*) I think that people should do something special for their amorous partners but not because an execs tell them to. Granted, roses and candy can be thoughtful reminders of affection, but they should not impersonate the real thing. When your sweetie belches loudly and scratches his crotch during the Chief's game or cleans the gunk from under her fingernails at dinner, are drooping roses or crumpled candy wrappers going to rekindle the spark? And suppose you don't receive the expected accountments of Valentine's Day. Your relationship has just become extremely dysfunctional until (or unless) the offending party makes amends. Gift-giving is not an entirely bad thing, but materialism will get love nowhere. Leave the economy to the experts and their golfing partners. Do something that no store can, even Tiffany's. Break out of the Feb. 14 rut and give your sweetheart a kiss when he or she least expects it. And if you do buy something, go for the stuffed raccoon. Sweetums can use it for target practice when you forget to call. Allisha Aora is an Overland Park freshman majoring in biology and English. MATHEY Chicago Tribune GO FORTH AND SOAK THE RICH!... (PRESENT COMPANY EXCEPTED OF COURSE.) BIG GOV't IRS BILL Reproducing the Beetle, a mistake? You will probably be as pleased as I was to learn that Brazil has plans to start reproducing the Volkswagen Beetle. The company obviously made this decision because it feels there are far too few cars the size of regulation NFL footballs bursting into flames on the world's highways, which is something this country has been sorely lacking since the "Le Car" was discontinued. Beetles, also known as "slug bugs," "herbies" and "those little black insects that, when you squash them, make a sort of crunchy sound," were produced in mass quantities from the early '60s until 1981 when, in a stroke of sheer legislative genius, the Reagan Administration released a study revealing that over 50 percent of automobile crashes in this country are caused by "cars going really fast and then slamming into each other." Among other things, this report confirmed that Beetles, with their engines in the rear, were capable of being compacted into chunks of metal that would easily fit in a COLUMNIST SCOTT AGIN Since the time of this report, however, tremendous advances in technology have been made, spawning a desire in car manufacturers to create the safest automobiles possible. Unfortunately, these advances have not made their way to Brazil yet, so the Beetle will be constructed in the same original mold by factory workers who are woman's handbag in the event of a head-on collision. The report committee also found that while some Beetles make a "crunchy" sound, others tend to produce a more "squishy" sound. Then the committee went out for drinks. trying to see how many floorboards they can install before lunch. Still, we should be glad to know that the Beetles will be roaming the streets again even though analysts claim that, in this country, there are already 3,417,967 Beetles in operation for every city block. I have a Beetle myself, and I really enjoy it, so I'm not sure why I have this constant urge to charter a plane loaded with a 20-megaton crate of Disney movies such as "Herbie Coughs Up a Sprocket" and drop them into the head Volkswagen engineer's living room. It may be because of this one particular problem: The engine has to be replaced more often than most people replace toothpaste. I'm on my third engine right now, but I know now why the other two exploded. It's something my mechanic calls a "long block." He says that Super Beetles, which is what I have, differ from regular Beetles in that a regular Beetle uses a "short block" or "stock block" engine while a Super Beetle requires more "kick" or "hundred dollar bills." Apparently, my first two engines had been too small, so I finally broke down and had a long block installed. And my mechanic was right about the two engine types. The "short block" was a small, contorted jumble of wires and tubing whereas the "long block" is a small, contorted jumble of wires and tubing with the words "LONG BLOCK" handsomely engraved on the side for a nominal fee equivalent to adding a billiards room onto my mechanic's house. But hey, you should feel the difference. Incidentally, I understand that to kick off the Beetle's renewal, Volk swagen plans to send hundreds of cars as gifts to prominent individuals throughout the world. Let's hope with the Beetle's repair record and its flaming dashboards, that Ross Perot receives several. Scott Agni is a Topeka sophomore majoring in broadcast journalism. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Who'sinationsresents being labeled as liberal I am writing in response to Lance Hamby's "Student Senate's Decision Against Funding Club is Discrimination" (Dec. 7, 1993) in which he claims Who'sinations is a "liberally oriented publication." As the one ultimately responsible for everything that is printed, I must object to the cheap-shot use of that particular stereotype. The fact that we are not the product of an organization within the establishment and that we have no reservations about printing potentially controversial material in no way whatsoever implies we are "liberal." In fact, several of our editors and staff are personally quite conservative. I invite the (KU Federalist) Society to "promote a forum for the discussion of law and public policy issues" (as they claim their purpose to be) by submitting articles for publication as anyone — conservatives and liberals alike — is encouraged to do. David Tamasi Publisher of Who'sinations Tougher laws needed for reduction of crime In the past few months there has been an increase in the kidnapping, molesting, and killing of youths. These tragedies need to be stopped. Most of the criminals who commit these crimes are repeat offenders. If they are kept in jail, the list of their victims will stop. Money [for the additional jails] could come from reappropriation of money from other areas. The children of this We need to pressure Washington to pass tough bills against crime, especially crimes against children. There are hundreds of thousands of children kidnapped every year in America. If there were federal statutes making any crime against a child a federal offense, the number of crimes would decrease. If Congress would pass a minimum sentence of forty years without parole or plea-bargaining, the number of such crimes would decrease. country are worth sacrifice. The building, maintaining, and manning of these prisons will create jobs and help stimulate the economy. The prisons should be built according to the number of representatives each state has in Congress. If a state needs more prisons, they should petition for the extra. This way each state has at least four new prisons. People have the power to change the country. Each of us can write to Congressional members and our president and ask them to start legislation for a crime bill geared toward protecting children. All you have to do is write; they will listen. Timothy Mathews Timothy Mathews Overland Park sophomore --- UN I V E R S I T Y· D A L I Y K A N S A N Wednesday, January 12, 1994 5 Haskell moves closer to state accreditation $ ^{R} $ By Denise Neil Kansan staff writer Haskell Indian Nations University will take another step in developing its baccalaureate degree in the elementary teachers education program. Dr. Karen Swisher, an associate professor in curriculum and instruction at Arizona State University, arrived yesterday to help develop the curriculum. Gaye Leia King, Haskell's director of teacher education, said Swisher would help the staff refine its professional education courses and work on developing a knowledge base for the program's 22 required courses. Haskell received accreditation from the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools to offer baccalaureate degrees in the elementary teachers education program in August. Before, Haskell only could offer junior college credit hours and associate degrees. The school has yet to receive accreditation from the state of Kansas. Hannes Combes, educational assistant to Haskell president Bob Martin, said the state board had visited Haskell in October to give it suggestions about how to develop the program. Swisher, who is also the director of the Center for Indian Education and a member of the Standing Rock Sioux tribe, will help Haskell develop the program in preparation for another state visit this October. Combest said state accreditation was important to Haskell. Without it, graduates would have to apply independently for state certificates, which she said lowered their chances of being certified. King said the program still was in the beginning stages. "We don't know how we'll offer junior level courses in the fall or even if we'll have students ready to take them," she said. King said that about 50 Haskell students were involved in the elementary teacher education program, and about 20 of them were taking an introduction to education course. Combest said one of the reasons the program was so important at Haskell was that it would contribute to the Native American community. "I see it more in the area of benefiting the Indian community," she said. "While we have teachers training in the program we can have some major leaps in Indian education." "One of the things we've always known is that there's a severe lack of Native American teachers," she said. "Some communities in reservation areas and outlying areas are extremely isolated. For non-Indians, they're not aware of the isolated lifestyle, and it's very difficult for them." Although plans for building the new hall fell behind schedule during the fall semester, the projected completion date is still on target, said Hannes Combesb, educational assistant to Haskell president Bob Martin. Congress approved $8 million for the building during the 1993 fiscal year, Combesb said. Students living in overcrowded conditions in Haskell Indian Nations University residence halls should have relief by Fall 1995, when a new hall is scheduled to be completed. Haskell hall system to expand; 300 additional spaces available By Denise Nell Kansan staff writer The cause of the delay was a disagreement between the architect, GWY Group out of Tulsa, Okla., and Haskell about what type of heating unit would be used in the building. Dale Keel, project coordinator of facilities management, said that there had been some question as to how well a heat pump operated by a well system would work. "We're a few months off," she said. "But it has been negotiated to begin this spring with ground-breaking this summer." Keel said an agreement was reached a couple of weeks ago when GWY reviewed the designs and approved 70 percent of them, including the plan for the heat pump. He said the designs should be approved in about two months, and Haskell would begin taking bids from contractors. "There were some people who felt they didn't have enough data as to a track record on that system," he said. Combest that last semester, about 770 students were forced to live in Haskell's seven residence halls, which were designed for 700 students. At one point, eight to 12 students could be found living in one room. The new hall, which will be built where the tennis courts are now located, will create space for 300 more students. Combesat said. This will alleviate the overcrowding problem and possibly allow Haskell to admit more students. Combest has 85 percent of Haskell's 982 students lived on campus last semester. This, she said, is because of the low price of on-campus housing. Since Haskell is federally funded, students are required to pay only $25 their first semester for housing. If they continue to live on campus after their first semester, there is no charge. Recycle the Kansan "Especially in Lawrence, where housing is so much, even with Pell grants, many students wouldn't be able to afford to live off campus," she said. Haskell students will not return until Monday, and Combest said there was no way of estimating how many students would be returning. However, she said overcrowding should not be as bad this semester because Haskell accepted fewer new students, and traditionally, fewer students returned for the spring semester. NAILTIQUE 2449 Iowa • Linen Wraps • • Back Scratchers Nails • • Pedicures • Manicures • • Sculptured Tips & Overlays • Gift Certificates Available $2.00 Off Manicures $5.00 Off All Other Services Call Heidi at 832-2900 ▶ Confidential ▶ Affordable ▶ Free pregnancy tests ▶ Birth control ▶ Sliding fee scale ▶ STD screening You gotta check us out! Planned Parenthood Quality reproductive health care for men and women Now Open in Lawrence 1420C Kasold Drive (Orchards Corners) YARNBARN 832-0281 - Jan 20 - Feb 7 Beginning Knitting: Learn by making a sweater! $20.00 for 8 weeks. 20% off class yarns - Feb 16 (Wed) 9:30 - 11 a.m. · Mar 8 (Tues) 7-9 p.m. Beginning and Intermediate Knitting Classes Starting Soon! Ray-Ban SUNGLASSES BY BAUSCH & LOMB The world's finest sunglasses™ (Thurs) 7-9 p.m. (Mon) 7-9 p.m. Complete schedule of all classes available at Yarn Barn 118 Moss St 928 Mass. Downtown YARN BARN. 918 Mass. St. 928 Mass. Downtown The Etc. Shop TM Parking in the rear TA NEW Late Night Hours Fri. and Sat. Evenings Midnight to Three Espresso bar, capuccino, fresh baked pies and cheese cakes 814 Mass. Downtown Lawrence, 7am - 10pm Mon - Sat 9am - 4pm Sun Dine in or Carry Out 843BIRD What happens if you refuse to take a breathalizer test when stopped for a DUI? No driving for one year. Legal Services for Students 148 Burge • 864-5665 STUDENT SENATE POLICE EXPO (EXPO POLICE) NEW All these 1993 "Award Winners"are on Sale Now! AUDIO/VIDEO "FALL 1993" BEST OF CLASS ENGINEERINGAWARDS OVER 200,000 AUDIO/VIDEO ENGINEERS HAVE SELECTED "THE YEARS MOST SIGNIFICANT VALUES" CHOSEN ON THE BASIS OF: OVER 2000 AUDIO.VIDEO ENGINEERS HAVE SELECTED 1. Design & Engineering Excellence. 2. Sonic Integrity & Sound Fidelity. 3. Bellability Record of The Unit 4. Manufacturer's Ability to Service. 5. "Value" Price Class vs. Performance. Top10 Brands Speakers of the Year Top 10 Brands 1.BOSTON ACU. 2.B & W 3.SNELL 4.MIRAGE 5.KLIPSCH 6.PARADIGM 7.PSB 8.SIGNET 9.ALON 10.JBL Winning Models Winning Models Dollar Value PSE - (ALPHA) Ea.125 BOSTON - (HD-8) 150 SIGNET - (SL-260) 225 KLIPSCH - (KG-4.2) 375 SNELL - (TYPE-EIII) 525 B & W - (DM-640) 750 KEF - (104.2) 1,225 MIRAGE - (3SI) 1,450 ALON - (IV) 1,695 B & W - (801 SERIES) 2,775 168 Manufacturers Considered Dollar Value Ea.125 150 225 375 525 750 1,225 1,450 1,695 2,775 Receivers of the Year 1. DENON 2. YAMAHA 3. SONY ES 4. NAKAMICHI 5. ONKYO 6. NAD 7. KENWOOD 8. SONY 9. H.KARDON 10. PHILIPS Top 10 Brands 250 275 325 375 385 425 500 575 800 1,050 Dollar Value Winning Models Dollar Value ONKYO - (TX-910) 250 YAMAHA - (RX-360) 275 DENON - (DRA-345R) 325 NAD - (701) 375 DENON - (DRA545R) 385 NAKAMICHI - (RE-3) 425 NAD - (705) 500 YAMAHA - (RX-770) 575 DENON - (DRA-935R) 800 DENON - (DRA-1035R) 1,050 See Sale Price Cass Decks of the Year ONKYO - (TA-201) 250 NAKAMICHI - (DR03) 425 SONY ES - (TC-K707ES) 489 ONKYO - (TA-R301) 300 DENON - (DRR-730) 350 YAMAHA - (KX-R425) 400 ONKYO - (TA-RW313) 275 YAMAHA - (KX-W262) 325 DENON - (DRW-840) 425 SONY - (TC-WR801ES) 650 36 Manufacturers Considered Winning Models Dollar Value Top10Brands Top 10 Brands 1.NAKAMICHI 2.DENON 3.SONY ES 4.YAMAHA 5.ONKYO 6.NAD 7.LUXMAN 8.SONY 9.H.KARDON 10.PHILIPS CD Player of the Year Top10Brands 1. DENON 2. YAMAHA 3. SONY ES 4. CAL. AUDIO 5. ADCOM 6. NAD 7. NAKAMICHI 8. ONKYO 9. LUXMAN 10. SONY Winning Models Dollal Value ONKYO - (DX-710) 225 DENON - (DCD-595) 275 NAD - (5000) 525 CAL-AUDIO - (ICON-MKII) 875 YAMAHA - (CDC-735) 325 DENON - (DCM-340) 350 YAMAHA - (CDC-735) 450 SONYES - (CDP-C701ES) 550 ADCOM - (GCD-600) 650 NAKAMICHI - (MB-2) 850 Winning Models Dollar Value 225 275 525 875 325 350 450 550 650 850 A/V Surround of the Year 1. YAMAHA 2. DENON 3. ONKYO 4. NAKAMICHI 5. SONY ES 6. LEXICON 7. ADCOM 8. PIONEER 9. KENWOOD 10. NAD Top10 Brands WinningModels DollarValue Winning Models Dollar Value ONKYO - (TX-SV313) 400 YAMAHA - (RXV-470) 475 DENON - (AVR-1000) 600 SONY ES - (STR-GX69ES) 650 NAKAMICHI - (AV-2) 800 DENON - (AVR2000) 850 YAMAHA - (RXV-870) 900 DENON - (AVR-3000) 1,325 YAMAHA - (DSPA-2070) 1,850 LEXICON - (CP-3) 2,775 Products of Special Merit Top10Brands VELODYNE MITSUBISHI SONY XBRII DENON YAMAHA CAL. AUDIO LAB DENON TARALABS AUDIOQUEST STRAIGHTWIRE WinningModels DollarValue SUBWOOFER-(F-1500) 1,500 VIDEOTVMON-(40") 4,500 VIDEOTVMON-(32") 1,975 COMP.SYS.-(D-80) 1,000 COMP.SYS-(YST-99CD) 450 CD.PLAY.-(TERCET-MKIII) 1,500 SURR.AMP-(AVC-3030) 1,275 INT.CONN.-(QUANTUM) 65 SP.CABLE-(CRYSTAL) 6.75/ft MEGALINK DIGITAL 135 All Manufacturers Considered KIEF'S AUDIO/VIDEO 24th & Iowa St. P.O.Box 2 Lawrence, Ks. 66044 AUDIOVIDEO ~ CARSTEREO ~ CDs & TAPES 913*842*1811 913*842*1438 913*842*1544 6 Wednesday, January 12, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Brother, can you spare a dollar? The Kansan proudly introduces the best Collegiate Savings Card program in the Nation! SAMPLE CARD NOT VALID Valid Through July 31, 1994 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN C A R D AT&T SAVE hundreds of dollars at 60 of your favorite Lawrence restaurants, bars and stores. - Exclusive offers for Kansan Card holders only. - Good all semester long--through July 31, 1994! - UNLIMITED USAGE! No coupons required! - Your Kansan Card is good nationwide at merchants displaying the NCCS symbol: NCCs So,go ahead ... Spend a little,to save a lot. PICK UP YOUR KANSAN CARD AT THE FOLLOWING LOCATIONS: University Daily Kansan Business office; KU Bookstores, Kansas and Burge Unions; University Book Shop and Jayhawk Bookstore RESTAURANTS & BARS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, January 12, 1994 MERCHANDISE & PRODUCITS CLOTHIERS The following offers are available exclusively through the Kansan Card program... SERVICES THESE DISCOUNTS AND OFFERS ARE GOOD THROUGH JULY 31. 1994! JUST SHOW YOUR CARD...USE AS OFTEN AS YOU LIKE! Britches Corner • 843 Massachusetts • 843-0454: Buy 1reg. price Tommy Hilfiger, get the 2nd of equal or lesser value at 20% off Cleopatra's Closet • 743 Massachusetts • 749-4664: 15% off everything in store (excluding sale items) The Etc Shop • 928 Massachusetts • 843-0611: 20% off Etc Shop brand sunglasses Harper's Fashions • 835 Massachusetts • 749-0626: Additional 20% off all regular price merchandise KU Bookstore • Kansas and Burge Unions • 864-4640: $5 off any gift or clothing purchase of $25 or more Natural Way Natural Fiber Clothing • 820 Massachusetts • 841-0100: 15% off all regular priced clothing Outfitters Clothing Co. • 740 Massachusetts • 843-3933: 15% off the regular price of guy's and gal's jeans Outfitters Clothing Co. • 740 Massachusetts • 843-3933: 10% off of tuxedo rental University Bookshop • 1116 W 23rd St • 749-5206: 20% off all clothing (except sale items) Weavers Department Store • 901 Massachusetts • 843-6360: 20% off all lingerie, hosiery, or intimate apparel American Bistro • 701 Massachusetts • 841-8349: 10% off any entree (limit one) Bonanza • 2329 Iowa • 842-1200: All-you-can-eat-Freshtasticks Food & Desert Bar for $2.99 Dos Hombres VI • 815 New Hampshire • 841-7286: Buy 1 menu item, get the 2nd for 1/2 price Dunkin Donuts • 521 W 23rd • 749-5015: 15% off any purchase Fifi's Restaurant • 925 Iowa • 841-7226: 10% off any entree (limit one) Imperial Garden • 2907 W 6th St • 841-1688: 10% off any dinner entree (limit one) Johnny's Tavern • 401 N 2nd St • 842-0377: Buy a cheeseburger w/fries at reg. price, get the 2nd for $1 (Good Mon - Fri, 4pm to 9pm) Little Caesars Pizza-Pizza • 1410 Kasold, 865-5400/520 W 23rd, 842-8000: FREE Crazy Bread w/ any pizza/pizza purchase Perkins Family Restaurant • 1711 W 23rd • 842-9040: $1.00 off any entree, anytime, 24 hours a day Pizza Shuttle • 1601 W 23rd • 842-1212: 1 carryout, 1 topping pizza w/a lg. coke for $4.00 Plum Tree • 2620 Iowa • 841-6222: FREE appetizer (2 crab rangoons or 1 egg roll) w/purchase of any entree Pyramid Pizza • 507 W 14th St (under The Wheel) • 842-3232: $4 sm-$6 med-$8 lg ea add topping 75¢ (Void w/ other offers) Shoney's Restaurant • 2412 Iowa • 843-3519: FREE salad bar w/ any purchase of a sandwich and fries Vista Drive In • 1527 W 6th St • 842-4311: FREE reg. French Fry w/purchase of a Vistaburger & drink The Athlete's Foot • 914 Massachusetts • 841-6966: $10 off a shoe purchase of $65 or more Community Mercantile • 901 Mississippi • 843-8544: 15% off any coffee purchase Cycle Works • 1601 W 23rd • 842-6363: FREE lock set w/new bike purchase Englewood Florist • 939 Massachusetts • 841-2999: 3 FREE latex balloons with any purchase of $20 or more Francis Sporting Goods • 731 Massachusetts • 843-4191: 15% off all Champion Sportswear It's Your Party • 1601 W 23rd • 749-3455: Buy any 3 greeting cards and get 1 FREE Jaybowl • Level 1-Kansas Union • 864-3545: FREE shoe rental during open bowling Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826: Get an extra 5% CASH back during Semester Buyback Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826: Save 10% on Computer Softwear EVERYDAY! Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826: Blue Books for 10¢ Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826: 20% off Blank Computer Diskettes Jayhawk Spirit • 935 Massachusetts • 749-5194: $1.00 off all adjustable hats, $2.00 off all fitted hats Jock's Nitch • 840 Massachusetts • 842-2442: 15% off all shoes Junior's Farm • 924 1/2 Massachusetts • 842-3344: Buy 2 CD's at reg. price, get the 3rd (equal or lesser value) at 50% off Kansas Sports Club • 837 Massachusetts • 842-2992: 20% off KU sweatshirts Laser Logic • 865-0505: 20% Off Recycled Laser Printer Toner Cartridges (FREE pick-up and delivery) Miracle Video • 1910 Haskell, 841-7504/910 N 2nd St, 841-8903: Rent 1 video, get 2nd FREE (Sun thru Thurs) Rentco USA • 1741 Massachusetts • 749-1605: 25% off all rentals Sports Fan-Attics • 942 Massachusetts • 842-2323: 15% off everything in store (excluding sale items & leather jackets) Stereo Lane • 2024 W 23rd • 865-2677: $10 off any purchase of $50 or more Union Technology Center • Level 3-Burge Union • 864-5690: 10% off any accessory (disks, diskholders, cables, paper, surge protectors, etc.) Video Biz • 832 Iowa • 749-3507: 2 For Tuesday! Rent.2 Videos for the Price of 1 (Tuesday only) Vormehr Studio & Gallery • 1 Riverfront Plaza, Ste 321 • 749-0744: 15% off framed prints of KU and sororities The Auto Medic • 3631 W 10th St • 842-0384: 20% off any service call B.C. Automotive • 510 N 6th St • 841-6955: 20% off tune ups and brake repair Copy Co • 1401 W 23rd • 832-2679: 10% off all merchandise or services Enterprise Rent-A-Car • 3030 Iowa • 842-8040: 10% off car rental Fantastic Sam's • 2223 Louisiana • 749-1976: 15% off any regular price service or product NailTique • 2449 Iowa, Ste N • 832-2900: $3.00 off any service Planned Parenthood • 1420 Kasold-Orchards Corners • 832-0281: 25% off initial or annual visit plus 12 free condoms RC's Stadium Barbery • 1033 Massachusetts • 749-5363: $5.50 haircut Sonny Hill Chevrolet-Geo-Oldsmobile • 3400 S Iowa • 843-7700: 10% off all parts and service Ultimate Tan • 2449 Iowa, Ste 0 • 842-4949: 1 FREE session with the purchase of a 9-session package ($5 value) Terms and conditions. The following items and conditions relate to cardholder's use of the *Universiary Daily Kansas Card* (DKC) at Participating Merchants (PM). 1) The DKC must be signed to be valid, is non-transferable, and PM may request identification, confiscating the Card by using any other than the cardholder. Cardholder's signature use or the DKC shall constitute cardholder's agreement to be bound by their terms and conditions of the Directory of PM. 2) DKC Special Offer/Sold-offs; a) are not withheld after other or special promotions; b) do not apply to taxation portion of purchase; c) apply only to cardholder's reasonable personal purchase to the total purchase tax determined by PM, if non-DKC purchases are part of the total purchase; d) are only available at the specific listed addresses of PM; e) may be discontinued, at PM's discretion, on Event Day events/days; f) are valid only to DKC cardholders through July 31, 2014. 3) Discounts for "regular price" do not apply to what are known as "Sales," "Sale or Promotional Items." 4) Cardholder must be 21岁 or older to purchase alcoholic beverages in Kansas, and some PM may deny entry to persons under 21 years of age. 5) Cardholder must accept any restrictions or conditions associated with the DKC's Authority of Compensation Marketing Group, or any individual group, or entity involved in the marketing or sale of the DKC, liable for any damage caused as a result of PM's breach of contract or for any other damages caused by an action of a PM or any other group or individual associated with the DKC program. 7) Should misunderstanding occur in relation to any of the DKC program, all parties agree to binding abstraction by a member of the American Arbitration Association. Jayhawk Bookstore 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826 Kansas and Burge Unions • 864-4640 UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP 1116 W 23rd St·749-5206 KU KU BOOKSTORES THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 119 Stauffer-Flint Hø'l·864-4358 8 Wednesdav. January 12. 1994 N For All Your Glass Needs All automotive glass replacement & insurance claims handled. 730 New Jersey 843-4416 Rentco USA 749-1605 Student Discount Now Carrying Computers 1741 Massachusetts spring air twin mattress 6995 Bethis Bedroom 842-7378 WE'VE GOT IT ALL AT POSTNET POSTAL & BUSINESS SERVICES We Get It All At One Location • UPS Authorized Shipping Outlet • Prensa Mailboard • Personal Business • Professional Packaging Supplies • Fax Services • Sand/Delivery 24hrs • Volunteer Service • Passport Photo & Applications 23:40 Iowa St., Suite J Lowrance, KS 66046 Phone: (913) 865-3636 Fax: (913) 865-3995 *Nexx to Acplades's* Rentco USA 749-1605 Student Discount Now Carrying Computers 1741 Massachusetts For All Your Glass Needs All automotive glass replacement & insurance claims handled. 730 New Jersey 843-4416 Rentco USA 749-1605 Student Discount Now Carrying Computers 1741 Massachusetts spring air twin mattress 6995 Bobbi Bedroom 842-7378 WE'VE GOT IT ALL! POSTNET POSTAL & BUSINESS SERVICES We've Got It All Authorization • UPS Authorized Shipping Outlet • Petite Mattresses • Personal / Business • Professional Packaging Supplies 2540 Irvine St, Suite J Lawrence, KS 66046 • Fax Services • Send / Receive 24 hr • Notary Service • Passport Photos & Applications Phone: (913) 845-3434 Fax: (913) 843-5995 It's everywhere you want to be... The University Daily Kansan Card... A semester of savings for only $1.001 Since 1972 Lawrence's foremost name in outdoor clothing and camping equipment. SUNFLOWER OUTDOOR & BIKE SHOP 804 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas 843-5000 We Buy, Sell, Trade & Consign USED & New Sports Equipment PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 1029 Massachusetts phone 841-PLAY Next to Acabebas' - spring air twin mattress 6995 Bobbi's Bedroom 842-7378 WE'VE GOT IT ALL! POST.NET POSTAL & BUSINESS SERVICES We've Got It All At One Location • UFS Authorized Shipping Outlet • Personal Information • Personal Business • Professional Packaging Supplies 2540 Ivory St., Selby J Lewranco, KS 65046 • Fax Services • Send/Receive 24 hrs • Notary Service • Passport Placement & Applications Phone: (12) 853-6346 Fax: (912) 843-9995 For All Your Glass Needs All automotive glass replacement & insurance claims handled. 730 New Jersey 843-4416 Rentco USA 749-1805 Student Discount Now Carrying Computers 1741 Massachusetts spring air twin mattress 6995 Beth's Bedroom 842-7378 WE'VE GOT IT ALL! POSTNET POSTAL & BUYING SERVICES We've Got It All At One Location • UPS Authorized Shipping Outlet • Private Mailbox • Personal / Business • Professional Packaging Supplies • 2540 Iowa St., Suite J Lawrence, KS 66046 Phone: (913) 865-3436 Fax: (913) 843-5995 • Fax Services • Send / Receive 24hrs • Notary Service • Passport Photos & Applications • Next to Applebee's It's everywhere you want to be... The University Daily Kansan Card... A semester of savings for only $1.00! Since 1972 Lawrence's foremost name in outdoor clothing and camping equipment. SUNFLOWER OUTDOOR & BIKE SHOP 804 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas 843-5000 We Buy, Sell, Trade & Consign USED & New Sports Equipment PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 1029 Massachusetts phone 841-PLAY EARN IT. SAVE IT. SPEND IT. The Department of Student Housing is now taking applications to fill student jobs in the residence halls. These positions offer convenient and flexible schedules with wages beginning at $4.25 to $4.35 per hour. Stop by the Student Housing office, or call 864-7203 for more information. ... YOU'LL GET TO SEE YOUR FAVORITE FACES EVERY MONTH $$$ Since 1972 Lawrence's forerunt name in outdoor clothing and camping equipment. SUNFLOWER OUTDOOR & BIKE SHOP 804 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas 843-5000 We Buy, Sell, Trade & Consign USED & New Sports Equipment PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 1029 Massachusetts phone 841-PLAY PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 1029 Massachusetts EARN IT. SAVE IT. SPEND IT. The Department of Student Housing is now taking applications to fill student jobs in the residence halls. These positions offer convenient and flexible schedules with wages beginning at $4.25 to $4.35 per hour. Stop by the Student Housing office, or call 864-7203 for more information. ...YOU'LL GET TO SEE YOUR FAVORITE FACES EVERY MONTH $$$ ... YOU'LL GET TO SEE YOUR FAVORITE FACES EVERY MONTH $$$ NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Serbs threaten retaliation Air strike threat might begin war leader cautions The Associated Press BELGRADE, Yugoslavia — A Bosnian Serb army commander played down the seriousness of new NATO air strike threats yesterday, saying U.N. forces also would suffer in any attack on his troops. He warned that NATO attacks "would trigger World War III." "They cannot strike at us without also hitting U.N. forces," the Bosnian Serb chief of staff, Manojlo Milovanovic, said in a telephone interview from the Serb stronghold of Pale, Bosnia-Herzegovina. "Our tactics are to keep close to the U.N. troops." Earlier, Radovan Karadzic, the Bosnian Serbs' political leader, said talk of NATO air strikes could doom peace negotiations set to begin Tuesday in Geneva. Serbs and Croats, who hold more than 80 percent of Bosnia, have offered Muslims one-third of the republic as part of apeace agreement. The Muslim-led government has rejected the offer, saying it would not give it a viable state. The Serbs' SRNA news agency quoted Karadzic as saying the NATO declaration "would prompt us to reconsider land concessions offered to the Muslims." Karadzic also warned that Serb forces could attack U.N. troops in Bosnia in retaliation for NATO air strikes. He commented before NATO had reaffirmed its readiness to stage air attacks "to prevent the strangulation of Sarajevo, the safe areas and other threatened areas of Bosnia-Herzegovina." In August, NATO identified six "safe areas" in Bosnia and said it was ready to use its warplanes against Serb forces, especially those besieging the Bosnian capital of Sarajevo. On Monday, President Clinton told leaders at a NATO summit in Brussels, Belgium, that "we have to mean it" if NATO again threatened military action to end Serb attacks in Bosnia. The air strike warning, NATO's strongest yet, was issued as the summit ended yesterday. Israel, Palestine discuss issues The Associated Press TABA. Egypt — New Palestinian demands for corridors out of the Jericho autonomous region bogged down talks yesterday, but Israeli and PLO negotiators reportedly were coming to terms on other points of Palestinian self-rule. Nabil Shaath, the chief Palestinian delegate, and Israeli spokesman Ami Gluska both said negotiators were working on a written document summarizing points of agreement, but dismissed earlier news reports that a final accord had been reached. Talks on implementing the Sept. 13 Israel-PLO accord for autonomy in the occupied Gaza Strip and Jericho on the West Bank resumed Monday in Taba, a Red Sea resort, after a two-week break. "I cannot say there is agreement on anything yet," Gluska said. "We have presented our positions, and on some of them there is no response yet, but on other points the Palestinians are demanding more. If there was agreement, we would be celebrating, but there isn't." Shaath said, "All issues are being discussed. We will not announce any agreement on specific items because all of the problems are interrelated." Israel radio reported earlier that the sides had reached agreement on control of border crossings between the Gaza Strip and Egypt, and between the Jericho region and Jordan. Israeli newspapers said the Palestinians had agreed to an Israeli proposal on the size of Jericho. The Israeli delegation arrived at the hotel with numerous map cases. Israeli sources said the Palestinians were shown sketches of international border crossings to the autonomous zones, with an equal presence of Israelis and Palestinians. Israel radio said the Palestinians "were satisfied" by the offer. Gluksa said the Palestinians did not object to the size of a 22-square-mile region around Jericho offered by Israel, although it is less than one-fifth of what they initially wanted. But the Palestinians were demanding extra land for corridors from Jericho to other areas, he said. Also yesterday, a Palestinian official told The Associated Press that the PLO and Israel had reached agreement on releasing Palestinian prisoners from Israeli jails. Such releases could start as early as next week, said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity. The release of Palestinian prisoners has been a key Palestinian demand. In a letter to prisoners, the PLO said Israel had agreed to free 3,500 prisoners the day an autonomy plan is signed. The remaining prisoners would be freed by July 13. But government spokesman Oded Ben Ami said, "I know nothing about any agreement of that kind. Releasing prisoners is one of the issues on the agenda for negotiations between us and the Palestinians." The Israeli daily newspapers Haaretz and Yediot Ahronot quoted army officials as saying Israel was preparing a plan for a phased release of more than 3,000 Palestinians. Israel has said it holds about 9,000 Palestinians in its prisons. The Palestinian-run Mandela Institute in the West Bank estimates the number at 11,700. There is a There is a Difference! BEST PRICES BEST SERVICE MORE USED BOOKS BEST BOOK SELECTION BEST SUPPLY SELECTION REBATE ON PURCHASES FREE LAWRENCE BOOKS FREE COLLEGE COUPONS TWO UNION LOCATIONS BEST CLOTHING SELECTION A division of the Kansas Union Memorial Corporation, a not-for-profit entity operated by the Students, Faculty, Staff and Alumni of KU, which receives no state tax dollars for operations. Not affiliated with the privately-owned Jayhawk Bookstore or the University Bookshop. OPEN UNTIL 7p.m. Jan. 11-13 KU KU DOORSTORES Kansas, Union 864-640 Burge Union 864-507 KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store offering rebates to KU students Visa, MasterCard, Discover and American Express Accepted. $ (Credit purchases ineligible for rebate) The University Daily Kansan Card...a semester of savings for just $1.00 The Cadillac Ranch and Stumble Inn Proudly Present 18th AMENDMENT GRAND OPENING !! (Formerly "The Hawk") Friday, January 14 7:00 p.m. It's your right to enjoy our daily specials: Wed - 50 cent draws 843-9273 Thurs - Retro/Disco Night/ $2.50 big beers Hours: Sun-Sat Fri - $1.00 jello shots Sat - $1.00 house shots 3p.m.-2a.m. Join us for all your college and professional sporting events. BIG Superbowl Party Jan. 30th!!!! bɔ̄ bɔ̄ bɔ̄ Valerie Rontrager / KANSAN Pitti-Sing, Sarah Swanson, North Platte, Neb. junior, screams at Katiisha, Ruth Robertson, Manhattan graduate student, during a dress rehearsal of "The Mikado." Students were rehearing last evening for the operetta that is based on a comical theme. Do you hate opera? You won't find any stuffy artistes screaming foreign language in KU Opera's production of The Mikado By Kevin Hoffmann Kansan staff writer Those who never thought they would enjoy an opera may soon change their minds. Gilbert and Sullivan's comic opera, "The Mikado," is nothing like the stuffy Italian monstrosities that can scare many people away from opera. The University of Kansas Opera will perform "The Mikado" this weekend at Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. "The Mikado" is, in fact, not a true opera. Its light nature and abundance of dialogue make it an operetta. Mark Ferrell, director of opera for the music department, described "The Mikado" as an opera for everyone. Ferrell said he thought "The Mikado" would entertain even those uninterested in opera. "It really doesn't take an opera-educated person to enjoy this, although, because it is classical in nature, opera-educated people do enjoy it." he said. "It is very accessible music. The music is very easy to listen to. It has a lot of lively music in it," he said. "The plot is kind of crazy. It is definitely comical and fun. There are also some visual surprises." Ferrell said he and John Stephens, a professor of voice who provides stage direction for the opera, tried to make the production as creative as possible. "What John and I really wanted to do was provide a framework within our performers to explore the material and come up with their own creative input," he said. Ferrell said the most rewarding aspect of working with "The Mikado" was watching the cast develop creatively. "Because the material is so brilliant, it inspires the performers to be equally brilliant," he said. "The Mikado," like most Gilbert and Sullivan operas, satiizes the British way of life. "It is essentially a Victorian era 'Saturday Night Live' with music. "Ferrell said." W. S. Gilbert and Sir Arthur Sullivan teamed up in the late 1800's to write operas. Gilbert wrote the words or books, and Sullivan wrote the music. The two became famous for their comical operas. Other famous operas by Gilbert and Sullivan are "The Pirates of Penzance" and "The HMS Pinafore." "It really doesn't take an opera-educated person to enjoy this." Mark Forroll Director of Opera Ferrell said "The Mikado" satirized the British legal system. "There is a character in this opera who holds several political positions, all of which came by the way of connections," Ferrell said. "The character is suited for none of them. There were people in office in Britain at that time who were similar to this character." "The Mikado" was inspired by a Victorian craze for all things Japanese. The plot revolves around Japanese characters who get involved in a crazy circle. Nanki-Poo, played by Nathan Croner, Wellesley, Mass, senior, falls in love with the leading lady, Yum-Yum, played by Jessica Sparlin, Rolla, Mo., senior. But Yum-Yum is preparing to marry Ko-Ko, the town executioner, played by Randel Wolfe, Lawrence graduate student. Ko-Ko is in trouble trouble though, for flirting, and is to be beheaded. Ko-Ko takes advantage of his title and puts off his own death. Meanwhile the Emperor of Japan, the Mikado, informs Ko-Ko that if no executions are performed, he will take the title of executioner away from him and the town will be reduced to a village. While all of this is taking place, Nanki-Poo finds out about Yum-Yum's upcoming marriage and decides to take his own life. Ko-Ko finds out and tries to persuade Nanki-Poo to let him perform an execution. The plot may seem confusing, but, in the classical tradition of Gilbert and Sullivan, everything works out in a creative but logical way. Ferrell said he was pleased with the cast's interpretation of "The Mikado." "Everybody worked hard," he said. "We have people with a lot of experience and we have people that this is their first time on stage in a costume." Jessica Sparlin, who plays Yum-Yum, said the cast had worked on "The Mikado" since early last semester. "I really came together quite nicely," said Snarlin. "It is a very funny story." "The Mikado" will be performed at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 13, through Saturday, Jan. 15, and at 2:30 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 16. Tickets are $6 for the general public, $3 for students and $$ for senior citizens. Tickets may be bought at the Murphy Hall and Lied Center box offices. theater Student's play heads for regional contest "Graf Spee," by Hays graduate student Ken Willard, may soon win the chance to play at Kennedy Center in Washington D.C. By Cathleen Siechta Kansan staff writer Kansan staff writer Willard's play has apparently had an affect on many other people. "Graf Spee," an original script written by Willard in a play writing class, has advanced to the regional level of competition of the American College Theater Festival. Productions from eight states will compete in the regional competition. After the curtain closed last semester on a production of Ken Willard's play, "Graf Spee," the audience did not applaud. "We have a one in eight chance of winning and going on to perform at the Kennedy Center in April," he said. "Graf Spee" is one of the best plays ever written in my class. We are very optimistic, and we believe in this play." "Graf Spee," named for a World War II battleship, is about a group of South Americans dealing with political terrorism. The play was inspired by a segment on "60 Minutes" that dealt with the fall of an authoritarian government in Argentina. "I couldn't believe it," said Willard, Hays graduate student. "The lights were on, the actors were off the stage, and the audience was just sitting there, staring at what they had just seen. The play had really affected them." Associate professor Paul Stephen Lim, who taught the play writing class, said he had high hopes for the production. "This is a very ambitious play," said Steven Grossman, Lawrence graduate student and director of "Graf Spee." "It takes on important "The actors are marvelous." Willard said. "Steve Grossman has assembled some of the finest actors at KU for this play. Some of the actors have changed my words in the performances, and we have taken the actors words over mine. As a result, the play is as much theirs as it is mine." and very troubling, powerful themes in a way that young playwrights are not commonly able to project. It deals with the ongoing horror of dictatorial brutality and torture. However, the themes transcend political dimensions. It is also powerfully spiritual." The nine-member cast will perform "Graf Spee" once more for Lawrence residents before going to the regional festival. The performance is scheduled for 8 p.m., Monday, Jan. 17, at Liberty Hall. General Admission tickets are now on sale at Liberty Hall for $5. But Willard is humble about his award-winning script. The company will then perform at Johnson County Community College on Sunday, Jan. 22. "Graf Spee" will be performed for judges at 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. Grossman said he hoped "Graf Spee's" last local performance would attract a large audience. "People should seize the opportunity to see this play," he said. "Ken Willard has crafted a play so rich in levels of knowledge, so powerful and complex, that the audience is moved very deeply. A play like this does not come around very often." Lifelong fan strives to build Elvis museum personalities SAN FRANCISCO — Robin Rosaena is a regular gal with a regular job and a regular life. Except for those 40,000 pieces of Elvis memorabilia. The Associated Press Her fascination with Elvis has led to appearances on TV talk shows. She's consulted on books about Elvis. Other fans and collectors call her at all hours of the night to settle bets, or just to ask a question about the "King." In short, Rosaena knows just about all there is to know about Elvis. Now, she's sharing some of her vast collection of Elvis stuff in a new book. "All the King's Things." Rosaea was only eight years old when she had her first Elvis experience. She was staying at her grandmother's house on the historic evening in 1956 when Presley first groomed on "The Ed Sullivan Show." "My grandmother thought it was bizarre and rious, as did a lot of people," she said. From Presley's memorable performance, she was inspired to save her baby-sitting wages and buy her first Elvis recording — "Jallhouse Rock." She followed Elvis as a teenager, along with Fabian and other teen idols. But she left Elvis for The Beatles when "the Elvis movies got to the point where it was almost embarrassing to watch." It wasn't until 1970, after Rosaen caught the King in concert in Las Vegas, that she began to get serious about Elvisology. She was entranced, she says, partly because "he THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN See ELVIS, Page 10 PAGE 9 JANUARY 12,1994 KULife Your guide to Entertainment in the Lawrence Area. calendar EXHIBITIONS AND LECTURES Exhibition — Paintings by E Minneapolis Children's Theater: "Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm" 8 p.m. Thursday, Jan 13, 1994, at the Lied Center. University of Kansas Opera: "The Milkado" by Gilbert and Susan Grace and ceramics by Glenda Taylor Jan. 3-20, 1994, at the Lawrence Arts Center Exhibition — "The Sleep of Reason: Reality and Fantasy in the print series of Goya" Jan. 9 - Feb. 20, 1994, at the Spencer Museum of Art. Video — "Dale Chihuly: Installations 1964- 1992" Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, Jan. 12-14, 1994, in the 20th-Century Gallery at the Spencer Museum of Art. Video available on request. Exhibition — Dennis Oppenheim: Drawings and Selected Sculpture Jan. 16 - Feb. 27, 1994, at the Spencer Museum of Art. Lecture — Glass artist Dale Chihuly, on his work 7 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 13, 1994, at the Kansas Union Ballroom. Sullivan 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Friday, and Saturday, Jan. 13-15, 1994, and 2:30 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 16, 1994, at SWarthwout Recital Hall. $6 public, $3 students, $5 senior citizens. English Alternative Theater Presents "Graf Spee" 8 p.m. Monday, Jan. 17, 1994, at Liberty Hall. $5 general admission. AUDITIONS PERFORMANCES University Dance Company Auditions 7 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 19, 1994, at Robinson Center Open to all interested dancers. WORKSHOPS Flamenco master class taught by Tamara la Garbanicca 7-9 p.m. Tuesday, Jan.18 1994, at Robinson Center, Studio 240. Open to public. Dance experience not required. $10. Wednesday, January 12, 1994 ... --- 105.2% Finding a Course for Your Spring Schedule Just Got Easier . . . ... Earn University of Kansas Credit through Independent Study. Stop by Independent Study Student Services, Continuing Education Building Annex A. Just north of the Student Union for a catalog or call 864-4440 for Information. ULTIMATE TAN Get that sunny beach feelin' How to rid the Winter Whites The Ultimate Tan solution: This week Super Bed Special: 3 Tans for $5 only! In one of our 8 New 36 Bulb Double Facial Beds - Free Facial Beds • Largest Salon in Lawrence with 16 Wolff System Beds • Professionally serving Lawrence for 6 years 2449 Iowa Suite O Lawrence, KS • 842-4949 (Just south of Molly McGees) WE HONOR KANSAN UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP Prescription Pad 1116 West $ 23^{\mathrm{rd}} $ st. 749-5206 Dr. Mike Symptoms: Shortness of cash, low school spirit, depleted school supplies and little energy. Prescription: A heavy dose of used books to keep your cash flow in check. Plenty of school supplies to replenish your thirst for learning. Ample amounts of Jayhawk clothing & gifts. Take: Plenty of books priced so low that your wallet will survive as well. School supplies so that you aren't subject to mid-semester withdrawal. Jayhawk apparel for your sagging school spirit. And a short trip to University Book Shop, where you'll find everything you need to get back into shape for this semester. 25% less than new books USED BOOKS Come see me at the University Book Shop for great Back to School Savings! ENTERTAINMENT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Dr. Mike review Cowboy Junkies have come full circle Surprisingly, vocalist Margo Timmins — always singing as if lost in a dream anyway — comes off as being tired on By John Pacenti The Associated Press While most guitarists these days seem to fall somewhere between Eric Clapton and Yngwie Malmsteen, Michael Timmins of the Cowboy Junkies has opted for understatement. Timmins hasn't sounded so sexy since "The Trinity Session." Timmins approaches the six-string the way jazz legend Miles Davis approached melody: less is more. There is something heart-wrenching about the simple riff Timmins creates for "Ring on the Sill" and "White Salt." two of the standouts on the Cowboys" "Pale Sun, Crescent Moon" compact disc. In many ways, the Toronto quartet — consisting of two brothers, a sister and their best friend — has come full circle on their fifth release. The disc contains the stark sounds of the Junkies' 1988 breakthrough "The Trinity Session" mixed in with the blazing blues rock of the band's 1986 release. "Whites Off Earth Now!!" some of these songs. When the work takes a decidedly edgy turn on "The Post," Timmins simply doesn't belt it out, even if she is lost in the mix. The songs here are much different than the country feel of 1992's "Black-eyed Man," which found Timmins coming into his own as a songwriter. The guitarist's newest tunes are haunted and opt for a singular theme; many seem to be lost on a lonesome, dark stretch of highway. By the end, though, she has found the voice for "Pale Sun, Crescent Moon." On one track, titled "Floorboard Blues," she croons, "Look under his floorboards, Mama. I don't trust his silly girn. He's got a beat up Rambler, Nebraska plates and I ain't getting in." Timmins hasn't sounded so sexy since the "The Trinity Session." And on "The Hunted," a devastating song about rape, the aptly talented vocalist narrates the tale of modern women stalked by the animal male at every turn: "Quick to your phone dial 911. Invite a strange man into your home who'll be carrying a gun." While the cutting-edge band Nirvana recently tackled the same topic sloppily, Michael Timmins' song catches the fear, the hopelessness and the outrage. Guest guitarist Ken Myhr, who adds a bit of David Glmour string-bending throughout the disc, matches the desperation, and the tune is one of the Junkies' finest and most poignant. ELVIS: Fan's book tells all about the king Continued from Page 9. And, of course, there was that voice. The next day she went over to pick up a few souvenirs. And she solemnly promised, "Elvis, I'll be back." was just gorgeous to look at." Back she went, catching a total of 72 shows in Las Vegas, Lake Tahoe and Oakland, Calif., San Francisco and anywhere else she could get to. Elvis himself began to notice Rosaaen, and kissed her about half a dozen times at the many shows she saw. He even gave her a nickname. Appropriately, the King called her "Rockin Robin." In the mid-'70s, she began to get serious about her collection. After Presley's death, it became her life's work. Now, Rosaaen has almost every album Elvis ever released. And the international pressings. And the reissues. She has Elvis mugs, plates, baseball cards, posters from his movies. has a few bottles of Elvis wine. There are over 500 books on Elvis. Elvis playing cards. The complete bubble gum card collections, years 1956 through 1978. There is Elvis jewelry. There are Elvis busts. She even She has a lock of Elvis' hair on her wall and a rose from his casket. She once dated an Elvis impersonator. Her interest in Elvis borders on a religion, complete with bodily relics. She has photographs of Elvis — 80,000 of them at last count, she says, all in chronological order. She has so much memorabilia crammed in her apartment, she hasn't eaten off her table in six years. She is now ready to take her parttime obsession and turn it into a career. She is searching for funding to create an Elvis museum in San Francisco. The captions give the reader hints about a few of the articles in each photo and dare one to find certain items. At the moment it is only a dream, but one that Rosaaen cherishes. The new book is designed to encourage the reader to search out particular pieces in each jampacked picture. In the dizzying array of Elvis lore, there are photos, dolls, bedspreads, buttons, crockery and even an autographed blue suede jacket that once belonged to the King. Rosaaen says she wanted the book to be unusual, not another run-of-the-mill Elvis memorabilia book. Does Rosaaen put any faith in the many "Elvis is alive" theories? If he is alive, he turned 59 on Jan. 8. "Elvis once said music and entertaining was his life," she says. "There's no way this man could ever stay away from what made him happy." But she believes "his spirit lives through the fans." She thinks Presley has been maligned, and feels people don't realize he was a humanitarian. "People aren't aware of all the giving that he did." She says the general lack of knowledge comes from the fact that "all they've ever written was how he was fat and how many pills he took and how many banana sandwiches he ate." "I think my mission as a fan, for the pleasure he gave me," she says, "is to make people aware of what a great guy he was, and what a marvelous entertainer." "I miss him," she says. "It doesn't seem like it is been 16 years." WELCOME BACK EARN CASH $15 Today $30 This Week Plus a $3 Bonus By donating your blood plasma Show your current student ID card between January 11 and January 28 and receive an extra $3 bonus on your second visit of the month. Lawrence Donor Center Walk-ins welcome $ NABI The Quality Source Hours: M-F 9-6 Sat 10-3 816 W.24th Behind Laird Noller Ford 749-5750 See our ad in the classified section SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, January 12, 1994 11 COLORADO 11 INDIANA 27 Freshman guard makes impact Tom Leininger / KANSAN Kansas guard Tamecka Dixon tries to stop Colorado's DeCelle Thomas from reaching for a loose ball during Sunday's game. KU won the contest, 59-57. Dixon brings talents to KU By Matt Siegel Kansan sportswriter For most people, choosing which college to attend is a tough decision. Choosing between almost 400 colleges, as freshman guard Tamecka Dixon had to, is an entirely different story. "I looked for a program on the rise," Dixon said. "All of the schools that I was considering were far away. I had seen everything on the East Coast and I wanted something different." At first Dixon liked all of the attention. However, when coaches were calling her at home in Linden, N.J., at 2 a.m., it became a bit too much. The coaches called so many times that she gave only the colleges she was truly interested in her room phone number. Dixon gave the other coaches her mother's number so they would have to go through her. Dixon knew she was attracting attention when she led her team to a state championship her junior year in high school. However, the attention escalated the summer before her senior year. "I went to play in an AAU tournament in Clovis, New Mexico," Dixon said. "Before the tournament, only the East Coast schools were recruiting me. I must have played well because when I got home there were like 500 letters waiting for me." One of those letters was from Kansas. Dixon had sent her response form to Kansas late. By the time KU received Dixon's response, she had already decided to play for Georgia. Although Dixon didn't show much interest at first, the Kansas coaches kept after her and eventually signed the high school All-American. "We wanted to make sure that what Tamecke saw from day one was the way we really are." Kansas coach Marian Washington said. "I think Tamecka sensed that sincerity. Her impact was felt immediately when she scored a team-high 19 points in Kansas' season opener against Creighton. Against Colorado on Sunday she scored 13 points and had six rebounds. "It all starts with her attitude," Washington said. "She's very coachable. Also, she is one of the finest athletes I've seen. She has tremendous quickness and she is in an elite class when it comes to ball handling." Dixon's attitude is reflected in the goals she set for herself this season. She is not concerned with how many points she scores or rolling up impressive stats. Her only goals coming into the season were to play and to contribute. However, Colorado coach Ceal Barry said that Dixon had done a lot more than just contribute. She said the addition of Dixon's quickness adds a new dimension to Kansas. If I'm in the open court against two girls or a girl, I think I'm going to take them." Dixon said. "Open court is my style, my thing." That Dixon considers herself at her best in the open court should come as no surprise to those who know her family. Dixon's father, Russell, who played for American University, also excelled in the open court. Dixon credits her father with teaching her the open court skills she possesses today. "We would always work on open coqt drills," Dixon said. "I grew up on the game. My roots all along were playing basketball." Dixon sees hard work as the key to success. She said a trip to the Final Four in Richmond, Va., would depend on whether Kansas chooses to work hard enough. If choosing to work hard is the only key to success for Kansas, then Dixon is one step ahead of the competition. After all, she already knows about making difficult decisions. Big Eight deserving of more recognition, Williams says By Gerry Fey Kansan sportswriter The Big Eight is a tough basketball conference in which to play, and Kansas coach Roy Williams will be the first to say that. No. 3 Kansas opened its conference schedule with an 84-74 home victory against Oklahoma on Monday night. The victory dropped the 8-3 Sooners to 0-2 in the conference. Oklahoma's other conference game was a 105-89 defeat against Oklahoma State on Saturday. "That's going to be a good basketball team," Williams said of Oklahoma. "I think that team's got a chance to be an NCAA tournament team at the end of year, and I really believe that." the year, and ready believe that 14 Kansas playersacknowledged Oklahoma's ability and talent after the game. Even though it was the Jayhawks' first Big Eight game, Kansas senior forward Patrick Richey said Kansas was prepared. "Oklahoma is not a team that's just going to roll over and die," Richey said. "It's tough to start off 0-2 in the Big Eight. They are a good team." Williams said the conference was not getting the respect it deserved in the Associated Press top 25 rankings. The only other team in the top 25 is Missouri, tied for 25th with Xavier of Ohio. in the CNN/USA Today poll, known as the coaches' poll, Kansas is No.4 and Oklahoma State is No.21. "The only thing I know, in the poll that I voted, I voted for Oklahoma State and Missouri both in the top 20," Williams said. "I think we should have those teams. We've got some teams that need to get more recognition nationally than I think we're getting right now." The Big Eight is a collective 73-16 against nonconference opponents for a. 82 percentage. Five teams in the conference have more than 10 wins, including unranked Nebraska at 11-2 and Kansas at 15-1. The Big Ten, a conference the Big Eight has a 5-0 record against, has five teams in the top 25. Kansas senior forward Richard Scott said there was a higher level of play in conference games. "They know it's a whole lot more physical," Scott said. "You play hard and just try to do the things you have to do to get a victory." "It's no sissy game out here in the Big Eight," he said. "Any night a team can get beat." Scott said the Oklahoma game showed the team's younger players exactly what basketball in the Big Eight is like. With these words of wisdom from the more experienced players, freshman guard Jacque Vaughn said he was ready for the conference schedule to pick up. "The coach said it would be like playing Indiana every night," Vaughn said. "I love challenges. I've been waiting for this since I came to Kansas." Richey, Scott and senior guard Steve Woodberry have yet to play a season at Kansas in which they have not won or shared a Big Eight championship. Vaughn said he didn't want this season to be the first. "I feel kind of obligated to them," he said. "I really want to send them away with another championship." Big Eight teams begin to see roles competition form within conference By Doug Glass The Associated Press Kansas City, Mo. — Nebraska coach Danny Nee isn't sure his team deserves to be mentioned as a possible Big Eight champion yet, but he has noticed something different about this year's group. "Camaraderie, chemistry, you're always trying to get that cohesiveness going," Nee said. "This year the Nebraska team has that. People know their roles. They get along on the floor. I think it's just experience." The Cornhuskers also have 6-foot-7 guard Eric Piatkowski, said by Nee to be as good as any player he's come across, which is no small statement. While an assistant at Notre Dame, Nee coached such future NBA stand-outs as Kelly Triucka and Orlando Woolridge. "He's really a big guy who can handle the ball," Nee said Monday during the Big Eight coaches teleconference. "He's a perfect pro size. Now, his senior year, he's just very focused and working very hard. I think he's capable of playing this way the whole year." Led by Piatkowski, Nebraska stormed to three victories last week, including a 78-72 victory at Iowa State to open the Big Eight and a 106-67 rout of Colorado in Lincoln, Neb. Piatkowski was named conference The Cornhuskers (11-2 overall, 2-0 Big Eight) have won 10 straight, the second-longest winning streak under Nee. player of the week after averaging 23 points and eight rebounds in those victories and an 89-85 victory over Southern Utah. "We want to be a contender, but I feel it's just so premature." Née said. "We just were fortunate to win our first game on the road, then get home and win big. ... It's such a boost, a confidence builder. They can't take away the road win." KU SOONERS Oklahoma State lost to Clermson and Florida a week earlier during a tournament in Honolulu. The Hawaii trip was especially disastrous for Bryant Reeves, Oklahoma State's 7-foot center, who managed just 22 points and nine rebounds in three games there. Oklahoma State, a conference favorite since the beginning, had been stumbling slightly before the Cowboys exploded Saturday in a 105-89 victory over Oklahoma in Norman, Okla. "We really were able to get our basketball team back on track," Sutton said. "I knew we would play well but not as well as we did." Looking for positive ways to shake up Reeves, coach Eddie Sutton's staff had him watch films from last season, when Reeves was Big Eight player of the year. The rest of the Cowboys got a shakeup, too, when Sutton drilled his team six to seven hours a day during the week before the second semester began. No. 3 Kansas was 16-1 overall after handling Oklahoma (8-4, 0-2) 94-84 Monday night in Lawrence. Kansas guard Jacque Vaughn attempts a shot in the second half of last night's game in Allen field House against the Oklahoma Sooners. Vaughn contributed three points for Kansas' 94-84 win. "If you just want to look at it from a record standpoint, it's be one big plus," coach Roy Williams said. "We've played five teams ranked in the top 25 and a couple of other teams pretty doggone good, like Georgia and DePaul." Williams is aware that the Jayhawks have played more games than most other teams and is trying to keep his players from wearing down. "I think if we continue to win, somebody will recognize us and slide us in there," said Stewart, whose team has won 10 consecutive games. "We've really tried to take some extra precautions," he said. "We gave them four full days off at Christmas, practices are a little shorter and we're taking more days off." Kansas State coach Dana Altman Tom Lenininger / KANSAN Missouri (10-1, 1-0) looks better and better, especially after throttling Kansas State 63-43 on Saturday in Columbia, Mo. Coach Norm Stewart said he was "appalled" at mistakes the Tigers were making but predicted, correctly, that his team would crack the poll. Missouri is ranked No. 25. faced the task of regrouping the Wildcats after the whipping in Columbia. "We've found some ways to win some ball games, but we haven't made the progress necessary to compete in the league." Altman said. "Offensively we're not playing with any crispness, any purpose." The Wildcats (10-2, 0-1) were to host Wichita State on Wednesday before meeting the Cowboys on Saturday. "I saw the Oklahoma game, and it was hard to believe (the Cowboys) ever were in a funk." Altman said. Both Colorado (5-5, 0-1) and Iowa State (8-2, 0-1) are trying to recover from injuries. Buffalofoos star Donnie Boyce has been troubled this season with an ankle sprain, leg cramps and the flu, and coach Joe Harrington last week dismissed freshman Dameon Page, who was unhappy over the amount of his playing time. The Cyclones will play Oklahoma on Saturday. "We hope we can get back on track and get going," coach Johnny Orr said. "We're just not functioning properly. Maybe by Saturday we'll be up for a run on the Sooners." COLLEGE FOOTBALL Orange, Hancock bowls generate money for Kansas SPORTS BRIEF The Jayhawk football team will be receiving money for a job they didn't do. With Nebraska playing in the Orange Bowl and Oklahoma competing in the John Hancock Bowl, the Big Eight Conference and the Jayhawks became richer. Kansas will get a one-eighth share of all post-season earnings made by both Nebraska and Oklahoma, said Susan Wachter, assistant athletics business director. The Aloha and Copper Bowls' paid both the Colorado and Kansas State football programs, but that money was not divided up within the conference. Those schools keep the money for themselves. The Jayhawks received $750,000 last year from the Aloha Bowl, Wachter said. Injuries plague Kansas players Kwamie Lassiter was among four KU football players who received exemptions from the Big Eight Conference for medical hardships. Lassiter, who is a fifth-year senior free safety, broke his collarbone during the second game of the season against Western Carolina. Because he has already been red-shirted, Lassiter has no remaining eligibility. He must go through the NCAA for a final decision, said Doug Vance, assistant athletic director for media relations. Senior running back George White injured his knee against Western Carolina. White was granted another year of eligibility, and will return next year for his senior season. Freshman defensive back Maurice Gaddie, who missed the last eight games of the year, suffered a stress fracture in practice. Gaddie was given another year of eligibility by the conference, and will return as a freshman next year. Freshman defensive back Charles Davis also was injured against Western Carolina. Davis injured his knee and will be a freshman again for next year's Jayhawks. Nuggets sign former Jayhawk PROFESSIONAL BASKETBALL The Denver Nuggets yesterday signed former Kansas point guard Adonis Jordan to a 10-day contract, filling a roster spot vacated by Darnell Mee, who was placed on the injured list. Jordan was expected to suit up last night when the Nuggets played the Pistons in Detroit. The former layhawk is beginning his second stint with the Nuggets. Denver signed Jordan to a free-agent contract Nov. 20. off the Sioux Falls, S.D., team of the Continental Basketball Association while Denver guard Robert Pack was a holdout. In six games with the Nuggets, Jordan averaged 2.5 points and 3.2 assists in 13 minutes per game. Last season he averaged 12 points and 4.5 assists while helping lead the Jayhawks to the NCAA Final Four. Jordan will rejoin former teammate Mark Randall, the forward who played alongside Jordan on the Jayhawks' 1991 Final Four team. The 5-foot-11 Jordan was a 1992 second-round draft choice of the Seattle SuperSonics. 12 Wednesday, January 12, 1994 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Rent-A-Center Special rates for students •furniture •electronics •computers $20 off first month's rent with this coupon expires. 2-19-94 842-8890 711 W. 23rd in The Malls RAC CHINESE Buffet Lunch/Dinner $4.95-$6.75 All-You-Can-Eat 北京 饭店 Peking Restaurant Free Delivery 749-0003 23rd and Iowa (Behind Hastings) 北京 饭店 OPEN UNTIL 7 PM TODAY THROUGH THURSDAY KU KU BOOKSTORES Ix-Itaiba 804-1640 Hurua Nairobi 804-1627 Textbooks available at both Union locations KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store that offers rebates to KU students SULLIVAN HIGDON & SINK ADVERTISING • MARKETING • PUBLIC RELATIONS 801 BAST DOUGLAS 7023 6008 3184 801 WICHTA WICHTA X9175 8023 9008 3184 801 0324 0124 GET SENTENCED TO FIVE WEEKS OF HARD LABOR. AND LIKE IT! MAY 31 - JULY 1 SULLIVAN HIGDON & SINK - WICHITA, KS Still, with 12 teams trimmed to eight in the NFL playoffs, it remains the Dallas Cowboys against the world, particularly if Emmitt Smith's shoulder is healthy. Sullivan Higdon & Sink is looking for a chain gang of six students who want to learn about advertising the tough way. Do time at SHS, and you'll gain the hardened edge it takes to break into advertising. You'll learn the secrets of survival from advertising and public relations pros, and do real work for real clients. To find out how you can get convicted, contact your advisor or call Kelli Frazier at (316) 263-0124. The wild-card games were fun, the weekend entertaining. Or as Kansas City coach Marty Schotenhelder said, "We're in the entertainment business. We delivered." Three of next weekend's quarterfinal games are regular-season rematches — Kansas City at Houston and the Los Angeles Raiders at Buffalo in the AFC and Green Bay at Dallas in the NFC. And the New York Giants at San Francisco may as well be a regular-season rematch — these teams seem to meet as often as division opponents. NFL playoffs showcase stars, rematches Dallas favored to win second straight title Dallas, Houston, San Francisco and Buffalo, the four teams that had byes last week, all are favored. Teams that were off lost two-thirds of the time when they met teams that had played the previous week. By Dave Goldberg The Associated Press There are a lot of winners on the playoff teams — the eight starting quarterbacks left have 11 Super Bowl rings among them (Joe Montana four; Phil Simms, Steve Young and Jeff Hostellert two; and Troy Aikman one). Montana, Alkman and Simms all have been Super Bowl MVPs. And don't forget Jim Kelly just because he has lost three Super Bowls — he's been the winning quarterback in three straight AFC title games. A look at this weekend's games Kansas City (12-5) at Houston (12-4) The Oilers won 30-0 in the regular season — but with an asterisk. Montana sat out with a bruised wrist. Still, that was during Houston's bad period — its only win in its first five games. Now they've won 11 straight and seem to be enjoying the Buddy Ryan-Kevin Gilbride sideshow. So we get Montana vs. Moon and the Houston defense. Montana has usually played well against Ryan defenses. Montana picked himself up after nine sacks to throw four fourth-quarter touchdowns on Sept. 24, 1989 for San Francisco in Philadelphia, finishing 24 of 35 for 428 yards in that game against man-to-man coverage forced by Ryan's blitzes. But the Kansas city secondary is banged-up and didn't have much success against Neil O'Donnell in the overtime win over Pittsburgh. And O'Donnell's a couple of notches below Moon. So can the Chiefs win? "Ithink they have the best defense in the league," Schottenheimer said Monday of the Oilers. "But Cleveland got 402 yards against them, so who knows?" Raiders (11-6) at Buffalo (12-4) The last meeting was in Buffalo Dec. 5 and the Raiders won 25-24. Tim Brown caught 10 passes for 183 yards. Buffalo's weather could work against the Los Angeles track club. But remember this — Brown played at Notre Dame, James Jett at West Virginia and Hostetler, a generation ahead of Jett at West Virginia, spent his formative NFL years in the winds of Giants Stadium. Still, Buffalo's secondary, Nate Odomes and Henry Jones in particular, is a lot better than that of Denver, which Hostetler, Brown and Jett riddled for two straight weeks. Teams can run against the Bills, but the Raiders' running game is mediocre at best even with the promotion of Napoleon McCallum. The last time the Raiders were in Buffalo for a playoff game, the Bills won 51-3 in the 1990 AFC title game. But while the cast of characters is the same, the Buffalo offense isn't — the Bills have won this year because their defense grabs turnovers. Buffalo should win, but there are no guarantees. suspect defense and try to consume 40 minutes or so to keep Rice, Taylor and Young off the field. Then they have to hope that they get touchdowns instead of field goals once they're in scoring position. Giants (12-5) at San Francisco (10-6) A seemingly annual matchup with an odd statistic: the 49ers have won five of the last six regular-season meetings, but the Giants have won the last three playoff games, including the 1990 NFC title game at Candlestick. In fact, this will be the 16th New York-San Francisco meeting in 13 years, a high among non-division opponents during that period. The Niners lost three of their last four after they had secured the NFC's second seed. But they still scare teams simply because of Jerry Rice and John Taylor, who can score from anywhere on the field. One problem for the Giants — Mark Collins, who usually handles Rice pretty well, has a gimpy ankle. The plot should be simple: the Giants will give the ball to Rodney Hampton against San Francisco's The Cowboys won 36-14 in the regular season and are two-touchdown favorites. That's assuming Emmitt Smith's shoulder allows him to play. He clearly has been the most important player in the NFL this year. Again, no guarantees. Smith won't be the only problem for the Green Bay defense, which will have to get a lot of pressure from Reggie White and Tony Bennett to keep Troy Aikman from finding Michael Irvin and Alvin Harper. Erik Williams, the Cowboys' right tackle, won an NFC player of the week award last season for shutting down White in a game with Philadelphia. Green Bay (10-7) at Dallas (12-4) The Cowboys have less to worry about on defense, although the Packers: Sterling Sharpe keeps finding ways of getting open. The Packers, weak at cornerback, strong at safety, may try a two-deep zone — a defense the Giants used to shut down Irvin and Harper. But Green Bay, banged-up at inside linebacker, allowed Barry Sanders 169 yards coming off a knee injury. Now the Packers must face Smith. The Etc. Shop TM 928 Mass. 843-0611 Ray Ban BANQUE & LONG LA FONTAINE DE BANCHE The Far kers probably have gone as far as they can. waterbeds new and used Bothis Bedroom 842-7378 You'll Walk Away From Our Sale Wishing You Were A Centipede. Reebok asics. NIKE Converse Fact is, you’ll need a hundred pairs of legs to take full advantage of our Clearance Sale. Just come on down to The Athlete’s Foot. You won’t be able to walk away empty-footed. The Athlete's Foot Hours: Reebok asics. NIKE CONVERSE ★ NIKE The Athlete's Foot DISCOVER MAXIMUM VISA 914 Mass. 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Keg Beer $39.99 16 gallon Call 843-2313 Alvin's 9th and Iowa, Lawrence, KS Open 6 a.m. to Midnight Call 843-2313 IGA HOMETOWN PROUD RAGU arabic language WITH ASPARAGUS SINCE 1980 RAGU die heutige NATURKREASURES BAGU FOR BEES WITH SUGAR IN SUGAR JELLS Spaghetti Spaghetti IGA Saltines Buy One Get One Free! 16 oz. box Saltines Saltines Campbell's SOUP Campbell's SOUP Alvin's IGA IGA . NATION/WORLD --- UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, January 12, 1994 13 Secret radiation tests revealed The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Nearly 1,000 research radiation studies and research projects were conducted at veterans hospitals in 1955 and 1956 alone, government records show. But the Department of Veterans Affairs cannot say how many people were wittingly or unwittingly exposed to radioactive isotopes in them or other experiments at VA hospitals between 1947 and 1979. "Right now, we do not know," VA Secretary Jesse Brown said Monday. "We don't even know what they were." we don't ever know who they were. Annual reports published by the old Veterans Administration, which was replaced by Brown's department in 1989, show that 399 radioisotope studies or research projects were carried out in 1955, and 560 were conducted in 1956. Brown said in an interview with Associated Press Radio that he didn't know whether any of them or the others since 1947 are among the 800 radiation tests on humans disclosed last month by Energy Secretary Hazel O'Leary. They "could, in fact, maybe have taken place in the VA on some unsuspecting veterans." Brown said. "That is what we are looking at." But VA documents indicate that its secret atomic medicine program and more public radioisotope programs begun in 1947 were intended to complement research by the Atomic Energy Commission, predecessor to the Energy Department. In the years following World War II, the VA was a pioneer in the use of medical radioisotopes for diagnosing and treating a wide variety of ailments, including dysfunctional thyroid glands, brain tumors, leukemia and other cancers. By 1951, 14 VA hospitals had established radioisotope laboratories, and by 1958, the number of such facilities at VA hospitals had risen to 48. Donna St. John, a department spokeswoman, said all 48 of those facilities have not been identified. While about half of the VA activities involved diagnosis and treatment, "the main contributions that radioisotopes can make to medical care will be as a tool in biological and medical research," the agency said in 1947. Although such experiments were first approved by a local committee that included outside representatives, reviews by VA headquarters did not begin until the 1960s. Based on the records collected so far, veterans were informed about the research in some of the projects. But the VA is not sure that all were informed, and it acknowledged that there often was no effort to keep track of the patients' medical histories. While early research under the "radioisotope program" was disclosed, Brown expressed frustured that the more inclusive "atomic medicine program" was classified as confidential out of concern over service-connected disability claims. According to agency records, the earliest experiments took place at VA hospitals in Los Angeles, Minneapolis, New York, Cleveland, Chicago and Framingham, Mass. The Veterans Affairs Department already has received records from some hospitals and expects to have enough within a month to piece together some kind of pattern on "what was taking place." Brown said. The VA set up a toll-free telephone hotline (1-800-827-1000) last month, seeking information from any veteran who may have participated in the studies or relatives with knowledge of them, but so far has received little response. BRUSSELS, Belgium NATO leaders warn of possible air strikes to assist Muslims After months of empty threats, President Clinton and his NATO allies warned Serb forces yesterday of a new determination to launch air strikes if needed to relieve embattled Muslim enclaves in Bosnia. "My resolve is there," Clinton said. At the end of a two-day summit, the 16 Western leaders announced their willingness to order bombing raids If Bosnian Serbs continue to prevent the opening of a major airport for aid supplies or the rotation of encircled peace keepers. "Whether they occur or not depends upon the behavior of the Bosnian Serbs from this moment forward," Clinton told reporters at the end of the meeting of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. "The offer is there." NATO Secretary-General Manfred Woerner said. "The door is open." "I think they will clearly understand that this is a very serious proposal that opens the possibility of membership — not one that limits it," said Clinton. From Brussels, Clinton flew to the Czech capital Prague to try to sell leaders of that new democracy, as well as Poland and Hungary, on the alliance's plan for limited partnerships. The three nations, worried about ethnic strife and political turmoil spreading in their region, have repeatedly asked for full membership in the alliance and the security guarantees that would go with it. Under NATO's 1949 treaty, members agree to consider an armed attack on any one of its members as an attack on all. THE NEWS in brief PRETORIA, South Africa Violence concerns leaders ANC leader Nelson Mandela ruled out a white homeland in South Africa, but said yesterday that he was confident pro-apartheid whites would return to negotiations with his Black group. Mandela spoke after four hours of private talks with President F.W. de Klerk. The discussions focused on political violence in black townships and pro-apartheid parties opposed to the country's first multiracial election in April. The Afrikaner Volksfront, a coalition of pro-apartheid parties, pulled out of talks Monday with the ANC because it rejected demands for a sovereign state for Afrikaners, descendants of white Dutch settlers. "We will never concede to the demand for a separate Afrikaner homeland," Mandela said at a brief news conference after his meeting with de Klerk. The African National Congress is expected to win the April election. Pro-apartheid groups say an ANC government will turn South Africa into a communist dictatorship and ruin the African culture. A Parliament divided by reforms On the eve of the opening of Russia's first post-Soviet parliament, President Boris Yeltsin's supporters threatened Monday to prosecute ultranationalists and blamed Communists for the deaths of millions of people. Intended to mark a new chapter in Russia's young democracy, the new parliament already is deeply divided, with extreme nationalists and Communists determined to undo Yeltsin's reforms. MOSCOW Russia's Choice, the main bloc supporting Yeltsin, said it would try to make parliament members face criminal responsibility for statements that incite hatred or violence. The threat was aimed at Vladimir Zhirinovsky, whose Liberal Democratic Party won 23 percent of the vote in last month's election. Comet to strike Jupiter in July WASHINGTON Astronomers around the world are tuning up their telescopes for the first scientific observation ever of a large comet smashing into a planet, an event that happens perhaps only once in a thousand years. Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9, now broken up into at least 21 large chunks, crashes into Jupiter in July, hitting that gaseous planet with aeries of impacts more violent than any atomic bomb ever exploded. More than 200 astronomers from observatories all over the world met Monday at the University of Maryland just outside Washington to plan a coordinated program designed to capture the split-second flashes of light that will occur when the comet impacts Jupiter. "Every person with a telescope large enough will be trying to observe it," said University of Maryland astronomer Lucy McFadden, the organizer of the meeting. "Even amateur telescopes may be able to see something." Compiled from The Associated Press. Purchase New & Used Items! Car Stereos Lawrence's Most Liberal Loan Company We loan on almost anything of value Bicycle ools Vacuums Camera's ● CD's & Tapes Musical Instruments Firearms/supplies CB's • Typewriters • TV's & VCR's Jayhawk Pawn & Jewwlry 749-1919 * 1084 W, 6th 2 blocks East of Iowa LAWRENCE BATTERY U 9:00 - 6:00 Mon - Fri Crown Cinema LAWRENCE BATTERY 842-2922 M-F7-6 SAT.8-4 903 N.2nd Street VISA Don't Get Caught With Your Battery Down! MAINTENANCE-FREE AUTO SALE AUTOMOTIVE BUY * SELL * TRADE BEFORE 6 PM ADULTS $3.00 (BUDGED TO SEEING) SENIOR CITIZEN $3.00 Guitar 9:00 - 5:00 Saturday 欢乐园 842-2922 M-F 7-6 SAT.8-4 905 N.2nd Street VISA Don't Get Caught With Your Battery Down! VARSITY 1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841-5191 Pelican Brief PG-13 5:00, 8:00 60 MONTH 60 MONTH 50 MONTH 40 MONTH SALE 70 MONTH 70 MONTH up to 875 CCA HILLCREST 925 CA 770 CCA 540 CA 450 CCA 440 CA 440 CCA 1050 CA 875 CCA Air Up There PG 5.00 Heaven and Earth R 7.20, 9.20 Remains of the Day PG 5.00, 8.00 Tombstone R 8.00, 8.00 Mrs. Doubtfire PG-13 7.15, 9.45 Rudy PG 5.00, 7.20, 9.45 CINEMA TWIN HILTON PARK LANDLIG $1.25 49. 92 42. 92 5:00,7:30 9:45 4202 36. 92 CA – Cranking Amps at 32° FREE CCA – Cold Cranking Amps at 0° INSTALLATION Warranty details at store SHOWIMAGES FOR TODAY ONLY Billiards $2.40 per hour until 6:00 p.m. Not just for bowling Jawbowl MIDWEST UNION SAVE 864-3545 Dickinson Bicycle Dickinson Grumpby Old Man PG-134:20; 7:20, 9:50 Wayne's World II PG-134:40; 7:25, 9:40 Beethoven's 2nd PG-4:15; 7:15, 9:35 Sister Act II PG-4:25; 7:15, 9:45 American Cyborg R-4:30; 7:05, 9:40 House Party III R-4:05; 7:00, 9:45 GIANT RICK'S BIKE SHOP Inc 916 Massachusetts, (913)841-6642 Greatselection of chairs, couches, lamps tables, and more to enhance your dorm room apartment, or house. SAVE Jayhawk Bookstore FURNITURE SALE BRIDGESTONE "Your Book Professionals" "At the top of Naismith Hill" Hrs: 8-7 M-Th, 8-5 Fri, 9-6 Sat, 12-4 Sun, 843-3826 cannondale 1993 closeouts layaway now save bucks! $ S_{A} $ SA THRIFT STORE 1818 Massachusetts PYRAMID PIZZA Wednesdays Only! "We Pile It On!" As Easy as 1-2-3! Buy a large, get a second of equal value for $3! Buy a medium,get a second of equal value for $2! The Women's Fitness Facility Buy a small, get a second of equal value for $1! B Begin Your New Year at Body Boutique B TEXT ONLY SAVE $ 139 842-0000 Special rates for graduating seniors! Absolutely NO joining fee! 749-2424 925 Iowa AEROSPACE - you can stop your membership over spring break! BODY BOUTIQUE The Women's Fitness Facility Learn to Flv - Lawrence Air Services Instruction • Charter Services • Rental awrence athletic lub 1410 Kasold (formerly Junkyard's Jym) Men $95 per semester Women S60 per semester Monthly rate S25 - Over 100 Stations * Nautilus Equipment * Stationary Bikes * Free Weights Hours 6 a.m.-10:00p.m. M-F 8a.m-8:00p.m. Sat. 11 a.m-6:00p.m. Sun. 842-4966 11a.m.-6:00p.m. Sun. 14 Wednesday, January 12, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Librarians hope database will make research easier By Mark Burnstein Kansan staff writer The University of Kansas libraries have added a computer index that librarians hope will alleviate overcrowding at computer terminals and make research easier. "We wanted to come up with an index that would be most applicable to students," said Rob Melton, library publications coordinator. The Expanded Academic Index is a database of more than 14,000 magazines, journals and issues of the New York Times indexed from 1988 to the present. The index is available on the Online Catalog and Information System on the main library terminals and can be accessed by any student, faculty or staff member with a computer and a modem. The index can be searched by keyword, title, author or any combinations. The index is one month behind periodical publication dates. The index went on-line. Jan. 6. Melton said he was not sure how frequently the system would be used. Currently, 15 percent of all searches through the on-line catalog come from off-campus computers. Using remote locations to access the index will allow more people to find and gather information, he said And students will be able to look up subjects at any time, said Channette Kirby, library assistant. "People can continue to study when the library is closed," she said. "We wanted to expand access and to relieve tension on machines in the library." Remote users will be able to search the index for information, download it, and — if they have the capability — print out what they find. This is an advantage, Kirby said, Search with computers Library users now will be able to use computers both inside and outside KU libraries to index articles, Use an on-line terminal in one of KU's libraries. From the main menu, select option two. Then type "ACAD." KANSAN A computer with a modem is needed. Contact Computer Services Consulting at 864-0410 for further instructions. KUID numbers are required to logon. Source: KU Libraries because Watson Library has only four printers connected to the system. But Watson will add 13 terminals with printers in the next few months, she said. The library bought the system a year and a half ago and spent more than a year testing and refining it. But because of its diversity, the index may not be specific enough for very detailed searches. "It's a broad index," Melton said. "It's not the most indepth to anything. It's mostly for undergraduates. It's going to give enough coverage for most people at that level." Melton said the system contained many publications concerning the humanities, social science and general science, but contained fewer art and music publications. Not all of the indexed art and music articles contain abstracts, he said. The library subscribes to 95 percent of the publications on the index, Melton said. However, users must consult the on-line catalog to confirm that the library carries the publication. A Student Senate resolution that opposes the South Lawrence Trafficway could face a veto or a revote. Trafficway resolution may encounter veto or revote By Heather Moore Kansan staff writer The resolution was introduced before the Senate and passed on Dec. 8. But according to Senate rules, a majority must be present to consider the resolution. When a quorum call was made at the beginning and end of the Senate meeting, the required 32 senators were not in attendance to validate a vote. Lane Jorgensen, Syracuse junior and Environs member, said the lack of majority might cause the resolution's vote to be invalid. "It passed that night, but there weren't enough senators there to vote," he said. "John had 10 days to veto it." John Shoemaker, Senate president, said that the senate should reevaluate its decision, because of the number of missing senators at the vote. "The decision didn't reflect the entire body's will," he said. "I don't believe it ever passed." But Travis Harrod, Student Senate Executive Committee chairperson, said enough senators were present when the resolution was presented. The resolution is meant to support the Haskell Indian Nations University Student Senate's protest of the trafficway. The Haskell Senate and the Haskell Board of Regents have said the trafficway would disturb land that is environmentally and spiritually important to Haskell. The resolution may be vetoed by Shoemaker within 10 school days. If he vetoes the resolution, the Senate may override the veto or reconsider it for legislation and hear it again. Patrick Eagleman, All Scholarship Hall Council senator, said that he supported the resolution. "The resolution outlines that it is inconsistent with KU to not address the problems of Haskell," he said. "In the form I saw, it called for the city to look at an alternate route for the South Lawrence Trafficway," he said. Jorgensen said that the purpose of the resolution is to give support to the Haskell Student Senate. But not all senators agree with the resolution, Trevor Thompson, engineering senator, said that he thought the South Lawrence Trafficway was the best solution for alleviating traffic problems. "I think that the South Lawrence Trafficway would improve the traffic situation in Lawrence," he said. Thompson commended the city commission's work on the issue. "They looked at all the options and found the best alternative," he said. The South Lawrence Trafficway will connect east of Lecompton Road and curve south of Lawrence. It will then intersect with 31st and Iowa streets and meet with old Kansas Highway 10 east of Lawrence. The project has been approved by the Lawrence city and county commissions. Price Banks, Douglas County planner, said that the county already has begun work on the project. FREE BEDROOM! RENT A TWO BEDROOM AND GET THIRD BEDROOM FREE NEWLYREMODELED! GREAT LOCATION JAYHAWK BUS ROUTE RESTAURANTS THEATERS SHOPPING 843-6446 South Dointe AFFILIATES 2166 W26th (26th & IOWA) SALE! SAVE UP TO 70% -Ladies Shoes -Men’s Shoes -Athletic Shoes -Children’s Shoes 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 1968. 825 Massachusetts Downtown Lawrence AEROBICS SESSION 1 BEGINS JANUARY 18TH! MONDAY, WEDNESDAY, FRIDAY: Sunrise (6:15 AM), Stepping Up(7:15 AM) MONDAY-THURSDAY: Stepping Out(5:00 PM) Aquacize(5:30 PM), Cardio Combo(4:30 & 5:30 PM) Body Sculpting(4:30 PM) SATURDAY: Cross Training(9:30 AM) (Participants in Cardio Combo or Stepping Out may attend a High/Low class on Fridays at 4:00PM-212 Robinson) Now SUNRISE STEPPING UP CARDIO COMBO CROSS TRAINING STEPPING OUT AQUACIZE BODY SCULPTING Wear HIGH/LOW IMPACT STEP AEROBICS HIGH/LOW IMPACT 1/2 STEP 1/2 AER. STEP AEROBICS WATER AEROBICS TONING Sponsored by KU Recreation Services (864-3546) *Sign Up/Register in 208 Robinson! AEROBICS SESSION 1 BEGINS JANUARY 18TH! MONDAY, WEDNESDAY, FRIDAY: Sunrise (6:15 AM), Stepping Up(7:15 AM) MONDAY-THURSDAY: Stepping Out(5:00 PM) Aquacize(5:30 PM), Cardio Combo (4:30 & 5:30 PM) Body Sculpting (4:30 PM) Cross Training (9:30 AM) SATURDAY: (Participants in Cardio Combo or Stepping Out may attend a High/Low class on Fridays at 4:00PM-212 Robinson) Now Was SUNRISE HIGH/LOW IMPACT STEPPING UP STEP AEROBICS CARDIO COMBO HIGH/LOW IMPACT CROSS TRAINING 1/2 STEP 1/2 AER. STEPPING OUT STEP AEROBICS AQUACIZE WATER AEROBICS BODY SCULPTING TONING Sponsored by KU Recreation Services (864-3546) * Sign Up/Register in 208 Robinson! MON MON SATU (Pa Tartaricanus inc. 1803 Red Lyon Tavern A touch of Irish in 944 Mass. 832-8228 downtown Lawrence of Kansas regulation or thing in this newspaper is Fair Housing Act of 1868 to advertise any pre- discrimination based on Kansas Classifieds agreement interimming basketball soccer back ground prep nothing compares (303)989-4084 For Sale, ID 82 S calculator with both in 1100. Call Carla 841-8681 leave message Do you suffer from A Year Round Runny Nose or Allergies? Receive up to $1,500 IMTCI, a pharmaceutical research company, is seeking nonsmoking males & females between eighteen and forty years of age to participate in a medical research study. To qualify you must have experienced allergy symptoms for the last two years, used allergy medications, and be able to attend six 37 hour visits & three short visits at our clinic. IMTCI International Medical Technical Consultants, Inc. 16300 College Boulevard - Lenexa, KS 66219 For more information, please call Mon - Fri (8 am - 5 pm): 599-2044 Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Lied Center Presents A Special Event The Children's Theatre Company of Minneapolis in Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm Co-Sponsored by Payless ShoeSource 8:00 p.m. Thursday, January 13, 1994 Lied Center Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office (864-ARTS); Murphy Hall Box Office (864-3982); and any Ticketmaster outlet (913) 234-4545 and (816) 931-3330; public $15 and $13, KU, Haskell and K-12 students $7.50 and $6.50, senior citizens and other students $14 and $12; KU student tickets available through the SUA office, Kansas Union; phone orders can be made using MasterCard or VISA; all seats reserved. Partially funded by the National Endowment for the Arts, Mid-America Arts Alliance. KU Student Senate Activity Fee, Friends of the Lied Series, and the Kansas University Endowment Association. THE LION GUMMER COMPANY THE CHILDREN'S THEATRE COMPANY MINNEAPOLIS MINNESOTA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, January 12, 1994 15 LAWRENCE & PARKS TAE-KWON-DO SCHOOL Increase your self-value through being a Martial Artist! Learn Martial Arts from an Original Master Master Kejune Park, Ph.D. 715 High St., Baldwin 10th & Massachusetts Buy 12" sub & receive 2nd for $1.99 Buy 6" sub & receive 2nd for 99¢ Sub8Stuff Sandwich Shop Expires 1/31/94 1618 W.23rd Classified Directory 100s Announcements 1005 People and employees 108 Personal 110 Business Personal 114 Family 130 Entertainment 134 Lost and Found 200s Employment 208 Help Wanted 208 Professional Services 238 Typing Services Classified Policy The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of individuals, nationality, nationalization, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 and the federal civil rights law, except limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or disstory idea? 864-4810 Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and jobs advertised in this newspaper are open. Please contact us at jobs@nationalmagazine.com. 300s Merchandise 400s Real Estate 405 Real Estate 430 Roommate Wanted 100s Announcements I 110 Business Personals WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO Really Listen -Kansan Classified:864-4358- Call or drop by Headquarters We're here because we care. 841-2345 1419 Mass. We're always open TRAFFIC-DUI'S 305 For Sale 340 Auto Sales 360 Miscellaneous 370 Want to Buy Donald G Strole Sally G Keisey 16 East 13th 842-1133 Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of DUI/MIP/Fake ID's Office located right next to campus Elizabeth Leach Attorney at Law-Former Prosecutor 414 W 14th 749-0087 Urgent Care (Additional Charge) Monday-Friday 4:30am-10pm Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm Sunday 8:40am-4:30pm WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500 Regular Clinic Hours Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm Saturday 8am-11:30am KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services Pharmacy Hours Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm Saturday 8.90am-12.30pm Sunday 11am-3pm 120 Announcements NEED A RIDE/RIDER* Use the Self Serve Car Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union. COMMUTERS: Self serve Car Pool Exchange Main Lobby, Kansas Union TIME MANAGEMENT AND STUDY SKILLS Workshop. Start the semester of right, get control of your computer. Begin jm 12 no:40 oe:40, pm 30, Strong, FREE! Presented by the Student Assistance Center. Internet Made Easy Access KU and the Internet SEMESTER SPECIAL Call DATABANK Your Key to the Internet Voice 842-6699 Data 842-7744 Slip is Available TUTOTOS: List your name with us. We refer inquiries to you. Student Assistance Center, 206 East 18th Street, 5th Flr., New York, NY WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 153 Stratford Ave. TIME MANAGEMENT AND STUDY SKILLS WORKSHOP Get control of your life! FREE! Wednesday, Jan 12, 7:00-8:30 pm 330 Strong Hall Presented by the Student Assistance Center 140 Lost & Found I found a kitten in Carlos O'Kelly's parking lot. Call me at 749-8672. 男 女 200s Employment 205 Help Wanted ACADEMIC AIDE POSITION AVAILABLE. (1) German Reader. Duties include: Reading textbooks and other materials for students who are blind or have reading disabilities $4.25/hr. Applications available at the Student Assistance Center, 680 N. 7th St., Manhattan, NY 10022, or deadline Tuesday, January 18, 1994, 5:00am. Adams Alumni Center is now hiring part-time bannel servers, day-time availability & professional attitude. Apply in person across from Kansas Union. 8645-4672. Babyisitters needed for the spring semester for a research grant. $4.35/hour must have experience with children and infants and references. Apply at 4087 Dole. Child care for 4y, old, near campus, 3:0-5:30 p.m. Call day: 821-261, evening: 849-2076 Call day: 821-261, evening: 849-2076 Manage PC and Mac local area network, suceen computer lab; purchase/maintain hardware and software; train/consult staff. Required: Bachese, Microsoft Lync proficiency, MAC LANs, proficient PC/Mac user, communication skills. $25,000 annually, minimum. For complete description contact John Matherbaugh. Availabl plea description, contact Linda Varberg; Applicants Kansas; Lawsuits, Kansas 69205; Fax (1) 843-845-455 Phone: (813) 844-6046 Applications must be post- marked by January 18, 1994 EO/AA Employer Cottonwood Inc. a service provider for adults with developmental disabilities is currently accepting applications for part-time employment in their residential division. All positions are evening and weekend hours, some may require sleep overs. College course work and related experience help applicants prepare for the RECORD IS A MUST. Please apply by Jan. 14 at Cottonwood Inc. II 30 W. EI. 102. Counselors/Support Skid Children's Camp/allows. Must have skill in one of the following activities: archery, arts & crafts, baseball, basketball, dance (jaz, tap, ballet), drama, drums, gymnastics, swimming, surfing, hockey, horseback riding-hunt seat, kate, lacrosse, mature, photography, piano, pionering, rocketry, rollerblading, sailing, scuba, sports, video, skiing, track, video, water ski, WSI, surfing, wind. Kitchen chefs, cooks, bus drivers, maintenance camp Winndow For boys, 2253 SLdu Ridge, S1e 406E, Boca Raton, FL 33431 (407) 994-5500, University camp Winndow For boys, 2253 SLdu Ridge, S1e 406E, Boca Raton, FL 33431 (407) 994-5500, University campus in the student union from 1am-4pm on 6/1/03 and the Regional Andagist Rooms. Do you like preschool children in 3 to 5 years old? Do you want to make a difference in a child's life? Do you have a little free time? Volunteer at Head Start every day a week. For information call 822-1251. EOE Cruise line, entry level, on-board positions avail- great benefits. Summer or year round (813) 813 256 7401 Evening and weekend CNA's needed to work with clients in their homes. Reliable transportation necessary. Call Sharon at Douglas County Visiting Nurses 845-3738. Hobby Town USA is looking for responsible people to help in our new Lawrence franchise store. PT/FT Apply by writing to H.T.U. P.O. Box 11453, Least, KS 60073-1453. Phillips 66 seeks cashiers to work the following, shift—5pm-8am; 12am-8am. Must be neat, clean and enjoy working with the public. Apply in person to Phillips 66-900 Iowa EARN CASH ON THE SPOT I am looking for a student to play with my 1/3 year old boy, Monday through Friday. 1-5 p.m. Please call Janalymn at 847-365. If you can only work certain daws. please call anawww. Excellent raw! BLAIRSTATE square aph. 360.481.2000 ARRIVE TIME EVENING DELIVERY PERSON Makes own car. Apply in person Personal Restaurant (2hrd and Iowa below Hastings). 749- 0003 Office help needed. Student hryl. $4.50/hr. Job: Skills Applications in 390 Wong Eng, Weng Dept. Open interviews for asst. property manager to be held Friday, Jan, 14th - 1.5 pm. Bring resume to PROMOTE our SPRINGBREAK packages wif our posters and flyers, or SIGNUP NOW to Springbreak rooms. Daytona, Panama, Padre Island. 8:30am-12:30pm. 829-7654. 129 call Up. now 1-800-423-8784 SUMMER JOBS AT CAMP $15 Today $30 This week By donating your life saving blood plan WALK-INS WELCOME! NABI Biomedical Center 816 W 24th 749-5750 By donating your life saving blood plasma Camp COUNSELORS USA 600 camps in the USA, Russia, and Europe need you this this summer. For the best summer of your life, meet us at www.mathandmusic.com for more information or call Camp Counsellors USA @ 800-999-CAMP or write CCUSA @ 420 Florence St. Palo Alto, CA 94301 MANPOWER TEMPORARY RESOURCES i Mature individual desired to perform custodial duties from 3 pm - 9 pm, M-F. This position will take place in a professional environment with a major Lawrence company. If interested please apply immediately. Manpower Temporary Services, 211E 8th.749-2800.EOE SHIPPING ASSISTANT Lawrence-based, growing, international, technical publishing company has a part-time (15 hours) job allowing it to handle include shipbuilding orders; staffing and machine maintenance; copying computer disks for inventory; taking the mail to the office daily; and providing backup support to the fulfillment leader as needed. Preference will be given to people working as a team required. Ability to maneuver up to 50 pounds and 50 wpm preferred. This position is part of our internal clerical support team DVF and helps other areas of the company as needed. R & D Publications. Inc. is an equal opportunity employer. You are welcome to work at our atmosphere. If you are looking for an enjoyable work environment with a reliable company, please come and fill out an application at 1001 West 23rd Street, Suite 800. **STUDENT APPLICATIONS PROGRAMMER** Date 01/26/1984 Salary $5400; 20 hours per week. Duties include programming in C, K-SHELL, FOXPRO and/or other languages on AIX, WMS, CMS and or LAN. Complete job description. Apply, complete a job application available in Rm 202 of the Computer Center and return to Ann Rirt. E/O/AA EMPLOYER. Student hourly office help requires for 15 hours a week at a 45.00/hr. Must have computer and office experience and be a current KU student. Apply at 403.Dolete. Daycare Jan. 18: 00pm. STUDENT SYSTEM TESTING PROGRAMMER Deadline: 01/21/94, Salary $560-650, Month. 20% per week. Duties include designing and writing programs, maintaining, or enhancing existing applications, and maintaining libraries library maintenance. Required qualifications: currently enrolled at the University of Kansas, demonstrated experience in designing and writing programs, knowledge of at least 2 program languages including Pascal or C., good English language skills, and ability/or software testing. Ability to maintain effective working relationships with customers and staff. Complete job description available. To apply, complete an application available at the Computer Center, EO/AA EMPLOYER. The Princeton Review is seeking dynamic people with high standardized test scores to teach part-time. No teaching experience necessary, high test scores on the SAT/GRE/GMAT/LSAT or MCAT a place in your community. Please take place on Jan 13, in Kansas City. For more information, please call Rebecca at 800-855-7737. Vista Drive in is now taking applications for full and part-time help. Apply in person. 1327 W. sth. The Lawrence Bus Company is now taking applications for SAFERIDE drivers. Must be 21, have a clean driving record, and be familiar with presence at 15 to 15 hrs.wk. if interested call 842-0544 Seds, deks, bookcases, chest of drawers. Everything But Ice. 908 Mass. Tel; (818) 999-4425; Fax; (818) 882-9681 Research Assistance - MS/MSL information specialist available to assist with term papers, theses, dissertations, research projects. 943-4280. 225 Professional Services INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS DV-1. VISION DEVELOPMENT. The U.S. Immigration Dept. Green cards provide permanent resident status, Citizens of almost all countries are allowed to take part. Students, tourists, anyone may apply. Info & forms: New Era Services, 20031 Stuurg, S.Caoga Park, CA 91306 IBM compatible computer with printer, software, and manuals. $500. Call 749-2839. 340 Auto Sales 1973 Volkswagen Super Bug, good condition, great student house, 800-843-1732 BRAXTON B. COPLEY buen size classic futon bed, solid map w/ mural filto finish $400, 814k - 781k ankle for Sherri Rick Frydman, Attorney 823 Missouri 843-4023 Attorney at Law General Practice Traffic Tickets, Misdemeanors, Landlord/Tenant X Mac SE 20 HD, SYS-7. Excel, upgraded memory, MemoryWriter, writing carriage. 989/obc. DVD. 64-bit. OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense One day sale, Saturday Jan. 15, 11am-5pm. Cornerson Community Church, 220 North Rogers Landlord Tenant 719 Massachusetts 749-5333 - Looking for a good type? * Paper, Applicant's name, Charts * Laserette to WOW! your profits * Grammar and spelling free * 18 years experience * Call Jack it * Make the Grade 865-285-293 Super single waterbed. Prame, mattress, heater and accessories $125.00/obc. 822-4164 235 Typing Services Carousel Slide Projector, Raymond, 2515 Arknames, 941-8334 370 Want to Buy INTEAGE 50" s, 60" s, 70" s CLOTHES 房屋 Almost new twin mattress and box springs. $50 o.b.o. Call 841-5945 300s Merchandise 2 furnished rooms in nice spacious house close to campus and 3rd St. Washery/Dryer. A/C $2550 400s Real Estate 405 For Rent Available immediately 3 bern apt, at 11270 St. brown downtown and campus. Go to GCB-Cort- lin. 305 For Sale Available Jan. 1, 3 dbm. on bus route. Call 749-1556 2-3 p.m. Fri.-Fri. Newer 1, 2 and 3 BR apartments available for August '94. Washer/dryer, dishwasher, microwave, private bath/balconies. Avoid the rush! Reserve you plan now!! 811-846-748 or 811-850-748. A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere VILLAGE SQUARE apartments - Close to campus • Spacious 2 bedroom • Laundry facility • Swimming Pool • Waterbed allowed 9th& Avalon 842-3040 EFFERSON PLACE Stocked fishing lake, courtyards w/fountain, sand volleyball, pool, jacuzzi & exercise facility COLLEGEPORT APARTMENT L1115 The Best Place to Live at KU is in K.C.! EQUAL MOUISSION Opportunity 764-1471 119th&l-35 meadowbrook COMPARE - Convenience - Location - Apartment Size - Cost Per Month - Lifestyle (Sorry, No Pets) Surroundings M-F8-5:30 Sat 10-4 Sun 1-4 we're making life easier! MASTERCRAFT OFFERS Now leasing for Spring! 15th & Crestline 842-4200 EQUAL LOOPING *Weekly Maid Service *Front Door Bus Service *"Dine Anytime" with Unlimited Seconds *Laundry and Vending Facilities COMPLETELY FURNISHED 1-2-3-4Bedroom Apartments Designed with you in mind! SUBLEASES AVAILABLE Open Daily 9 A.M-5 P.M. HANOVER PLACE 841-1212* 14th & Mass. REGENTS COURT 749-0445 * 19th & Mass. SUNDANCE 841-5255 * 7th & Florida TANGLEWOOD 749-2415 * 10th & Arkansas CAMPUS PLACE 841-1429 * 1145Louisiana ORCHARD CORNERS 749-4226 * 15th & Kasold 842-4455 - Free Utilities NAISMITH 1800 Naismith Drive Nice, 1 bedroom, close to campus. hard wood floors, lots of windows. No pets, off street parking. Day: 749-2019. Evenings: 942-8007. Day: 7/49-10/19. Events: 844-647-0077 Studio apartment now available close to campus. Utilities paid. $305. 6 month lease available. 841-648 or 749-1554. 430 Roommate Wanted 2 are looking for 3rd roommate for little room in baby appt. new room, $65 + 1/4 utilities. *F female roommates desperately needed for spacings* a linen on, on bus seat, dishwasher. WE RESPOND FOR ALL, on bus seats. Male Grade Student to share a dorm house with one $300/month. Bills pcd. Call 442-1298 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN To share spacious house, completely furnished, walking distance campus, $50/month + utili- tion. Female, non-smoking, roommate needed, imme- diate guest, private room, own bedroom, wash/dry $99.00 - $1,499.00 Sleeping area $79.00 - $1,299.00 College-aged roommate needed now for 3 BR alvarne homes, 115mm, water, rain, rent free Roommate wanted, N/S, to share apartment: Washer/dryer water paid. $20/month + utilities. Female roommate, live in 3 bedroom townhouse. Willing to pay $1200/month. Available Jan 1, 749-288 or 61-500-588. Roomaone needed for 3 bdm req apt. Rent Roomaone needed for 3 bdm req apt. Rent to NOTE and W/D/ Call 802-2538 for all the salary data. Female roommate wanted for 3 birm api, close to campus, $300 per month, includes rent and utilities. - By phone: 864-4358 How to schedule an ad: Wanted: Female roommate to share new large condo with 3 other female college students. Walking distance to campus. 6 month lease available. Rent $285/month. Call 769-389 or (315) 348-9435 Boorman needed to share 3 bbm townhouse. +/- utilities. Cal Jailer at Masterplan 641-4935. Classified information and order form Ads phone in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made. Stop by the Kansas office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or Visa. Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of apile ties the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run. You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kassan offices. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or VISA account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date. When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds on a classified ad that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available. The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00. Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Classifications 1X 2-3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-28X 30+X 2.65 1.55 1.05 .85 .75 .90 1.99 1.15 1.05 .79 .65 .45 1.86 1.85 .75 .65 .60 .49 1.75 .90 .75 .60 .60 .35 165 personal 118 business persons 129 anon-recommend 130 entertainment 140 lab & board 180 help uswd 225 professional services 235 systems服務 Please print your sd one word per box 370 want to buy 405 for rent 450 roommate wanted ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print: 1 | | | | | | 2 | | | | | | 3 | | | | | | 4 | | | | | | 5 | | | | | | Date ad begins: Total days in paper Total ad cost: Classification: Classification VISA Method of Payment (Check one) Check enclosed MasterCard Visa (Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansan) Furnish the following if you are charging your ad: Account number: Expiration Date: MasterCard Print exact name appearing on credit card: Signature: The University Daily Kanzan, 119 Stauffer Flint Walk, Lawrence. KS. 66045 THE FAR SIDE By GARY LARSON © 1984 ForWorks Inc. Published by Universal Press Syndicate "Oh, not you, mister! ...I was referring to something here from my dog, Nimka." 16 Wednesday, January 12, 1994 M layhawk Bookstore "Your Book Professionals" "At the top of Naismith Hill" Hrs: 8-7 M-Th., 8-5 Fri., 9-6 Sat., 12-4 Sun. 843-3826 PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 1029 Massachusetts phone 841-PLAY Futon Couch w/ 8" F/C Mattress $239.95 Bobbis Bedroom 842-7378 EVERYTHING BUTICE "Leader of the People" 1928 - Beds - Desks - Chest of Drawers - Bookcases G 936 Mass. BRAXTON COPLEY ATTORNEY - General Practice • Traffic • Misdemeanors • O.U.I. • Landlord/Tenant Landmark series 1993 719 Massachusetts, Suite D Lawrence, KS 66044 (913) 749-5333 A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence 944 Mass. 832-8228 Red Lyon Tavern Fine Line Tattoo Inc. - Fraternity & Sorority Letters - Baby Jayhawk Tattoo - Bring your own design or choose from our extensive selection Mon - Sat 12 - 8pm Tues. till 6pm 29h Mass. St Topeka 233-8288 - Reasonably priced - Hospital sterilized PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS 842-1212 1601 W.23rd Southern Hills Center "NO COUPON" SPECIALS EVERYDAY TWO-FERS 2-PIZZAS 2-TOPPINGS 2-COKES $900 PARTY "10" 10-PIZZAS 1-TOPPING PRIMETIME 3-PIZZAS 1-TOPPING 4-COKES $30⁰⁰ $11^{50} CARRY OUT 1-PIZZA 1-TOPPING 1-COKE $350 DELIVERY HOURS 11 AM-2 AM 11 AM-3 AM 11 AM-1 AM MON-THURS FRI-SAT SUN NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN School pays man to go away Suspended student to get tuition paid The Associated Press PHILADELPHIA — A Swarthmore College freshman was accused of harassing a student who resisted his romantic overtures. Now the school is paying him to go away. Swarthmore agreed to pay Ewart Yearwood's tuition, transportation and book costs wherever he decided to enroll for the spring semester. Yearwood, 18, said he planned to register today at Columbia University in New York City, where he lives. But Columbia spokesman Fred Knubel said yesterday that there was no record of Yearwood having applied. His departure came after another freshman, Alexis Clinansmith, complained that he had harassed her last semester. She accused him of stalking her at the fall formal dance, phoning her at night, and making lewd comments and remarks such as "I'm going to have her." Alfred H. Bloom, president of the exclusive liberal arts college in the Philadelphia suburb of Swarthmore, said Yearwood did not sexually harass Clinansmith, but did engage in a "pattern of intimidation." "The resolution of this case makes clear that intimidation is not to be tolerated at Swarthmore College and, consistent with the college's confidence in the power of education, provides the means for (yearwood) to learn to better manage his own behavior," Bloom said Friday in a statement. Swarthmore said it would consider taking Yearwood back next term if he undergoes counseling — at the school's expense. Columbia, like Swarthmore, costs more than $20,000 a year in tuition room and board. Yearwood, who was on a partial academic scholarship at Swarthmore, said he accepted the deal to avoid being suspended. "If you truly think I did something wrong, kick me out," he said. "I think the president of the college ... sees something is wrong here, either the penalty, the process or the procedure. I made clear that if I was suspended I would sue." Yearwood denied harassing his classmate and said she misinterpreted his actions. He said that he shaved his head last semester, revealing several eras scars, and that he "looks mean" when he's not smiling. His lawyer, Harvey Silverglate, said the case resulted from an "outrageous infestation of political correctness." Clinamsmith, who lives in Bloomfield Hills, Mich., is away during the school's winter break and could not be reached for comment. Her lawyer, Carolyn P. Short, did not return calls to her office Monday. After Clinansmith complained about Yearward to the college, police and the Delaware County District Attorney's Office, Yearward agreed to stay at least 40 feet away from her. But a disciplinary committee decided to suspend Yearward for the spring semester for violating that agreement. Yearward and Clinansmith both appealed to the president of Swarthmore, which resulted in Friday's decision. "I do not think I have a problem," Yearwood said. "They feel that I probably inadvertently, subconsciously, release intimidating vibes and that I need counseling to better understand what it is in my behavior that makes people feel that way and how to be perceived as less intimidating." connex PART-TIME POSITIONS AVAILABLE (with full-time benefits) Connex International, a leader in the communications industry for over a decade, is looking for you to join our growing team. We are searching for several part-time people (flexible schedules available) Monday-Friday for our busy operations center in downtown Lawrence. Positive attitudes and good phone skills a must. NO SALES INVOLVED! We offer a paid training program for qualified applicants. Starting wage: $6.00/hour. Tolearnmore, joinuson: WEDNESDAY, JAN.12, 1994 USE KANSAN CLASSIFIED INTERNATIONAL ROOM, KU UNION or stop by our table in the KU Union on Fri. January 14, from 9:00a.m.-3:00p.m. 6:30PM NATURAL WAY Natural Fiber Clothing 820-822 Mass. 841-0100 SUNY SAVE UP TO 30% ON USED BOOKS FROM Jayhawk Bookstore only at the top of Naismith Hill! 1420 Crescent Road Lawrence, KS 66044 843-3826 PLUS ADDITIONAL SAVINGS BELOW OPEN UNTIL 8:00P.M. JANUARY 11, 12, & 13 FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE Clip and Save $10 $10 JBS BOOK BUCK UP TO $10.00 OFF $1.00 OFF EACH TEXTBOOK $10.00 OR MORE (MAXIMUM $10.00 OFF) Jayhawk Bookstore only at the top of Nalsmith Hill! NOT VALID WITH ANY OTHER COUPON OR OFFER. LIMIT ONE PER CUSTOMER. MUST BE PRESENTED AT TIME OF PURCHASE. EXPIRES JANUARY 13, 1994 30 MINUTES FREE STORE SIDE PARKING SPORTS EMPORIUM & FUNDRINKERY Choose from over 15 appetizers, all under $4.00. NTN Trivia, the newest game in town. Super Bowl and Spring Break round trip airfare contests, ask for details. Billiards, darts, and a big screen TV. Daily drink and shot specials. CHIEFS GAME SPECIAL 22 oz. Bud and Bud Light bottles $2.25 and daily food special. Sun, Jan 16. BRAINS& BRAWN PLAY THE MOST EXCITING LIVE TV COMPETITIONS IN HISTORY. TRIVIA A panel of experts developed the ultimate fun trivia contest that puts your skill and knowledge against other players here in our place and players all across the country. We Hold the Total Package QB1 OB1 For the first time in history, you can actually interact with live TV football games via 601 Kasold Suite D-102 (Formerly Jacque's) satellite right here. Compete with other players here and nationally by anticipating live quarterback plays. 865-4040 --- Sports: Rival figure skater's husband and bodyguard accused in arranging attack on Nancy Kerrigan. Page 12 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS VOL.103, NO.79 KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPERA KS 666 2 THURSDAY, JANUARY 13, 1994 ADVERTISING: 864-4358 (USPS 650-640) Prerequisites result in drops NEWS:864-4810 By Susan White Kansan staff writer Some KU students may have come to class this week to find that their names have been dropped from class rosters. The English, math and Spanish departments have automatically dropped students who failed to meet enrollment requirements before the beginning of the semester, said Pam Houston, director of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences undergraduate center. Houston said most students should have received letters during the winter break notifying them about a drop. However, some letters may have been lost in the mail. Also, students who paid their fees by mail may not have received a receipt with their updated schedules attached. The math department had specific guidelines set for each course. Houston said, "Between semesters, I check prerequisites for students enrolled in math courses," she said. "I find that they don't have the prerequisites. They either haven't taken a course, they didn't pass a certain course the previous semester or their ACT scores aren't high enough. Then I submit a letter telling them that I have to cancel their enrollment. "Sometimes I don't hear from them. Since I send out the letters, I assume if I do not hear from them that they are agreeing to having that course canceled." Houston said the Spanish department also set certain requirements for taking classes. "The Spanish department made some changes in its beginning-level courses," she said. "If students have certain years of high-school Spanish, they have to be in an upper-level course rather than the introductory 104. So the Spanish department tries to work with students, but sometimes it does cancellations." Students who enrolled in upper-level classes after failing English 101 or 102 were dropped from the classes, as well. But not all the problems with canceled classes come from classes in these three departments, Houston said. "Occasionally a department will have to cancel a course or a section of a course," she said. "Then on the student's registration ticket there will be a message that the section or course is canceled, but sometimes students are automatically put in a different section of the course. So the new section is on the ticket with a note that a section has been canceled. More class cancellations will take place within the first two weeks of the semester, Houston said. If students do not attend their classes in certain departments, professors will assume they have dropped the class and take them off their rosters. "Students do not realize that they are enrolled in another section of the same course, so they take a different course. They do not realize that they were added to another section until the grades come out and they have an A for the course." Joe Van Zandt, director of the KU advising support center, said if students had been dropped for not meeting the prerequisites of the class, they could talk to their instructors about reinstatement. Tom Leininger / KANSAN "That is why it is so important to check with a instructor to make sure that you have met all the requirements for the class before enrolling for the class," he said. Afoggy night Fox purchase of NFC games worries fans Antenna, unhooked cable necessary to get network By Cheryl Cadue Kansan staff writer "They better get Fox back on Sunflower Cablevision so we can watch NFC games," said Middleton, whose television does not have an antenna. "It is half the NFL, and I don't want to get screwed up reception." For avid football fan Jim Middleton, third-year law student, watching the Dallas Cowboys play this fall may require more effort than pushing a button on the remote control. The rights to the games of the Cowboys and the 13 other teams that make up the National Football Conference were bought in December by the Fox Television Network and will be televised this fall exclusively on the Fox network. NFC teams, which also include the San Francisco 49ers, the New York Giants and the Chicago Bears, have won 11 of the past 12 Superbowls. Two students walk through mist in front of Watson Library late Tuesday night. But Sunflower Cablevision — Lawrence's only cable company has not carried KSHB, the Fox affiliate in Kansas City, Mo., since Oct. 6. That month, negotiations between World Company, Sunflower's parent company, and Fox fell through. Fox wanted cable companies to air its new cable channel, and any company that refused — such as Sunflower — would no longer be allowed to carry Fox. Dennis Knipfer, general manager for Sunflower Cablevision, said Sunflower refused to carry the channel because it did not feel comfortable committing to an untrained channel, but World Company was still negotiating with Fox. In the meantime, Knipfer said, subscribers still could watch the games if Sunflower Cablevision has not carried Fox since October. they unhooked their cable and attached an antennae that easily can be bought at a hardware store. Some Sunflower customers called when the news of Fox's purchase came out, Knipfer said, but the number of comments eventually declined. "I wish Fox all the luck in the world, but I do hope it won't hurt the consumer," he said. Other cable subscribers did not mind the reception, but they disliked the inconvenience. "I don't have an antenna and it's really just a pain," Jason Harris, Clay Center, junior, said. Ryan Folkerts, Overland Park, junior, said he would like Fox to return to Sunflower but would settle for attaching an antenna to his television before each game. "I think Sunflower should definitely get Fox back," he said. "It's just a hassle switching back and forth." The move of NFC games to Fox will not bother Robert Edwards, Wichita, junior. "I like the AFC better," he said. "I watch mostly AFC games and for me the NFC games are secondary." Could the 'Hawks be ranked No.1? Georgia Tech, ranked 17th at 10-3, crushed No. 1 North Carolina 89-69 last night The othertime the Tur- Heels were ranked at No. 1 this season, they lost in the third round of the Presseason National Invitational Tournament. This leaves Duke, at 10-0 and ranked No. 2, as the prime candidate for the new No. 1 spot. But tonight the Blue But tonight the Blue Devils play Wake Forest at home, a team that beat them last year. And No. I may be cursed this year. No team has held the position for more than three weeks. Arkansas, Kentucky and now Carolina have all fallen after holding the No.1 position. INSIDE The 'Hawks play K-State at 8:30 p.m. Monday in Allen Field House. Nintendinitis Repetitive pushing of buttons on a home video game system controller can lead to wrist injuies that may cause pain, loss of sensation in the finger or even a total loss of use in the hand. Page 3. Legislators expect vigorous debate over elusive death penalty legislation By Stephen Martino Kansan staff writer It is probably the state's greatest political and social irony. But in past years, the Legislature has passed legislation to legalize the practice only to have the governor veto it. Governors have ran campaigns promising to sign any death penalty bill presented to them; the Legislature fails to accommodate their request. Kansas is a moderately conservative state in America's heartland. More than 70 percent of the states' residents claim, through opinion polls, that they want the return of capital punishment, society's most severe penalty against its worst members. "We've never been in a situation like this one before," said State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence. "When Gov. Carlin was in office, the Legislature would pass death penalty laws because they knew he would veto them. When Gov. Hayden was in office, everyone knew he would sign the bill, so many re-evaluated their positions." Gov. Joan Finney's declaration that she would allow a death penalty bill passed by the Legislature to become law without her signature is its best chance of passage, Charkon said. "The death penalty will take up to 70 percent of my time this year," said State Rep. Greg Packer, R-Topeka, the sponsor of the House bill. Two bills have been introduced in the Legislature, one in each chamber. And no one is expecting easy deliberations. Packer is a freshman legislator who says ANALYSIS “If criminals start thinking that it's their life they will be giving up, maybe they will think twice before killing someone,” he said. that the time has come for Kansas to begin exacting the ultimate punishment. Not so, says State Rep. Forrest Swall, D-Lawrence, and an assistant professor of social welfare at the University of Kansas. "There is no deterrence involved when the death penalty is used," he said. "This is an issue where people are generally going to respond to their beliefs, and the Mark Parkinson B. K. PRAKASHAN Greg Packer facts are of little relevance." Swall said that supporting the death penalty was a knee-jerk reaction to society's outrage about crime. "We keep talking about how to handle the results of crime without any substantive discussion on the causes of crime," he said. "The death penalty isn't a very encouraging discussion. Few people change their views on facts presented or pleas of persuasion." However, two things have changed the environment enough in Kansas to make Finney either changed her mind or clarified her murky position on the issue. I remember my legislative time valuable, and I wasn't going to spend time on the death penalty as long as the governor continued her opposition to it," said State Sen. Mark Parkinson, R-Olathe, and author of Senate legislation "However, when the governor said that she would allow the bill to become law without her signature, I knew we had a chance to pass a bill." death penalty passage an even bet in the Legislature this year. Packer said that Schmidt's death had an influence in his decision to introduce death penalty legislation. And the July 1993 murder of Stephanie Schmidt, a Pittsburg State University student, refocused the state's attention on how violent crime is handled. "It's a travesty to see any young person die before their time," he said. "It's horrible that we allow people like the guy who killed her out on street." However, Packer said arguments against the death penalty tend to detract from an overall discussion on crime. Schmidt's murderer, Donald Gideon, was a paroled felon known to have committed sex crimes. "This is only one aspect of a stronger penal system and punishment," he said. "We have to look at the big picture." One person who says he is looking at the big picture and does not see the death penalty is House Minority Leader Tom Sawyer, D-Wichita. Sawyer said he would lead the charge against the death penalty in the House based on its ineffectiveness, cost and chance of killing innocent persons. "The death penalty doesn't have anything to do with fighting crime," he said. "Since 1984, there have been four documented cases of innocent people being executed." he said. The estimated cost to the state for the death penalty would range from $10 to $13 million, Sawyer said. "People don't want things done that are wasteful and stupid," he said. "Spending $10 to $13 million on something ineffective is completely stupid." Stupid or not, supporters say the option to execute is needed in Kansas. "These are not easy issues," Parkinson said. "And people who choose not to support it, I can respect that, and we can still be friends. I think we have reached the point in time when this option must be available." The Senate bill was assigned to the Judiciary Committee and hearings will probably begin the week of Jan. 24 or Jan. 31. And in an election year when all representatives will be up for re-election, many believe that this issue is too important to voters for legislators to ignore. 9 "In the past this state has had the benefit of thoughtful legislators and governors." Swall said. "The jury is out on what will happen right now." 1 12 2 Thursday, January 13, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119. Stauffer-FlintHall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045. LAST THREE DAYS TO STOP at THE ART PRINT/POSTER SALE! Jan. 13 - Jan. 15 9 - 5 pm Thurs. & Fri. 10 - 4 pm Sat. Kansas Union Gallery/Level 4 Kansas Union STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES Sponsored by SUA THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SUA THE UNIVERSITY OF KANBAR ON CAMPUS Canterbury House will celebrate Holy Eucharist at 12:05 p.m. today in Danforth Chapel. The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an informational meeting for students interested in studying in Great Britain at 4 p.m. today at 3 Lippincott Hall. For more information, call Nancy Mitchell at 864-3742. KU Champions Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. today in Parlors A, B and C in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Erik Lindesley at 841-4585. Rock Chalk Revue Promotions Committee will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at the Oread Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Kristi Kipper at 864-4033. InterVarsity Christian Fellowship will meet at 7 ontight at Alcove LesBiGayS of Kansas will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. Amnesty International will sponsor a letter-writing session at 8tonight at the Glass Onion, 624 W. 12th St. H in the Kansas Union. For more information, call David Zimmerman at 864-7117. United Students will sponsor a get-together, "Whack!" at 8 tonight at the Granada Theater, 1020 Massachusetts St. For more information, call Jon Paul Shores at 864-6473. Icthus Christian Outreach will meet at 8:30 tonight at the Big Eight Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Mark Winton at 843-2260 or Noel Storey at 749-5848. CORRECTION Pharmacy and Allied Health and as a professor of administrative and social sciences at the University of Creighton. WEATHER Weather around the country: Atlanta: 41'/36' Chicago: 34'/26' Houston: 71'/57' Miami: 73'/68' Minneapolis: 8'/4' Phoenix: 69'/40' Salt Lake City: 44'/26' Seattle: 50'/45' Omaha: 30°/10° LAWRENCE: 37°/13° Kansas City: 26°/23° St. Louis: 40°/37° Wichita: 56°/26° Tulsa: 47°/34° TODAY Tomorrow Saturday North winds 10 - 15 m.p.h. High: 37' Low: 13' Colder, chance of flurries High: 19' Low: 5' Chance of flurries High: 18' Low: 3' A story on the front page of Tuesday's *Kansan* contained incorrect information. Jack Fincham now serves as both associate dean of THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Comments/Complaints/Corrections KANSAN HOW TO REACH US Source: The Associated Press Call 864-4810 for the newsroom: News tips — Campus Desk - Ben Grove, Editor or Lisa Cosmillo, Managing Editor Call 864-4358 for advertising: ■ Classified Department Comments/Complaints — Kelly Connealy, Classified Manager ■ Display Advertising Comments/Complaints — Justin Garberg, Business Manager Come to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall for: ■ placing announcements of meetings or events of campus groups for the "On Campus" calendar. Announcements must be submitted on form provided by 5 p.m. two days prior to desired day of publication. No submissions will be taken by telephone. ■ submitting "Letters to the Editor." See the Opinion page for details. Kansan fax #—913-864-5261 Valid Through July 31, 1999 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN C A R D Don't leave home without it... That's right...this is one card it want to leave at home when but in lawrence. This is the such a valuable product has and to the KU Community. KU Card, you get a listing classes and their exclusive - Incredible discounts * 20% Off any regular priced item - Buy one get one free * Free medium beverage or fries - Free appetizer w/purchase of entree Kansas Cards may be purchased at the Kansas Business office; KU Bookstores, Kansas and Burge Unions' University Book Shop and Jayhawk Booksstore for only $1.00! offers to cardholders. The Kansan Card exists for no other reason than to SAVE YOU MONEY!!! The card offers you great discounts on car repairs, clothing, food and much more. And better yet, the card is valid at other participating universities across the nation.Don't get caught in Lawrence or another participating university without the card...it's an expensive world out there and the Kansan Card is your only weapon against high prices. Just remember... Don't let Home Without W Don't Leave Home Without It! United Parcel Service Part time Jobs ups $8 Hour ups Interviews will be held Wednesday, Jan. 19 from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Sign up in the placement center, 110 Burge Union E/O/E m/f Who says you can't buy your friends? $1,509 The Macintosh LC 475 4/80 can be so useful that it may just become a close personal friend. Just like a close friend, the Macintosh LC 475 4/80 is friendly, dependable, interesting and helpful. But, unlike a friend, the Macintosh LC 4/80 doesn't mind staying up till all hours of the night helping you with a paper. Plus this friend comes with a printer and great software. And now is the best time to buy because the Union Technology Center is offering the Macintosh LC 475 4/80 with ClarisWorks, Campus Software Set, a StyleWriter II printer, a Color Plus 14" monitor and a standard keyboard all for just Macintosh. The Power to be your Best at KU. $1,509^{00} union technology center KU APPLE Academic Computer Supplies, Service & Equipment Burge Union * Level 3 * Level 5 N614-8694-5609 MasterCard VISA MasterCard NCOVER } ’ CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Thursday, January 13, 1994 3 Finney appoints four to Board of Regents Senate to hold confirmation hearings soon The Associated Press TOPEKA — Sen. Dave Kerr said yesterday that he hopes to move quickly to hold confirmation hearings for Gov. Joan Finney's four new appointees to the state Board of Regents. The governor named Catherine D. Conger, an Iola elementary school principal; Karen Krepps of Leawood, an official of Sprint; Phillis Nolan of Louisburg, an official with Hallmark Cards, and Tom E. Hammond, a Wichita attomey. They replaced three regents whose terms expired on Dec. 31, Shirley Palmer of Fort Scott, Don Slawson of Wichita and Rick Harman of Prairie Village. They also filled a vacancy left by the Senate's rejection last year of the appointment of Maxine Porter of Topeka and Reading. All four are subject to Senate confirmation. Conger's term will expire Dec. 31, 1996, while the other three new Regents' appointments have terms expiring Dec. 31, 1997. "We've asked for the paperwork on these nominees as soon as the governor's office can get it to us," Kerr said. "I hope to have hearings as quickly as possible, possibly as early as next week." "The only comments I've heard on a couple of them was favorable," he said. "Beyond that, they're a mystery." Kerr said none of the four appointees was familiar to him. Hiebert is a Lawrence cardiologist who appointed to the Regents last summer by Finney. Kerr's committee held a confirmation hearing for Hiebert on Monday, and endorsed his confirmation. "We're hopeful the governor has selected people like Dr. Hiebert," he said. "He appears to be an excellent appointment. I expect him to be confirmed unanimously, or nearly unanimously." The Senate is expected to vote on Hiebert's confirmation early next week. The Senate rejected three of Finney's appointees to the Regents during the 1993 session: Porter, Ruth Schrum of Manhattan and former state Sen. Jack Steineger of Kansas City, Kan. Conger is district test coordinator for Iola Unified School District No. 257 as well as being a principal. She is a lecturer at Pittsburg State University and formerly was an instructor at Allen County Community College. She holds a bachelor's degree from Pittsburg State, a master's degree from Emporia State University and earned a doctorate from Kansas State University. Krepps has been vice president of human resources development for Sprint since 1990 and has worked for that company since 1983. She formerly worked for Michigan Bell Telephone Co. and AT&T of New Jersey. She holds bachelor, master and doctoral degrees from Wayne State University in Detroit. Hammond has practiced law in Wichita since 1980, specializing in labor, litigation, workers' compensation and personal injury law. He represents more than 15 labor unions, including those in the aircraft industry. He holds a bachelor's degree from the University of Kansas and a law degree from Washburn University. Nolan has been a member of senior management at Hallmark the past 10 years and has worked for the company since 1966. She began her career as a mathematics teacher in Denver, and has been an adjunct professor at Emporia State. She holds a bachelor's degree from the University of Nebraska and a master's degree from Rockhurst College in Kansas City. 'Nintendinitis' may take the 'joy' out of joystick By Ashley Schultz Kansan staff writer Nintendo can do more than just strain video players' nerves. It can damage them. Students who overdo it in front of the video screen may put pressure on their eyes or — even worse — on their median nerve, causing carpal tunnel syndrome. Jason Preu, Olathe freshman, said that sometimes he played Super Nintendo between five and seven hours a day. "My hands have tingled, but they haven't ever gone numb," Preu said. The syndrome results from pressure the tendons put on the median nerve, said Bruce Toby, assistant professor of orthopedic surgery at the University of Kansas Medical Center. As it passes through the wrist, the median nerve goes through a canal that has nine tendons in it. Inflammation of these tendons as a result of tendinitis can cause this pressure. Toby said repetitive hand and wrist motions, such as rapidly hitting a button on a controller with the thumb, might cause "Nintendinitis." "If the tendons which surround the nerve swell up, then there's not enough room in the canal for the nerve," Toby said. "The nerve gets squeezed, and when it gets squeezed it doesn't function very well." The syndrome's initial symptoms are tingling, decreased sensation in the fingertips, discomfort at the wrist and pain causing difficulty sleeping, told Toby. Eventually, patients may have trouble holding on to objects because of a lack of sensation in the hand. The muscle at the base of the thumb may also lose muscle, causing a loss of strength. The nerve can sustain permanent damage if treatment is delayed. Surgery is necessary in more severe cases. The median nerve controls the thumb, index and long fingers and half of the ring finger. It is also responsible for the group of muscles at the base of the thumb. "If you lose your median nerve, you've lost a good portion of your total hand function," said Toby. If people experience symptoms that bother them, they should seek help, Toby said. Treatment for mild cases involves a splint worn day and night and anti-inflammatory medications. "I've played some of those games myself," said Reg Williams, chief resident of ophamology at the Med Center, whose children play Nintendo. "You've got to move your hand so fast, over time that could cause some problems." Williams said that players should also be careful not to harm their eyes. "People have a tendency to concentrate so hard they don't blink, and when you don't blink, your cornea can dry out," Williams said. Williams said he was unaware of any conclusive evidence of long-term damage because of eye strain, but he advised that students remember to blink. "Certainly contact lens wearers are especially susceptible because they've got a foreign body on the front of their eye and they need even more tears and more lubricant," said Williams. TOKYO William Alix / KANSAN Playing video games for extended periods of time can lead to "Nintendinitis," or inflammation of tendons in the wrist, which can cause pain or loss of sensation. Technology could link information sources Kansan staff writer By Roberta Johnson All it could take to accomplish these things would be the flick of a button. Within five years, KU students may not have to leave home to rent a movie or look at a library book. The "information highway," as it is known, will make it so that "anybody, anywhere, can be connected with anybody else and any other source," said Bill Conboy, professor emeritus of communication studies. Conboy, who taught a course on the future of communications for 25 years, said he thought the media would create services to help consumers sort out the impending glut of information. "Agencies will be set up to help the consumer," he said. "They need help figuring out what's important. People already don't know what to believe." A combined system of computer, telephone and cable services could link resources throughout the world, Conboy said. Although this is technologically possible in the future, Conboy said, he doubted it would happen. "Not every house will be able to pay for it, and not everybody wants everything," he said. "It's not worth it for an individual, family or home." A. F. Although this link may not be popular within households, Conboy said the benefits to businesses and universities in research capabilities would be worth the high cost. Bill Conboy "Just in terms of service, we couldn't measure the amount of help," he said. "It will have a huge impact. It will even help the economy, at first." Conboy suggested other possibilities, including an increase in specialization in employment, further expansion of virtual reality as a training device, increased use of fiber optics in medicine and a second computer revolution with CD-ROM. Mohamed El-Hodiri, professor of economics, agreed with Conboy. Because of the high amount of information that could be available by a keystroke, consumers could feel overwhelmed, Conboy said. "Most of us already experience overload," he said. "There is already too much to choose from." Conboy said that the increasing amount of information available came with an increasing amount of risk. "The biggest single problem is the size of human-made disasters," he said. "Some single, crazed individual could blow up half of New York City or put some chemical in the water system." Futurists may be able to predict and ward off this type of potential disaster, Conboy said. "If we can identify ahead of time where we seem to be heading, there is the opportunity to see whether we want to go there or not," he said. "The future is the only part of life we can change." CAMPUS BRIEF KU fraternity's celebration will focus on contributions of Martin Luther King Jr. Kansanstaffreport Alpha Phi Alpha will recognize the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday with a candlelight vigil and a celebration tonight. Dwayne T. James, St. Louis senior and member of the fraternity, said participants would light candles at 7 p.m. in front of Wescoe Hall. From there, they will form a procession to the Kansas Union. James said he honed to play a tane of King speaking during the procession. A celebration featuring songs and speeches, including one by Sherwood Thompson, director of the Office of Minority Affairs, will follow the procession at 7:30 p.m. in Alderson Auditorium in the Union. This is the first year the fraternity organized a celebration honoring King, who James said had been a member of the fraternity. He said he hoped both African-American and white students would attend the vigil and celebration. LOOKING FOR THE BEST PLACE TO GET IN SHAPE? 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At the top of NestHill MH Nr: 8-7 M-Th. 8-14 A-M, 9-5 Sat, 12-4 Sun. 433-832-1837 Kennedy Kennedy GLASS For All Your Glass Needs All automotive glass replacement & insurance claims handled. 730 New Jersey 843-4416 spring air twin mattress 6995 Bobbi Bedroom 842-7378 WE'VE SOUTH ALL POSTNET POSTAL & BUSINESS SERVICES WeVeGeGdtII AlAxNcOneLocation - UPS Authorized Shipping Carrier Friendship Personal / Business Personal / Business Professional Flipping Applications 254 10w St. Suite 10 Lewinsville, KS 65046 913-843-3544 Form (913) 843-9959 1 Next to Applebee's 4 Thursday, January 13, 1994 OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 4.200.21 VIEWPOINT Senate should reaffirm commitment to meetings Each April, Student Senate candidates pledge their devotion to Senate. However, once elected, senators' actions tell a different story. Fewer than half of the senators attended the entire Dec. 8 Senate meeting. Though this meeting is the most blatant example of the attendance issue, absenteeism remains an ongoing problem. Senate policy states that senators who have "three unexcused absences or six absences of any kind shall be immediately suspended..." The attendance policy includes both Senate meetings and committee meetings. In committee meetings, senators debate and discuss possible bills. In Senate meetings, those bills are voted on. Although both Senate and committee meetings are important, it is imperative that senators attend all Senate meetings. It is in Senate meetings that elected representatives' voices are heard. Each time a senator misses a Senate meeting, the voters' that senator represents are effectively silenced. Senators must make attending Senate meetings a priority. Senators have a responsibility to attend every meeting. KU students elect their senators to make decisions that will affect all students. Although an occasional absence is not unreasonable, repeated absences, excused or unexcused, weaken Senate as a whole. COLLEEN McCAIN AND NATHAN OLSON FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD The following is a list of absences at Student Senate meetings during the fall semester. Accurate records of committee meeting attendance were not available Name were not available. Rob Alfred 0 0 0 John Altevogt 4 1 5 Jill Bechtel 1.5 0 1.5 John Becker 1 0 1 Clint Bloom 1 0 1 Chad Boeger 3 1.5 4.5 Jeff Bottenberg 1.5 0.5 2 Toya Bowles 1 0 1 Christy Brown 3.5 0.5 4 Catherine Bubb 0.5 0.5 1 Alfonso Canedo 1 4 5 Tonya Cole 3 0 3 Matt Cowan 0 0.5 0.5 Patrick Eagleman 1 1 2 Peter Falt 0 0 0 Jon Foral 2 0 2 Lisa Golzar 0 1.5 1.5 Michael Guemple 1 2.5 3.5 Jody Hagerman 0 0.5 0.5 Dan Hare 1 0 1 Julie Harris 0.5 0 0.5 Travis Harrod 0.5 0 0.5 Gretchen Havner 1.5 0.5 2 Octavio Hinojosa 2 1 3 Katie Hutchinson 0 0 0 Andrew Irwin 0 0 0 Chander Jayaraman 0 1 1 Kara Laricks 1 0 1 Phillip Mabry 0 3 3 Munish Malik 1 3 4 Tim Marks 0 0 0 Ken Martin 3 2 5 Eric Medill 0 0 0 Eric Mersmann 1 0.5 1.5 Nikiki Millard 1.5 0 1.5 Bill Mills 2 1 3 Michael Moyer 1 1 2 Shannon Newton 1 0.5 1.5 Ann Perry 2 0.5 2.5 Alan Pierce 0 0 0 Hillary Price 2.5 1.5 4 Jerry Rank 1.5 0 1.5 Michelle Ray 2.5 1 3.5 Kristina Redding 1 1 2 Sherman Reeves 0 0 0 Michelle Rolfe 1.5 1 2.5 Steve Simpson 2 1 3 Heidi Snyder 0 0.5 0.5 Kelly Staples 0 2 2 Bradley Stasiulis 1 1 2 Carey Stuckey 1.5 0 1.5 Trevor Thompson 1 0.5 1.5 Jill Tibbetts 0 0.5 0.5 Alan Tikwart 0 0 0 Andrea Toll 1.5 0 1.5 Shanda Vangas 1.5 0 1.5 Paul Wolters 0.5 0.5 1 Jennifer LaMeil 0 0 0 Kim Cocks 0 0 0 Christine Campobasso 0 0 0 Jessica Bobker 0 0 0 Barbara Gelb 0.5 0 0.5 Lojen Tsao 0 0 0 Stuart Waldman 0 2 0 LaMell did not become a Senate member until Oct. 6. The final six members did not become members until Nov. 17 and therefore could attend only the last two Senate meetings. Half absences result from the fact that roll is taken twice during the meeting. KANSAN STAFF BEN GROVE, Editor LISA COSMILLO, Managing editor General manager, news adviser TOM EBLEN BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator Editors Assistant Managing Editor ...Dan England Assistant to the editor ...J. R. Clairborne News ... Kristi Fogler, Katie Greenwald, ... Todd Sellff Editorial ... Colleen McCain ... Nathan Olson Campus ... Jesse DeHaven Sports ... David Dorsey Photo ... Doug Hesse Features ... Sara Bennett JUSTIN GARBERG Business manager JENNIFER BLOWEY Retail sales manager JEANNE HINES Ruinasa Staff Campus sales mgr ..Jason Eberly Regional Sales mgr ..Troy Tawerley National A Co-op sales mgr ..Robin Kring Special Sessions mgr ..Shelly McConnell Production mgrs ..Laura Guth ...Gretchen Koehletheimtch Marketing director ..Amy Casey Creative director ..John Carlton Classified mgr ..Kelly Connelys Teamsheets mgr ..Wing Chan Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position. Guest columnists should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be pleased. The Kanan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kanan newsroom. 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Condom commercials effective; necessary for informing public The government, through Surgeon General Joyceyln Elders, has unveiled a series of frank, relatively graphic AIDS-education public service announcements for radio and TV aimed at people between the ages of 18 and 25. That's me, so I've been paying pretty close attention to this story. And the message is clear and logical: Condoms save lives. The ads themselves are pretty well done. One features a little animated latex condom hopping down from a dresser drawer and scurrying across the floor, tippeeing past a sleeping cat, and leaping onto...a bed where a couple is making love. Oops! Too late! But that's the whole point. The voice-over says: "It would be nice if latex condoms were automatic. But since they're not, using them should be." Not what you're used to seeing when "Melrose Place" cuts away to a commercial, is it? Or maybe it is. After all, we live in a society which teaches us that, if you drink the right beer, large-breasted women in uncomfortable looking bikinis will want to be with you. It's nice to see the other side COLUMNIST PAUL HENRY get addressed once in a while Our conservative friends are, predictably, outraged. These are the folks that think they can get through to hormone-addled young people by saying Don't Have Sex, End Of Discussion. Near as I can figure it, their various arguments can be divided into two general groups. There is the argument that frank talk about condoms on TV will put the federal stamp of approval on premarital sex. Perhaps this is so. But when you consider some of the other things that the federal government has put a stamp of approval on in the past — Salvadoran death squads, Contra drug running, and the insane arms race — safer whoopee begins to look pretty innocuous. The second argument, which I don't entirely understand and which has come into vogue in recent years, suggests that condom use does not decrease the risk of AIDS due to the allegedly high failure rate of condoms. What? It's true that condoms fail more often than they ought to. This is, more often than not, due to lack of information on the condom's proper use. The same folks who say the condom failure rate is too high are the ones preventing the information from reaching the people who need it. The Centers for Disease Control, in a study of couples in which one partner was infected with the HIV virus and who used latex condoms correctly, found not one instance of transmission from the infected partner to the uninfected one. Unfortunately, we are dealing with people who do not like to let facts get in the way of a good argument. What I like about these ads is that they concede that the best way to avoid AIDS is to abstain from sex altogether but do not assume that young people are necessarily going to. When the question of whether or not to have sex is approached from a moralistic position as opposed to a logical position, it is easy to lose perspective and blow the whole argument. I'd wouldn't be surprised if this campaign will actually be more effective in persuading young people to abstain than all the fire-and-brimstone sermons in the world, because this campaign makes people aware of their choices and gives them some idea of the positive and negative aspects of each choice. Will these ads have any effect? Only time will tell. One thing we do know, though, and it's something our conservative friends ought to consider, is that doing nothing will definitely result in a lot more people dying. Paul Henry is a Tacoma, Wash. graduate student in journalism. THESE POLITICIANS ARE GIVING WATER A BAD NAME! WHITE- WATER EXPOSED WATERGATE REMEMBERED HOOD VOK 04 Love of music an old friend At the start of this semester, I had to break up with an old friend. This friend carried me through the hard times and made the good ones even better. She warmed my heart on cold nights. She was my shadow when I was lonely. You've had a friend like this, haven't you? In kindergarten? Or maybe you have one now. “WELL?” she screeched. I jumped. I then drew in a deep breathe and told the lady, OK, eliminate jazz. COLUMNIST DAN ENGLAND Well, my friend was music. And I'm really going to miss her. And with one punch on the computer, our friendship was over. For the first time since I was 9, I would not be playing in a band. I stammered for a second. I needed this class to graduate. What do I do now? It was one month ago when I stared at the computer screen, not believing my eyes. Why does my jazz band class have CONFLICT in dull green letters stamped after it? "What's this?" the lady blurted out. "OHI. I see. They must have switched times on you. Media Ethics now starts at 10:30 on Monday and Wednesday." The same time as my jazz band. As I stumbled out, stunned, I remembered the good times we had shared. I remembered when we first met. I was an awkward fourth-grader. I could barely hold the trombone in my hands. I blew mightily into the instrument. A note! My music teacher clapped. "That was pretty good for your first time!" she said. I was hooked. The men's basketball band and the Marching Jayhawks would take too much of my time this year. But I could still play in jazz band. Not anymore. And so began a beautiful friendship. It let me travel to places I couldn't even dream about with any other activity except for athletics. I represented Kansas with my high school when we marched in George Bush's inauguration parade in Washington, D.C. I traveled with the basketball band to almost every NCAA tournament game. I was there in 1991 at the regional semifinal, when we beat Indiana and Arkansas. I was there in 1993 at the semifinal, when we beat California and Indiana (and I wrote a column about the trip). Music is still in my soul. I listen to it constantly. I was there when Kansas lost in last year's Final Four. I cried with Roy Williams after the UTEP game. And at every game, I could smell the mixture of sweat and hardwood, because I was so close to the court. My mother, skeptical at first about my commitment to music, told me right before my first year at KU, "Thankgod for your music. Because it saved your life." But music gave me confidence as well. I was shy when I went to junior high school, and I didn't have many friends. Music was something I could feel good about. But a small ache will occupy my heart where my music once did. If you aren't playing music, especially not with others, when you have for long, just listening to it isn't the same thing. It's like being with friends or an old flame. We had one last fling. In a smoky dimly-lit bar, I played with my jazz band for the last time at our year-end concert. The trumpets sang, the trombones hummed and the saxophones screamed. The drums popped. The bass rang out with the guitar. It was as close to paradise as I can reach. It was a remarkable goodbye. And it will make me miss it even more. But every time I need her, I'll think back on that night and smile. Soon I'll be too busy to miss it like do now. The paper will keep me occipied, and my friends will keep me happy. But just like any old friend you don't see anymore. I'll think about her. And right now, my loss feels just like any old breakup. It hurts. Dan England is a Lenexa senior majoring in Journalism. LETTER TO THE EDITOR Templin Hall residents fighting worthy battle I would like to clear up a few misunderstandings about Colleen McCain's "Viewpoint" article about Templin students fighting for their rights. First of all, she writes, "The Templin Hall residents ... are fighting an inane battle." This is not true. In the Spring 1994 KU Timetable of Classes, where University rules and regulations are printed, under the Bill of Rights (Article 2, Section D) it states, "Students will be exempt from disciplinary action, except for violation of a published... University or Regents rule or regulation. Rules and regulations shall be fully and clearly promulgated in advance of the supposed violation" (p. A20). The University rule being pushed at us says, "...[P]hysical conduct of a nature [not "actions of a sexual nature" as Ms. McCain writes] constitutes sexual harassment when, (3) such conduct has the purpose or effect of unreasonably interfering with an individual's work or creating an intimidating, hostile, or offensive working environment" (p. A25). What does "physical conduct of a nature" mean? It sounds to me like it's talking about hand gestures or some kind of touching or assault. Besides, some of the pictures that Also she says, "...residents' doors technically are part of the hallway." Is that always true? Or is it only when the door is closed? The door is in my room when it is open. How then can it be considered part of the hallway? Should it be able to put up a picture on my door when it is open, because it is inside my room. were put on the door weren't even put up by the residents living in the particular room. If someone else puts a picture on my door, according to Article 22, B.2 (p. A23), I can not "knowingly and without proper consent or authorization remove, use, misappropriate, or sell the property of another person or the University." I think that I have already proven that Ms. McCain is wrong in saying, "No justifiable reason exists for displaying these pictures outside rather than inside their rooms." But I can't help but say something about the last sentence: "A battle about bare-chested women is not worth anyone's time or effort." Jennifer Warren, Ottawa senior, thinks otherwise or else she wouldn't have sent a letter to the editor called "Resident's complaint shows his immaturity." But I would have to agree with Ms. McCain. So why doesn't anyone that opposes us just give up. Dan Murrow Kansas City freshman 1 UNIVERSITY. DAILY KANSAN Thursday, January 13, 1994 5 Rodent residents at Lewis likely no danger to students By Frank McCleary Kansan staff writer Lewis Hall is entertaining some extra residents these days. Several students have reported seeing brown mice in rooms on five of seven floors, especially at the end of list semester. There have been no reports of the rodents in the Ekdahl Dining Commons. Although the appearance of mice might disturb some people, there is little reason to fear them. Richard Ziesenis, director of environmental health for the Lawrence Health Department, said the department had not heard of any problems with mice carrying diseases in the last 20 years in Lawrence. There has not been a complaint filed about Lewis Hall in several years, he said. "It's very rare, but it is possible that the mice could carry salmonella, also known as food poisoning," Ziesenis said. Nonnie Klumpp, a Topeka freshman who worked as a security monitor in Lewis last semester, said some of the residents were unset about the mice. "Some people want to move out just knowing they are there," she said. "It bings a lot of people." People told her about the mice because they knew she liked mice, Bring in the cats Bring in the cats Richard Ziesenis, director of environmental health for the Lawrence Health Department, offers these tips to prevent mice from running around your room: ■ Eliminate any food sources ■ Keep garbage contained in metal cans ■ Keep kitchen areas clean ■ Patch holes bigger than 1/4 inch in diameter Jim Schmaedeke, Lewis Hall complex director, said he had heard about the mice sightings. she said. "I do know we have mice in the building, " he said. "I do know that trans have been set for them." Klumpp said that several students had told Schmaedeke about the mice and he had told them it was not a big deal. "He's trying to keep it totally hush- hush." Klumpp said. Schmaedeke denied that. He also said he wanted to get rid of the mice. Jon Long, assistant director of student housing, said that he was unaware of the situation but that he was not surprised. "We just want to get things taken care of." he said. Long said residents should talk to the hall staff if they feel the problem had not been solved. "Anytime you have a large facility, such as a residence hall, there is a tendency, especially in the winter, for mice to come in and get warm," he said. "We want to make sure that the students get what they need to take care of the mice," he said. "We need to get it taken care of." When there is an available food source, however, there could be a problem, he said. Ziesenis said the risk of mice in the residence halls was slight because mice feces must come in contact with the food for there to be a real danger. The mice are drawn into students' rooms because students keep food there. Klumpp said. "They have little holes in the closets." she said. The best method for getting rid of the mice is to contact a professional pest management company, Ziesenis said. Rodent-borne virus jumps Mississippi The Associated Press MIAMI — A resident of a drug treatment center spent 12 days on a respirator, his lungs filled with fluid, in the first documented case in the East of a rodent-borne virus that has killed 32 people west of the Mississippi. Kenneth Spence, 33, of North Miami recovered after 22 days in the hospital. The lung aliment, caused by what is called a hantavirus, has killed 32 people in 14 Western states since it was recognized last spring. Mice are believed to be the prime carriers. People are infected by dried droppings and urine. Spence developed a flu-like illness in October while he lived at the treatment center in the Redland area, which was ravaged by Hurricane Andrew in August 1992. Spence said he believed he contracted the virus at the center. Ever since the hurricane, health officials have worried about the potential for diseases linked to bad sanitation. Piles of debris became ideal breeding grounds for vermin. Residents complained when their neighborhoods became infested with mice and rats but the federal government was unwilling to give financial help for the problem, said Will Rudd, assistant city manager in nearby Homestead. M. GARRETT Heather Lofflin / KANSAN Johnathan Seyerle, Durant, Okla., freshman and a member of KU jazz band No. 2, exercises his trumpet technique. Seyerle, who has played trumpet for seven years, practiced yesterday at Murphy Hall. 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IMTCI International Medical Technical Consultants, Inc. 16300 College Boulevard - Lenexa, KS 6219 For more information please call Mon-Fri (8 am-5pm): (913) 599-2044 STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE is NOWACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FORTWOLIBERALARTSandSCI ENCES NUNEMAKEROFFCAMPUSREPLACEMENT SENATORS APPLICATIONS AVAIABLE IN THE STUDENT SENATE OFFICE 410 KANSAS UNIONCALL8643710FORQUESTIONS. *APPLICATIONS MUST BE TURNED IN BY THURSDAY, JANUARY 19th 6 Thursday, January 13, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Shoemaker vetoes legislation that requires senator attendance By Heather Moore Kansan staffwriter A bill that would require all senators to attend the events for which they raised funds has been vetoed by Student Senate President John Shoemaker. Shoemaker said he vetoed the bill because it contained grammatical errors and incorrect references to rules. STUDENT SENATE The bill will be sent to the Student Rights Committee for the necessary changes. It then will be presented to the Senate and will return to Shoemaker for his signature. Shoemaker said the bill would have to go back through Senate because of Senate regulations. "If there's a mistake, I can't mark the change and sign it because it's not the original passed by the Senate," he said. The bill would result in senators being more accountable for the funds that are given to groups. Kelly Staples, graduate students senator, said that with this bill the senators would know if the groups were fulfilling their obligations. "It would eliminate the redundancy of sqme groups which overlap funding," he said. urally it is easier for senators to go," she said. Golzar said this would cut down on frivolous bill writing. Nicki Millard, Liberal Arts and Sciences senator, said the bill would make senators more accountable. "It should be highly recommended that senators attend the events..." Jeff Bottenborg Lisa Golzar, Liberal Arts and Sciences senator, said the bill would be a service to students. "Someone should check the figures for funding, and nat- Jeff Bottenborg graduate student senator "We could make sure that the event has exact figures for spending," she said. The senators could attend the event, find out how many people attended and how the money was spent. When the groups come forward for money the next year, Senate would then have a record of how the money was spent. Alan Tikwart, Liberal Arts and Sciences senator, said that he supported the bill but that he wondered who would enforce a senator's attendance. Tikwart also said the Senate needed to have a record or log of funding. attends, we need to know," he said. Groups need to be fiscally responsible, Tikwart said. "If we give money and no one Jeff Bottenberg, graduate student senator, said that he thought the bill was a good idea but that it would be hard to enforce. "It should be highly recommended that senators attend the events, but we have so many other things we have to do," he said. Professor at KU recognized among best of U.S. physicians By Ashley Schultz Sechin Cho, professor of pediatrics and medical genetics at the University of Kansas School of Medicine-Wichita, is one of the best physicians in the nation, according to the second edition of "The Best Doctors in America." Kansan staff writer The book lists slightly more than 2 percent of the nation's 360,000 practicing physicians. "We asked them who the best clinicians were in their own specialty," said Lucy Stec, senior editor of the book, which will be out in March. About 17,000 specialists in the United States and Canada were polled, and 7,844 physicians were selected for inclusion in the book. "The thing that makes this book credible is that doctors do not pay to be listed," Stec said. "They are not required to purchase the book. It's completely done by their peers, the theory being those who are in the profession know who the best practitioners are." Cho, head of the department of pediatrics at the Wichita branch, said the award meant more to him as a clinician than as a professor or researcher. Cho said that he did not think being mentioned in the book would add more patient to his practice. "But that's not my focus." Choi said. "My focus in practice is helping people more than anything else." tice is helping people more than anything else. The Children's Primary Care Clinic is one way to do that, he said. The clinic opened Feb. 1, 1992, in conjunction with the Sedgwick County Health Department. It is a product of Community Access To Children's Health, a national organization sponsored by the American Academy of Pediatrics. Cho is the organization's state facilitator for Kansas. "In that position, I got to do something in our community," Cho said. "We had this opening of a successful clinic, so I felt like, 'That's my contribution to our children's welfare.' And we're actually doing something for what we preach as child advocates." The clinic is open four hours a night, four nights a week. Cho said, "Those four nights, we truly want to serve those children who do not have doctors and who do not have insurance or any financial support." Cho said that 65 percent of the pediatricians at the Wichita branch and more than half the campus' senior medical students volunteered for the clinic. "Also, this is the place we educate our junior medical students for our community pediatrics and sensitize the children's plight in our society today," Cho said. Cho graduated from medical school at Seoul National University in South Korea in 1971 and then completed a fellowship in medical genetics at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine in Baltimore. He became an assistant professor of pediatrics at the Wichita branch in 1978 and a professor eight years later. Cho was named the department's interim chair in 1990 and head of the department in 1992. Five other physicians associated with the Wichita campus will also be included in the book, as well as 22 physicians affiliated with the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan. Clip and Save with Daily Kansan Coupons!!! The University Daily Kansan Card...a semester of savings for just $1.00 FREE BEDROOM! RENT A TWO BEDROOM AND GET THIRD BEDROOM FREE NEWLYREMODELED! GREAT LOCATION JAYHAWK BUS ROUTE RESTAURANTS THEATERS SHOPPING South Point AZAFLGAMES 2166 W26th (26th & IOWA) Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Lied Center Presents A Special Event The Children's Theatre Company of Minneapolis in Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm Co-Sponsored by Payless ShoeSource 8:00 p.m. Thursday, January 13, 1994 Lied Center Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office (864-ARTS): Murphy Hall Box Office (864-3982); and any Ticketmaster outlet (913) 234-4545 and (816) 931-3330; public $15 and $13, KU, Haskell and K-12 students $7.50 and $6.50, senior citizens and other students $14 and $12; KU student tickets available through the SUA office. Kansas Union: phone orders can be made using MasterCard or VISA; all seats reserved. Partially funded by the National Endowment for the Arts. Mid-America Arts Alliance, KU Student Senate Activity Fee, Friends of the Lied Series, and the Kansas University Endowment Association. HONOR LION GENDER CENTER THE CHILDREN'S THEATRE COMPANY STUDENT SENATE M I N N E A P O L I S , M I N N E S O T A SPRING LEAGUES ARE FORMING NOW AT THE Jaybowl KANSAS UNION Sign up in person, or by phone Pay for 13 weeks in advance get two weeks free Free shoe rental for league bowlers Four Leagues Available: Monday Mixer Tuesday Varsity Mixer Wednesday Mixer Thursday Mixer Located on Level One of the Kansas Union 864-3545 Super Bowl and Spring Break round trip airfare contests, ask for details. NTN Trivia, the newest game in town. SPORTS EMPORIUM & FUNDRINKERY JOX Choose from over 15 appetizers, all under $4.00. CHIEFS GAME SPECIAL 22 oz. Bud and Bud Light bottles $2.25 and daily food special. Sun, Jan 16. $ \textcircled{*} $ Billiards, darts, and a big screen TV. Daily drink and shot specials. BRAINS & BRAWN PLAY THE MOST EXCITING LIVE TV COMPETITIONS IN HISTORY. TRIVIA A panel of experts developed the ultimate fun trivia contest that pits your skill and knowledge against other players here in our place and players all across the country. We Hold the Total Package QB1 601 Kasold Suite D-102 QB1 For the first time in history, you can actually interact with live TV football games via (Formerly Jacque's) satellite right here. Compete with other players here and nationally by playing live quarterback plays. 865-4040 1 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Thursday. January 13, 1994 7 Mobile home residents fear that new Target store threatens neighborhood By Cheryl Cadue Kansan staff writer Commercial development chased one neighborhood out of south Lawrence, but residents of the Easy Living Mobile Home Park, 3323 Iowa St., say their neighborhood is not budging. "We don't want to be boxed in," said Alice Helmer, resident of the park. "We are a neighborhood. We live in a mobile home, but our home is not mobile. We just can't pick up and move any time we want." Residents of Nieder Acres, a subdivision southwest of 31st and Iowa streets, won city commission approval last year to rezone their neighborhood for commercial development. Target Inc. took up the offer and planned to build a discount store there. The residents decided to rezone because of the retail stores and other businesses that were being built around the developments, said Martha Nieder, former Nieder Acres resident. "The bottom line is, everyone wanted Target to come in and say they'll take the whole neighborhood," Nieder said. "We were smack dab in the middle of a commercial area and not in a viable place for a neighborhood." Nearly all of the 21 residents of Nieder Acres can now sell their property and move. But south of Nieder Acres, the 217 residents of the Easy Living Mobile Home Park fear their neighborhood will be lost to commercial developers. To further complicate the matter, Target announced plans this month to build a larger store, requiring almost nine more acres in addition to the 10 acquired originally. The additional land would shrink the buffer zone between development and the mobile home park. Jo Andersen, city commissioner, said Target's expansion plan was a mistake. She said the city should adopt the Southern Development Plan, a new development plan for the area bordered by Kasold Drive, Louisiana and 31st streets and the proposed South Lawrence Trafficway. Under consideration by the commission, the plan would provide a guide for residential, commercial and industrial development in the area. "There are 217 people in that mobile home park," Andersen said. "We're not taking their needs into account, but we did when 20 Nieder Acres residents wanted top dollar for their property." Andersen said she would like to see residential and office development behind Target. Helmer said the Easy Living Neighborhood Association, which protested the rezoning, agreed with Andersen that the mobile home park needed buffering, not further commercial development. Roger Schenewerk, landscape architect for Target, said current plans for a buffer included building dirt barriers and planting trees. Alan Jaskiewicz, president of the neighborhood association, said Target had shown good faith in meeting other requests from the park residents. Right on target There will be a new Target south on Iowa Street. 31st Street Nieder Arena Target Local Street K Mart 33rd Street Wal Mart Source: Kansan Staff Research Dawn Campbell / KANSAN "I've seen the developing coming," he said. "People were just scared basically. I said, 'Let's just improve the situation.' And I think we've done a pretty good iob of it." Jaskiewicz said the new Target plan addressed the association's main concerns over flood control, a better access road to the mobile home park and Target's plan to move its loading dock out of view of mobile homes. Helmer said that she was glad she would not have to look out her window and see trash dumpsters but that she still would like to know that her neighborhood will not be threatened by further commercial development. Grieving friends and family find help through counseling services By Liz Chadwick Kansanstaffwriter Murders such as that of Jessica Baker, a former KU student, leave grieving friends and families in need of help. According to police reports, in December, Baker was shot and killed in her home at 1723 Tennessee St. The man who allegedly shot her, David R. Jenkins, shot and killed himself shortly after the incident. "A person who has lost someone due to a murder can be very confused and scared," Harnish said. "They may feel anger and/or have uncontrolled crying. In cases such as this, I usually recommend long-term therapy." In the wake of such tragedies, the surviving family members and friends of victims of violent crimes are left reeling, said Mike Harnish, a crisis counselor at Headquarters Inc. of Lawrence. He said they often suffered from traumatic stress syndrome, a condition shared by many veterans of war. "The emotions of a person suffering a loss due to violence are strong and free-flowing." he said. Harnish said suffering people should call a counseling service like Headquarters, which takes 16,000 calls a year. "Headquarters is good when that counselor isn't available to the person," Harnish said. "We're open 24 hours a day. In a quarter of a century, we've never been closed. A counseling service such as ours helps people in the short term." In addition to the emergency counseling offered by Headquarters, counselors — such as Melissa McDaniels of Parkview Hospital in Topeka — offer individualized grief therapy. "The first step of therapy is to educate the person on the different stages of grief." McDaniels said. She said she drew heavily on the teachings of Elisabeth Kubler-Ross, a physician whose book, "On Death and Dying." describes the five stages of grief about death. The five stages are denial, anger, bargaining, grieving and acceptance. "Second, I find out where that person is at in the grief process," McDaniels said. The survivors of murder victims have special problems that differ from those who have lost loved ones through natural causes, McDaniels said. "They often feel a lack of control over the violent event that occurred, and they often feel guilty at not being able to protect their loved one," she said. At this time there are no support groups in Lawrence for survivors of violent crime, said Pat Davis, director of community development for Bert Nash Community Mental Health Center of Lawrence. However, long-term counseling can be found. 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SAVE BIG BUCKS! Pyramid Pizza (of course!) From Your Friends at Fast & Friendly Delivery (limited area) 842-3232 BLOWING THIN Thrifty Thursday Special Only $3.49 + tax (carry out only) For a small pizza (add. tops only .75) order 2 or more for free delivery Good Thursday Only! PYRAMID PIZZA chip me 14th & OHIO (UNDER THE WHEEL) Since WATKINS "We Care For KU" 1907 Busy schedule? Watkins Pharmacy Is Conveniently Open Til 9 p.m. Monday-Thursday. Pharmacy Hours A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence Pharmacy Hours Monday-Thursday 8 a.m.-9 p.m. Friday 8 a.m.-6 p.m. Saturday 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Sunday 11 a.m.-3 p.m. STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES 864-9500 Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students Introducing Full Service Engraving Name Tags, Name Plates, Plaques and More! 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McGreey (just south of Molly McGees) WE HONOR KANSAN 8 Thursday, January 13, 1994 NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Clinton visits Russia to advise parliament The Associated Press MOSCOW — With President Clinton arriving yesterday to bolster Russian democracy, Russia's new parliament was already degenerating into a free-for-all of bickering, name-calling and threats. A dozen anti-American demonstrators who stood in a light snow outside the U.S. Embassy said Clinton shouldn't even bother coming to Moscow. "Clinton — we don't need your advice" said one demonstrator's sign. Clinton and Russian President Boris Yeltsin are scheduled to hold three days of talks on nuclear weapons, the possible expansion of NATO and the sorry state of the Russian economy. Clinton also planned meetings with leading politicians, including Yeltsin's opponents, to get a firsthand look at Russia's emerging democracy. His guest list did not include ultranationalist Vladimir Zhirinovsky, whose racist statements and outrageous comments about reclaiming former czarist lands have made him an outcast in Western circles. Yeltsin's pro-reform supporters, who once hoped to control parliament, now find themselves in the minority and on the defensive. There were signs of a split in their ranks yesterday, with a leading pro-reform group threatening to withdraw support from Yeltsin if reformers lose out in a Cabinet reshuffling. Democratic Russia, which claims tens of thousands of supporters across the country, is one of several groups that last year formed Russia's Choice. Democratic Russia's leaders said they would "have to reconsider the question of support for the president's and the government's course" if conservative ministers remain in the Cabinet and reformers are dropped. The Cabinet has been sharply divided for months between ministers who want to push ahead with free-market reforms and those who want to scale reforms back to ease the economic pain they are causing. Arlington, Va. Repaired Hubble to begin conducting black hole search The repaired Hubble space telescope has vision keen enough to finally prove the existence of black holes by measuring the velocity of stars being sucked into the center of galaxies, experts say. Astronomers at a national meeting of the American Astronomical Society said the December space shuttle mission to correct the blurred vision of the $1.6 billion Hubble has been successful and the orbiting telescope will soon be able to conduct an unprecedented search for black holes. "The search for black holes is a top priority for the Hubble space telescope, and our efforts have been frustrated by the (blurred image)," said Gary Bower of the Space Telescope Institute. Asked if the repair effort corrected Hubble's view sufficiently to now prove the existence of black holes. Bower said, "Yes, it will." The Hubble has been undergoing a checkout since its repair in December, and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration is to formally announce today whether the fix-it job was successful. Astronomers who have gotten reports on the work, however, indicated yesterday at a national meeting of the American Astronomical Society that the Hubble now has 20-20 eyesight. At a news conference yesterday, Bower said that the Hubble would be able to provide final proof about the existence of black holes by measuring how fast stars were being pulled into the center of galaxies by immense gravitational force. + - THE NEWS in brief EGYPT Israel and PLO recess talks The talks are due to reconvene Monday. Israeli and PLO delegates recessed talks on Palestinian self-rule yesterday, saying they had made progress on transferring civilian control of the Gaza Strip and Jericho but remained divided on security issues. The tasks are the one to accomplish today. During the round of talks ending yesterday, Israeli officials said the Palestinians were not contesting the offer of a 22-square-mile Jericho area, one-fifth of what they initially demanded, but are now demanding corridors from the area to two holy sites and a Dead Sea beach. MOGADISHU, Somalia U.S. sharpshooters withdraw The U.S. military command in Somalia has pulled most of its smipper troops off Pakistani U.N. posts in a dispute over how aggressive sharpshooters should be in firing at armed Somalis. The Americans accuse the Pakistani of withholding fire for fear of provoking the locals. The Pakistanis say they're doing their job with care and the Americans may be taking too many risks. italy said yesterday that it will begin withdrawing its soldiers this month. The United States, France, Belgium and Sweden are among other countries that have announced withdrawals. Pakistan recently said it would reinforce its troops to compensate for the withdrawals. San Antonio Trial begins for cult followers The government opened its trial yesterday against 11 Branch Davidians by telling jurors that David Koresh expected disciples "to kill for God." The defense blamed a faltering agency that "declared war on its citizens." The trial of the 11 cult members charged with murdering four federal agents in a gun battle in February opened with details of bullets blazing amid horrified women and children. Prosecutors also maintained that Koresh's followers killed their wounded after the raid by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms. "People who were too wounded to fight were executed, put out of their misery," Assistant U.S. Attorney Ray Jahn told jurors. Four ATF agents were killed and 16 wounded in the Feb. 28 shootout at the cult's compound near Waco, Texas, when more than 100 officers tried to search for guns and arrest Koresh on weapons charges. Six Branch Davidians are believed to have died in the assault. Compiled by The Associated Press. SUNGLASSES Spicy Red Wine Sauce!!! Almost the Weekend Thursday Special!! Large Pizza 2 toppings 2 drinks ONLY $8.50 plus tax RUDY'S PIZZERIA 749-0055 Open 7 days a week EARN CASH $15 Today $30 This Week By donating your blood plasma Walk-ins welcome Lawrence Donor Center Hours: M-F 9-6 Sat 10-3 816 W. 24th Behind Laird Noller Ford 749-5750 See our ad in the classified section TravelMate™ WinSLC ... only $1,699 • 486SLC, 4Mb RAM • DOS 6.0, Windows 3.1, Mouse • 80/160Mb Hard Drive (w/compression) • Affordable color option available TEXAS INSTRUMENTS Laptop The Etc. 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Dennis Jul. 14, 1971 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN C A R D Valid Through July 31, 1994 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN C A R D AToT SPEND A DOLLAR... Valid through July 31, 1994 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN CARD AT&T $AVE HUNDREDS! Buy your Kansan Card for only $1.00 now through February 25, 1994! Available at the Kansan Business office; KU Bookstores, Kansas and Burge Unions; University Book Shop and Javhawk Bookstore. Sand Dollar Realty & Management YARNBARN "God, I hope I get it!" Anticipation fills Murphy Hall this week as nervous theater students audition for a place in the spotlight. By Cathleen Siechta Kansan staff writer Tom Leininger / KAN8AN Matt Diel, St. Louis freshman, stretches while Laura Zabel, Manhattan freshman, fills out a card for an audition Tuesday night at Crafton-Preyer Theatre. He was getting ready to step onto the stage. As he bounced around and threw punches into the air, Matt Diel looked like he was about to fight. But he wasn't getting ready to step into the ring. Diel, St. Louis freshman, was one of many students nervously waiting to audition Tuesday night at Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall. The auditions will decide who will be cast in the five plays scheduled by the University theatre and film department this semester. "I really try not to get too nervous," Diel said. "I just try to transform my nervous energy into stupidity. I just start bouncing around and goofing off." forming a two-minute monologue in front of a panel of judges. "Ive smoked a lot of cigarettes," said Robin Parks, Kansas City, M., sophomore. "It's a first date kind of nervousness, except they have to like you here." Parks auditioned with a humorous monologue about a girl afflicted with "I had read a serious script with much tensed before, and I just wanted to get the judges' attention with this one," she said. "I think that auditions are one of the most exciting moments in a student's life." Dan O'Connell Dan O'Connell Coordinator of auditions Paul Halton, Dallas freshman, also wanted to get the judges' attention. "I just found out that if everyone shows up for our audition, I won't perform until 11:00." Halton said. "Unless I walk in there naked, I don't have a chance. After sitting through four and a half hours of auditions, the judges will all just be thinking, 'Thank God he's the last one.'" Jack Wright, director of University Theatre, seemed as if he could sit through hundreds of auditions. "Auditions are really exciting, especially at the beginning of the year," Wright said. "We get to see improvement in veteran students and talent in the new students. It's very satisfying and a lot of fun." "I think that auditions are one of the most exciting moments in a student's life," O'Connell said. "I see their excitement, their flushed cheeks, the twistingof their rings and the sparks in their eyes. "All that nervousness is a great thing. It's a very good thing. They're getting ready to perform." Still, nerves were not a problem for some students. Pete Slowey, St. Louis graduate student, said he saw no reason to get anxious about an audition. "To me, the nervousness helps," said Laura Zabel, Manhattan freshman. "It's an adrenaline rush that gets you going at the beginning." "You just have to look at it objectively," Showey said. "What's the worst the judges can do to you? They can't kill you. Besides, if you don't know what you're doing by the time you get up on stage, you shouldn't be there in the first place." Robin Parks must have known what she was doing. She came out of her audition all smiles. Students who were picked by the judges are now being called back for additional Tom Leininger/KANSAN Erin Kessler, Palatine, ill., junior, waits inside the doors of Cranston-Preyer Theatre before auditioning for one of five plays scheduled by the department of theatre and film this semester. Students selected by judges are being called back. auditions. Those students may go through call-backs again or may be given apart in one or more of the five plays. The plays are "The Grapes of Wrath" by Frank Galati, "The Heidi Chronicles" by Wendy Wasserstein and three "Potpourri" productions, which will be directed by students. O'Connell said he hoped people would come to see the student actors who must endure the grueling audition process at the beginning of each semester. "We encourage everyone to come to these and all the other productions," he said. "It is really a very enriching experience." theater KU play reaches regional level "The Boys Next Door" may soon win the chance to perform at the Kennedy Center in Washington D.C. By Kevin Hoffmann Kansan staff writer "The Boys Next Door" will compete with other college productions from Kansas, Missouri, Colorado, Nebraska, North and South Dakota and Minnesota. The production has advanced to the regional level of the Kennedy Center American College Theater Festival. Anyone who has ever dreamed of becoming an actor or actress dreams of making it to the big stage. For the students participating in the University Theatre production of "The Boys Next Door," by Tom Griffin, that dream may be close at hand. The regional festival will be held from Tuesday to Jan. 22 at Johnson County Community College's Cultural Education Center in Overland Park. If the production wins at the regional level, it will be performed at the Kennedy Center in Washington. "The Boys Next Door" was first performed at the University last November. Only a few productions advance to the regional level, said Jack Wright, director of the play. Wright downplayed his role in the success of the production, preferring to commend the efforts of the nine actors. "It's quite an achievement,just to be selected to perform for the region," he said. "The Boys Next Door" is a comedy drama that revolves around the life of four men who are developmentally disabled. The four men are roommates in an apartment for people with disabilities. "Judy Pfeirer, a graduate student, did a tremendous job designing the costumes," he said. Jim Wallert, Omaha, Neb., senior, said the challenges that the four men face in everyday life were portrayed in the play. "I just try to stress their natural instincts," he said. Wright also praised the efforts of the people behind the scenes. While working on "The Boys Next Door," the cast did research with Cottonwood Inc., a community-based organization that provides several services to people with developmental disabilities. "It looks at everything from going shopping to dating, to just how the four get along together," he said. "One of the most interesting things was working with the people at Cottonwood and learning a great deal from them," Wallert said. "They helped us about our roles and also taught us about ourselves." "This is a play that anybody can come into the theater, enjoy themselves for two hours, while at the same time challenge their stereotypes and ideas," he said. Wallert said he thought people would enjoy the play while also learning from it. Wallert also said the play reinforced the aspects of acting that he enjoys. "I like the interaction between the actor and audience," he said. "I also like the rehearsal process and watching something develop from the first reading through to the performance." Wallert said KU's theater faculty played a big part in the production's success. "They've got an incredible faculty here," he said. Cinnamon Schultz, Maryville, Mo., senior, agreed that the faculty encouraged creativity. p le coaching it would have been much more difficult." "I really appreciated the help of the director," she said. "Without his sim- Schultz, who plays the part of Sheilla, a woman who is developmentally disabled, said she thought everyone could relate to her character. "I think there's a lot of Sheila in everybody," she said. Three people from the production, Wallert, Schultz and David Prentiss, Geneva, Ill., senior, have been selected to perform for the Irene Ryan Award, which also will be judged at the regional competition. Another KU production, "Graf Spee," written by Ken Willard, Hays graduate student, will also compete in the regional competition. "The Boys Next Door" will be performed Jan. 22 at 8:30 p.m. at the Johnson County Community College's Cultural Education Center in Overland Park. Tickets may be purchased through the box office at the Cultural Education Center. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN JANUARY 13, 1994 PAGE 9 KULife Your guide to Entertainment in the Lawrence Area. calendar NIGHTLIFE Benchwarmer's Bar and Grill Milhaus Nixons, Saturday ★★★ 1601 W. 23rd St. Torquoise Sol, tonight Monterey Jack, tomorrow KU/K-State game and Squib Cakes from Manhattan, Monday Dave Matthews Band from the Hoarde Tour, Tuesday The Crossing 12th and Oread Blue Fuse, 8:30 p.m. tomorrow Full Moon Cafe 803 Massachusetts St. Deb Gernius, 8:30 tonight Walking on Einstein, 9 p.m. tomorrow Melvin Litton, 9 p.m. Saturday The Jazzhaus 926 1/2 Massachusetts St. Millhous Nixons, 9:30 tonight '70s Disco Party, 3:00 p.m. tomorrow Limbo Cafe, 9:30 p.m. Saturday E Rick's Neighborhood Bar and Grill 623 Vermont St. Ricky Dean Sinatra, 9:30 p.m. Saturday, $3 The Bottleneck The Bottleneck 737 New Hampshire St. The Cactus Brothers and The Starkweathers, 10 tonight L.A. Ramblers, 10:30 p.m. tomorrow Mountain Clyde and Lonesome Hound Dogs, 10 p.m. Saturday Grenada Theater Grenada Theater 1020 Massachusetts St. "Whack!",9 tonight Lee McBee and The Passions,9 p.m.Satur day 10 Thursday: January 13, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN waterbeds new and used Bobbi Bedroom 842-7378 N Rentco USA 749-1605 Student Discount low Carrying Computers 1741 Massachusetts WHACK! THURSDAYS Starting every Thursday at the GRANADA - TOTALLY INTERACTIVE - Come prepared to sing along - Great Video Clips on the MOVIE SCREEN - Music - a little bit of this a little bit of that, and a whole lot of fun. MC, D.J., Movie Screen GRANADA 1020 Mass.- LAWRENCE, KANSAS - (913) 842-1390 Tailgate Party Time B-B-Q Beef $1.00 Kraut and Sausage $1.59 Sat. 10:00-1:00 9th and IOWA OPEN 8:30 AM TO 6:00 PM Coca-Cola CLASSIC Coca-Cola CLASSIC Sprite --- Sprite Coke Sprite $499 Limit 1 with $10.00 24 pack purchase BAGU GIVE ME LOVE SWEETNESS SWEETNESS Ragu Spaghetti Sauce Buy One Get One Free! 30 oz. jar Automatic Butter Spaghetti Automatic Butter Spaghetti American Beauty Spaghetti Buy One Get One Free! 24oz. Saltines Saltines IGA Saltines Buy One Get One Free! 16oz. box Campbell's SOUP Campbell's SOUP Campbell's Family Size Soup Buy One Get One 26 oz. Free! Alvin's IGA HOMETOWN Keg Beer $39.99 16 gallon Call 843-2313 Alvin's IGA HOMETOWN 9th and Iowa, Lawrence, KS Open 6 a.m. to Midnight Call 843-2313 IGA HOMETOWN PROUD IGA Clinton to request special counsel Whitewater role to be investigated The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Bowing to intense political pressure, President Clinton will ask for appointment of a special counsel to investigate his investment in an Arkansas real estate deal, a senior White House official said yesterday. The White House was expected to announce the decision last night, said the official, speaking to The Associated Press only on condition of anonymity. The reversal of the White House policy came as Republican leaders in Congress called for appointment of special House and Senate committees to investigate the Clintons' 1880s investment in the Whitewater Development Corp. "In my view, appointment of a special counsel doesn't take away our responsibility in Congress," Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole told reporters. "We need to determine the answers to all the questions that have been raised. We must meet our responsibility, as well as the executive branch must meet its responsibility." The White House for weeks has opposed Republican demands for an independent investigation of the Whitewater investment, arguing that an ongoing Justice Department investigation was adequate. The senior aide declined to discuss the White House decision prior to the announcement planned for last night, except to say that under Justice Department regulations the White House would have no say in who Reno picked to lead the investigation. led by Rep. James Leach, a Republican from Iowa, that Reno name a special counsel to investigate allegations that Clinton improperly benefited from his business partnership with James McDougal, operator of a now-failed Little Rock, Ark., savings and loan. Reno has the power to name a special counsel who would report to her but would have independent authority to subpoena records and, if necessary, conduct a grand jury investigation. Investigators are trying to determine whether depositors' funds were diverted from Madison Guaranty Savings and Loan to help retire Clinton's 1984 gubernatorial campaign debt and whether thrift money was improperly deposited in the Whitewater account. McDougal and his wife at the time were partners with the Clintons in Whitewater. "The most important thing to me and the most important thing to the American people is I'm completely relaxed about this because I didn't do anything wrong, except I made a bad business deal." Clinton told CBS-TV in Prague, Czech Republic. Clinton said he was revisiting the subject of an independent review because his decision to give his Whitewater records to the Justice Department had not quieted the political controversy over the matter. A growing number of Democrats, including at least eight senators, have joined Republicans in recommending an independent investigation, stripping the White House of its argument that such demands were the product of politics. None of the Democrats has suggested any wrongdoing by the Clintons. But they have said Clinton risks a protracted, distracting political fight over Whitewater that could be avoided through an independent investigation. Clinton and his wife, whose law firm represented Madison, have denied any wrongdoing and said McDougal controlled the Whitewater account. Until yesterday, the White House had steadfastly opposed demands, The White House has agreed to turn over Clinton's Whitewater records to Justice Department investigators, but only under a subpoena — requested by the White House — that prohibits their release to the public. Valid Through July 31, 1994 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN C A R D AT&T Spend $1...Save hundreds Membership has its privileges... THESE DISCOUNTS AND OFFERS ARE GOOD THROUGH JULY 31, 1994! JUST SHOW YOUR CARD...USE AS OFTEN AS YOU LIKE! 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Candidate's signature on the DRC shall contain permission to be issued by these terms and the directors of the Director 20, 21 & 22 Special Offer Discounts (are not valid with or off special promotions of P.M.) 15 cannot apply to tax position of purchase; it applies only to candidate's non-obligated personal purchase to the total purchase determined by PM.; non-DRC purchases are part of the total purchase; do are only available at the University Dirk Kassan Card in Kansas and HORSE AVAILABLE AT THESE LOCATIONS: Jayhawk Bookstore Kansas and Burge Unions·864-4640 1420 Crescent Road 843-3826 1116 W. 23rd St *749-5206* UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP KU KU BOOKSTORES THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358 I SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 11 NCAA basketball boycott threatened NCAA: Scholarship rejection part of cost containment effort The Associated Press DES MOINES, Iowa — Plans for a college basketball boycott gathered strength yesterday, with more coaches supporting the unprecedented protest and talks with the National Collegiate Athletic Association broken off. Rudy Washington, director of the Black Coaches Association and the basketball coach at Drake, would not say when the walkout would take place, but acknowledges it is likely to happen. He said the boycott would include players and could conceivably last the rest of the season. Some coaches said they hoped to avoid such action but would participate in a show of unity. Others said they would continue to get their teams ready to play. "There comes a point where you have to take a stand," said Washington State coach Kelvin Sampson, a member of the BCA. "A brush fire here or there isn't going to do anything. We've got to have solidarity on this." Arkansas coach Nolan Richardson said he thinks a bowcott is inevitable A vote at the NCAA Association convention against restoring a 14th scholarship in Division I men's basketball triggered the boycott plan. Washington said efforts to consolidate support for a boycott were going better then he had expected. The coaches could act as early as Saturday. Stopping games on a weekend also would knock a number of feature cups ups off television, depriving the NCAA of revenue from those telecasts. Washington discussed the BCA's plan with the group's executive legislative committee Tuesday night. "Ipromised the other guys I wouldn't discuss it." Washington said yesterday. What is known is that the BCA and NCAA are no longer talking. NCAA officials met twice with BCA officials in the last hours of the NCAA convention, which ended Tuesday night in San Antonio, and had planned to meet again today. The BCA called off that meeting. "We were notified this morning that there was no need to continue a dialogue," said Cedric Dempsey, the NCAA's executive director. "Our communication has stopped." Dempsey said he had no idea what the BCA planned or when it would act. But the possibility of a boycott has college administrators scurrying to figure what they would do if it actually happened. All 33 Division I conference commissioners scheduled a conference call for 3 p.m. EST Thursday to discuss strategy. NCAA delegates, who often use the end of convention week for vacation, instead hurried home to deal with the BCA's threat. Many questions remain unanswered. Would the players join the coaches in a walkout? Are coaches putting their jobs in jeopardy? Would boycoting teams have to forfeit games? "I don't know what the ramifications are," said Iowa State coach Johnny Orr, former president of the National Association of Basketball Coaches. "Could they fire the coaches or take scholarships away from the players? I really don't know. No matter what, there's going to be some hard feelings, probably some jobs lost." Brown, the team's leading scorer, said he supports the BCA and would go along with its plans. Despite the risks, some players likely would join a boycott. New Mexico guard Greg "We all know what's going on. I think a lot of people would follow what John Thompson or John Chaney would do," Brown said, referring to two BCA leaders and two of the nation's most prominent coaches. Drake assistant coach Pat Rafferty said he was certain his school's players would honor a boycott. "If coach Washington isn't coaching, then this basketball team won't play," he said. The NCAA scholarship vote upset the Black coaches, who contend minority athletes are most hurt by bickbacks. A reduction of one scholarship means 300 fewer opportunities at a college education, they say, adding about two-thirds of that total likely would be black "We're looking for opportunities for our kids," Arkansas coach Nolan Richardson said. "Is that so terrible? Don't close no doors on me; open the door. You don't have to give me nothing. Just give me an opportunity." Tulsa coach Tubby Smith said that while he's disappointed that the additional scholarship was rejected, he's not sure a boycott is the answer. "Ihoping we can work within the confines of the NCAA," said Smith, who is Black. "I would like to see something done later." Even if the coaches walk, there's no guarantee the NCAA will be moved to act. The NCAA Presidents Commission has insisted it is committed to containing costs, and this year's rejection of the 14th scholarship was the second straight time that proposal has been turned down. Greg O'Brien, chairman of the Presidents Commission, said universities face tight budgets in all areas, not just athletics. "For the first time in the lives of anybody at the convention, there's less money in higher education than there was the year before," said O'Brien, president of the University of New Orleans. "Things are tough on virtually every campus in America." KU coach: Cutting scholarship may deprive players of education By Matt Slegel Kansan sportswriter The NCAA may have gotten more than it bargained for when it denied schools the right to add a 14th scholarship to men's basketball programs. Now the Black Coaches Association has threatened to instigate a national boycott. While the NCAA said it had concerns about the cost of an additional scholarship, a Kansas coach felt the decision not to add the scholarship will deny some students the right to an "You have to admire people who are willing to stand up for what they believe in," said Marian Washington, Kansas women's basketball coach and president of the Black Coaches Association. "I support the restatement of a scholarship for the men's program." Marlan Washington stems from the NCAA's refusal to grant anon- scholarship because of financial reasons. Washington said she did not know what effect a boycott would have. "I think the best thing we can do is constantly verbalize our support," Washington said. "I'm not sure that a demonstration on the women's side is going to have too much impact, since women's sports, although getting better, don't get that much norotility." Speculation remains about when the boycott would occur. Washington said she had not spoken out officially on the boycott because the official spokesman for the coaches association is Rudy Washington, the association's executive director. Marian Washington said that she did not understand why the NCAA voted against adding another scholarship. "I find it very difficult to believe that they couldn't pick up another scholarship," she said. "I want our kids to have as many educational opportunities as possible. It seems like we are restricting or taking away opportunities from our youth. If students don't have the opportunity to go to college, then more kids will wind up on the streets and turn to a life of crime." Fifteen scholarships used to be available to the NCAA men's basketball program. Two years ago, a commission of college presidents cut the number of permitted scholarships to 13. The NCAA decision Monday to keep the number at 13 was unpopular among other basketball coaches. "I was shocked at the insensitivity shown by the vote of the NCAA in regards to the rejection of adding a 14th scholarship," said Arizona coach Lute Olsen, who is white, in a written statement. Olsen said that the decision leaves the Black Coaches Association with no other choice but to boycott. He also said men's basketball funds 75 percent of the NCAA annual revenue and, along with football, provides financial support for both men's and women's college sports. Walters' inevitable NBA fame waiting on Coach Daly's bench "To me it was a vote that was indicative of the refusal on the part of the presidents to listen before making a decision," Olsen said. 17 Andy Warhol once said that everyone will be famous for 15 minutes. But Rex Walters, a rookie shooting guard with the New Jersey Nets, can't even get 15 minutes of playing time. After playing nearly 30 minutes a game last season while leading the Jayhawks to the NCAA Final Four, Walters serves as the Nets No. 1 benchwarmer. In the 14 games he has played, he has averaged six minutes and 1.7 points. Before a Jan. 2 game at Boston Garden against the Celtics, Walters went one-on-one against teammate Kenny Anderson, worked on his jump shot and posed for a picture with several autograph seekers. Later that night, he watched the entire game from the bench, leaving his seat only to stand near the team's huddle during time outs. "It's definitely been very difficult and frustrating for me," Walters said Tuesday night in a telephone interview. "In many ways, it's been like my freshman year at Northwestern." Walters spent two years at Northwestern. He averaged only six minutes and 2.1 points a game his freshman season — statistics almost identical to this season's NBA output. However, he blossomed as a sophomore, averaging 17.6 points a game before transferring to Kansas. Tuesday night in East Rutherford, N.J., the Washington Bullets routed the Nets 115-100. Walters scored four points while shooting one for one from the field and two for two from the free-throw line. "I got to play, but it was a blowout," Walters said. His frustrations are understandable. He proved his abilities last season, especially when it was needed most. In the NCAA Tournament his scoring output surged; although he averaged 15.3 points a game the entire season, he averaged 21.2 points a game during the tournament. He also tied a tournament record against Brigham Young by making six three-pointers without a miss. He finished that game with 28 points, his college career-high. SPORTS EDITOR DAVID DORSEY The New Jersey Nets must have seen some talent in Walters, or they wouldn't have selected him in the first round as the 16th pick of last year's draft. Nor would they have signed him to a six-year, $6.8 million contract. The long-term deal means that Walters is far from pushing the panic buttons on his NBA future. But the guaranteed money and a spot on the team should not keep Walters content for long. "It's not about the money," Walters said. "I play the game because I love it. The way I see it, they shouldn't be paying me all of my money if they're not going to play me." During shoot-a-rounds Tuesday night, Walters spoke casually with a referee who said that Nets coach Chuck Daly is notorious for ignoring rookies. If Walters has learned anything this season, it is that NBA rookies have to earn respect from teammates, coaches and referees. "I probably haven't spoken more than two sentences at one time to Coach Daly," said Walters, who would choose be body-slammed by Dennis Rodman over kissing up to his coach. "That's just his way. I've always felt that I can prove my abilities through playing and not talking about them. "The level of competition here is unbelievable. It's a much more physically demanding game. As a rookie, you don't get any foul calls whatsoever. Ninety percent of the calls I got last year that were legitimate calls, I wouldn't get this year in the NBA. You have absolutely no respect whatsoever." Daly said that Walters needed to improve his skills before he could get more playing time. "First of all, he's a terrific person and has a tremendous work ethic," Daly said. "He's playing the game for all of the right reasons. Right now he's learning the program, and he's going to have to develop some NBA-type skills, whether it be shooting or on defense. Right now he's struggling in those areas, but that's typical for a lot of rookies. The key for him will be what he does between the end of this season and the beginning of next season." In other words, Daly doesn't believe in playing rookies. And since the Nets are struggling with a 13-19 record, it would be difficult for Daly to disrupt his playing rotation anyway. Veteran player Kevin Edwards starts at shooting guard, and another veteran, Johnny Newman, comes off the bench. So, until Walters gets a year older and wiser, he will have to keep working on his game. If his professional playing career continues to parallel his college career, Walters will soon see his 15 minutes of playing time — and fame. KANSAS 23 Doug Hesse / KANSAN Former Kansas guard Rex Walters hopes to drive past opponents in the NBA as he did in college With one month to go, Norway gears up for Olympics $1 billion spent in preparation for Winter Games LILLEHAMMER, Norway — There's plenty of snow, the venues are ready and the buzz of excitement is everywhere. The Associated Press With one month to go before the start of the Winter Olympics, Lillehammer is set for the Games to begin. On Feb. 12, a Norwegian ski jumper with the Olympic torch in his hand will soar off the jump in the hills above town to mark the opening of the biggest Winter Games ever. Lilahammer organizers are working feverishly to make sure every "We're all doing 100 miles per hour," said Lillehammer Olympic Organizing Committee representative Rolf Nereng. "It's all arms and legs around here." thing is in place. Actually, Lillehammer has been ready for months for the Winter Olympics in a region Norwegians call the cradle of skiing. The country has spent $1 billion on the Winter Games, not counting roads and other projects. Norway has celebrated every step of preparations for the Games, which are a national obsession in this country of 4.3 million people. But Nereng said the final countdown would begin without much ceremony. "We don't have time." he said. The venues are completed and tested, and the International Olympic Committee proclaimed Lilleham mer "the best-prepared Olympics Games organizer of recent times." Whining cars, with frosty windows, seemed outraged at having to start on cold mornings. Bulldozers growled as they removed excess snow from Lillehammer's streets. A thousand details and few fears still remain. At least one worry, perhaps the biggest after a series of warm and dry winters, appears to have been eliminated. The days have been crisp and, best of all, snowy. On Storgata, Lillehammer's long walking street, a bundled-up woman glided her stand-up sled — called a "spark" — past the stuffed reindeer outside a shop. Two teen-age boys — with one shorty ski each — slid along the snow that blankets the cobblestones and the manhole covers, which bear the Olympic rings. Even the nights seem brighter than usual, despite the gloom of subarctic winter. A few straggling Christmas lights on the pine trees and hanging between buildings help brighten the snow. Spotlights illuminate the parallel ski jumps above town, which will be the site of the opening ceremony. The Norwegians have done everything they can to get ready for the Games, which will feature about 2,000 athletes from 80 countries. "Even though we are prepared for most things, we have also discovered that everyone has very high expectations of us," said Petter Ronningen, deputy managing director of the organizing committee, known as LOOC. "This, of course, gives us butterflies in our stomachs." Norwegians built a huge skating hall, which looks like a giant Viking ship overturned on the shores of Mjosa, Norway's largest lake and now the domain of skaters and ice fishermen. But there are some things — other than the weather — that worry the orderly, efficient Norwegians. They hollowed out a mountain in the town of Gjovik, south of Lillehammer, so they could build a hockey ring inside. They built a bobsled track that — in keeping with the environmental profile of the Games — can barely be seen in the forest north of town. Despite a beefed-up rail and road network, the transportation system will be straining to bring up to 100,000 people a day into the isolated and compact Olympic region centered on Lillehammer, 110 miles north of Oslo. The same snow that makes Lillehammer a dream for winter sports can turn the roads into a nightmare of ice and drifts. The computer system used for results and information may be vulnerable. Newspapers said so-called computer hackers are suspected of having broken into the system, although Nereng of the organizing committee said he assumed the system was secure. Norway fears protests against its commercial whale hunts and terrorism by those angered by a Norwegian-brokered peace accord between Israel and the Palestinians. And easy-going Norwegians have realized that, because of random attack on athletes such as U.S. figure skater Nancy Kerrigan, they have to beef up security. "Even with all the world's resources and planning, something could still go wrong," said Ronningen. "We have developed a contingency plan that will allow LOOC to deal with most of the potential problems." 12 Thursday, January 13, 1994 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN FBI investigates Kerrigan attack Bodyguard, husband of rival competitor are possible suspects The Associated Press PORTLAND, Ore. — The FBI is investigating allegations that the husband of figure skater Tonya Harding and her bodyguard arranged last week's attack on rival skater Nancy Kerrigan, a private investigator said today. Gary Crowe said a Portland minister came to him for advice after he heard a tape recording of Harding's husband and bodyguard plotting with a third man, described as a "hit man" from Arizona, to injure Kerrigan. Bart Gori, Oregon spokesman for the FBI, confirmed that the Oregon agents are investigating the Kerrigan attack, but he declined to elaborate. The Oregonian newspaper first reported yesterday that federal authorities were investigating the possible role of Harding's husband. Jeff Gilooly, and her bodyguard, Shawn Eric Eckhardt, in the attack during practice at the U.S. Figure Skating Championships in Detroit. Law enforcement sources in Washington told The Associated Press yesterday that the FBI would announce arrests later last night. Dewey Blanton, a representative for Kerrigan, said yesterday that the skater's family "was informed by the FBI of an impending development." Kerrigan was struck on the leg after a practice session Jan. 6, suffering severe bruises that forced her to withdraw from the U.S. Olympic trials in Detroit. The International Committee of the U.S. Figure Skating Association named Kerrigan to the team along with Harding, who won the U.S. championship at the trials. Crowe said Eugene C. Saunders told him the tape recording made it clear that Kerrigan was the target and that Harding knew nothing about the plot. Saunders told him a man's voice on the tape asked, "Why don't we just kill her?" The response: "We don't need to kill her. Let's just hit her in the face." Crowe described Saunders as a "straight shooter, the straightest of the straight." He did not know which church he was affiliated with, or who played the tape for him. Crowe said Saunders' acquaintance became worried after receiving threats from the Arizona man because the man who allegedly hired the "hit" had failed to pay the $100,000 promised. Harding's husband, Gillooily, acknowledged he was being investigated, but told The Oregonian he was not involved in the Kerrigan attack. "I wouldn't do that," Gillooly said. "I have more faith in my wife than to bump off her competition." Harding's bodyguard, Eckardt, called the allegations "absurd." "I would never get involved in anything like that," Eckardt told The Oregonian. "That would be jeopardizing my future, my career. I mean, that's not something I could do or allow." Harding has denied any link to the attack, saying she felt cheated of the chance to compete with Kerrigan. Efforts to find Saunders early yesterday were unsuccessful. There is no phone listing for him, and no one answered the door at his house. Detroit police, and later FBI agents, questioned all skaters and coaches at the Olympic trials. Harding and Gillooly talked to FBI agents in Detroit and checked in again with them Tuesday, Harding said earlier. Gillooily said he understood why the FBI had to investigate him. "It's their job to follow up on this," Giloolly told The Oregonian. "Nobody likes being investigated by the FBI. But I understand their need to investigate." Kerrigan's coach had no comment. "We really have nothing to say because we know nothing about it so there's nothing we can possibly add," said Evy Scotvold. Kerrigan's coach and representative. "You know more than we do." Chiefs 'steel' big bucks from Buffalo fans The Associated Press BUFFALO, N.Y. — David Hart, a Buffalo businessman and Bills fan, last Saturday found himself in the unique situation of rooting for the conference-rivals Pittsburgh Steelers to win. Hart had a lot riding on the Kansas City Chiefs-Pittsburgh Steelers playoff game — about $50,000 to be exact. "During halftime I found myself hoping, praying, that Pittsburgh would hold on to win," Hart said. "When the Chiefs won, it was like watching a bundle of money go out the window." Hart is president of Hart Hotels, a management group that operates four Holiday Inns and a Hampton Inn in the Buffalo area. And like many other Buffalo hotelsellers, restaurateurs, shop owners and taxi drivers who benefit from the tourist industry, he lost out on a mini-bonanza when Kansas City defeated Pittsburgh. Had the Steelers prevailed, the proximity of Buffalo to Pittsburgh would have meant hordes of football fanatics coming to town for this week's game. "Traditionally, we know Pittsburgh fans make the trip to Buffalo," said Mary Summers, spokeswoman for the Greater Buffalo Convention and Visitors Bureau. "It would have been a big shot in the arm." This is the time of year when Buffalo's tourism industry can badly use a boost. Come January and February, western New York turns into snow country and the tourist trade evaporates. That's where the Bills' playoff success in recent seasons has come in hand. Each game can generate about $150,000 worth of business for the host city, said David Lacki, director of tourism at the visitors bureau. When the Bills are playing a team from a nearby city or a traditional rival, the money is even greater, Lacki said. By playing the Los Angeles Raiders instead of Pittsburgh Sunday, Buffalo is losing 15,000 possible tourists. "There are a lot of elements to this loss," Lacki said. "This is a big-time rivalry. Pittsburgh beat us badly during that Monday night game (on Nov. 15). And it's one of the cities we normally target for tourist trade. It's a shame they didn't win. It's going to mean a lot of money." Hart figured that his hotels would have rented out 400 rooms at $65 a night. With most guests staying two nights and ordering room service, the hotels lost at least $50,000. Other hoteliers expect similar losses. "There's a big difference between airfare and carfare," said Ed Wallis, general manager of the Marriott Hotel in Amherst. "With LA, I don't anticipate too many people flying in for the game. If Pittsburgh won, it would have made a difference." There is some consolation. If the Bills win their game against the Raiders this weekend, that will put them into the AFC Championship game, which will mean more tourists for business owners. "It's a big party," Lacki said. "It really doesn't matter who you play because that team's diehard fans are going to come. Once here, they like to go out, drink, have a good time and celebrate. If Buffalo wins Sunday, it might make business people forget that Pittsburgh lost." There was another aspect to Pittsburgh's loss: Rich Stadium officials were counting on Pittsburgh's incoming fans to help sell out the game. Without a sellout, the game won't be televised in the Buffalo area. "Pittsburgh was a guaranteed sellout," said a ticket seller at Rich Stadium. "If the game isn't on television, I think that's what everybody will remember as the worst part of Pittsburgh's loss. PAPA=KENO'S Pizzeria Papa's by the slice Our slices come from a 28" pie, which means your slice is 14" long. We consider our slice the specialty of the house. Try one made to order by far the best deal in Lawrence. 1035 MASSACHUSETTS DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE 841-7272 A different SLICE of Life --- The Largest T.V. Screen in Lawrence --- AT THE BASKETBALL Come see all the KU and Playoff games. GRANADA 20' x 20' Screen **SUPER BOWL SUNDAY** — Jan 30th — Lawrence's Newest COLLECTIBLE USED BOOK STORE 8500 Old Books VAGABOND BOOKMAN 1113 Mass 842-BOOK Hours : Mon-Sat 10-6 We buy and sell hardback books Bobbis Bedroom 842-7378 Increase your self-value through being a Martial Artist! Learn Martial Arts from an Original Master Master Mi-June Park, Ph.D. Best Price in Town! Futon Couch w/ 8" F/C Mattress $239.95 LAWRENCE & PARKS TAE-KWON-DO SCHOOL 715 High St., Baldwin 549-3800 10th & Massachusetts 843-2121 Since WATKINS 1907 "We Care For KU" Anonymous HIV Antibody Testing What? The Test for HIV - the AIDS virus Where? Watkins Health Center When? Mondays Cost? $18.50 cash (paid at initial visit) How? By Appointment Only By Appointme B. 864-9507 "Anonymous Testing" means that you do not use your real name when being tested. Your test results will be provided to you in person two weeks after your initial visit. Testing includes pre- and post-test counseling. STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES 864-9500 Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students 120 Announcements 130 Entertainment 140 Lost and Found 100s Announcements Classified Directory 200s Employmen 235 Typing Services 1 Employment 205 Help Wanted 225 Professional Service WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO Really Listen Call or drop by Headquarters We're here because we care. 841-2345 1419 Mass. We're always open Classified Policy Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are free of charge. All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 (Section 15.4) and is limited to education, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or dis- WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500 The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on nationality, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or Regular Clinic Hours Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm Saturday 8am-11:30am Urgent Care (Additional Charge) Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm Sunday 8am-4:30pm 正 Pharmacy Hours Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm Friday 8am-5pm Saturday 11am-3pm Sunday 11am-3pm KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services 100s Announcements DUI/MIP/Fake ID's Office located right next to campus Elizabeth Leech Attorney at Law-Foreign Prosecutor 414 W14th 749-0087 110 Business Personals TRAFFIC-DUI'S Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters The law ofouses DONALD B. GROLE Donald G. Strohe Sally G. Kelsey 16 East 13th 842-1133 405 430 300s Merchandise 400c Real Estate 405 Real Estate 430 Roommate Wanted 305 For Sale 340 Auto Sales 360 Miscellaneous 370 Want to Buy - Kansan Classified: 864-4358 - NEED A RIDE/RIDER? Use the Self Serv Cars Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union 120 Announcements COMMUTERS: Self Serve Car Pool Exchange Main Lobby, Kansas Union TUTORS. List your name with us. We refer inquiries to you. Student Assistance Center, UCF. WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 133 Strong Street SCHOLARSHIP OPPORTUNITIES! INTERNSHIP OPPORTUNITIES! GRANTS AND LOANS! CASHE-PLUS SCHOLARSHIP SEARCH CALL OR DROP BY FOR DETAILS UNIVERSITY SCHOLARSHIP CENTER 33 STRONG HALL 864-5439 BENCHWARMERS Tonight! Turquoise Sol $.25 draws Be There! UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Thursday, January 13, 1994 13 S ONLY $ 1.00! Only available through February 25, 2014 at the Kansas Business office. KU Book-Service University Book Shop and Jawahawk Book University Book Shop and Jawahawk Book BENCHWARMERS Friday, January 14th MONTERREY JACK $2.00 Long Island Ice Teas Long Beach Teas MILHOUS NIXONS 2 For 1 Wells 140 Lost & Found I found a kitten in Carlos O'Kelly's parking lot. Call me at 749-8472. 200s Employment 205 Help Wanted 600 CAMPIS THE USA, RUSSIA AND EUROPE NEED YOU THIS SUMMER. For the best summer of your life-see your career center or contact: Camp Counselors USA 420 Florence St. Palo Alto, CA 94301 PART-TIME POSITIONS AVAILABLE Earn While You Learn!!! ACADEMIC AIDE POSITION AVAILABLE. (1) German Reader. Duties include: Reading textbooks and other materials for students who are blind or have reading disabilities: $4.25/h. Applicant must be employed at Application Center, 131 Strong Hall, 864-4044. Application deadline Tuesday, January 18, 1994; 5:0pm. Connex International, a leader in the communications industry for over a decade, is looking for you to join our growing team. We are searching for several part-time people (flexible schedules available) Monday-Friday for our busy operations center in downtown Lawrence. Positive attitudes and good phone skills a must. NOSALES INVOLVED! We offer a paid training program for qualified applicants. Starting wage: $6.00/hour. If you would like to learn more about these dynamic positions please join us on: WEDNESDAY, JAN. 12, 1994 6:30P.M. INTERNATIONAL ROOM, KUUNION Or stop by our table to speak with us on: FRIDAY, JAN. 14, 1994 9:00A.M.-3:00P.M. KUUNION Adams Alumni Center is now hiring part-time bartempers, day-time availability & professional attitude. Apply in person across from Kansas Union 8645-4672 BabySisters needed for the spring semester for a research grant. $4.35/hour must have experience with children and infants and references. Apply at 4037 Dole. Child care for 8 yr old, near campus, 30:30-31 pm, Pay neg. Call 833-2111; evening, 845-207-06. Call 833-2111; evening, 845-207-06. Christian Lady needs reliable assistants. Work 8am - 11am on request help 12pm - 3pm. 9-10am on request help 4pm - 6pm. Computer Systems Specialist Computer System Specialist Manage PC/Mac area located, student computer lab; install hardware and software; train/counsel staff. Required: Bachelor's degree; knowledge experience with PC and Mac LANs; proficient PC/Mac user; communication skills; please provide a detailed description, contact Linda Vardei; apply English Center, 204 Lippincott Hall; University of Kansas; Lawnress, K6504, K5955; (913) 845-4554; phone: (913) 845-4600; Applications must be postmarked by January 18, 1984, EOA Employer Cottonwood Inc. a service provider for adults with developmental disabilities is currently accepting applications for part-time employment in their office and on weekends, some may require sleep overs. College course work and related experience helpful but may not be required. A GOOD DRIVING RECORD IS A MUST. Please apply by Jan. 14 at Cottonwood Inc. 280 W. 31 E. WOE. Do you like preschool children? to 5 years old? do you want to make a difference in a child's life? Do you have a little free time? Volunteer at Head Start day a week. For information call 824-1835. EOE Evening and weekend CNA's need to work with clients in their homes. Reliable transportation necessary. Call Sharon at Douglas County Visiting Nurse 863-3738. sunny level, on-board positions available. Benefits. Summer or year round. (813) 292-4744 292-4745 - female help wanted for light house keeping on mondays and Wednesdays from 12 to 9 pm. Call For sale: Remaining student basketball tickets. J- 484-0788. Hobby Town USA is looking for responsible people to help in our new Lawrence franchise store: PT/T FT Apply by writing to H.T.U. P.O. Box 11453, Leask, KS00267-1453. I am looking for a student to play with my 1/2 year old boy, day Monday through Friday, 1-5 p.m. Please call Jannah at 882-2705. If you can only work core-drive please phone: Bestwife.com Office help needed. Student hkp. $4.50/hr, 20 hrs/wk. Upper-level, strong English & computer skills. Applications in 3081 Wescoe, Eng. Depl. property manager to be held Friday, Jan. 14th. Bradford Square Apt. 148, 501 Colorado RI. Part-time clerical job available now. Flexible hours. Call 843-2744 PART-TIME EVENING DELIVERY PERSON Must have own car. Apply in person Peking Restaurant (23rd and Iowa behind Hastings). 749- 0003 Phillips 66 sees cashiers to work the following shifts—5pm-8am; 12am-8am. Must be neat, clean and enjoy working with the public. Apply in person to Phillips 66-90 lowa PYRAMID PIZZA Now Taking Applications Looking for enthusiastic people who understand what great service is all about! THOUSAND DOLLARS Now Hiring Drivers Must have car and insurance Fast growing company. Looking for quality minded people. Good opportunity for growth. Full & Part Time Apply in person 14th & Ohio(under the Wheel) Preschool Substitutes. Prefer training and experien- tation with young children. Sunshine Acres School 2004. PROMOTE our SPRINGBREAK AKACK packages with our posters and flyers, or SIGNUP NOW for Springbreak rooms. Daytona, Panama, Padre, New York. 7 nights up! 8 nights up! Call MWI: 1-800-423-5264 Lawrence-based, growing, international, technical publishing company has a part-time (15 hours per week) position available. Duties include shipment of copies from the warehouse to copying computer disks for inventory; taking the mail to the office daily; and providing backup support to the fulfilment leader as needed. Prepup work may include coordinating working as a team required. Ability to maneuver up to 50 pounds and 50 wpm preferred. This position is part of our internal clerical support team (ASSIST) and helps other areas of the company as R & D Publications, Inc. is an equal opportunity employer in the U.S., and we accept any atmosphere. If you are looking for an enjoyable work environment with a reliable company, please come and fill out an application at 1601 West 23rd Street, New York, NY 10024. EARN-CASH ON THE SPOT $15 Today $30 This week By donating your life saving blood plasma WALK-INS WELCOME! NABI Biomedical Center 816 W 24th 749-5750 STUDENT APPLICATION PROGRAMMER. Deadline: 01/28/94. Salary: $550/month. 20hrs per week. Duties include programming in C, K-HELL, FOXPROW and/or other languages on AIX, OSF/1, VMS, CMS and/or LAN. Complete job application. Apply to the Computer Center and return to Ann Riat. EO/AA EMPLOYER. Student hourly office assistant assigned for 15 hours a week at $4.50/hour. Must have computer and office experience and be a current KU student. Apply at 6037 Dole. Deadline Jan. 18: 5pm. STUDENT SYSTEM TESTING PROGRAMMER. Deadline: 01/21/94. Salary $550-680/Month. 20hrs per week. Duties include designing and writing programs, maintaining, or enhancing existing software applications; library maintenance. Required qualifications: currently enrolled at the University of Kansas, demonstrated experience in designing and writing programs, knowledge of at least 2 prerequisites, computer skills, oral and written communications skills, experience and/or ability in software testing. Ability to maintain effective working relationships with customers and staff. Complete job description available. To apply, complete an application available at the Computer Center. EO/AA EMPLOYER Fennis Jobs-Summer Children's Camps-Northeast-Men and women with good tennis background who can teach children to play tennis. Good salary. Course in sports education. write: Camp Vega. P.O. Box 1771, Dauphin, MA 23323 (617) 934-6538. Men call or write: Camp Winadu. 2515 Glades Rd., Suite 404, Boca Raton, FL 33420 (617) 450-5500. We will be on campus at the student union fraternity on dpm 6/21 in the Gresham and Regionalist rooms. The Lawrence Bus Company is now taking applications for SAFERIDE drivers. Must be 21, have a clean driving record, and be familiar with驾驶 Up to 15 mph/wk. If interested call 62-0544. The Lawrence/Douglas County Infant-Toddler Coordinating Council is seeking a temporary position and provide support for inclusion of infants and toddlers with disabilities in regular child care settings. Duties include visiting local child care settings and providing technical assistance to care providers with special needs. Requires degree in child development, special or early childhood education, social work, PT, PT or related field, and experience working with children. Requires training with numbering numbers for three references; to: Carolyn Roy KECRI/Life Spain Institute, University of Kansas, 4132 Haworth Hall, Lawrence, KS 60045, tel. (913) 728-2525 The Princeton Review is seeking dynamic people with high standardized score tests to teach part-time. No teaching experience necessary, high score on the SAT/GRE/GMAST/LSAT or MCAT a take place on Jan 13, in Kannan City, Fremont information, please call Rebecca at 810-855-7797. EARN CASH $15 Today $30 This Week Plus a $3 Bonus Walk-ins welcome Bonds By donating your blood plasma Lawrence Donor Center 816 W.24th Behind Laird Noll Ford 749-5750 NABI The Quality Source 816 W.24th $ Vehicle Drive-in is now taking applications for full and part-time help. Apply in person. 127.9 Wth. 6 Christian Daycare offers the best care at low rates. Transportation avail. West 422; 823-2935 **Address:** 1000 W 62nd St, Bellevue, WA 98023 NABI The Quality Source Internet Made Easy 225 Professional Services Access KU and the Internet DATABANK SEMESTER SPECIAL Call Your Key to the Internet Voice 842-6699 Data 842-7744 Slip is Available OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense Rick Frydman, Attorney 823 Missouri 843-4023 INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS DV-1 green card Program Sponsored by the U.S. Immigration Dept. Green cards provide permanent access to a variety of programs are allowed to take part. Students, tourists, anyone may apply. For info and forms: New Era Legal Services, 2302 Stagg St., Canoga Park, CA For free consultation call Tel: (818) 998-4425, Fax: (818) 982-9681. Research Assistance - MS/MSL information specialist available to assist with term papers, theses, dissertations, research projects. 843-4280. 235 Typing Services BRAXTON B. COPLEY Attorney at Law General Practice Landmarks of Tampa 749-5333 719 Massachusetts 749-5333 A X 1-der Women Word Processing. Former editor transforms scribbles into accurate pages of letters Looking for a good type? *Papers, Applications, Spreadsheets, Charts *Laser Writing and Word Works *Grammar and spelling free *18 years experience call Jack at Make the Grade 885-283 T General Practice Traffic Tickets, Misdemeanors, Landlord/Tenant Carsousel Slide Projector, Raymond, 2515 Arkansas, N41-8354 305 For Sale 370 Want to Buy MAC SE 30 HD, SYS7, EXEC, uprated memory, 989/ 989/ ooba, Call 841-7841, 811-1611, ask for IMM. IMM. 300s Merchandise Almost new twin mattress and box springs. $50 b.o. b.O. Call 841-5945. Beds, denks, bookcases, chest of drawers. Everything But Ice. 903 Mass. BBDM townhouse // AC and basic cable paid. wear/ dryer and appliances $60/m. Pet paw- ments $50/m. Queen size futon mattress and wooden frame. Condition condition, 78. Phone 685-9958 and ask for Tom 2 and 3 bedroom apartments now available. On bus route. Call 749-1556. 2 furnished rooms in nice spacious house close to campus and 31 St. Washervy/Dryer. A/C $250 Queen size classic futon bed, solid maple w/ mural $400 + $886 +711a4 for Sherri computer computer with printer, software, and manuals. 8500 Call 749-2839. 405 For Rent Available Jan. 1, bldm. on bus route. Call 749-1568 2-5 p.m. Mon-Fri. Bail - $125, Ball Pythons - 945, Other lizards also Call Gargent at 749-196 and leave message. Available now, studio apartment in nicely renovated older house. Private entrance, separate bedroom, ceiling fan, room A/C. No pets. 1300 block Vermont. $296/month. 841-1074. 400s Real Estate Available immediately 1 bdmr apt. at 1127 Ohio 810 pets, not宝sorbon, or CSiron- pets, not宝sorbon, plus eagle 641.1207 Newer 1, 2, and 3 BR apartments available for August '94. Washer/dryer, dishwasher, microwave, private patio/balconies. Avoid the rush! Reserve your place now! 814-846-0749 or 749-846-0749 Super single waterbed, waterjet, matress, heater and accessories. $125/obc. S33-8145 Leasing until the end of July '94. 2 bedroom, 2 bath. Management office. Wooled Woods management B8-511, Aiae for 30 yrs. Management B8-511, Aiae for 30 yrs. Desperatey seeking roommate to Live in 3 bedroom apt at 708-696-7244 Rent at 842-696-7244 One day sale, Saturday Jan. 15, 11am-6pm. Cor- tory Community Church, 202 North Rogers Hall. Nice. 1 bedroom, close to campus. Hard wood flooring. Day-street parking. Street parking. Day-748-291. Earnings: 862-9077 VINTAGE 50's, 60's, 70's CLOTHES Studio apartment now available close to campus. 841-8484 or 849-1566 1973 Volkswagen Super Bug, good condition, great student book, e-800 843-1732 340 Auto Sales Till March 31st 28r. Georgetown Apartments W/D 4844 mason, pat. 260-260, free wateredw 4844 mason, pat. 260-260 - Convenience meadowbrook COMPARE - Location - ApartmentSize - Cost Per Month - Surroundings - Lifestyle (Sorry No Pe M-F8-5:30 Sun 1-4 合 15th & Crestline EQUAL IMPORTANCE Opportunity 842-4200 MASTERCRAFT OFFERS COMPLETELY FURNISHED 1·2·3·4Bedroom Apartments Designed with you in mind! SUBLEASES AVAILABLE Open Daily 9 A.M-5 P.M HANOVER PLACE 841-1212 • 14th & Mass. REGENTS COURT 749-0445 • 19th & Mass. SUNDANCE 841-5255 • 7th & Florida TANGLEWOOD 749-2415 • 10th & Arkansas CAMPUS PLACE 841-1429 • 1145 Louisiana ORCHARD CORNERS 749-4226 • 15th & Kasold 842-4455 A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere VILLAGE SQUARE apartments - Close to campus • Spacious 2 bedroom • Laundry facility • Swimming Pool • Waterbed allowed Now leasing for Spring! 9th& Avalon 842-3040 430 Roommate Wanted 2 are looking for 3rd roommate for little room in 2 look-up rooms, near campus, 460 x 2' utilities, call 749-856-1234 2 x/male roommates for 48 house. W/D, DW, D/L utilities paid $12.50/month. Call Jennifer, M1-6999. 2 female roommates desperately needed for spa cleaning. 1 male roommate in dishwasher. WE HAVE TO MOVE! Call 843-704-944 utilities paid. $215/10/month. Call Ivan. 841-4699 2 to share space, comfortably, furnished in, walking distance to campus. $250/month + utilities. call 749-2165. we're making life easier! *Weekly Maid Service *Front Door Bus Service *"Dine Anytime" with Unlimited Seconds *Laundry and Vending Facilities Facilities College-aged roommate needed now for $134.hrm home loan $115/mon, water pd. Jan. rent free. Fees apply. Female, non-smoking, roommate needed, immaculate bedroom, wash/drwr, 80%, bwr, 80%, bedding, $250.00 NAISMITH Female roommate, comfortable 3 bedroom townhome on bus bedrooms, $850 + all, no smokey no smoke. Naismith Drive 1800 Have your own room, covered parking, private garage, and other amenities, etc., for only $175/mon + call 749-264-8030 Female roommate wanted for 2 bdrm apl. close to campus, 800 per month. include rent and utilit. Female roommate wanted to share 3 bfbm, 1 bath diaper with microwave, WIP, CA / On RU bus route. I need a large roommate for this. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Male Grad student seeks M/P nonmokern at great age on 8th and Mass Institute includes dish station. Attend one of two breakfasts/1/2 block from bus route and conventon to downtown. Avail immediately. Call Kevin at 849-8394 Male N/S roommate need to audite nice, 4 bed- room house. $180 per month. Call 780-2168. Male or female roommate to share 2 br. house, Bedroom, Quiet and considerate, CA, W/D/ W/B75% (875%), W/D75% (875%) - By phone: 864-4358 How to schedule an ad: Roammate needed for 3 bdm furnished apt. Rent is $185 or less. Request W/D AND B/1 Call 605-283-1988 Roommate needed to share 3 bdm townhouse. Very nice. Only $185/mo. + Female N/ roommate for B.DRM, 2 bath burn. except for bdmr. W/D, fireplace, pool. New n campus, on bus route. $240/mo. and 1/2 util., cable paid. contact #853-8533. Roommate wanted to share 3 br house in quiet neighborhood. 8175 mo. ma4-4338 Adobe phoned in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made. 119 Stour Street Elysian. Wanted: One roommate, nonsimaker to share a bedroom from campus. Two full baths. 842-445 Wanted: Female romantics to share new room condo with 3 other female college students. Walking distance to campus. 6 month lease available Rent $825/month Call: 749-5883 or (215) 348-9483 Stop by the Kasan office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or Visa. Calculating Rates: Classified Information and order form You may print your classification order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas offices. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when canceled before their expiration date. Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insections and the size of the ad (the number of agains the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run. When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available. The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00. Item. of insertions: 3 lines 4 lines 5-7 lines 8+ lines Cost per line per day 1 2X -3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 30+X 2.05 1.55 1.95 .85 .75 .50 1.90 1.15 1.85 .70 .65 .45 1.85 1.05 .75 .65 .60 .45 1.75 .90 .65 .60 .60 .35 Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Classifications 105 personal 118 business personas 129 announcements 138 entertainment 148 lab & found 265 high wanted 225 professional services 225 typing services 378 want to buy 405 for rest 438 roommate wanted 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | | | | | ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSMAN POLICY Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print: Name:_ Address: Date ad begins: Total days in paper Total ad cost: Classification: VISA Method of Payment (Check one) Check enclosed MasterCard Visa (Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansas) Furnish the following if you are charring your ad: Expiration Date: Account number: MasterCard Print exact name appearing on credit card: Signature The University Daily Kansas, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, lawrence. KS. 66445 THE FAR SIDE By GARY LARSON © 1994 ForWorks Inc./Dot by Universal Press Syndicate Café de Bruffon BORROLA Expatriates, they migrated in the 1920s to Paris Left Bank, gathering in their favorite haunts and discussing the meaning of cream pies and big shoes. They were, in fact, the original Boclownians. 1 14 Thursday, January 13, 1994 NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SEX HEALTHY. HAPPY. AND WISE 1234567890 SEX Over 85% of all college students are sexually active, but less than half use protection. Sexually transmitted diseases and the HIV disease exist on every campus. How can we decrease the incidence of these diseases? Join us for this important discussion. Wednesday, January 19, 1994 Pine Room, Kansas Union - 7:00p.m.-9:00p.m. Facilitator: Renee Speicher Graduate Assistant, The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, and Coordinator, Center for Sexual Health Education, Watkins Health Center Sponsored by The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, 115 Strong Hall. For more information, contact Renee Speicher at 864-3552. The Lowest CD Prices In Town! Current, Popular CDs for $5.95! Buy 5 or more CDs for $4.95! Also available, special selection CDs $3.95! Buy 10 or more CDs for $2.50 each! For the Best Values in Town Visit Lawrence Pawn 843-4344 718 New Hampshire Court blocks woman from Citadel Student registers; can't attend classes The Associated Press CHARLESTON, S.C. — The gates of The Citadel opened to a woman armed with a court order yesterday. But after Shannon Faulkner registered to take day classes, the nation's top judge blocked her from attending them. At the request of the 151-year-old military college, Chief Justice William Rehnquist granted a stay to keep the 18-year-old student from attending classes today. The Citadel and Virginia Military Institute in Lexington, Va., are the nation's only all-male, state-supported military colleges. Admissions policies at both are the targets of federal lawsuits. Faulkner, who plans to major in education, walked several hundred yards through driving rain and a horde of reporters to register in Bond Hall, the turreted administration building that dominates "I didn't expect all of this, and I didn't really expect to be here," Faulkner said as she advanced through the crush to meet her academic adviser, register and pay tuition. "I factually expected the battle to be a lot longer." one end of The Citadel's parade ground. She said she was treated nicely by college officials and signed up for biology, math, English, history and education. But she said she felt "overwhelmed" by the attention. "Everybody is saying, 'You're making history,' she said. Though cadets promised to treat her with respect, they kept hoping for a last-minute reprieve. "We don't want the class of 1994 to be labeled as the year of Shannon Faulkner," said Will Benton, senior. Faulkner initially was accepted by the college after she had references to her gender deleted from her high-school transcript. The Citadel rejected her application when it discovered she was a woman, and she sued, challenging the constitutionality of the all-male admissions policy. In August, a federal judge said Faulkner could attend classes but not join the corps of cadets while her lawsuit proceeds. The 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals refused to overturn the order. Faulkner, who is from Powdersville, S.C., said she hoped to become a full-fledged member of the gray-uniformed corps of cadets within a year. "I don't think you can get the full Citadel experience without being a cadet," she said. Since Faulkner sued, five incidents of vandalism have been directed against her and her the family — the most recent when vandals poured sand, rotten eggs and spilled food on her car. U. S. Attorney J.P. Strom said the FBI was investigating threats against Faulkner's "personal safety" and unspecified threats to his family and attorneys. "I know I feel safe here on campus, it's just the off-campus stuff I do have to worry about," she said. "She will sit with a Chamberlain family that has She will stay with a Charleston family that has requested anonymity. After registering, Faulkner toured campus, escorted by Lynn Hook, one of 1,649 women who take evening classes at The Citadel. OPEN UNTIL 7 PM ONIGHT Textbooks available at both Union locations KU KU CONSTRUCTIONS Aa-Union Rd-84-40 Burgos Ubicado 884-980 KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store that offers rebates to KU students Purchase New & Used Items! 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SUNKISSED TANNING 2540 IOWA (Next to Applebee's) Grand Opening Special 6 Tanning Sessions $10 At Sunkissed Tanning we offer the most technologically advanced equipment on the market today. By utilizing this "Cutting Edge" tanning equipment you will see results faster than ever before. We offer only the best. Wolff tube beds Wolff lights 10 min lighting beds 30 min facial beds Personal Stereos Certified staff Open 7 days a week Phones in all rooms Competetive prices Wide lotion selection Trained staff to clean beds Lighted make-up counter Call For Your Appointment Today 842-5096 4 ROTC: The Jayhawk Battalion gets a new Cadet Commander. Page 8. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOL. 103, NO.80 THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA KS 66612 ADVERTISING: 864-4358 FRIDAY, JANUARY 14. 1994 Proposal would extend closed-campus hours (USPS 650-640) Brian Vandervliet / KANSAN OPEN TO DRIVE THROUGH TRAFFIC PERMIT REQUIRED WELCOME TO THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS The Senate Executive Committee is considering a bill proposed by the Parking Department that would extend the time students could not drive on campus. The proposed change would restrict vehicles from campus from 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. By Jamie Munn Kansan staff writer People who want to drive through campus at night may have to wait another 45 minutes for access if a new recommendation by the KU Parking Board is passed. NEWS:864-4810 Booth restriction for Jayhawk Boulevard would extend from 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. instead of the current 7:45 a.m. to 4:45 p.m. regulation. David Faurot, head of parking board, proposed the new parking regulations at the University Senate Executive Committee meeting this week. "People think this is a safety problem," Faurot said. Originally, Faurot recommended restriction from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m., but he compromised with SenEx members for the 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. time period. Don Kearns, director of the parking services, said he was comfortable and pleased with the decision that had been made. "I thought they took care of it very reasonably." Keams said. The initial recommendation began as a concern for pedestrians and those who had campus access at the end of the day. Cars were piling up at traffic booths waiting to cut through campus when the stop signs changed, Faurot said. Lawrence High School students and KU students were cruising down the street after 4:45 p.m. increasing traffic, too, he said. "There's a general concern about a lot of traffic and a feeling that reducing it will increase safety," Faurot said. before the restrictions began in the morning. Many of these drivers were students with 7:30 a.m. classes who hoped that they could leave class before getting a parking ticket, Faurot said. Another complaint was directed toward people who parked illegally in blue spaces Early opposition to the changes were expressed by Student Body President John Shoemaker. "Increased enforcement of the current rules would deal with the problems laid out here." Shoemaker said. If tickets were given out as soon as the restrictions began, fewer people would abuse the early parking rules. he said. SenEx member John Altevogt disagreed with the initial proposal for several reasons. Altevogt said he was concerned that students, especially females, would not be able to park on campus until after dark. If they needed a parking space before 6 p.m., they would have to park in less lighted areas, such as spaces near Potter Lake, he said. Altevogt found another flaw in the plan. "There's an inconsistency in that we've opened up our parking lots at 5 o'clock," he said. "But now you're telling them that the parking lot is open, but you can't get there until six." After the times were amended, however, Altevogt agreed with the recommendation. Kearns said the new parking proposal, which also includes a $5 increase for campus access passes, would go to the University Council for approval at its next meeting, on Jan. 27. The council will also consider a parking recommendation to remove the evening restriction on 43 spaces behind Strong Hall and Bailey Hall. Festivities to honor King's birthday DODS Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. By Denise Nell Kansan staff writer This year's ninth annual Martin Luther King Jr. Day celebration will feature a weekend of festivities, including a speech by a well-known journalist, a gospel musical and a commemorative service with a keynote speaker. Trying to spread the warmth and knowledge that Martin Luther King Jr. shared, Aaron Greene, Olathe junior, lights the candle of Kyle Moore, Newark. N.J., senior. The vigil last night in front of Wescoe Hall was one of many area events planned honor King. Tony Brown, host and executive producer of "Tony Brown's Journal," a television show based in New York, will start the festivities with a speech at a banquet at 6:30 p.m. Saturday in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Brown's speech will focus on the week end's theme, "Building a Healthy Community (Patience to Toil)." Jennie Zeiner / KANSAN Admission to the dinner and speech is $20, to the speech only is $10. KU students and children aged five to 10 pay $10 for dinner and may attend the speech free. The Martin Luther King Jr. Day festivities are sponsored by the Ecumenical Fellowship of Lawrence. A gospel chorus from Newton will sing with a Lawrence youth choir at 6 p.m. Sunday at the Lawrence High School auditorium, 1001 Louisiana St. The gospel performance is free. The Rev. Dr. Frederick G. Sampson of Detroit will be featured as the keynote speaker in a commemorative service Monday at 1 p.m. in the Lied Center. The service is free. The Rev. Charles Kennybrew, head of the King celebrations in Lawrence, said the memorial service had been moved to the Lied Center from its usual location at Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St., to accommodate more people. "We had really outgrown the churches here in the city," he said. "Last year we practically filled it up. It's really growing." Sponsoring the event are: the Office of the Executive Vice Chancellor, Haskell Indian Nations University, The City of Lawrence, KU Black Student Union, USD 497, KU office of Minority Affairs, the KU School of Journalism and Douglas County. Sherwood Thompson, director of the Office of Minority Affairs, said the involvement of so many different groups was a positive sign. "It's a very healthy sign," he said. "It indicates that Lawrence is interested in healing the wounds of racial discrimination and injustices. It's a sign people are interested in learning about how to be a progressive community." Williams supports coaches Next 24 to 48 hours may be emotional, upsetting, he says Bv Gerry Fey Kansansportswriter "I don't know what's going to happen," an unusually somber Williams said yesterday in a news conference. "I think it's sad that issues were not addressed in the way we felt like they were going to be." Amidst the shadow of a possible boycot of college basketball games by the Black Coaches Association this weekend, Kansas coach Roy Williams said he supported such an action. Williams was referring to the association's request for restoring a 14th scholarship to Division I men's basketball. The request was denied earlier this week at the NCAA convention in San Antonio. The association is rallying support for the boycott from the National Association of Basketball Coaches, of which Williams is a member. "We made some concessions and tried to show some ways that there would be money saved that could then be given to a 14th scholarship," Williams said. "So they took our concessions, and they didn't give the 14th scholarship, either." "I've been on six hours of conference calls since yesterday morning with different groups of coaches," Williams said. "The next 24 to 48 hours is going to be very telling, very emotional...disturbing." Williams said he was not happy with the way the scholarship issue had been handled. Some university presidents have said that coaches did not looked for budget cuts that would free money for the extra scholarship. But Williams said that the NABC had made cost-cutting concessions, such as cutting back on in-season recruiting evaluations. "The bottom line is that college basketball, particularly men's college basketball, pays an exorbitant percentage of all the expenses on every campus for all your sports," Williams said. Williams said the NCAA might have denied the scholarship because of the attitude some university presidents had toward coaches. However, he said the Kansas administration was in favor of the extra scholarship. The NCAA basketball tournament raises revenue for 75 percent of NCAA expenses. Williams said. Williams said he conferred Wednesday with his players "Men's basketball coaches feel like we're getting squeezed every which way we turn," he said. "We've got a group out there now that's willing to make a stand, and I'm very supportive of that." cotted. Kansas is scheduled to play Kansas State at 8:30 Monday night in Allen Field House. "We talked yesterday afternoon after our practice because I'm trying to keep them aware of what's going on," he said. "And we'll do it again after practice today." Players would not comment on the possible boycott yesterday, but senior forward Richard Scott spoke with the Kansas City Star Wednesday. "Players only get a certain amount of games," Scott said. "If they want to go on to the next level, a boycott isn't going to help them. I think a boycott would hurt players more than it would coaches." Williams said he was fearful about the possible boycott this weekend. "Players, coaches. I think college basketball has a lot to lose," he said. "And all it takes is some people being truthful and trying to work with people, instead of standing up there like God Almighty." Williams said he was facing the hardest decision he had ever had to make. "When I've lost, I've been very disturbed and distressed, ready to jump off a building," he said. "When we went on probation, I felt the same way. And none of those compare to the way I feel right now." BUSINESS AS USUAL: "Hawks still preparing for Monday night's K-State game." Page 11. INSIDE INSIDE HARASSMENT HARASSMENT Sexual Harassment Sexual harassment has become an increasingly common issue. Incidents in University residence halls have brought the issue home for some students. Page 10. Health officials say flu strain will become more widespread The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported yesterday that Type A flu is expected to become even more widespread before the end of January. ATLANTA — The severe type of flu that hit epidemic levels in December is only going to get worse. The Associated Press So far, the strain has been reported in every state except Mississippi, Delaware, Hew Hampshire and Rhode Island. Flu season normally begins in November and lasts until March. The flu outbreak became a national epidemic during the last two weeks of December, when deaths from flu and pneumonia rose in the 121 U.S. cities monitored by the CDC, said Dr. Larry Schoenberger. "I am confident that mortality data will continue to rise," said Schoenberger, medical officer for the CDC's influenza branch. The elderly and other people at high risk from the flu may still benefit from a flu shot, he said. The vaccine is effective about 70 percent of the time, making it worth taking, Schoenberger said. "You've got a virus that is very tricky," he said. "It's able to change on a regular basis." In Mississippi, state epidemiologist Dr. Mary Currier said the flu might peak later. He estimated that 42 million people have had flu shots this winter. "We are starting to hear more and more from physicians who say they are seeing patients with flu-like symptoms," she said. Add/drop days rescheduled to observe national holiday Richard Morrell, University Registrar, said the remaining schedule for add/drop would be moved back one day to accommodate observation of the holiday. Kansan staff report Add/drop may become a madhouse next week when students scheduled to make changes on Martin Luther King Jr.'s birthday hunt for alternative appointments. "It's extremely important to preserve the dignity of that day," Morrell said. If students are scheduled for Monday, they should come Tues- Though he knew that some students would want offices open, Morrell said,he felt strongly that the time should be spent observing the holiday. day; if students are scheduled for Tuesday, they should come Wednesday, and so on, Morrell said. He encouraged students to stick to the new schedule but said students would be accommodated as best as possible. 1 Morrall said he didn't realize that the add/drop day was scheduled for King's birthday until the student timetable had already been printed. 2 Friday, January 14, 1994 UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the suhmer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Staufer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, KA 68045. ON CAMPUS SPENDADOLLAR... Valid Through July 31, 1994 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN C A R D AT&T SAVE HUNDREDS! Auld Through July 1, 1994 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN C A R D AT&T $AVE HUNDREDS! Buy your Kansan Card for only $1.00 now through February 25, 1994! Available at the Kansan Business office; KU Bookstores, Kansas and Burge Unions; University Book Shop and Jayhawk Bookstore. KU Fencing Club will meet at 6 p.m. today in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Jen Snyder at 841-6445. St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today in Danforth Chapel. Vietnamese Student Association will meet at 7:05 tonight in 2023 Haworth Hall. All students are welcome to attend. For more information, call Luong Lv at 749-4065. The Astronomy Associates of Lawrence will meet to stargaze if the sky is clear at 8 p.m. Sunday on the top floor of Lindley Hall. Free coffee will be available. For more information, call Corye Zirlin at 842-2225. ON THE RECORD A turntable and an amplifier, valued together at $600, were stolen Dec. 9, 1993, from the fourth floor of Murphy Hall, KU police reported. A KU student received a harassing telephone call Sunday in McCollum Hall, KU police reported. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN HOW TO REACH US Call 864-4810 for the newsroom: ■ News tips — Campus Desk ■ Comments/Complaints/Corrections — Ben Grove, Editor or Lisa Cosmillo, Managing Editor 电话 864-4358 for advertising: Classified Department Comments/Complaints — Kelly Connealy, Classified Manager Display Advertising Comments/Complaints — Justin Garberg, Business Manager Come to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall for: - placing announcements of meetings or events of campus groups for the "On Campus" calendar. - Announcements must be submitted on form provided by 5 p.m. two days prior to desired day of publication. No submissions will be taken by telephone. ■ submitting "Letters to the Editor." See the Opinion page for details. University Dally Kansan fax number 913-864-5261 WEATHER Weather around the country: Atlanta: 53/'43' Chicago: 34/'15' Houston: 56/'50' Miami: 80/'67' Nineapolis: 19/'3' Phoenix: 68/'42' Salt Lake City: 47/'35' Seattle: 50/'49' Omaha: 43'/22' LAWRENCE: 19'/5' Kansas City: 34'/30' St. Louis: 40'/31' Wichita: 39'/23' Tulsa: 49'/33' TODAY Tomorrow Sunday Cloudy Sunny Day Cold, chance of flurries Mostly cloudy North winds 10-15 m.p.h. High: 19' Low: 5' Source: The Associated Press High: 20° Low: 5° Chance of snow Warmer High 35' Low 20' CORRECTIONS KANSAN A story on Page 5 of yesterday's Kansan contained incorrect information. The risk of catching a disease from mice in Lewis Hall is slight because mice feces must come in contact with food to pass a disease to humans. Astory on Page 14 of Wednesday's Kansan contained incorrect information. The Expanded Academic Index is a database of more than 1,400 magazines and journals. 928 Mass. 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Academic Computer Supplies Service & Equipment Burge Union * Level 3 / S1938-6640 - 5690 VISA UnionCard PayPal KU VISA MasterCard MasterCard union technology center MasterCard The Etc. Shop UNIVERSITY DANCE COMPANY AUDITION Wedn Wednesday, January 19th 7:00 p.m. Studio 242 Robinson No solo material required. For more information, please call 864-4264. WELCOME BACK EARN CASH $15 Today $30 This Week Plus a $3 Bonus By donating your blood plasma Show your current student ID card between January 11 and January 28 and receive an extra $3 bonus on your second visit of the month. Lawrence Donor Center Walk-ins welcome $ NABI The Quality Source Hours: M-F 9-6 Sat 10-3 816 W.24th Behind Laird Noller Ford 749-5750 See our ad in the classified section --- 》 CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Friday, January 14, 1994 3 KKK will meet opposition at Capitol Unity rally leaders plan counterprotest By Denise Nell Kansan staff writer The Rev. Wanda M. McDaniels said she was tired of hate. She said she wanted to prove that Kansas was a state of love and unity. She will try to do that tomorrow with the Unity Ride to the Capitol building in Topeka to demonstrate against the Ku Klux Klan's protest of the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday. King's birthday is Saturday, and it will be observed as a national holiday Monday. "I think it's very sad that we've come to 1994, and we're going to continue to let hate dominate." Davis said. McDaniels, who lives in Wichita and serves as the second vice president of the Wichita chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, said her goal was to organize 1,000 cars to come from all directions to convene at the Capitol at the same time. She said people from Wichita, Kansas City, Lawrence, Junction City, Salina and Manhattan had told her they would participate. People from Oklahoma, Nebraska and Missouri also will come to Topeka. McDaniels said she had made an agreement with the U.S. Department of Justice, the Highway Patrol and Sheriff's departments to provide an escort for the people who were joining the caravans from Wichita and Kansas City. McDaniels, who will lead ceremonies, said the event at the Capitol would include speeches and songs that commemorated King. McDaniels said she thought that every person had a right to free speech but that there should be limits. "Everyone has a right to opposition, but when people decide to hate because of race, color, creed or natural origin, it's a sin and its wrong," she said. Orion Jordan, the director of the division of facilities management at the Capitol, the office that granted the KKK the permit to hold a demonstration, said that the right to free speech was not something that applied differently to different groups. "Our position is that a government bureau doesn't have the right to decide who has a right to freedom of speech," he said. "That's guaranteed by the constitution." Jordan said that permits to demonstrate at the Capitol were granted on a first-come, first-serve basis. The KKK applied for its permit a few months ago, he said. The KKK could not be reached for com- Sgt. Terry Maple, public information director for the Kansas Highway Patrol, said that the Capitol steps would be surrounded entirely by a six-foot fence. He said the KKK would be demonstrating on the south side of the Capitol and the Unity Riders would be demonstrating on the north. The Capitol will be the block between the two demonstrations. The only people who will be permitted inside the barriers are law enforcement personnel, the media and participants in the protests. ment. "What we're trying to do here is to do enough planning so, hopefully, problems won't occur." Manle said. Maple said that the KKK had indicated that it was not expecting more than 15 members to attend the protest. That and cold weather may decrease the need for police, he said. Another factor that may decrease the need for police is that the KKK changed the time of its protest from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. The Unity Riders are planning to arrive at 11 a.m. C. E. "Sonny" Scroggins, another organizer of the event, said that some participants of the counterprotest would move to the south side of the Capitol outside the barriers at 1 p.m., the starting time of the KKK demonstration, for a prayer vigil. He said it was important to realize that the demonstration was not against the KKK but against the message they sent out. "For hundreds of years we've been reacting to the Klan, and now we're responding to the Klan," he said. Terry Bell, president of the Black Student Union, said that he and a few union members were planning to attend the protest. He said the union supported the Unity Riders' efforts. "I think that something definitely should be done because the holiday itself is very important." he said. Bill Tuttle, professor of history and American studies, said that in some cases it was better to ignore organizations such as the KKK. Tuttle, who taught KU's first course in African-American history, said he helped organize a protest against the KKK when it demonstrated on campus in 1988. He said that a few days after the anti-Klan rally he had found a swastika scratched into his office door and suspected it was put there by the KKK. "I think what the Klan wants to do is provoke confrontation, to present themselves as victims," he said. "It's hard not to wage counterprotests because their message is so ugly. The best thing to do is to try to ignore it." 102 Bus drivers savor their freedom, the radio Drunks, bad hygiene give drivers trouble By Heather Moore Kansan staff writer Every day KU students are chauffeured to classes in green and white stretch limos that cruise up and down Mount Oread with motors humming and radios blaring. Steve Shalinsky drove for Safe Ride last semester, but he got his commercial driver's license so that he could drive the buses this semester. Amy Solt / KANSAN He said that he liked the freedom involved in driving the bus. To earn extramoney Tim Morris, Overland Park senior, drives a bus for the Lawrence Bus Company. Morris has been driving for the company since September. "There's not a boss nearby," he said. "You're not confined to one place, and you're always moving." Shalinsky does not go to school this semester because of financial reasons and works almost full time as a bus driver. "I start at 7:30 a.m. and work until after 9 a.m." he said. "Then I go back at noon and work until 6 p.m." Shalinsky said the job does get dull sometimes. "I usually have a radio to ease the boredom," he said. "I don't have problems with anyone, but sometimes people want me to take them to places that I don't go to," he said. Shalinsky, who drives the Naismith-Oliver route on a daily basis, said that he liked it when people told him stories while he was driving and that, for the most part, he enjoyed his job. Shalinsky said that Lawrence streets were hard to get around on. "People with fancy cars make it worse, and alcohol use on campus affects people's driving," he said. When he's not driving the bus, Shalinsky likes to mountain bike, he said. "Right now I can't because of the weather, so I watch TV," he said. "I usu- Shalinsky said that he did not plan to drive a bus for the rest of his life. "I plan to graduate, move to a different town, find an occupation and just do it," he said. Tim Morris, Overland Park senior, also spends nearly 30 hours a week chaufeing other students around Lawrence. Like Shalinsky, Morris worked at Safe Ride during the fall semester. "I just got tired of it," he said. Morris said that one of the problems of driving the bus was that he often could not get to classes on time. He is a psychology major who has 15 class hours in addition to his job. Morris, who drives the Meadowbrook route, said he did have pet peeves related to his job. "People without good hygiene and litter all over get obnoxious in the summer," he said. "It's easy, though. It's just driving around, and it pays the bills." One of Morris' favorite stories involves the brakes locking-up when he was driv- ing. "Some of the buses have brakes that lock when the back door opens," he said. "We're cruising down the road, and I decide to open the back door. "The brakes locked and everyone went forward. It wasn't funny at the time though." Morris said that his best days were when the radio played good songs all day. "The worst would be having a wreck, but that hasn't happened yet," Morris said. Regents begin with inexperience New appointees will face full agenda of issues in first term By Stephen Martino Kansan staff writer All of them have advanced degrees,but they might feel like college freshmen as they learn the ropes in their new endeavor. The four appointments to the Board of Regents made by Gov. Joan Finney Wednesday, coupled with the appointment of John Hiebert in the fall, will make five of the nine-member board quite inexperienced as the Legislature goes into high gear. "It will probably be a rather slow start for them and be a rather high learning curve for a while," said State Sen. Doug Walker, D-Osawatomie. "I would imagine that they will be tentative at first and be relying on staff a great deal." It may not be the best time for the Regents to have rookies on the bench with their legislative agenda so full. Finney, in her State of the State address Tuesday night, endorsed two plans proposed by the Regents; admission of Washburn University into the Regents system and support for the Partnership for Excellence, a plan to increase the salaries of Regents faculty members to equal that of their peer schools. "Things will depend on whether the Regents are speaking with one voice on these issues," said State Rep. Duane Goossen, R-Goessel, and head of the House Education Committee. Additionally, Finney's proposed 5.1 percent increase in the Regents budget was the largest increase offered to any area of the state government. "It's a tight budget, and a lot of people are looking for increases. That will probably determine the fate of those proposals more than anything else," Goossen said. Most legislators said that just because the Regents had many new members, it would not necessarily doom the proposals' chances in the Legislature. "The ideas presented by the Regents were proposed by the old group," said State Sen. August Bogina, R-Shawnee, and head of the Senate Ways and Means Committee. "It's not going to have any effect on the way we look at the proposals." The one area where new Regents might lag behind their more experienced colleagues is in relations with legislators and lobbying efforts to support Regents policies. "Things might turn more on the role of tenured members taking the lead and helping to establish relations," Walker said. However, State Sen. Sandy Praeger, R-Lawrence, stressed the importance of just getting the appointees confirmed by the Senate. Finney's last three appointees to the Regents have been turned down by the Senate. "We've been concerned with getting quality people on the board," she said. "There will be a transition period for them to assimilate information, but it won't have a negative effect." Praeger said that if Regents members continue to be high quality persons, higher education in Kansas would be fine. "I think we'll move quickly and get them confirmed, and then they can start operating with a full board," she said. "That will be best." ULTIMATE TAN Get that sunny beach feelin' How to rid the Winter Whites The Ultimate Tan solution: It’s back, historical “106 Days”! 6 SESSIONS FOR $10 • 8 New 36 BulbDouble Facial Beds • Free Facial Beds • Largest Salon in Lawrence with 16 Wolff System Beds • Professionally serving Lawrence for 6 years 2449 Iowa Suite O Lawrence, KS • 842-4949 (Just south of Molly McGees) How to rid the Winter Whites How to rid the Winter Whites The Ultimate Tan solution: It's back, historical "106 Days"! Today Only! 6 SESSIONS FOR $10 • 8 New 36 Bulb Double Facial Beds • Free Facial Beds • Largest Salon in Lawrence with 16 Wolff System Beds • Professionally serving Lawrence for 6 years 2449 Iowa Suite O Lawrence, KS • 842-4949 (Just south of Molly McGees) Pancho's MEXICAN RESTAURANT Where the Jayhawk goes for Homestyle Mexican Food Margaritas and the largest variety of Mexican beers 843-4044 Call in for take out orders 711 W 23rd in the Malls Shopping Center WE HONOR KANSAN Pancho's Pancho's MEXICAN RESTAURANT Where the Jayhawk goes for Homestyle Mexican Food Margaritas and the largest variety of Mexican beers 843-4044 Call in for take out orders 711 W 23rd In the Malls Shopping Center MasterCard --- 4 --- Friday, January 14, 1994 OPINION + + + + + UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VIEWPOINT King's accomplishments deserve more recognition Monday is the official celebration of Martin Luther King Jr.'s birthday. This celebration, which has been a federal holiday since 1986, unfortunately is often neglected by people who view King only in his capacity as a leader of the African-American community. King's contributions go beyond race and have benefited all Americans. King is best known for his struggle against racial discrimination and legal segregation in the South. However, he also devoted a significant portion of his career to addressing social and economic inequality. Throughout his life he fought for freedom, justice, self-determination and equality for all people. The official observance of his birthday is an important holiday for all Americans to recognize. A variety of activities at the Lawrence Senior Center today are open to everyone. The scheduled events run from 10 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. and include a video, speakers and discussion groups. There will be a banquet, and television journalist Tony Brown will speak at 6 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Tickets are available at SUA and the Office of Minority Affairs, and the speech itself will be free to students. On Sunday, a Gospel Extravaganza will be held at 6 p.m. in the Lawrence High School Auditorium. The event will be free and open to the public. On Monday there will be a Memorial Observance Service, with the Rev. Frederick Sampson as the keynote speaker. This service is at 1 p.m. in the Lied Center and is free. The Ku Klux Klan has chosen to mark this holiday by sponsoring a rally at 1 p.m. tomorrow on the Capitol's south steps in Topeka. Students should honor and support what King stood for by attending a Martin Luther King Celebration, which begins at 11 a.m. on the Capitol's north steps. King's message was one of unity, not divisiveness. All students should participate in the celebration of his birthday. MARGARET BECK FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD Violence in video games calls for detailed labels Growing concern about the potential harm of violence in video games has led to discussions concerning a ratings system for computer games. A simple ratings system is inadequate. Game manufacturers should include information about a game's content on the game's package. The U. S. Senate has introduced legislation to pressure the video game industry to come up with its own ratings system. The system under consideration by the Software Publishers Association would grade video games by their appropriateness for particular age groups, which include all ages, children 12 and under, children 17 and under or adults only. This ratings system is not enforceable. Because it is a voluntary system instituted by private enterprise, not the government, retailers do not have to heed it. Because it is not enforceable, the system is worthless. Even if Congress were to draw up legislation that enforces these ratings, a ratings system is not enough. Parents are the best authorities to decide what is appropriate for their children — not the industry. Parents should and must be able to make informed decisions about what games their children play. Computer software companies should include a brief synopsis of the objectionable content of video games on the outside of game packages. Alerting parents to excessive violence, adult situations or other contents involves more than a simple, vague rating system. DAVID ZIMMERMAN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD KANSANSTAFF BEN GROVE, Editor LISA COSMILLO, Managing editor JUSTIN GARBERG Business manager TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser General manager, news adviser BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator Editorn JENNIFER BLOWEY Retail sales manager Assistant Managing Editor...Dan England Assistant to the editor...J. R. Clairborne News...Kristi Fogler, Katie Greenwold, Todd Sefert Editorial...Colleen McCain Nathan Olson Campus...Joel DeLoven Sports...David Dorsey Photo...Doug Nees Features...Sara Bennett JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser Business Staff Campus sales mgr ... Jason Eberly Regional sales mgr ... Troy Tarvwater National & Co-op sales mgr ... Robin Kring Special sections mgr ... Shelly McConnell Production mgr ... Laura Guth Grotten Kochenholmftm Marketing director ... Amy Casey Creative director ... John Cartoon Classified mgr ... Kelly Connelys Tweetsheets mgr ... Wing Chan 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 Kanan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kanan newsroom, 111 Stuart-Flint Hall. Great columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed. Allegations against Clinton are cheap shots in the dark A piece of coal was dropped in Bill Clinton's Christmas stocking last month. The perpetrators — two money-hungry Arkansas state troopers, a Republican attorney, two Los Angeles Times reporters and the January issue of the American Spectator — accused the president of wanton sexual misconduct. Not to be outdone, Sen. Bob Dole called for an independent investigation of Clinton's supposed involvement in a shady land-development scheme. Hillary Clinton declared that both controversies arose from the same impulse: a desire to discredit a president whose job approval ratings are on the rise and who has presided over a successful legislative program. These Yuletide rumors of scandal are feeble. The state troopers' tale of how Clinton tried to buy their silence concerning his alleged habit of sneaking women into the Arkansas governor's mansion is a choice bit of tabloid trash. It has been effectively demolished by New Republic columnist Michael Kinsley, other troopers who served in Clinton's entourage and the women who supposedly participated in these trysts. COLUMNIST BRIAN DIRCK Dole only succeeded in resurrecting old stories that were-rejected by the press and the voters during the 1992 campaign. His call for an independent investigator to examine the charges have a hypocritical ring, coming as they do from a man who consistently denounced the use of investigators in probing Republican scandals like the Iran-contra affair. And Dole's repeated dark allusions to Watergate during interviews on "Meet the Press" and CBS "This Morning," are simply absurd. CNN quoted Justice Department representatives who stated that it is highly unlikely that criminal charges will result from this episode. Dole stirred this new controversy with no other apparent motive than to wreck Clinton's credibility, and he should be ashamed of himself. Clinton wearily denied all the accusations but otherwise said very little. Good for him. For it is the accusers, not the accused, who should answer some hard questions. Why have some Republicans and conservatives declared open season on this president? I think it is nothing more than simple nostalgia for the good old days, when Republicans ruled the White House. It began in 1980, when President Ronald Reagan fueled suspicions that Washington was an empire little less evil than Moscow, accusing the national government of being hopelessly corrupt. Republicans' calls for "getting the government off the backs of the people" resonated with a disillusioned electorate and made the presidency a Republican enclave for more than a decade. Still besotted with this Reagan-era rhetoric and bitter about their loss of the White House in 1992, some Republicans nowadays assume that any attack, fair or foul, on federal leaders is bound to gain them votes. They see no difference between a healthy desire to reform our topheavy government and indiscriminate mudslinging at a president with whom they happen to disagree, nourishing the powerful signs of American apathy and cynicism in the hope that doing so will recreate the golden days of Republican power. But few Americans want to see cheap shots leveled at their president. If there is deep despair concerning government in this country, there is an equally deep desire to see our leaders succeed. Most people want to see Clinton do well; that is why he was elected. I suspect that Americans will, in the end, look none too kindly on those who wish to extinguish hopes for a better future in their need for power, still less with means normally resorted to only by the most shameless supermarket rag. Those Republican and conservatives who utilize such tactics may someday find that the voters have dropped coal in their stockings. Brian Dirkel is a Conway, Arkansas graduate student majoring in history. WAEODY Chicago Tribune YOUVE BABYSAT FOR ME... YOUVE TAUGHT ME... YOUVE RAISED ME. YOU'VE BABYSAT FOR ME... YOU'VE TAUGHT ME... YOU'VE RAISED ME. I'VE SPENT MOST OF MY WAKING HOURS WITH YOU... BUT YOU DON'T LISTEN TO ME, AND YOU'RE A BAD EXAMPLE FOR US KIDS. LET'S FACE IT: AS A PARENT, YOU'RE A LOUSY ROLE MODEL. FLINK I'VE SPENT MOST OF MY WAKING HOURS WITH YOU... ! LET'S FACE IT: AS A PARENT, BUT YOU DON'T LISTEN TO ME, AND YOU'RE A BAD EXAMPLE FOR US KIDS. YOU'RE A LOUSY ROLE MODEL. FLINK Flight attendant overloads on cheer You've got to love flight attendants. In general, they are a very helpful group. In general, they are also an intensely cheerful group. The cheerfulness I could do without. It's not that I don't like cheerful people or anything, it's just that flight attendants tend to take this part of their job in an extreme that is sometimes painful for the passengers. Take the flight attendant I had the immense pleasure of being exposed to on a recent flight to Kansas City. As I boarded the plane, I was immediately and mercilessly pounced upon by this extremely happy man who offered to take my bag for me. At first, I was impressed and pleased by his helpful actions. I was so impressed that I barely even took offense to his overly joyful attitude. I gave him my bag and thanked him for his help. Then I began to make my way to my seat. "No problem, SWEETHEART," he oh-so cheerfully chirped. COLUMNIST DANIELLE RAYMOND I'm not a raging feminist or anything like that, so the fact that he had Sweetheart? I stopped short in the aisle. The flight attendant had called me sweetheart. This was very bad. referred to me in a condescending manner barely phased me. However, I can't say that I like to be called sweet-heart by anyone, let alone a perfect stranger who happens to be an obnoxiously cheerful flight attendant. I let it slide and began again to make my way to my seat. I settled in and decided that sleeping through the flight would be a good way to avoid the psychotically happy flight . . .endant. I soon found this was not to be. As the flight attendants began the standard safety/instructional speech that is given at the start of every flight, his voice came over the loudspeaker. He was to be the narrator for the speech today. Just my fck. Happy man began to tell us all about the features of the plane as the flight attendant in front of me went through the motions that illustrated the speech. Something was different about this attendant though. The depressed flight attendant accompanied her co-worker's monologue with the necessary motions, the whole time with a mild look of displeasure on her face. When the happy flight attendant began to refer to the emergency air mask as "the little margarine jar," the displeasure turned to full-blow annoyance. Instead of the "I'm a flight attendant" terminally happy grin slapped across her face, she looked a little unhappy. In fact, she looked down-right depressed. I felt sorry for her. I would only have to tolerate that fool's stupid antics for one afternoon. She had to do it all the time. No wonder she was depressed. The attendant ended his speech The psychotically happy attendant was turning the safety/instructional speech into a monologue. He thought he was the funniest thing to hit the scene since David Letterman, and we were his perfect audience. We couldn't leave. with a great joke about smokers being welcome to have a cigarette out on the wing or something. At this point, I was lucky enough to fall asleep. After we landed, I started to make my way toward the insanely happy flight attendant. He had my bag, so there was no way I was going to be able to avoid him. When I got to the front of the plane, he was standing at the exit with a big, cheesy grin on his face. He was saying goodbye to everyone in flight attendante. You know, a continuous stream of goodbyes that are customized for each passenger. "Bye. Bye-bye. Bye now. Goodbye. Ba-bye. Bye." He was very good at it. I asked him for my bag and readied myself for what I was sure was going to be a cheeriness overload. He handed my my bag accompanied with that grin. "Here you go SWEET-HEART! Have a good day!" he said to me in a-song-sy voice. Sweetheart? Again? Like I said: flight attendants, you've got to love 'em. Danielle Raymond is a Wiltlett, Ill., junior majoring in journalism. Violence is real threat to Lawrence community Re: the Jan. 11 story, "Citizens not worried about guns." I'm not sure if the "citizens" interviewed are living in the same city as me. Maybe those involved with this story have selective memories. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Four days later, Lawrence police arrested a 23-year-old man after the man reportedly tired several shots from insist he apartment with a .30 caliber M-1 Carbine rifle. On Dec. 23, 1983, a 20-year-old Lawrence man shot and killed his 19-year-old girlfriend before killing himself minutes later. And don't forget the car jacking at Riverfront Park, which ended with the murder of a man in the presence of his girlfriend and her children. Although Lawrence's nine homicides in 1939 pale in comparison to 153 in Kansas City and 52 in Wichita, citizens of Lawrence are worried just the same. If the Kansan was searching for the pulse of the community, it should have ventured further than the end of its own arm. According to my observations, the pulse of this community has, at times, come close to stopping. Greg Thonen Kansas City senior Leaders play on fears in attempts to ban guns A lust for political power motivates those in charge to chip away at America's constitutional right to gun ownership. These leaders play on their followers' fears of crime to advance a cause that would see average citizens powerless to defend their basic rights when faced with an armed government or armed criminals. The Brady bill is a first step, but it has nothing to do with crime. It is a first step in the battle to keep guns out of the hands of aver- Americans. Like many other items of personal property, from automobiles to kitchen knives to spray paint, death and injury can result from the irresponsible misuse of guns. Like those items, guns give many responsible people much enjoyment — not just from hunting but from target practice and collecting. But an even greater benefit of gun ownership is the added protection it gives to individual liberty. If only the citizens of Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia had been armed well enough to fight their governments' assorted atrocities, we might not need to worry so much about what well-armed governments can do to an unarmed citizenry. Joe Suber Tobeka sophomore UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ar i so vo so go go go go be go be be or so tol 5 Manure animals grace gardens Friday, January 14, 1994 'PooPet' sculptures are safe for the environment By Susan White Kansan staff writer Two entrepreneurs from Lebanon, New Jersey, seemed to know what to do when it came to poo. John Rothman and John Flaherty are the brains behind Tewksbury Gardens, the company responsible for making biodegradable animal sculptures from cow manure called "Poo Pets." Rothman said the idea to make PooPets had come to him after he met a farm woman from Cape Cod, Mass, who liked to mold animal sculptures out of manure and had several of them around her house. Rothman said he had realized that he could profitably manufacture a similar product nationwide and that the woman had the right idea with manure because it was the most durable and natural fertilizer available. What's my name? Pepe LaPo™ Soil Swine™ Scat Cata™ Stuggo Snail™ Stool Toads™ Quackers™ Stool Pidgeons™ Mink Poos™ Ugain Bunnies™ Turdle, Stool Toad, & Stoid Pigoon Planters™ Turdles™ P cow Pew™ Flaherty, Rothman's partner, said they had adopted the idea of animal sculptures because the animals would look good in a garden setting. The duo went to an Amish community in Pennsylvania to get the raw materials for the PooPets because the community had a lot of cows, Flaherty said. The company then hired the Amish to clean and place the manure in animal molds designed by Tewksbury Gardens. After the manure is molded, a special process is used to remove its offending odor, Flaherty said. "The manure is air-dried," he said. "Then it is heat-treated at 210 degrees in a propane heater which totally removes all the residual moisture. The bacteria cannot live without any moisture, so it dies." After the sculptures are molded and dried, the Amish ship them to a factory in Lebanon, where employees paint them and add seeds for eyes. Micah Laaker / KANSAN Poo Pets can be used for indoor potted plants or in outdoor gardens. They will last from two to four years, depending on the moisture level in the area, Rothman said. When PooPets get wet, they release nutrients into the soil, keeping the plants healthy and strong, he said. PooPets won't harm plants because they are environmentally safe. "Everything is 100 percent natural, safe and biodegradable." Rothman said. PooPets can be found throughout the United States and in parts of Canada. Tewksbury Gardens also would like to market them in Europe, Rothman said. Lawrence residents do not have to travel far to The Making of the PooPets™ 1. The Amish clean the manure. 2. The manure is molded into animal shapes. 3. The sculptures are baked at 210 degrees to get rid of the smell. The Amish clean the manure. 4. The sculptures are painted and seed are put in for eyes. Micah Laaker / KANSAN find them. PooPets are sold at the Bay Leaf, 725 Massachusetts St. Anne Yetman, manager of the Bay Leaf, said PooPets had been more popular than she expected them to be. we've been selling them like crazy," she said. PooPets have been so popular that the Bay Leaf sold out of them. Yetman said the store would stock more PooPets in spring when new designs were made available. Despite the success of PooPets nationwide, they have received varying reactions from KU students. Mari Gordon, Salina sophomore, said she did not Mart Gordon, Saina sophomore, said she did not plan to purchase one. I saw an article about them in Newsweek, and I thought it was really funny, but not something I would buy." she said. Peter Hughes, a Kansas City, Kan, senior, had a more favorable reaction to the product. "They seem like they would be pretty humorous items to buy and possibly useful at the same time," he said. "They're kind of cool." Alumni keep ties in worldwide travel By Angelina Lopez Kansan staff writer Ski the slopes of Interlaken, Switzerland, for $995, or cruise around the world on a Concorde for $49,500. These and 14 other traveling options are available to members of the University of Kansas Alumni Association through the Flying Jahawks travel program. The Flying Jayhawks is one of many programs the Alumni Association promotes to keep alumni involved in the University, said Fred B. Williams, Alumni Association president. When the Jayhawks went to the Orange Bowl in 1969, many alumni wanted to go, as well, said Donna Neuner, director of membership services for the Alumni Association. The Alumni Association organized a trip, and the Flying Jayhawks were born. The program has served approximately 5,700 members with more than 264 group tours. The program caters to those who worry about traveling alone in a foreign country and feel more secure in a group, Williams said. "It's not only the security issue," he said. "It's being with a group of people who have a common interest, and that's KU." The tours are primarily organized by two travel organizations that focus on trips for alumni groups — Alumni Holidays, based in Chicago, and Intrav, based in St. Louis. Neuer said one of her best traveling memories was being with alumni in China. In three small boats floating on a lake at the Grand Palace, the alumni sang the alma mater. The tours usually include 15-20 people and last anywhere from six to 24 days. Both international and domestic tours are sponsored. Every alumini trip is first class," said Polly Bales, who attended the University in 1942. "They take care of you. You can spend your time doing what you want to do rather than worrying about getting from one place to another." These trips are available for University alumni this year January 24, Febu 13 Big Eight Cruise of Trans-Panam Canal — Feb. 22, March 5 Swiss Winter Escapade — Feb. 27-March 6 Australia and New Zealand — March 10-26 Legendary Package — May 12- 24 **Italy's Historic Cities and Countryside—June 5-16** Passage to Victory — June 18 - July 1 Swiss Alumni College — July 4- 12 Journey of the Czars — July 5-18 Midnight Sun Express — Alas English/French Countryside -- Aug. 6-21 Mongol/Manchu Dynasty — Sept. 17. Voyage to Antiquity — Sept. 14- 26 Danube Passage — Sept. 18-29 Bandera essay Sept. 11 Exploring the Columbia River, Olympic Peninsula and British Columbia — Oct. 1-11 Around the World on the Concorde — Oct. 5-28 Source: The Associated Press KANSAN Most of the Flying Jayhawks' 1994 tours cost less than $5,000. One exception, however, is a $49,500 trip around the world. Working with other alumni groups, the Flying Jayhawks have chartered a Concordia that will make stops in Honolulu; Sydney, Australia; Athens, Greece, and other ports of call. Bales and her husband, Dane, went on their first Flying Jayhawks tour in 1972. Since then, they have been on 28 trips and have visited exotic places such as Russia, Vienna, Corsica and Malaysia. "The camaraderie is unbelievable," she said. Hispanic history focus of cultural celebration By Denise Nell Kansan staff writer nancy Bjorge, Lawrence resident, said she felt isolated in the Lawrence community because she was a minority, so she decided to do something about it. "I don't like to see a community so isolated, with people here and there that don't get together," she said. As a member of the Cultural Affairs Committee of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, she made a proposal in 1897 to begin a program that would bring all cultures of the community together. Heridea was a success, and the group is now an organization of more than 200 members who are dedicated to celebrating ethnic and cultural diversity in Lawrence. The members of the nonprofit group, called the Celebration of Cultures, are all volunteers. Every year since 1988, the group has sponsored three events: a festival in October, a taste-of-cultures event in April and a January event that celebrates a culture living in Lawrence. This year, the Hispanic population of Lawrence will be celebrated at Hispanic Journeys, which is from 2:30 to 5:30 p.m. Saturday in the auditorium of the Lawrence Public Library. Admission is free. "Instead of a problem, we see cultural diversity as a pretty exciting aspect," she said. "Instead of misunderstanding each other, we get to know each other." Lucy Paden, secretary of the group, said the purpose of the celebration was to educate the community about other cultures. Paden said she was responsible for recruiting people to conduct the program. She contacted Irma Lopez, a Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, graduate student. Lopez said the program she coordinated tomorrow would be divided into four segments. The first segment will be an overview of Hispanic history and the different types of Spanish languages. The second will be an explanation of Hispanic history, starting at the colonial period until present. The third will be a look at four outstanding intellectuals: Evita Peron, a woman from Argentina who fought for the rights of women and labor workers; Rigoberta Menchu, a 1992 Nobel Peace Prize winner; Diego Rivera, a painter from Mexico; and Gabrielle Garcia Marquez, a Nobel prize winner in literature. Rey-Ban Founded in BIRMINGHAM & LEONARD By Smith & Proplight. The fourth section will be an explanation of who is included in the Hispanic community in Lawrence. Las Castrro, a local Hispanic band, will provide music before the presentation begins. "I think people know Hispanics are here, but they think of characteristics Mexicans have." Lopez said. "They don't know who everybody else is. Not all of them come to work as laborers in fields. We share a lot of things in common with this country, but we're also very different." The Etc. 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Their action will also lift, at least symbolically, the specter of nuclear annihilation from Britain, France and others, including Britain, which is pledging to get rid of the third-largest arsenal in the world and consequently will not be targeted by the United States or Russia. be retargeted within minutes. Administration officials acknowledged yesterday that the U.S.Russia agreement was virtually impossible to verify and that the missiles could Dunbar Lockwood, a senior researcher at the private Arms Control Association in Washington, called it a confidence-building gesture that could be reversed quickly. He said the accord could have been strengthened if the two sides had agreed to separate the warheads from the missiles. Still, Thomas Pickering, the U.S. ambassador to Moscow, called the agreement "an important first step." "It has symbolic value, but I think it also has real value in confidence-building between the two countries," he said. Some of the missiles would be aimed at ocean areas, but most would no longer be aimed at any specific target, administration officials said. territories not only of the United States and the former Soviet Union but of other nations, too. For decades, thousands of U.S. and Soviet nuclear warheads have been on a ready-to-go alert, aimed at the The long-range missiles under Russian control are spread among four former Soviet republics: Russia, Ukraine, Kazakhstan and Belarus. Ukrainian President Leonid Kravchuk this week reaffirmed a pledge to surrender the L800 long-range warheads on Ukrainian territory by the end of the decade. Kazakhstan and Belarus took the pledge earlier. The move to de-target is a significant step in the easing of nuclear tensions. In 1991, the United States and the Soviet Union took their bombers off alert. With the Cold War over, the United States and Russia have been discussing the plan to stop aiming their long-range nuclear missiles at each other and at allies for months. The Associated Press Ukraine reluctant to disarm KIEV, Ukraine — President Leonid Kravchuk's decision to disarm Ukraine's missiles in return for U.S. and Russian aid and security guarantees angered many Ukrainians who want the country to keep its nuclear muscle. After a brief airport meeting with Kravchuk, President Clinton announced Wednesday night that Ukraine had agreed to dismantle its 1,800 nuclear warheads during the next seven years. The agreement, however, would have to be ratified by Ukraine's parliament, which has previously balked at rubber-stamping agreements Kravuchk has signed and is particularly reluctant to give up the nuclear missiles. Persuading Ukraine to give up its nuclear arsenal has been one of the United States' principal foreign policy goals since the Soviet Union broke up in December 1991. Ukraine's 176 long-range missiles, inherited from the Soviet Union, make up the world's third-largest nuclear arsenal. The agreement is to be signed in Moscow today by Kravchuk, Clinton and Russian President Boria Yeltsin. It offers Ukraine $177 million from a U.S. fund to help former Soviet republics dismantle nuclear weapons, $155 million in direct U.S. aid and up to $1 billion throughout 20 years from the commercial sale of uranium extracted from the warheads. Russia, which supplies 96 percent of Ukraine's energy needs, promised to sell oil and natural gas at bargain rates and joined with the United States in promising not to launch a nuclear attack and to respect Ukraine's territory. The energy pledge could help sway some lawmakers because Ukraine has been suffering economic troubles and an energy crisis because of Russia's previous insistence on world prices for its gas and oil. But many lawmakers are likely to oppose giving up Ukraine's nuclear arsenal. They fear surrendering Ukraine's missiles would mean a loss of international prestige and leave it vulnerable to a powerful Russian military. Mental illness touches many The Associated Press CHICAGO — Almost half of Americans experience mental illness at some time in their lives, and almost one-third are afflicted in any one year, according to the most comprehensive U.S. mental health survey in a decade. The findings point to a need to learn why more people don't seek help, the authors said. "It shouldn't be scary to say half the population has suffered from some mental disorder. That's part of life," said the lead researcher, Ronald C. Kessler, a sociologist professor at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor. The researchers looked for 14 of the most common mental illnesses. Forty-eight percent of respondents had suffered from at least one disorder at some time during their lives, and 29.5 percent had been afflicted within the previous 12 months, researchers said. Kessler said the study did not change previous estimates that only 3 percent to 5 percent of Americans are in serious need of psychiatric help at any given time. But it made an important new discovery: 79 percent of cases of mental illness are concentrated in about 14 percent of the population. The most persistent problems appeared to be anxiety disorders, which are marked by excessive worry for six months or more about such things as future events, past behavior or competence, researchers said. More combat roles open to women The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Defense Secretary Les Aspin moved to open more ground combat jobs for female soldiers yesterday by lifting a key restriction that barred women from certain military tasks simply because the tasks were dangerous. But how many more jobs women soldiers actually enter remains to be seen. "We've made historic progress in opening up opportunities for women in all of the services. Expanding roles for women in the military is right, and it's smart," Aspin told a Pentagon briefing. "It allows us to assign the most qualified individual to each military job." In April, Aspin moved to open combat aviation jobs and warship assignments to women. But his latest decision will not put women in the military's most lethal ground forces, such as infantry and tank units. Aspin directed the services to report by May 1 which units could be opened and which they thought should remain closed to females. The services will be looking at jobs in such fields as engineering, chemical reconnaissance, intelligence and artillery. In a telephone interview, Aspin said he believed that his successor, retired Adm. Bobby Inman, would keep pressure on the services. "He's very forward-leaning on this," Aspin said. At the briefing, Aspin said it was "unlikely that the Army and Marine Corps would drop their opposition to placing women in field artillery units equipped with the Multiple Launch Rocket System. Maj. Carol Barkalow, who was in the first class of women to go through West Point, the U. S. Military Academy, and wrote a book about her experiences, called the new policy "a great start." However, she criticized attempts to keep women soldiers from any portion of the battlefield. Today's high-tech weapons are so deadly "you cannot draw a line. ... Certainly every person who is out there on the battlefield can be hit by a direct-fire weapon or an indirect-fire weapon. The results are the same: They're gone; they're dead," Barkalow said. Formally, Aspin eliminated the so-called "risk rule," which had barred women from noncombat units where the risk was thought to be as great as that in combat units. But he also shrank the definition of what is a combat unit. Under the new definition, women will not serve in units that engage the enemy on the ground with weapons, are exposed to hostile fire and have "a high probability of direct physical contact with the personnel of a hostile force." All three factors must be present for women to be barred from any job, Aspin said. Proponents of the changes have argued for years that prohibiting women from certain combat jobs keeps them from the most prestigious military work, which they argue is necessary for advancement and promotion. Winter Sale 15-50%Off! 一 WE HONOR KANSAS CLEOPATRA'S CLOSET a unique boutique 743 Massachusetts St. • 749-4664 Basketball fans... Didn't buy Basketball Tickets this season? Come watch the Hawks play with us on our WILLIAMS Basketball Big Screen T.V.!! Seating Available Seating Available We have the Best Burgers ANYWHERE, GUARANTEED!!! West Coast Saloon 841-BREW 2222 IOWA Valid Through July 31, 1994 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN C A R D That's right...this is one card you don't want to leave at home when you go out in Lawrence. This is the first time such a valuable product has been offered to the KU Community. With the Kansas Card, you get a listing of 60 businesses and their exclusive Don't leave home without it... - Incredible discounts 20% Off any regular priced item - Buy one get one free Free medium beverage or fries - Free appetizer w/purchase of entree Kansas Cards may be purchased at the Kansas Business office; KU Bookstores, Kansas and Burge Urns; University Book Shop and Jawhawk书店 for only $1.00! offers to cardholders, The Kansan Card exists for no other reason than to SAVE YOU MONEY!!! The card offers you great discounts on car repairs, clothing, food and much more. And better yet, the card is valid at other participating universities across the Music and Dance THE nation.Don't get caught in Lawrence or another participating university without the card...it's an expensive world out there and the Kansan Card is your only weapon against high prices. Just remember... Don't leave Home Without IT The University of Kansas Opera presents Don't Leave Home Without It! MIKADO by Gilbert and Sullivan 7:30 p.m. January 13 - 15, 1994 For general admission tickets, call the KU box offices (Murphy): 913/864-3982, Lied:913/864-ARTS); 2:30 p.m. January 16, 1994 KU student tickets are available through the SUA Office, Kansas Union; public $6, Swarthout Recital Hall/Murphy Hall students $3, senior citizens $5; VISA/MasterCard accepted for phone orders. PAPA KENO'S Pizzeria Papa's by the slice Our slices come from a 28" pie, which means your slice is 14" long. We consider our slice the specialty of the house. Try one made to order by for the best deal in Lawrence. 1035 MASSACHUSETTS DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE 841-7272 A different SLICE of Life --- NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Friday. January 14. 1994 7 Science employs fewer women The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Unequal pay and the difficulty of juggling a research career and a family push women scientists and engineers away from jobs in industry, a National Research Council report stated yesterday. Women make up 45 percent of the total work force but only 12 percent of the scientists and engineers working in industry. Women tend to choose careers in life sciences, behavioral sciences and social sciences, fields in which industry plays a fairly small part, the report said. In 1899, 75 percent of science degrees awarded to women were in those fields, compared to 46 percent for men. The report also found: —Female scientists are twice as likely as men to leave industry for academic or government work. They also quit twice as often as their female counterparts in government. an male salary, $32,800 vs. $39,000. —At $21,000, the median salary of women scientists with bachelor's degrees and up to two years' experience was 73 percent that of their male colleagues in 1990. Those with doctorates made 88 percent of the medispring air twin mattress 6995 Bobbi Bedroom 842-7378 —Corporations make it difficult for female scientists to juggle career and family. The council recommended that companies offer higher quality day-care and flexible work schedules so women don't lose their edge by taking lengthy maternity leave. Pancho's MEXICAN RESTAURANT Pancho's MEXICAN RESTAURANT Homestyle Mexican Food 23rd & Louisiana 843-4044 ADVERTISING WORKS! JD's Baseball Cards & Sports Nostalgia Shop 711 W.23rd 842-1002 We buy back use baseball cards DICKINSON HEALED 641 8000 2339 South Iow St Dickinson 6 Grumpy Old Men PG*13·4*12.0; 7:90 5 Beethewn's two baths PG*12·5*11. 7:95 35 Shadowlands PG*4.05·7.00 9:45 Iron Will PG*4.00·7.00 9:35 Sister Acti PG*4.25·7.10 9:45 House Party IM*4.10·7.25 9:40 $3 Primertime Show II: Hearing Dolby Semi-Citizen Anytime Impaired Siren The Etc. Shop THE NEWS in brief Camipt, 73, a former governor of Italy's central bank and the country's first premier not aligned with a political party, saw himself as a transitional figure. In his eight months in office, he pushed through electoral reforms and started selling off state-owned industries at the heart of the nation's patronage system. The Associated Press Premier Carlo Ciampi resigned yesterday, opening the way for parliamentary elections that are expected to oust the scandal-scarred parties that have dominated Italy for five decades. President Oscar Luigi Scalfaro planned to meet today with the leaders of the Senate and Chamber of Deputies, a necessary step before dissolving Parliament. The period was marked by a change to direct elections of individual lawmakers and the widening of investigations in a corruption scandal that has implicated most of Italy's political and business elite. 928 Mass. Downtown Amid government reform Italy's premier resigns making way for elections That would bring on the elections foreseen as the culmination of a year of reform. In local elections in December, voters handed humiliating defeats to the Christian Democrats, Socialists and smaller allies that have governed since World War II but have been entangled in corruption investigations. A The former Communists and other leftist parties and pro-reform groups such as the separatist Northern League are poised to be the new power brokers. Ciampi's departure was widely expected. On taking office in April as head of Italy's 52nd government since World War II, he set his main tasks as fiscal and electoral reform. Luxembourg donates flood aid A $70,000 donation to Elwood will mean new school playground equipment and maybe a new city park. ELWOOD, Kan. — American soldiers liberated Luxembourg in both World Wars, and now the small European nation has come to the aid of the Midwest, raising $370,000 for flood relief. ELWOOD. Kan. In Missouri, Missouri City and West Alton also will receive donations. The Christian Democrats and their allies wanted to delay elections to give themselves a chance to regroup. The disbanding of Parliament also would mean members under investigation would lose their parliamentary immunity from prosecution. ROME The Associated Press Schaeffer and visiting Luxembourg residents took a trip to Elwood in early December and decided the community could use their help. The "Hands Across the Atlantic: Luxembourg Relief Fund" project was the idea of Robert Schaeffer, Luxembourg's consul general for a seven-state region based in Kansas City, Mo. Schaeffer put out the call for donations in Luxembourg, appealing to Luxembourg citizens' memories of American help during World War I and World War II. The $370,000 collected represents nearly $1 for each citizen of the country. THE CINEMA TWIN Crown Cinema presents N W E S Hillcrest Shopping Center Ione Street Allen Field House Missaukee 31st Street K-Mu Cinema Twin BEFORE & PM, ADULTS $3.00 ( LIMITED TO SEATING ) SENIOR CITIZENS ~ $3.00 THE BACK-TO-SCHOOLBUDGETBLUES! Every Seat, Everyday, $1.25 Cinema Twin - 31st & Iowa The best of both worlds... First Class service... discount prices... big screen entertainment... for the budget minded. A SOLUTION FOR VARSITY 1075 MASSACHUSETTS 847-5191 Pelican Brief PG-13 Mrs. Doubtfire PG-13 4:45 Heaven and Earth R 8:39 Air Up There PG 8:39 Tombstone R 7:18 Philadelphia PG-13 7:25 Malice R 5:00, 7:30,9:45 MyLife PG-13 5:00, 7:30,9:45 CINEMA TWIN LLI/OWA ALL 5191 $1.25 SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY WINNER BEST FILM BEST ACTRESS-HOLLY HUNTER CANNES FILM FESTIVAL-1993 "BREATHTAKING... EXHILARATING... A TRIUMPH! Could be the movie sensation of the year!" -Vincent Camby, THE NEW YORK TIMES "ONE OF THE MOST ENCHANTING LOVE STORIES EVER FILMED!" Roger Ebert, CHICAGO SLUN-TIMES THE BEST OF THEM ALL holly hunter harvey keitel sam neill Compiled from The Associated Press. the Piano a jane campion film 5 Today (4,15) 7.00; 9.30 Sat: Sun(1,15;4,15) 7.00; 9.30 SPORTS EMPORIUM & FUNDRINKERY Choose from over 15 appetizers, all under $4.00. Super Bowl and Spring Break round trip airfare contests, ask for details. NTN Trivia, the newest game in town. Billiards, darts, and a big screen TV. baseball Daily drink and shot specials. CHIEFS GAME SPECIAL: 22 oz. Bud and Bud Light bottles $2.25 and daily food special. Sun, Jan 16. PLAY THE MOST EXCITING LIVE TV COMPETITIONS IN HISTORY. BRAINS & BRAWN TRIVIA A panel of experts developed the ultimate fun trivia contest that pits your skill and knowledge against other players here in our place and players all across the country. We Hold the Total Package 601 Kasold Suite D-102 OB1 For the first time in history, you can actually interact with live TV football games satellite right here. Compete with other players here and nationally by anticipating live quarterback plays. (Formerly Jacque's) 865-4040 FREE BEDROOM! RENT A TWO BEDROOM AND GET THIRD BEDROOM FREE NEWLYREMODELED! GREATLOCATION JAYHAWK BUS ROUTE RESTAURANTS THEATERS SHOPPING 843-6446 South Point ALAHAIA 2166 W26th (26th & IOWA) TALENT AUDITIONS FOR SINGERS • DANCERS This could be the start of something big! Worlds of Fun is searching for the Midwest's most talented singers and dancers to appear in our 1994 show program. Performing at Worlds of Fun is the perfect summer job for students. If you work the entire season (six days per week in the summer, and weekends in the spring and fall) you can earn over $7,000! "All the Worlds a Stage" at Worls of Fun, from our lively 50's-60's rock revue, STAX OF WAX, to our spectacular new Country music show at the Tivoli Music Hall. Performing at Worlds of Fun is fun, and it can be that important First Step. More than 1.3 million Worlds of Fun visitors are waiting to discover YOU!! AUDITION INSTRUCTIONS: if you are a singer, please sing one verse and the chorus of two contrasting styles of song; one up-tempo and one ballad. Sing any type music you enjoy; rock, country, show tunes, etc. (no rap.) Please limit your material to no more than three minutes in length. Dancers should prepare one song to sing and a jazz routine no longer than 2 minutes. We are not auditing bands; solo instrumentalists or dramatic actors. Worlds of Fun KANSAS CITY You must provide your own accompaniment, whether it be a pianist or a cassette tape. We will provide a cassette deck and a piano. THE CLOSEST AUDITIONS: - LAWRENCE, KANSAS Thursday, February 3: The University of Kansas in the Kansas Room (level 6) at the Kansas Union. 3:00 p.m. (Registration closes at 5:00 p.m.) KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI Saturday, January 22: The Adam's Mark Hotel 9103 East 39th Street (I-70 at the Truman Sports Complex) 10:00 a.m. (Registration closes at 1:00 p.m.) - KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI Saturday, January 29: The Adam's Mark Hotel 9103 East 39th Street (I-70 at the Truman Sports Complex) 9:00 a.m. (Registration closes at 2:00 p.m.) For more information and a complete audition schedule, contact the Worlds of Fun Show Productions Department, at (816) 454-4545. Ext. 1350. 8 Friday, January 14, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Learn to Fly Lawrence Air Services Instruccion-Carter Service-Rental 842-0000 Sunday 50¢ bowling Not just for bowling anymore! Jaybowl 864-3545 % N Rentco USA 749-1805 Student Discount Now Carrying Computers 1741 Massachusetts EVERYTHING BUT ICE • Beds • Desks • Chest of Drawers • Bookcases 936 Mass. Rentco USA 749-1605 Student Discount Now Carrying Computers 7141 Massachusetts EVERYTHING BUTICE The Lowest CD Prices In Town! Current, Popular CDs for $5.95! Buy 5 or more CDs for $4.95! Also available, special selection CDs $3.95! Buy 10 or more CDs for $2.50 each! For the Best Values in Town Visit Lawrence Pawn 843-4344 718 New Hampshire You gotta check us out! Continental Affordable Free pregnancy tests Birth control Sliding feescale STD screening Planned Parenthood Qualityreproductive health care for men and women Now Open in Lawrence 1420CKasold Drive (Orchards Corners) 832-0281 1993 closeouts layaway now save bucks! cannondale BRIDGESTONE GIANT RICK'S BIKE SHOP Inc 916 Massachusetts, (913)841-6642 PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS 842-1212 1601 W.23rd Southern Hills Center "NO COUPON" SPECIALS EVERYDAY TWO-FERS 2-PIZZAS 2-TOPPINGS 2-COKES $9.00 PRIMETIME 3-PIZZAS 1-TOPPING 4-COKES $11^{50} PARTY "10" 10-PIZZAS 1-TOPPING Ceremony marks ROTC changing of command A CHANGING of the Guard A change-of-command ceremony that took place last night at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union brought a new Cadet Commander to the Jahvay Battalion. Cadet Lt. Col. Travis Carlisle, left, gives his first command briefing as commander of the Jyahawk Battalion while Lt. Col. Ron Nichol waits for his turn to speak. Mexican government recognizes guerrilla group The short ceremony involved passing the Army ROTC battalion's colors from the fall semester's battalion commander, Cadet Lt. Col. Geoff Athey, to the new commander, Cadet Lt. Col. Travis Carlisle. Every semester, a new battalion commander is chosen from the battalion's seniors. After the change of command, an award ceremony recognized the cadets who participated in the Vietnam Memorial Vigil on Veterans Day last semester. The cadets held the vigil for 24 hours. CARRY OUT 1-PIZZA 1-TOPPING 1-COKE $350 Manuel Camacho Solis said he had received messages that might be an opening to negotiations but it was not clear if he had heard directly from rebel leaders. Geoff Athey will be leaving for Washburn University to serve as ROTC company commander. He said he chose Washburn because it presented a challenge and there weren't many seniors there. Washburn's company is one of the three companies that make up the battalion. The Associated Press $30⁰⁰ Cadet Lt. Col. Geoff Athey, the outgoing battalion commander, gives the battalion's flag to Nicholl. Nicholl then passed the flag to Carlisle. President Carlos Salinas de Gortari made the first overture Wednesday when he announced a unilateral cease-fire in the southern state of Chiapas. He said troops would fire on rebels and their strongholds only if attacked first. He also offered to pardon the guerrillas if they laid down their SAN CRISTOBAL DE LAS CASAS, Mexico — The government's peace envoy openly accepted an Indian guerrilla movement as a political and military force yesterday, taking a second step toward meeting rebel demands for talks. Photos and Story by William Alix P. S. KENNEDY DELIVERY HOURS 北川羌族自治县 The women and men of the Jayhawk Battalion stand at attention. The change-of command ceremony took place last night at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. MON-THURS 11 AM-2 AM 11 AM-3 AM 11 AM-1 AM MARINELLO The government had previously charged that the rebellion was not an Indian movement but rather a group of armed professionals who were manipulating uneducated Indians. Estimated to number from 1,000 to 2,000,the rebels have not publicly responded to the government overtures so far. The Zapatista National Liberation Army, which shocked the nation with a New Year's Day uprising, had demanded the government stop military offenses, recognize the army's movement and withdraw troops. The rebels denied that, saying their group was 100 percent Indian. They take their name from Emiliano Zapata, the 1910 Mexican Revolution hero who fought for peasant land rights. But there was no sign that the government would meet the rebels' demand that the 14,000 soldiers in Chiapas be withdrawn. The infantry and tanks continued to advance slowly toward Guadalupe Tepeyac, a town near the Guatemalan border believed to be a rebel stronghold. Camacho told reporters he had received respons- weapons. Salinas appointed Camacho, former foreign minister, as special commissioner to Chipas on Monday after a series of Cabinet shuffles that were intended to send peace signals to the rebels. "I have received messages from various parts of the country that appear to be the first signs of negotiations," Camacho said, but he did not elaborate. es to a request for talks with the guerrillas (1) Great selection of original KU artwork available as a matted print or as a card. Vormehr Gallery 1234567890 Riverfront Plaza Suite 321, across from Bass 749-0744 66 66 66 66 66 66 66 66 66 66 10. 100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% Off Mass., but not out of sight SPECTRUM OPTICAL $40 OFF ALL PRESCRIPTION EYEWEAR FREE ADJUSTMENTS Not valid in conjunction with other coupons. Save big on designer fashion eyewear. Over 1,000 frames in stock! Ralph Lauren, Logo, Calvin Klein, Guess, Geoffrey Beene, Beverly Hills and many others. Ray Tower, and many others. Come in and register for a free pair of eualesss! Come In and register for a free pair of eagleglasse 4 East 7th (Downtown • Lawrence. 814-1131 4 East 7th (Downtown · Lawrence. 841-1113 66 66 66 66 66 66 66 66 66 66 66 66 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Friday, January 14, 1994 9 School district may face divisions Lawrence students may be redistributed By Cheryl Cadue Kansan staff writer Debbie Henning thinks that proposed changes in school boundaries will not prepare Lawrence students for the real world. "This is not the 1950s, it's the '90s," said Henning, whose child goes to Central Junior High School, 1400 Massachusetts St. "And the school board is continuing to promote an all-white school in Lawrence." Lawrence Unified School District 497 wants to change school boundaries to accommodate two new elementary schools and a new junior high school. But some parents and administrators want the boundaries to balance Lawrence's minority and lower-income students among the schools. Dan Jaimes, Central principal, said that more than half of Central's 580 students came from lower-income households. "It's important that the other schools in the district have fair representation of a broad range of minority kids and low socioeconomic kids," he said. "I don't think it's a good plan to overload one school because when you segregate kids into those groups, you don't let the kids have the opportunity to mix with kids that are different from them." The school district's Boundary Committee drafted three proposals that are based on projected enrollments. The Lawrence School Board plans to make its final decision in February, and the new boundaries would go into effect in 1995, when Southwest Junior High School opens. Jaimes said that the best proposal would drop Central's number of low-income students from 53 percent to about 40 percent but that the proposal did not give the district a desirable mix of minority and lower-income students. Susan Wolfe-Shirk, parent of a Central student, said the boundary proposals were not fair to Central or other junior high schools. Henning said she was in favor of busing students to balance out the Supporters of the redistricting proposal say it is the most fair in balancing minority and low-income students among Lawrence's junior high schools. Now 53 percent of the students are from lower-income households. This proposal would reduce that number to 40 percent. The Lawrence School Board will decide on the proposal in February. Supporters of this Who are the people in their neighborhood? Proposed district's boundaries I-70 2ND ST 9TH ST 9TH ST MARSH ST 15TH ST IOWA ST 23RD ST Source: Boundary Committee from the Lawrence School Board Micah Laaker / KANSAN schools, but Mick Lowe, principal of West Junior High School, 2700 Harvard Road, said the new boundaries should represent the schools in a manner that reflects the community. "For junior-high kids who ride the bus and who are in after-school activities, it may be difficult for parents to pick them up if they're working," he said. "There are certain advantages to going to school as near to home as possible." A forum to receive public input about the proposed changes will be at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at West Junior High School. Outside classroom programs growing at School of Law By Roberta Johnson Kansan staff writer The School of Law slowly is breaking the first barrier between insisting upon traditional learning in the classroom and allowing students to have practical experience in the work force for college credit. The school offers credit for courses with projects such as the Defender Project, in which students represent inmates at federal penitentiaries and state institutions. However, some students want other opportunities to get experience in the workplace for credit. Diana May, third-year law student from Lamar, Colo., is enrolled in an externship program with the school at the University of Denver this semester. She works for a district attorney in Colorado. Last semester May took her proposal for transfer of credit to the school's academic committee, which denied the request on the basis that it did not meet the American Bar Association's standards. Joy Strauss, coordinator of the externship program at Denver, said that the program met the association's standards. "I was astonished that we were locked in a procedural battle that made us forget about the issue," said Tom Theltorth, second-year law class president, from Topeka. On Dec. 3, May appealed to the faculty-student assembly, where some members objected to her case on the basis that she had turned in a proposal different from the original proposal she had submitted to the school. The academic committee later approved eight credits for the externship and an additional two for independent study, said Robert Jerry, dean of law. Jerry and Allison Cumberbach, president of the Student Bar Association and third-year law student, agreed that there was a need for written procedures. Al Johnson, associate dean of law, said he would work on a notebook of procedural information that would be made available to all law students. The school also has hired Roscoe Howard, an attorney at the Office of Independent Council in Washington. Howard will help coordinate and expand KU's externship program. Any future proposed externships from other universities will be taken on a case-by-case basis. Jerry said that not all schools would have similar standards to KU and that he wanted all externships to have an academic value. "The faculty-student assembly is the guardian of the value of a law degree," he said. May said she thought December's meeting was necessary because it brought up issues that the assembly had needed to discuss. "It's just too bad they had to do it at my expense," she said. Wichita professor wins antidepressant's approval By Ashley Schultz Kansan staff writer Effexor, a new antidepressant, is nearly ready to take its place alongside Prozac, one of the most widely prescribed drugs in the nation, and a professor from the University of Kansas School of Medicine-Wichita helped make it happen. Sheldon Preskorn is vice chair of the department of psychiatry and has served since 1984 on the Food and Drug Administration Psychopharmacologic Drugs Advisory Committee. With Effexor, however, he attended committee meetings on behalf of the Wyeth-Ayerst division of American Home Products Corp., Effexor's manufacturer. The drug received approval from the FDA Dec. 29. He said Effexor could be on shelves as early as March. Preskorn, director of the Psychiatric Research Institute, which is affiliated with the Wichita branch, began studying Effexor about five years ago. He estimates that he has conducted six studies involving more than 100 volunteers for his research. Preskorn also consulted the company on how the drug should be developed. John Baughman, chief pharmacist at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said Prozac was a common antidepressant for patients with mild "I would say it's probably one of the most widely accepted antidepressants that is used on campus," said Baughman. to moderate depression. Prozac affects the neurotransmitter in the brain called serotonin, which helps regulate sleep, sexual behavior, concentration, appetite, fluid consumption and energy levels. Serotonin also appears to regulate higher cognitive functions, including moods, Preskorn said. Preskorn said that antidepressants helped regulate the firing of the neurotransmitters. Effexor targets both serotonin and a second neurotransmitter, morepinephine, which regulates the same activities as serotonin. Serotonin in clinically depressed people is not properly regulated, he said. Some patients fail to respond to drugs like Prozac but respond to drugs that work on norepinephrine, Preskorn said. "In other words, major depression is probably not a single illness but more than one kind of illness," Preskorn said. "And the two neurotransmitters that have been most implicated are norepinephrine and serotonin." New patients may be more inclined to opt for Effexor's double barrel approach, Preskorn said. Preskorn is currently studying Efexor's use in children. Hall renovations to improve access By Frank McCleary Kansanstaffwriter In an effort to make KU's residential halls more accessible to students with disabilities, the Department of Student Housing is making a few changes in the structure of some its buildings. The department is renovating one building at Stouffer Place Apartments and has plans to renovate Sellards Scholarship Hall and Gertrude Sellards Pearson-Corbin Hall. Sellards and GSP-Corbin will undergo renovations during the summer and will be completed by the fall semester. Fred McElhenie, associate director of the department, said it was important for the University to have accessible buildings. Ken Stoner, director of the department, said 25 buildings were scheduled to receive complete renovations. "We want to make sure that we have the facilities that are accessible since more and more people with disabilities are able to come to school." he said. The first floor of Building 11 at Stouffer Place is being lowered so wheelchair ramps will not be necessary, he said. The basement and first floor of Sellards and the bathrooms on the second and third floors will be renovated. An elevator also will be added. McElhenie said that the department had received some complaints about accessibility in the past but that those complaints had all been dealt with. GSP-Corbin will receive a face-lift that will include new windows, exterior wall repairs and a new roof. A ground-level exit will be added to the southwest corner, providing access for wheelchairs. Complaints have helped the department make improvements, he said. "It is that kind of feedback we need," he said. Thomas said Amini Scholarship Hall, the newest residential building, was designed to be fully accessible. But sometimes it is difficult to accommodate everyone, McElhennie said. "It is that kind of feedback we need," he said. 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Lawrence's Most Liberal Loan Company We loan on almost anything of value Car Stereos Camera's CD's & Tapes 0 AIR FORCE ROTC Musical Instruments Firearms/supplies CB's • Typewriters • TV's & VCR's Guitar Tools Vacuums U METROBUS Jayhawk Pawn & Jewwlry 749-1919 * 1084 W,6th 2 blocks East of Iowa 9:00 - 6:00 Mon - Fri 9:00 - 6:00 Mon - Fri 9:00 - 5:00 Saturday If you have a GPA of 2.5 or higher and are a full time student, you can qualify for an Air Force ROTC scholarship. In addition, you will receive $100.00 each academic month for our last two years of college. This scholarship is available to ANY ACADEMIC MAJOR. The deadline to apply for the fall 1994 semester is rapidly approaching. For more information on this exciting opportunity talk to Captain Brad Gentry or Captain Bob Wicks at 864-4676. SUNFLOWER 843-5000 804 MASSACHUSETTS TRADITION OF EXCELLENCE THE NORTH FACE, PATAGONIA, OLD TOWN, DANNER, TREK, SPECIALIZED, BIANCHI, KELTY. SUNFLOWER HAS ALL THESE AND MORE... 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Upcoming Home Games and Promotions • Friday, Jan. 14 Thunder vs. Tulsa Oilers • Tuesday, Jan. 18 Red Light Special • For groups of 20 or more, all tickets $5 per person Thunder vs. Ft. Worth Fire • Thursday, Jan. 20 Thunder vs. Memphis Riverkings • Wednesday, Jan. 26 Thunder vs. Tulsa Oilers • Friday, Jan. 28 Claude the Trumpeteer Thunder vs. Dallas Freeze • Sunday, Jan. 30 Super Bowl Sunday • Game starts at 1:00 p.m. Thunder vs. ORC Blazers RENT TO OWN CENTER Call and Compare- Rent by Phone Students Rental Rates on Most Items SCHOOL - Fast Free Delivery - No Credit Needed - Short or Long Term - Retail Sales - Maintenance - Included - Flexible Terms New Larger Location. • 2204 Haskell • At 23rd & Haskell Behind Ampride Formerly In Downtown Ledus - Futons - Small Refrigerators - Sofas-LoveSeats - Television - Washer-Dryers --will meet with the director of affirmative action to discuss the findings and any possible sanctions. There is also an appeals process. 842-8505 Much More GOOD JOB HARASSMENT Reports of sexual harassment plague University community By Roberta Johnson Kansan staff writer In these days of heightened awareness of sexual harassment, several employees of the Department of Student Housing have become more open about their experiences. Sexual harassment, according to University guidelines, includes anything that has "the purpose or effect of unreasonably interfering with an individual's work or academic performance, or of creating an intimidating, hostile, or offensive working or educational environment." But Tompkins said she still hated walking down the hall where the student had flashed her two months before. Some employees at residence halls said that they felt they were working in such an environment. If a student chooses, an affirmative action officer and a consultant mediator will investigate the complaint, which may go to a hearing. They then "I hate going down (the floor)," she said. "I'm just wondering what they're writing next, what perverted picture is on (a resident's) door." "I was working security, and for some reason a lot of the guys, they just got it into their mind that they would be so cool and show me their underwear," said Madeline Tompkins, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore. "They just basically dropped their pants. I just left. I didn't want to deal with it." Any student wanting to file a formal complaint on sexual harassment has 180 days from the time of the incident to file with the University. Dan Murrow, Kansas City, Kan., freshman, is one of the residents that Tompkins said had dropped his pants in front of her. Murrow at first denied during an interview that he had flashed female security monitors, then he said, "not really flashed. I just walked by them or whatever. "I don't do it for any sexual pleasure, just to see if that offends them more than naked lady pictures. We can do that. It's a guys' floor." Tompkins said that Jim Schmaedeke, director of Lewis and Templein halls, suggested reporting the complaints to the Office of Affirmative Action or student housing. But Tompkins said she felt she had waited too long for the reports to be productive. Tom Berger, associate director of affirmative action, said that although the number of total discrimination cases at the University had decreased in the past years, the number of sexu- In November, a female custodian filed a sexual harassment charge with affirmative action against students with posters of topless or naked women on their doors. Jason Smith, Valley Center senior, said that the posters on his door were art and that making the residents take them down was a violation of their constitutional rights. Matt Hood / KANSAN . However, student housing guidelines say that decorations are allowed on the outside of a resident's door if "it is not offensive according to university guidelines." The housing contract also states that contract cancellation or disciplinary action could occur if a resident does not abide all rules and regulations. Schmaedeke said, "We're all for freedom of expression, but it's a lot different what goes outside of your door than what goes on inside of your door." In another incident, a resident assistant may also take action if anti-homosexual actions continue against him. Lawrence junior Eric Moore's problems began when he wrote up residents in his hall for pornography on doors. A few apparently retaliated by putting up anti-homosexual messages. He wrote up a report on one student for posting "Homosexuals suck" when Moore was the resident assistant on duty. "I don't care what signs he puts on his door," he said. "It's just the fact that he went out of his way to make sure that I knew it was there." In one bathroom, graffiti on the mirrors and one of the stalls said that the fourth-floor resident assistant has AIDS. Moore said. Moore said that he had filed reports on both vandalism and harassment and that he might file a slander suit. But Schmaaeeke said no concrete evidence pointed to one person. "If we were able to establish who did it, then we would not be at all reluctant to deal with it," he said. Berger said that sexual harassment charges could be applied to antihomosexual materials. The problem comes in defining what is "sexual harassment," or any harassment in general. Harassment is in the eye of the beholder, Berger said. Schmaedeke agreed with Berger. "There's no cut and dry thing," he said. "We have to deal with the feeling of the person who's been victimized and the perception of the person who did what was done. "I've found some things in the past that I thought might be harassing behavior that some people were not offended by." 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SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Friday, January 14, 1994 11 Two men arrested in attack on Kerrigan Rival's guard played role in conspiracy By David Foster The Associated Press PORTLAND, Ore. — Figure skater Tonya Harding's bodyguard and another man were arrested yesterday and charged with conspiracy in the attack on Olympic rival Nancy Kerrigan. The bodyguard, Shawn Eric Eckardt, 26, and Derrick Brian Smith, 29, were arrested in Portland, said Michael Schrunk, Multnomah County district attorney. Eckardt told authorities that Harding's ex-husband asked him to arrange the attack, The Oregonian newspaper reported yesterday, citing unidentified law enforcement sources. It wasn't immediately clear what role Smith played in the alleged plot. The charge of conspiracy to commit assault is a felony punishable by up to 10 years in prison and a $100,000 fine. Earlier yesterday, Multnomah County sheriff's representative Bart Whalten said more than two arrests were expected. The arrests were announced after two days of confusion and speculation over the role of Harding and her ex-husband, Jeff Gillooily, in the Jan. 6 attack that left Kerrigan unable to compete in last week's U.S. Figure Skating Championships. ABC News said a Portland man, whom it identified as Shane Stant, was the alleged hit man who carried out the attack at Cobo Hall in Detroit. The assailant escaped. The U.S. Olympic Committee said it would defer to skating officials who chose Harding for the team as long as she was not implicated in the assault. Harding won the championships, qualifying for the Olympic team. Kerrigan was also named to the team even though her injury forced her to withdraw from the competition. But the injury raised doubts about her ability to compete in the Winter Olympics in Lillehammer, Norway, Feb. 12-27 "At the same time, in terms of dealing with this in the abstract, there are other issues that must be resolved before questions of sportsmanship and conduct can be answered," said committee executive director Harvey T. Schiller. Harding, 23, and Gillooly were divorced Aug. 28 but later reconciled and have lived together since Octo- There was no indication that Harding was involved in planning the attack, authorities said. ber. NBC News on Wednesday quoted sources as saying that after the men met in Portland, the hit man went to Boston, where Kerrigan lives and trains. The investigators believe that he planned to attack Kerrigan there but that bad weather somehow fouled the attempt. NBC said. Detroit police said yesterday that they had recovered a collapsible metal baton, believed to be the weapon. A Detroit resident found it in a trash can behind the arena, police said. In Detroit earlier yesterday, deputy police chief Benny Napoleon said a woman from out of state called the police department Saturday and insisted on speaking with him. Monday, before specific allegations surfaced, Harding, Gilooly and Eckard denied any involvement in the attack. "She indicated to me that she heard a conversation regarding the planned assault on Nancy Kerrigan" several months ago, Napoleon said. "She put it off as somebody talking. Once the assault occurred, she became frightened. She wanted to make sure the people responsible were apprehended." NTS 'Hawks face hungry rivals By Matt Siegel Vancouver sportswriter Kansan sportswriter The No. 8 Kansas women's basketball team faces the unenviable task of going on a two-game road trip this weekend against two teams desperately seeking a Big Eight Conference victory. The trip starts today at Nebraska and finishes Sunday at Iowa State. Nebraska, which went to the NCAA tournament last season, is reeling from two consecutive conference losses. Iowa State also opened conference play with two losses. Kansas, on the other hand, stands 2-0 in the conference and is riding a six-game winning streak. Although the Jayhawks' upset victory against Colorado provided a surge in confidence, Kansas coach Marian Washington did not want to place too much importance on one victory. Nebraska needs no more incentive. The Cornhuskers, 8-7 overall, are looking to turn their season around. They are 4-1 at home but are coming off two road losses. "I wanted our team to understand that it isn't a "one game season," Washington said. "The Colorado win was great, but it's time to move on. Every team has an even greater incentive to get up for us." "We have to take care of business this weekend," Nebraska coach Angela Beck said. "You have to win at home to have a chance at the title. We'll be up for the game." Kansas senior center Lisa Tate is not worried about a possible letdown. She said that Kansas has had ample time to recover from the victory against Colorado. She also said the hostile environment would not be a factor. Kansas senior guard Ericka Muncy, left, tries for a steal against Colorado's Shelley Sheetz. The women's basketball team defeated Colorado 59-57 at Allen Field House Sunday. "The crowd is not going to affect me or the team," Tate said. "I have been here for four years and I know crowds. It won't bother us at all." What may bother Kansas are Nebraska's seniors, forward Nafessah Brown and guard Meggan Yedsena. Brown is averaging 19.5 points a game and has had 10 games in which she has scored and rebounded in double fixtures. Yedsena, who is fourth in the conference in all-time career assists, is the conference's leading active playmaker. She has started 105 of 106 games in her career. Washington said that along with containing Brown and Yedsena, the key to the game could be how well Nebraska's young players perform. She also said she was pleased with the way Kansas had responded to early season challenges. "We have taken some of the other team's best and have done pretty well," Washington said. "I have been surprised by the high level of intensity that some teams have come out with against us. I told our team we have to approach every game like we Statistics would not indicate that Nebraska is 0-2. The Comhuskers out rebound their opponents by 10.6 rebounds a game, the top margin in the conference. They also rank second in field goal percentage. Beck said that Nebraska needed to be consistent in order to win. "We haven't put two good halves together," Beck said. "They have tremendous depth and are diffcult to match up with. We have a monumental task in front of us. The ranking doesn't matter. What matters is that they are 2-0 in the conference and 11-1 overall." As for Iowa State, r the Cyclones won the University of North Carolina-Greensboro Tournament championship, they dropped two consecutive conference games. Iowa State is 0-2 in the conference and 5-9 overall. NCAA eliminates recruiting post The Associated Press COLUMBUS, Ohio — College basketball isn't alone in feeling the brunt of the NCAA budget-slicing axe. The assistant coaches at Ohio State figure to be putting in even longer hours beginning Aug. 1, when, in addition to teaching blocking and tackling, they will spend more time courting recruits. That is because of legislation passed this week at the NCAA's annual convention in San Antonio that eliminated the position of full-time recruiting coordinator at member universities. The NCAA said it would cut costs. But all Ohio State recruiting coordinator Larry Petroff knows is that it cut his job. "The recruiting coordinator has his hands on the recruiting process every day, and he's on top of what the coaches are doing," he said. "I don't know how people are going to handle it. It's difficult, to be a full-time coach on the field and a full-time recruiter." Most of the other programs in Ohio have already reorganized their staffs to avoid a full-time coordinator. Petroff got caught in the crossfire between big-time football and administrators' desires to bring the sport in under the university umbrella. He hopes to stay at Ohio State in another position. "I can't worry about it," pet罗TFoI said. "After our recruiting is done, I'll sit down with Coach (John) Cooper and some administrators, and we'll see what they have in mind." Ohio State has had a full-time administrative assistant in charge of football recruiting since Bob McNea was hired in July 1979. Now Petroff's duties — watching films, evaluating players, mailing letters and organizing the recruitment process — will be handled by Cooper and his nine assistants. "It'll put recruiting into perspective," said Terry Malone, a Bowling Green assistant coach who also handles recruiting. Kansas loses its recruiter Kansas football recruiting coordinator R.D. Helt was unavailable for comment yesterday. He will continue working at his current position until Aug. 1, when the new rule takes effect. He is now working on fulfilling his obligations for next season's recruiting class. The early signing period begins Feb. 2. Helt will have served six seasons as the recruiting coordinator at Kansas. Although other Ohio universities have gotten away from having a coordinator, the size of the job varies from a top-25 team to a small Division I-A or I-A college. University of Cincinnati assistant coach John Harbaugh, who also handles recruiting chores, said the additional work facing coaching staffs was significant. "They'll have more responsibility in recruiting their area, and they'll have to do more legwork," he said. "They'll also have to do a lot more screening, because the recruiting coordinator eliminated a lot of possible recruits." Harbaugh cautioned that, in the absence of a coordinator, others must now judge not only talent, but also the morals of recruits. "There'll be more mistakes, and not just athletically, but also in character," he said. Akron coach Gerry Faust said his program would not be affected by the new rules, since it dropped the coordinator spot two years ago. But that doesn't mean he's in favor of the new ruling. "The thing that bothers me about the whole thing is that they're going to eliminate some people who have worked very, very hard, who have become experts on college football. Now, either a coach or a recruiting coordinator is going to go," Faust said. "That's sad." Jayhawks preparing for upcoming K-State Team uneasy about future tries to focus By Gerry Fey Kansan sportswriter Usually, the Kansas men's basketball team would know exactly when its next game is. However, this weekend will be unusual if the Black Coaches Association decides to boycott college basketball games. The BCA is considering a boycott because of an NCAA decision against allowing Division I men's teams to offer a 14th scholarship. Kansas has tried to prepare for its next scheduled game Monday night against K-State, but Kansas coach Roy Williams said it had not been easy with the distractions. No. 3 Kansas has a 16-1 overall record and a 1-0 record in the conference, while K-State is 10-2 and 0-1. Williams said he not expect such a good start. Preseason poll picked Oklahoma State and Missouri to fight for the Big Eight championship, with Kansas close behind. Williams said current expectations that Kansas would run away with the conference are unrealistic. unrealistic," he said. "I told them, 'you're surprising everyone, including me, so keep doing it. Let's see if you can last for about three or four more months.'" "I think the expectations were unrealistic, and I almost think that 16-1 is Roy Williams Kansas basketball coach Despite the success, Williams said he was worried about the Jayhawks' "We look like one of those big wheel trucks. We get there but it ain't pretty." "I'm not that concerned about our shooting percentage because the bottom line is we're still scoring points and we're still winning," he said. "We look like one of those big wheel trucks. We get there, but it ain't pretty." offensive play K-State's defensive intensity is something that impressed Williams. The Wildcats defeated Wichita State 71-54 at home Wednesday night. open shot," Williams said. "I was really impressed by two things: Deryl Cunningham's work inside and their defensive play." *Wichita State had trouble making a dribble, making a pass, getting an "The focus has to be Askia," Williams said. "You have to try to either do one of two things: stop his scoring, which I think is very difficult, or cut down on his percentage. Normally that's the route that we try and take." K-State senior forward Cunningham is averaging 9.1 points and 8.4 rebounds a game. However, it is senior guard Askia Jones' play that has led the Wildcats. Jones is averaging a team-high 21.5 points a game. Kansas junior center Greg Ostertag said Jones would be the key but that other players also would be challenging, like senior guard Anthony Beane. "From what I've seen, he's been their big guy," Ostertag said of Jones. "But they can hurt you with everything because Anthony is quick. He can shoot the ball and dribble." Williams said he was surprised by Kansas' rebounding ability, and Ostertag was a big reason for it. Ostertag said he was happy with that aspect of his game but not his shooting percentage. The 7-foot-2 center is averaging 9.4 rebounds a game, but he is shooting only 45.4 percent from the field. "We're going to have to go out and play hard," he said. "We need to play good defense like we did against Oklahoma to beat them." CARRY JOHNSON'S Valerie Brontrager / KANBAN Kansas junior center Greg Oostertag answers questions at yesterday's news conference. Oostertag is averaging nearly 10 points and 10 rebounds after 17 games. He leads the team in blocked shots and also ranks third in blocks in the Big Eight Conference. The Jayhawks play Kansas State Monday night at Allen Field House. Duke's chance at No.1 ruined by Wake Forest; Childress hits clutch shot The Associated Press The Wake Forest players stormed the court in jubilation as the Duke players seemed confused about the ending and coach Mike Krzyzewski went to the scorer's table looking for an explanation. The shot by Childress, who finished with 24 points, was clearly a 3-pointer, but the Cameron Indoor Stadium scoreboard didn't record it that way, and the closest official did not signal that it was a 3-pointer. DURHAM, N.C. — Randolph Childress' 3-pointer with 11 seconds left gave Wake Forest a 69-68 victory against No. 2 Duke last night. It was the second straight season the Demon Deacons, 11-3,2-0 Atlantic Coast Conference, upset the Blue Devils, 10-1,2-1, at home. Grant Hill, Duke's star with 23 points, drove the length of the floor and put up a 15-foot jumper in the closing seconds, but the ball bounced off the rim, off the hands of teammate Chris Collins and out of bounds as the clock ran out. The 6-foot Childress, who leads the conference in scoring, missed a layup and a 3-pointer that would have given Wake Forest the lead in the closing moments. He made the winning shot over Hill, who is six inches taller. Duke, which blew a 12-point, first-half lead, was in line to become the nation's top-tanked team after No. 1 North Carolina lost by 20 points Wednesday night to No. 17 Georgia Tech. But the Blue Devils turned the ball over two times in the final 2 minutes, 22 seconds in losing for the first time this season. After trailing by seven points at halftime, Wake Forest started the second period with a 13-4 run to take the lead at 43-41 with 14:38 left. From that point, neither team led by more than five points. The lead changed hands nine times in the opening six minutes before the Blue Devils gradually began to pull away. 12 Friday, January 14, 1994 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 'Hawks look to home advantage for victory ALEXANDER BORNIS Jennie Zeiner/ KANSAN Scott Townsend, Dales, Ore., senior, practices for the next swim meet. The No. 16 men's swimming team will take on No. 12 Minnesota at Robinson Natatorium tomorrow. That is what the Kansas swimming teams will have on their minds when the men duel Minnesota and the women take on Arkansas at 1 p.m. tomorrow in the Robinson Natatorium. Respect. By Andrew Gilman "I'd like to see some more school support," said senior Scott Townsend, a two-time All-American freestyle. "We work just as hard as any other athletes. The school spirit should be there more." Junior Heather Switzer, also a freestyleler, agreed with Townsend. "When we see a lot of people it makes us feel like we're doing something for the University," she said, "That helps our swimming." Townsend and the men's team have made a case that they deserve respect. They are ranked for the second consecutive week and have moved up one spot to No. 16 in this week's College Swimming Coaches Association of America poll. Kansas met Minnesota on Nov. 19 at the Minnesota Invitational. Minnesota won the meet, and Kansas finished fourth. "They're a good squad," Townsend said. "They have a lot of depth in all strokes, but we have the same." That respect could be earned on Saturday, when the men prepare to swim against No. 12 Minnesota "We got handled by them at the Minnesota Invite," Townsend said. "But we've had some good practices, and if we swim the way we know we can, we'll beat them." Townsend, a nine-time All-American — he qualified for All-American status in five different relays as well as individually in the men's 50- and 100-meter freestyle — has posted a team best 20.75 seconds in the men's 50 freestyle this season. Townsend will be swimming the men's 50 freestyle, the breaststroke leg of the men's 200-meter individual medley and will be the starting leg of the men's 400-meter freestyle against Minnesota. Annoug Minnesota may be next on the schedule, Townsend said he looked to the future. The Kansas women's team dropped one spot to No. 18, but the swimmers are looking ahead to competing against unranked Arkansas as a motivator for bigger and better things. "In the past it's been a good meet against them," Switzer said. "They're struggling this year, and their squad is a little smaller, but our problem is that conference is just six weeks away." Kansas has dominated its opponents throughout the last two seasons at home. The Jayhawks have won seven consecutive dual meets. During their last 20 home meets, they have amassed a 19-1 record. The only blemish on that record was a defeat at the hands of Arkansas on Nov.16,1991. Switzer said that the team needed to step up and perform well in order to prepare for Big Eight Conference competition. KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Although he's a three-time All-Pro, Neil Smith knows there are all-present of things he does not understand about football. "I don't think there will be any problem in conference," she said. "We're looking to go to nationals. We have the capability to place in the top 10 or 15. We've getting hyped. We'll be ready to race on the weekend." Chiefs' sack leader adds to Oilers' distractions By Doug Tucker AP Sportswriter How, for example, can a team have coaches throwing punches at one another during games and still win 11 in a row? "We all think of ourselves as a family," said Smith, Kansas City's overpowering defensive end. "When you Smith's Kansas City Chiefs are 7-point underdogs in their second round AFC game Sunday in Houston, where defensive coordinator Buddy Ryan was recently caught on television throwing a punch at offensive coordinator Kevin Gilbride. have bad blood in families, eventually, something's going to give." But throughout a series of distractions among coaches and players, the resilient Oilers have strung together an 11-game winning streak, much to the bewilderment of people who always thought distractions were the surest way to ruin any team. Smith, who had one of his better games in a 30-0 loss to Houston in September, had always thought so. "I hear a lot of guys from the Oliers saying, 'What the coaches do, it's their business,'" the NFL's 1993 sack champ said Thursday. "But any team where you have two coaches fighting against each other, it's got to mess with the players." Nevertheless, Smith can admire anybody's 11-game winning streak. "Their streak has come from their being consistent," he said. "They've been very consistent on offense and on defense and running the ball." Maybe all the distractions, Smith concluded, "just hurts their feelings more than anything. "I can't recall playing on a team where something like that came about among coaches. Different players don't have to like each other. They just have to do their job. But coaches, those guys meet with each other all the time." For the underdog Chiefs to end the Oilers' streak and make their first appearance in the AFC championship game since 1972, Smith will probably have to meet with Houston quarterback Warren Moon in the Houston backfield. Pressuring Moon could be the key. "If we don$ pressure the guy, and if we can't shake Warren's confidence early, then our chances aren't so good, Smith said. "It will be crucial to pressure the guy and let him know early in the game that the pressure's there." Smith dropped Moon for a 9-yard loss in their previous meeting, one of 15 sacks he would have in the season. "It can come at the ends, and it can come up the middle, but the pressure has got to come," he said. "If you've got good pressure coming from the outside, they'll tell him to just run by and step up in the middle of the pock; et. But if he's getting pressure up the middle, that won't work." You'll Walk Away From Our Sale Wishing You Were A Centipede. Reebok asics. NIKE CONVERSE Fact is, you'll need a hundred pairs of legs to take full advantage of our Clearance Sale. Just come on down to The Athlete's Foot. You won't be able to walk away empty-footed. UNICover Menu Menu VX4 The Athlete's Foot Hours: Sun. 12-5:30 M-Sat. 9-5:30 Thurs. 9-8:30 914 Mass. 841-6966 NOBODY DOES SPRING BREAK BEITER! SPRING BREAK COMPLETE FIVE & SEVEN NIGHT TRIPS 13TH A SELLOUT YEAR $69 AS LOW AS PARTY PANAMA CITY BEACH SOUTH PADRE ISLAND NEW & BRANDS Swatch DAYTONA BEACH SUNCHA STEAMBOAT LAS VEGAS ORLANDO/DISNEY WORLD VAIL/BEAVER CREEK MUSTANG ISLAND HILTON HEAD ISLAND BRECKENRIDGE/KEYSTONE PER PERSON DEPENDING ON DESTINATION / BREAK DATES / LENGTH OF STAY. FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS 1·800·SUNCHASE Advertise in The Daily Kansan for Quick Results LION Jayhawk Bookstore "Your Book Professionals" "At the top of Naismith Hill" Hrs:8-7 M-Th., 8-5 Fri. 9-5 Sat. 12-4 Sun. 843-3826 100s Announcements 105 Personal 110 Business 120 Personal 120 Entertainment 140 Found and Found Classified Directory 200s Employment 205 Help Wanted 225 Professional Business 235 Typing Services Classified Policy All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 and requires certain requirements, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or dis- The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against persons with disabilities, race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are subject to a $1,000 deposit. 100s Announcements I 110 Business Personals USE KANSAN CLASSIFIED 300s Merchandise DUI/MIP/Fake ID's Office located right next to campus Elizabeth Leach Attorney at Law-Female Prosecutor . 414 W 14th 749-0087 TRAFFIC-DUI'S *Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of DONALD G. STROLE Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey 16 East 13th 842-1133 WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO Really Listen Call or drop by Headquarters We're here because we care. 841-2345 1419 Mass. We're always open 305 For Sale 340 Auto Sales 360 Miscellaneous 370 Want to Buy -Kansan Classified: 864-4358 400s Real Estate 405 Real Estate 430 Roommate Wanted WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500 Regular Clinic Hours Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm Saturday 8am-11:30am Urgent Care (Additional Charge) Monday Friday 4:30pm-10pm Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm Sunday 8:40am-4:30pm Pharmacy Hours Monday-Thursday 8am 9pm Friday 8am 9pm Saturday 11am 9pm Sunday 11am 3pm KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services 120 Announcements SCHOLARSHIP OPPORTUNITIES! INTERNSHIP OPPORTUNITIES! GRANTS AND LOANS! CALL OR DROP BY FOR DETAILS UNIVERSITY SCHOLARSHIP CENTER 33 STRONG HALL 864-5439 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Friday, January 14. 1994 13 COMMUTERS: Self Serve Car Pool Exchange Main Lobby, Kawan Union. NEEDS A RIDE/RIDER Un the Servi Serve Car Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union. Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Ramen TUTORS. List your name with us. We refer student inquiries to you. Student Assistance Center, 123 Strong WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of available tutors. Tutor Assistance Center: 183强光路 130 Entertainment Monday, Jan.17th no school! KU vs K-State the squibcakes (from Manhattan) $3.75 pitchers free pool BENCHWARMERS From the Horde Tour, The Dave Mathews Band Tuesday, Jan.18th $1.00 off imports free pool BENCHWARMERS BENCHWARMERS MONTERREY JACK Friday, January 14th $2. " Long Island Ice Teas Long Beach Teas Saturday, January 15th MILHOUS NIXONS 2 For 1 Wells 140 Lost & Found found a kitten in Carlos O'Kelly's parking lot. Call me 749-8782. 男 女 200s Employment 205 Help Wanted 600 CAMPS IN THE USA, RUSSIA AND EUROPE NEED YOU THIS SUMMER. For the best summer of your life-see you career center or contact: Camp CounselorsUA 420 Florence St. Palo Alto, CA 94301 *Adams Alumun Center is now hiring part-time banquets server, daytime availability & professional attitude. Apply in person across from Kansas.* *Union. 8645-4672*. BabySister at our home 8 miles from KU, 12 km a week, schedule negotiable, $0.50/hour 841-1599 BabySister needed Monday-Friday, 8 noon in child's home, References and transcrip Babyailty needed Monday-Friday, 8-noon inferences and transportation required, 8-hour work Computer Systems Specialist Babysitters need for the spring semester for a research grant. $4.35/hour must have experience with children and infants and references. Apply at 4037 Dole. CAMP SEQUOIA in New York's Catakini Mills (85 miles N/T) has summer students. Cabin counselors, specialty instructors for sports, swimwear and fitness programs, English Horseback Riding, Outdoor Education Adventure Programs and more! Competitive Adventure Programs will be held dry. See us at The Summer Employment Fair in the Kansas Union Ballroom on Ground Hog's Day. For more information call **SEQUOIAU** (414) 672-9323. Manage PC and Mac local area networks, student computer lab; purchase/maintain hardware and software for the network; degree of experience with PC and MAC .Ana; proficient PC/Mac user; communication skills; $25,000 annually, minimum. For com- munication skills, please visit www.mcweb.com. English Center; 241 Lippincott Hall; University Kansas; Lawrence, KS 65045; Fax: (931) 845-6455; email: lawrencekcs@univ.kansas.edu; for Januar- y by January 19, 2014, EO/AEE Employer. Child care for yr old, near campus, 8:0-3:30 PM Pay call: 855-721-2111, 845-206-7000 Call day: 855-211-2111, evening: 845-206-7000 Cottonwood Inc., a service provider for adults with developmental disabilities is currently accepting applications for part-time employment in their residential division. All positions are evening and weekend hours, some may require sleep overs. College course work and related experience helps prepare you to apply by WRITE RECORD A MUST. Please apply to 14 at Cottonwood Inc. 280 W. 31 EOE. **Christmas Day needles needlily assistants. Work** 11 - 15 am or amr needles help 12 - 30 pm / 5 - 9 pm 11 - 15 am or amr needles help 12 - 30 pm / 5 - 9 pm Counselors/Support Staff/Children's Camp/ Northeast top salary, ksmB/IDL/Business, travel in various cities. Provide activities in activities archery, arts & crafts, basketball, dance (bajz, tap, ballet), drama, drum line, gymnastics. field hockey, football, gulf, guitar, gymnastics, ice hockey, horseback riding-hunt seat, karate, lacrosse, photography, photojournalism, scuba, soccer, swim team, tennis, theater, technicians, track, video, water aki, WSI, wind surfing, wood. Kitchen stewed, cooks, buses, drivers, carpets. Camp Windsor For Boy, 2515 Gladius Rd., Suite 406E, Boca Raton, FL 33807 (316) 543-6336. We will be on campus in the student unit at 11am from 4pm-6pm Duxbury, MA 02333 (617) 924-6336. We will be on campus in the student unit at 11am from 4pm-6pm Duxbury, MA 02333 Cruise Line, entry level, on-board positions avail- able, Summer, Summer or year round (838). 202-697-4748. Evening and weekend CNA's need to work with clients in their homes. Reliable transportation necessary. Call Sharon at Douglas County Visiting Nurses 843-3788. Do you like preschool children in 6 to 5 years old? Do you want to make a difference in a child's life? Do you have a little free time? Volunteer at Head Start a day a week. For information call 8251. EOE. Female babybaby needed late afternoons & eve. Babybaby must have驾机 transportation Beeky 441-986-7232 Female help was needed for light house keeping on Friday from December 12 to 4 p.m. (Call Marten Denton 843-330-8236) For sale: Remaining student basketball tickets 1- 348-0708 Greenspace is now hiring intelligent energetic people for its grassroots lobbying and fundraising efforts. We want to build a community that includes and guarantee wage aid benefits. Call us at (612) 509-3412 for more information. Everyone is encouraged to apply. Hobby Town USA is looking for responsible people to help in our new Lawrence franchise store. PT/FT Ackley by writing to H.T.U., P.O. Box 11453, Leask, KS 60207-1453. I am looking for a student to play with my 3/4 age old boy, Monday through Friday, 1-5 p.m. Please call Jalanylm at 862-3705. If you can only work certain days, please call us. Excellent work! for individual to watch my school age before and after school. Call 855-7928 after 5:30 p.m. NANNIES/CHILD CARE The premier agency - 9 yrs experience. Families and Teens can attend a variety of programs - & Sunny FLL - Call today, set up tomorrow! Open interviews for asst. property manager to be responsible for managing our resume to Bordertown Apt. 438, Colorado City, CO 81025. Part-time clerical job available now. Flexible hours. Call 842-2744. PART-TIME EVENING DELIVERY PERSON Must have own car. Apply in person Peking Restaurant (23rd and Iowa behind Hastings). 749-0003 Prescool Substitutes. Prefer training and exper- ience in young children, Sunshine Acre School 845-2232 Philips 66 seeks cashiers to work the following shifts - 5am- 6am; 12am- 6am. Must be neat, clean and enjoy working with the public. Apply in person to Philips 60- 900 Iowa PROMOTE our SPRINGBREAK packages with our posters and flyers, or SIGN UP NOW for Springbreak rooms. DaysRoom,帕帕. Padre, Patricia. 7 nights $129. Up call CMI. 1. 900-432-5284 Lawrence-based, growing, international, technical publishing company has a part-time (15 hours per week) job providing orders, stuffing and mailing statements; copying computer disks for inventory; taking the mail to the office daily; and providing backup support to the fulltime leader as needed. Preferably have a strong background working as a team. Required. Ability to maneuver up to 50 pounds and 50 wpm preferred. This position is part of our internal clerical support team (FTP) and helps other areas of the company as needed. R & D Publications, Inc. is an equal opportunity employer concerned with creating a pleasant work atmosphere. If you are looking for an enjoyable work environment with a reliable company, please come and fill out an application at 1601 West 23rd Street Suite 202, Lawrence, KS EARN CASH ON THE SPOT $15 Today $30 This week By donating your life saving blood plasma WALK-INS WELCOME! NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750 Tennis Job-Summer Children's Camps-Northeast-Men and women with good tennis background who can teach children to play tennis. Good salary, room & board travel allowance (US $150). Baxter 771, Dickery, MA 02333 or 914-654-868. Men call or write: Camp Winadus, 225 Glades Rd. Suite 400E, Boca Raton, FL 35431 (407) 994-5500. We will be on campus in the student union from mid-4pm on the 4th of August. STUDENT SYSTEM TESTING PROGRAMMER. Date: 01/21/1924 Salary $19,500-$60,000. Month: 20 per week Duties include designing and writing programs, maintaining, or enhancing existing programs. Participate in system development and training of new qualifications; currently enrolled at the University of Kansas, demonstrated experience in designing and writing programs, knowledge of at least 2 programs, including computer science, communications skills, experience and/or ability in software testing. Ability to maintain effective working relationships with customers and staff. Complete job description应用。Apply, complete an application available on the Computer Center. EO/JO EMPLOYER. The Lawrence Bus Company is now taking applications for SAFERIDE drivers. Must be 21, have clean driving record, and be familiar withence. Up to 15 hrs wk. If interest call 604-0544 The Lawrence/Douglas County Infant-Foddler Coordinating Council is seeking a temporary Inclusion Consultant, 16 hours a week, to promote the care of infants/youth with disabilities in regular child care settings. Duties include visiting local child care settings and providing technical assistance to care providers with disabilities in special needs. Requires degrees in child development, special or early childhood education, social work, GT, PT or related field, and experience working with families of infants/young children with disabilities in child care setting. Address below for full job description and required qualifications. Send letter of application and resume, including names, addresses and phone numbers of applicants. Reach KECHI/Life Span Institute, University of Kansas, 4132 Haworth Hall, Lawrence, KS 68045, el. (913) 864-4801. Review of applications will begin Jan. 1, 2017, and will be filled. The University of Kansas is an equal opportunity affirmative action employer. STUDENT APPLICATIONS PROGRAMMER. Date 01/26/89, Salary: $834/month. 20 hrs per week. Duties include programming in C, K-HELL, FOXEL PROG/and/or other languages on AIX, OSF1, VMS, CMS and/or LAN. Complete job description available in Rm2, 1902. Computer Center. Job #101. Rm2 1902 of the Computer Center and return to Ann Rm2 1902 of the Computer Center and return to Ann Rm2 EOA (EMployer). Student boury office hire for 15 hours a week at a $4.90/hr. Must have computer and office experience and be a current KU student. Apply at 4031 Dole. Deadline Jan. 18, 80:00pm. Visa Drive-in in now taking applications for full and partial-time help. Apply in person. 1827 W. H. 40th Street, New York, NY 10003. PYRAMID MILK Now Taking Application Looking for enthusiastic people who understand what great service is all about! Now Hiring Drivers Must have car and insurance Fast growing company. Looking for quality minded people. Good opportunity for growth. Fast growing company Apply in person 14th & Ohio(under the Wheel) Full & Part Time Christian Day offers the best care at low rates. Transportation. West location. 682-3254. Transportation. East location. 682-3254. 225 Professional Services BRAXTON B. COPLEY Attorney at Law General Practice Traffic Tickets, Misdemeanors, Landlord/Tenant 719Massachusetts INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS DV.1 education Immigration Dept. Green cards provide permanent resident status, Citizens of almost all countries are allowed to take part. Students, tourists, anyone may apply. For info and forms: www.immigrationservices.2011.Ssag.St.CanogaCA, 91340 749-5333 Landlord Renewal 719 Massachusetts 749-5333 370 Want to Buy BIOLOGY Tel; (818) 996-4425; Fax; (818) 882-9681 Internet Made Easy Access KU and the Internet SEMESTER SPECIAL Call DATABANK Your Key to the Internet Research Assistance : MS/MLS information paper, dissertations, research project papers, theses, dissertations, research project papers. Your Key to the Internet Voice 842-6699 Data 842-7744 Slip is Available Looking for a good type: *Papers, Applications, Spoilers, Charts *Laser Tracing WOW! Your profs *Grammar and spelling free *18 years experience call Jack at Makka the Grade 385-2853 235 Typing Services 1-der Women Word Processing. Former editor of *The American Journal* into accurate pages of letter quality type. 843-200-9999. 305 For Sale X 300s Merchandise H 405 For Rent Almost new twin matress and box springs. $50 o.b.o. Call 841-5945. Quesen are classic fusion food, valid wine w/cream. 8.400 LB 721.2L x114 in Foil Sharp 800 ml Mac SE 20 HD. SYST. Excel, upgraded memory, 9680/6900 Call Midr. # 412-6431, 111-6411, or 800-5570. 1 bdm, furnished apt, for rent in private home. Private entrance, 1 block from KU, avail now. Female grad student preferred. No pets; $300/mo, includes all utilities & cable. 864-9344. % BDIM lowwithw / w/ AC and basic cable paid. % BDIM lowwithw $80/$100. Pets-paws. Contact M524 86-73-9588. Size queen futon mattress and wooden frame Excellent condition 878 Phone: 805-8650 and ask Ihang Buf Set. 105 Mats. For sale: Queen-sized felon mattress, well used. $ furnished rooms in nice spacious house close to camp and 23rd St. Wdrey/Dryer. A $225 room is available. 2 and 1 bedroom apartments now available. On bus route. Call 749-1586. Mountain Bike, 92. Giant Iguana, Excellent Condition, 873/870账叫 Jim at 642-5998 Beds, desks, bookcases, chest of drawers. Everything But Ice. 936 Mass. 400s Real Estate rMM compatible computer with printer, software, and manual. $500. Call 794-2838. 340 Auto Sales Carousel Slide Projector, Raymond, 2515 Ardennes, #A18394 Available immediately! bJdmrt apt at 1232 OHio B belle downtown and campus. bJdmrt-Corntin. bJdmrt-Westchester. Available Jan. 1, 5 bdm, apt on bus route. Call 749-1556 2-00 mon-Pri. - Convenience Boss-$125, Ball Pythons -845. Other lizards also. Call Greg at 749-1064 and leave message. - Location meadowbrook COMPARE Happy hours everyday from 3-4 p.m. All soft drinks are available at 9 a.m. and 7 a.m. @ 79. Berry's Hamburg at th8 and lth8. 1972 Volkswagen Super Bug, good condition, great student car, $800 943-1723 Super single waterbed, Frame, mattress, heater and accessories 115/bso (823-324) https://www.royalstonehotels.com/super-single-waterbed-frame-mattress-heater-and-accessories-115bso-823-324.html - Apartment Size 360 Miscellaneous One day sale, Saturday Jan 15, 11am-6pm. Cor- nell University Church, North Ridge Rd. D, Altoa Bukle BongKelg. New engine, SKG Great AM/FM cassette. Runs great. fm84 890-7230 - Cost Per Month - Surrounding - Lifestyle (Sorry, No Pets) M-F8-5:30 Sun 1-4 EQUAL MONTHS 15th & Crestline Available now, studio apartment in nicely renovated older house. Private entrance, separate bedroom, ceiling fan, room A/C. No pets. 1300 block Vermont. $296/month. 841-1704. 842-4200 Newer 1, 2, and 3 BR apartments available for August '94. Washer/dryer, dishwasher, microwave, private patio/balconies. Avoid the rush! Reserve your place now! 811-484-6700 or 748- MASTERCRAFT OFFERS COMPLETELY FURNISHED 1·2×3·4Bedroom Apartments Designed with you in mind! HANOVERPLACE 841-1212·14th & Mass. REGENTSCOURT 749-0445·19th & Mass. SUNDANCE 841-5255·7th&Florida TANGLEWOOD 749-2415*10th & Arkansas Nice, 1 bedroom, close to campus. Hard wood ORCHARD CORNERS 749-4226* 15th & Kasold 841-1429*1145Louisiana Desperately seeking romance to live in 3 ind households - 506-901-724 or Ross at Rose and leave蜜 842-4455 Study apartment now available close to campus. Utilities费 $495, 6 month lease available. $200/month. Leasing until the end of July 94. 2 bedroom, 2 bath. Colony Woods . 460/mo. Contact Colony Woods management 842-511-11, for Apt O-18. MASS. STREET. Love newly 1 br, ceiling fan, blinds, quiet and safe. Available 1/23. Lease thru August. Renewable. 749-3474. Soblese 2 Bedroom apt. Available February 1st. On KU bus route. 833-6097 Sublease III July, new 2 bedrooms in 4 beds. Central location. Monthly rent $450 - $799/月 903 Montay Way Bd-850-799/年 896 Montay Way Bd-850-799/年 TU March 31 at 8:30. Georgetown Apartments, W7 downs, BW appliances, free water queen bathroom. 430 Roommate Wanted or 1 roommate needed for new 3 bedroom apartment. Complete campus WD in available rooms. Call Caterers at (866) 209-7495 or Availability Web Site: www.caterer.com 3n/s male roommates for 4 br house, WD, DW, all utilities paid. $15.00/month. Call Ivan. 841-4689. 2 to share spacious house, completely furnished, in walking distance to campus, $20/month + utili- 5 female roommates desperate needed for spac- e sharing. HAVE TO MOVE! Cable 88-796-3240. HAVE TO MOVE! Cable 88-796-3240. we're making life easier! Female, non-smoking, roommate, immedi- tate/database, house, own bedroom, dance/private room, 300 square feet. College-aged roommate needed now for $3 BR lAv- age, water pd. Jan. rent free call 641-852-9700 -Weekly Maid Service -Front Door Bus Service -*"Dine Anytime" with Unlimited Seconds -Laundry and Vending Facilities Female roommate must for 3 bdrm ap. close to female roommate monthly, include and rent utili- ties. Call 841-745-6820. Female roommate need for 3 bedroom very close to campus. $185.90 + utilities. Call Jalata at (866) 276-1414. NAISMITH Hall Female phone wanted to share 2 bdmr, 1 tshirt dupe w/microphone, WD, DCA on RU bus route. Naismith Drive Have your own room, covered parking, private area. Please contact us, wafer, caterer, or for 1-800-753-4251. * 70+ min/day + meals.* Male Grade Student to share a bdroom with house $300/month. Bills pld. Call 482-8129 Male 7/8 roommate required to subset nielsen, 4 bedroom suite, $180 per month. Call 748-0168. Male Grad student seeks M/P/mannager at great age on 8th and Mass. All amenities including dishwasher, garbage disposal, and centralAir/air. V / R / S. Must have a Bachelor's degree in Acupuncture, immediatl, Call Kevin at k8249-3170. Male or female roommate to 3 bachelor's house, 2 master's house, 1 house, DW 875 (utl. call) C. call evening. 749-6411. - By phone: 864-4358 Ads phoned to me now hail! THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN How to schedule an ad: Mature n/ rostrate needed AXAP 1 tbl from AxapCatalog for the following +/u utilities: interested call 740-6415 Roommate needed for 3 bbm fitted appl. Rent AND W/D! Phone 865-2485 for all the juicy details. Call 865-2485 for all the juicy details. Need 1 female immed. for 2nd sem. 2 bills from KU. bkr bd, rf wL, $200; +/u$100; call 749-3860 or 841-3655 Needed by KU. NS KR to share 3 BR $Hp 214 needed by KU. DW, DP, walp, 3 min from B. Bin R. Call 841-3540. Female N/ roommate need for BDRM. 3 bath furn. except for bdm. W/D, fireplace, pool. Near n campus, on bus route. $240/mo, and /a' util., cable paid. contact #82-833. Roommate wanted, N/S, to share apartment. Wasser/woeder water paid, $20/month + utilitie Batterie / battery paid, $10/month Roomsmite needed to share 3 barm townhouses. Very nice. Only $15/mo + 5/utilitys. Call Julie. Phone: (718) 249-3600. Roommate wanted to share 3 br. house in quiet. neighborhood. $175 mo. 843-4338. Adobe phone in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made. adobe.com/phone/Elite360 big distance to bathrooms b to bathroom Rent $835/month Call 749-5803 or (215) 348-8443 Wanted: One roommate, nonskater to share a 4 bedroom from campus. Two full baths: 842-4445 Calculating Rates: Classified Information and order form Stop by the Kawasan office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or VISA. by meint. I is too personal! Let me know, but no rebeauty. You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it to payment to the Kansas offices. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Ade that is billed to Visa or MasterCard quality for a refund on unused days is billed before their expiration date. Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of again times the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of days in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run. When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or VISA, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Failed on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check with cash are not available. Num. of lines: 3 lines 5 lines 5-7 lines 8+ lines The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00. Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Please print your ad one word per box: Classifications Cost per line per day 1X 2-3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-28X 30+X 2.85 1.55 1.05 .65 .75 .95 1.99 1.15 .85 .70 .65 .45 1.85 1.85 .75 .65 .65 .45 1.75 .69 .65 .69 .65 .35 140 lack & friend 365 for sale 200 help needed 365 auto sales 225 generalised services 380 microconsultants 225 junction services 105 personal 111 business perdamis 122 anno commota 130 anteriammoel 370 want to buy 485 for rent 430 roommate wanted 1 | | | | | | 2 | | | | | 3 | | | | | 4 | | | | | 5 | | | | | Total ad cost: ___ Classification Date ad begins:___ Total days in paper. Phone: Adtrance **VISA** Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □ Visa (Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansas) Furnish the following if you are charging your ad: Expiration Date: Account number: Print exact name ansearing on credit card: MasterCard Signature: The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 68445 THE FAR SIDE By GARY LARSON © 1984 farWorks, Inc./Dist. by Universal Press Syndicate "This just makes me sick! ...Sick! ...Why, in my day, we collected wild heads from the jungle! ..These things are all sissies!" 14 Friday, January 14, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VV The Etc. Shop Ray-Ban PRODUCED BY BAUSCH & LOMB 928 Mass. 843-0611 Ray-Ban MARQUEE & LORIE BANCOS & LORES Sunglasses for DRIVING Red Lyon Tavern "Universal since 1993 A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence 944 Mass. 832-8228 "Universal Service 1905" y Red Lyon Tavern THE JAYHAWKS - VS - K-STATE Monday Jan. 17 8:30pm 832-8228 on the ISLAMIC ART CENTER vern BASKETBALL BASKETBALL Big Screen Tailgate Party Time B-B-Q Beef $1.00 Kraut and Sausage $1.59 Sat. 10:00-1:00 Coke Sprite Coca-Cola Sprite $4 24 pack 99 Limit 1 with $10.00 purchase BAGU spray WITH CONDITIONER WITH CONDITIONER Ragu Spaghetti Sauce Buy One Get One 30 oz. jar Free! Sixghent Sixghent American Beauty Spaghetti Buy One Get One Free! 24oz. Salines Salines Saltines IGA Saltines Buy One Get One Free! 16 oz. box Campbell's SOUP Campbell's SOUP Campbell's Family Size Soup Buy One Get One 26oz. Free! Keg Beer $3999 Alvin's IGA HOMETOWN HOMETOWN Proud Call 843-2313 IGA 9th and Iowa, Lawrence, KS Open 6 a.m. to Midnight Call843-2313 Air Jordan leaps into baseball park New challenge sought in training for Chicago CHICAGO — Michael Jordan isn't kidding. He's been working out at Comiskey this winter, and not just to stay in shape or fight boredom. The Associated Press Jordan said if he kept improving during his three-hour, five-day-aweek workouts, he thought he could make the team even though he hasn't played baseball regularly since he was a teen-ager in Wilmington, N.C. Jordan, craving a new challenge just months after retiring from the Chicago Bulls, thinks he's found one. He wants to play baseball with the Chicago White Sox. "I want to go to spring training for one reason, and that's to make the team," Jordan was quoted as saying in yesterday's edition of the Chicago Tribune. "This is no fantasy. I plan to be in Sarasota by mid-February. If the White Sox were to tell me that they didn't think I was good enough to make the team and that they don't want me at spring training, then I would accept their wishes and not go." He insists this is no midlife crisis or fantasy yearning. He certainly doesn't need the money and offered to pay his own way to spring training. White Sox general manager Ron Schauer said yesterday that the likelihood of Jordan making the team this season is "at best a long shot." Jordan retired from the Bulls of Oct. 6, upstaging the White Sox whel they played the Toronto Blue Jays in Game One of the AL playoffs. they deserved. I think the first day there would be tremendous media, but then we would put an end to it and settle it down to play baseball." He said a decision would be made next month on whether to offer him the invitation to spring training. White Sox pitchers and catchers report Feb. 16 and the position players five days later. Schauer said it would be to a situation where Jordan could help the White Sox or "it wouldn't be fair to both sides." Schueler wondered whether Jordan would make the adjustment to live pitching, not the kind you get in a batting cage or from a batting practice pitcher. that Jordan was serious about coming to spring training. "I'm serious. My father thought could be a major-league baseball player, and I'm sure that right now he can see me trying." Jordan said. "He's watching every move that I make." "There's a lot of difference between 70 mph and 90 mph," said Schueler, 40-48 in eight major league seasons. Schueiler finally learned Wednesday "I talked to Frank Thomas and Jack McDowell and Robin Ventura and gave them my stand," Schueler said. "I don't want to take anything away from them. Everything they earned, "Iheard some of the comments from some of the other players that he has good bat speed and obviously good hand and eye coordination. I think that pumped Michael up. We have to wait and see, it's way too early," Schueler said. Jordan has been joined recently at the workouts by several White Sox players. The White Sox have a vacancy in right field because Ellis Burks signed with the Colorado Rockies. Schueller said he had no problems with Jordan's arm. The appearance of Jordan would create a circus atmosphere much larger than the one last spring, when Bo Jackson was making a comeback from hip replacement surgery. "He does have a good loose arm, but I haven't seen it from the outfield," he said. Jordan's father, James, was slain in August. When he retired, Jordan said he wanted more time with his family and less in the limelight. But he noted Wednesday that baseball teams often spend four or five days in one city. "It's not like the NBA, where you'd fly out after every game. I'd like to take my wife and children with me on the road," he said. "There were certain things I was thinking when I retired that I didn't want to express to anyone. I know this will put me back in front of people. But I hope they'll be looking at me in a different light." KANSAN Spend $1...Save hundreds C A R D AT&T Membership has its privileges... THESE DISCOUNTS AND OFFERS ARE GOOD THROUGH JULY 31, 1994! JUST SHOW YOUR CARD... USE AS OFTEN AS YOU LIKE! LOTHIERS Britches Corner • 843 Massachusetts • 843-0454; Buy 1reg, price Tommy Hilfiger, get the 2nd of equal or lesser val. Cleopatra's Closet • 743 Massachusetts • 749-4664; 15% off everything in store (excluding sale items) The Etc Shop • 928 Massachusetts • 843-0611; 20% off Etc Shop brand sunglasses Harper's Fashions • 835 Massachusetts • 749-0626; Additional 20% off all regular price merchandise KU Bookstore • Kansas and Burge Unions • 844-6460; $5 off any gift or clothing purchase of $25 or more Natural Way Natural Fiber Clothing • 820 Massachusetts • 841-0100; 15% off all regular priced clothing Outfitters Clothing Co. • 740 Massachusetts • 843-3933; 15% off the regular price of guy's and gal's jeans Outfitters Clothing Co. • 740 Massachusetts • 843-3933; 10% off of tuxedo rental University Bookshop • 1116 W 23rd St • 749-5206; 20% off all clothing (except sale items) Weavers Department Store • 901 Massachusetts • 843-6360; 20% off all linerie, hosiery, or intimate apparel American Bistro · 701 Massachusetts · 841-8349: 10% off any entree (limit one) Fifty's Restaurant 925 Iowa 841-7226 10% off any entree (limit one) Donna Lombris & Humphrey 1920 - Humphrey Lombris Food & Design Center for 8:30 Dos Hombrez WI 815 Nantucket B41-72B6: Buy 1 menu item, get the 2nd for 1/2 price RESTAURANTS & BARS Fir's restaurant *925 Iowa* 841-7226: 10% on any entree (limit one) Imperial Garden • 2007 W 6th St • 841-1688: 10% on any dinner entree (limit one) Imperial Garden • 2907 W 6th St • 841-1688: 10% off any dinner entree (limit one) Pizza Shuttle • 1601 W 23rd • 842-1212: 1 carryout, 1 topping pizza w/ a lg. coke for $4.00 Johnny's Tavern • 401 N 2nd St • 842-0377: Buy a cheeseburger w/fries at req, get the 2nd for $1 (Good Mon - Fri, 4pm to 9am) Little Caesars Pizza-Pizza • 1410 Kasold, 865-5400/520 W 23rd, 842-8000: FREE Crazy Bread w/ any pizza/pizzal purchase Perkins Family Restaurant • 1711 W 23rd • 842-9040: $1.00 off any entree, anytime, 24 hours a day Plum Tree *2620 lowa* · 841-6222: FREE appetizer (2 crab rangoons or 1 egg roll) w/purchase of any entree Pyramid Pizza *507 W 104 St* (under The Wheel) · 842-3232: **4 s_arm* $6 _med^-$ 80 ea add topping 75¢ (Void w/ other offers) Shoney's Restaurant· 2412 lowa · 843-3519: FREE salad bar w/ any purchase of a sandwich and fries Vista Drive In· 1527 W 61st · 842-4311: FREE reg. French Fry w/purchase of a Vistaburger & drink The Athlete's Foot * 914 Massachusetts * 841-6966: $10 off a shoe purchase of $65 or more* MERCHANDISE AND PRODUCTS Cycle Works • 1601 W 23rd • 842-6363: FREE lock set w/ new bike purchase Englewood Florist • 939 Massachusetts • 841-2999: 3 FREE latex balloons with any purchase of $20 or more Francis Sporting Goods • 731 Massachusetts • 843-4191: 15% off all Champion Sportswear It's Your Party • 1601 W 23rd • 749-3455: Buy any 3 greeting cards and get 1 FREE Jaybowl! Level 1-Kansas Union • 864-3545: FREE shoe rental during open bowling Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826: Get an extra 5% CASH back during Semester Buyback Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826: Save 10% on Computer Softwear EVERYDAY! Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826: Blue Books for 10¢ Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826: 20% off Blank Computer Diskettes Jayhawk Spirit • 935 Massachusetts • All adjustable hats, $2.00 off all fitted hats Jayhawk Spirit *935 Massachusetts* *749-5194:* $1.00 off all adjustable hats, $2.00 off all fitted hats Jock's Nitch *840 Massachusetts* *842-2442:* 15% off all shoes Junior's Farm • 924 1/2 Massachusetts • 842-3344: Buy 2 CD's at reg. price, get the 3rd (equal or lesser value) at 50% off Genova Sports Club • 837 Massachusetts • 842-3992: 20% off KL swappables Laser Logic • 865-0505: 20% Off Recycled Laser Printer Toner Cartridges (FREE pick-up and delivery) Miracle Video • 1910 Haskell, 841-7504/910 N 2nd St, 841-8903; Rent 1 video, get 2nd FREE (Sun thru Thurs) Rentco USA • 1741 Massachusetts • 749-1605; 25% off all rentals Sports Fan-Attics • 942 Massachusetts • 842-2323: 15% off everything in store (excluding sale items & leather jackets) Stereo Lane • 2004 W 23rd • 865-2372: $10 off any purchase of $50 or more Union Technology Center - Level 3-Burge Union - 864-5690 - 10% off any accessory (disks, diskholders, cables, paper, surge protectors, etc.) Video Biz + 832 lowes + 749-3507: 2 For Tuesday! Rent 2 Videos for the Price of 1 (Tuesday only) Iowa 749-350-1234 • for Tuesday Night videos at 1 (星期天 only) Vormehr Studio & Gallery • 1 Riverfront Plaza, Ste 321 • 749-0744: 15% off of framed prints of KU and sororities SERVICES The Auto Medic • 3631 W 10th St • 842-0384: 20% off any service call B. C. Automotive • 510 N 6th St • 841-6955: 20% off tune ups and brake repair B.C. Automotive • 510 N 6th St • 841-6955; 20% off tune ups and brake repair Copy Co • 1401 W 23rd • 832-2679; 10% off all merchandise or services Enterprise Rent-A-Car • 3030 Iowa • 842-8040; 10% off car rental Fantastic Sam's • 2223 Louisiana • 749-1976; 15% off any regular price service or product Nail Tique • 2449 Iowa, Ste N • 832-2900; $3.00 off any service Planned Parenthood • 1420 Kasold-Orchards Corners • 832-0281; 25% off initial or annual visit plus 12 free condoms RC's Stadium Barbery • 1033 Massachusetts • 749-5363; $5.50 haircut Sonny Hill Chevrolet-Geo-Oldsmobile • 3400 S Iowa • 843-7700; 10% off all parts and service Ultimate Tan • 2449 Iowa, Ste O • 842-4949; 1 FREE session with the purchase of a 9-session package ($5 value) The University Daily Kansas • 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall • 864-4358; 10% off any private party classified advertisement **Terms and conditions.** The following terms and conditions are to be withheld to cattailers of use *The University Dirkkan Kunan Card (DRC) at Participating Merchants* (1): The DRC must be signed to be valid, in non-transferable, and PM may request identification, confiscation the Card if used by other than the cattailer. Cattailers' signature on one of the DRC shall constitute bound to be questioned by the directors of the DRCs. 23 DRC Special Discounts / Discounts are not valid with or without special promotions of use or not apply to tax purchase; it is only acceptable to cattailers personal purchase for the total purchase if determined by PM, if non-DRC purchasers are part of the total purchase, or if only a portion of the total purchase is purchased by non-DRC purchasers. If you pay taxes directly to the U.S. government or sell promotionals or special promotions of use, it must be not applied to purchase alcoholic beverages in the United States, and some PM may deny entry to persons under 21 years of age (5) PM may obtain a comparable value in opinion where legal advertising permits PM to change the original agreement (6) Cattailers agrees not to hold *The University Dirkkan Kunan Card (DRC)* independently, independentAgency, any student organization or DRC setting location. Regems or employees of the University of Kunan Compulsibility Marketing Program 7 should maintain understanding in relation to any of the DRC program, all parties agree to binding authority by a member of the American Abstraction Association. D Jayhawk Bookstore Kansas and Burge Unions •864-4640 1420 Crescent Road 843-3826 1116 W.23rd St * 749-5206 UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP KU KU BOOKSTORES THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358 1 CAMPUS/AREA: Lawrence celebrations commemorate Martin Luther King Jr. Page 3. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA KS 66612 VOL.103, NO.81 ADVERTISING: 864-4358 TUESDAY, JANUARY 18, 1994 (USPS 650-640) KU KU On top for now NEWS:864-4810 Kansas was voted to the top of The Associated Press' and CNN/USA. Today's basketball polls, but a loss to Kansas St. spoiled the party. The Associated Press top five 1. KANSAS ... 16-2 2. UCLA ... 11-0 3. Arkansas ... 12-1 4. N. Carolina ... 13-2 5. Duke ... 11-1 Team puts top spot in perspective By Gerry Fey Kansan sportswriter KANSAN With Kansas' 68-64 loss to Kansas State last night, the Jayhawks are in danger of losing their day-old No.1 spot. Kansas coach Roy Williams said he wanted to put the Associated Press poll into the correct perspective for his players. "I told the team this morning, 'It's just another indication of what you've done to this point, but it means absolutely nothing.'" he said. Kansas jumped from No. 3 to No. 1 in the AP men's basketball poll released yesterday, but Williams said he didn't care what the Jayhawks were ranked during the season. extra concern on us." "I could care less if I'm M. 1 or 5,000," Williams said. "It doesn't put any extra pressure on us. It doesn't put any Kansas moved to the top after No.1 North Carolina and No.2 Duke lost last week. The Jayhawks defeated Oklahoma last Monday, setting the stage for a top ranking. "We played them last year, we were No. 1 and we won," he said of K-State. "We played them this year, and we were No. 1, we lost. I'd just as soon we didn't have any polls." Williams said the rankings had no effect on either KU or K-State's performance. The only thing the poll may have done was help K-State prepare for the game, Kansas sophomore forward Sean Pearson said. "It made K-State more intense to play us and knock us down from No. 1," he said. "Coach Williams told us that we were No. 1, but everybody knows that in the middle of the season being No. 1 doesn't mean a thing." ASKA Tom Leninger / KANSAN Michael Ryan, left, Eudora freshman, and Travis Green, Kansas City, Mo. junior, react to the 68-84 loss to Kansas State last night in Allen Field House. QUAKE in LOS ANGELES Death toll: At least 32 people reported dead. Aftermath: 200,000 without water and 680,000 without power in Los Angeles County. State of emergency: President Clinton declares Southern California eligible for federal aid. Severity: Deadliest quake in California since 1989. L.A. digs out of the rubble LAWRENCE Students survive anxious hours, contact families By Roberta Johnson and Susan White Kansan staff writers While the Los Angeles earthquakes seemed thousands of miles away for some students, for others the shocks hit very close to home. Barak Yaughn, Marina Del Ray, Calif., junior, said his family lived within ten miles of the epicenter of the earthquake. His mother contacted him early yesterday morning and said his family was not hurt. At 6:30 a.m. yesterday an earthquake measuring 6.6 on the Richter scale hit the San Fernando Valley and was felt from San Diego to Las Vegas. "My mom's apartment is in shambles," he said. "The plaster on the walls fell off, and everything fell and shattered." "The hallway was bouncing so much that he was thrown wall to wall like he was in a fun house," he said. L.A.C.O.F.D. Justin Anderson, Los Angeles junior, said that a friend in California told him of a frightening experience he had upon awakening to the earthquake. The massive destruction and congested telephone lines have left some KU students wondering about family and friends. Don Steeple, professor of geology, said that at least one aftershock typically will occur within one magnitude, or 5.5 on the scale, during the month after any earthquake. Steeple said the aftershocks could occur for several months. Anderson said that his brother tried to call their family yesterday morning. Leonard Ortiz / ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER "The phone just kept ringing and ringing," he said. He later learned that the house received minor damages and that his family was all right. Students needing help coping with the crisis can turn to a variety of places. The Bert Nash Community Mental Health Center, 336 Missouri St., suite 202, also offers counseling services. A separate disaster-related services number is 843-9192. Vaughn said that even though he has been in several earthquakes, he has never gotten used to them. Nannette Stone, 68, of Sifmar, Calif., hugs Capt. Bob Ward of the Los Angeles County Fire Department yesterday after he and other fire fighters saved her mobile home from fire. The fire started after the earthquake ruptured a natural gas line. "We don't ask for names," said Headquarters director Marsha Epstein. "It's very low-key. We don't sit in the office across a desk." Headquarters, Inc., located at 1419 Massachusetts St. , is open 24 hours a dav. and students can walk in or call. "If you have ever been in an earthquake, then you know it's one of the scariest things you've ever experienced," Vaughn said. "There's an inside fear that it's going to happen, but you're never really sure when." Highlighting the quake's harm Epicenter: Northridge Burned homes House, other buildings burned throughout the San Fernando Valley; 30 to 40 houses burned in Sylmar Collapsed freeways Parts of the Santa Monica, Golden State, Antelope Valley and Sylmar Valley freeways collapsed, killing at least one person Collapsed apartment A Northridge apartment, which housed mainly students from California State University, fell in, killing several Deralled train A 64-car train carrying hazardous material derailed between Chateworth and Northridge, leading sulphuric acid Incapacitated hospital Hospital at Sylmar has no power, no functioning laboratories, no X-ray equipment, no pharmacy, and almost no food Major earthquakes in California Source: News reports; research by Pat Carr; Associated Press Oct. 17, 1989: A quake of 7.1 magnitude in the San Francisco area kills 63 people. Jan. 24, 1800: 5 a趴 eight at of San Francisco damages a nuclear weapons laboratory. Feb. 9, 1971: A 6.5 quake in the San Fernando Valley leaves 65 people dead. March 10, 1933: A 6.3 quake in Long Beach kills 11.5 people. CALIFORNIA Ron Coddington and Jeff Dionise/ KNIGHT RIDDER-TRIBUNE Residents reeling from fire, aftershocks The Associated Press According to CNN early this morning, at least 32 people were killed, 14 in the apartment building where more victims were believed to be trapped in the rubble. LOS ANGELES — Body after body was pulled from a crumpled apartment complex yesterday after an earthquake that snapped freeways like matchsticks, left hundreds of thousands without power and water and turned the nation's busiest highway network into a commuter's nightmare. The quake hit at 6:31 a.m. CST, shattering the sleeping suburbs of the sprawling San Fernando Valley, 20 miles northwest of downtown Los Angeles. Freeway traffic was minimal in the pre-dawn hours on the holiday honoring the late Martin Luther King Jr. The only traffic fatality was a motorcycle policeman who rode off a fractured freeway as he drove to work. Measuring 6.6 on the Richter scale, the quake was felt from San Diego 125 miles to the south, to Las Vegas 275 miles to the northeast. Telephone service was erratic as long-distance phone companies routed calls away from the region to prevent communication gridlock. By yesterday evening, at least 680,000 customers were still without power in Los Angeles County, and 200,000 were without water, officials said. Valley residents were able to obtain water from trucks at area high schools. Though the bulk of structural damage was centered in the valley, power was disrupted as far away as Canada, and traffic lights were knocked out in downtown Los Angeles as well as in the valley. By sunrise, dozens of homes had been lost to fires that broke out on cracked and flooded streets. By sunset, scores of aftershocks, including one with a magnitude of 5.7, had left residents fearful for their homes. HOW YOU CAN HELP The American Red Cross is taking monetary donations to help earthquake victims. Students interested in donating should contact the Red Cross at 2120 W. 25th St., suite B, or at 843-3550. A freight train carrying sulfuric acid was derailed, and Los Angeles International Airport closed briefly. About 700 patients were transferred from quake-damaged hospitals. About a dozen hospitals sustained minor damages and could not accept new patients, said Cindy Shamrock of the state Office of Emergency Services. Less than 10 hours after the earthquake, President Clinton declared Southern California a disaster area, making residents eligible for federal aid. "We intend to do everything we possibly can to help the people of Los Angeles and Southern California to deal with the earthquake and its aftermath," Clinton said in Washington, D.C. Gov. Pete Wilson and Mayor Richard Riordan declared emergencies. Riordan instituted a dusk-to-dawn curfew in Los Angeles to protect "life and property." California National Guard troops were sent in, and the state emergency agency sent about 300 search-and-rescue teams. At least 14 people were killed when an apartment building collapsed in Northridge. The building housed mostly students from nearby California State University-Northridge. Thousands were treated for injuries. In Los Angeles, Cedars Sinai Medical Center was receiving "a tidal wave of walking wounded," spokesman Ron Wise said. Five interstates and three state highways were closed at several points after the quake. Fires fed by gas and oil main ruptures destroyed other homes in the valley. Concrete the size of bowling balls fell from overpasses onto area freeways and streets. 2 Tuesday. Januarv 18. 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN MAZZIOS PIZZA Buffet Hours $2.99 lunch buffet 2630 Iowa 11:00-1:30 (add .70 forsalad) 843-1474 The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-840) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, KA 6045. AIM HIGH $2000.00 SCHOLARSHIP If you have a GPA of 2.5 or higher and are a full time student, you can qualify for an Air Force ROTC scholarship. In addition, you will receive $100.00 each academic month for our last two years of college. This scholarship is available to ANY ACADEMIC MAJOR. The deadline to apply for the fall 1994 semester is rapidly approaching. For more information on this exciting opportunity talk to Captain Brad Gentry or Captain Bob Wicks at 864-4676. ON CAMPUS AIR FORCE ROTC LesBiGaySOK encourages anyone who is lesbian, gay, bisexual or unsure to call Headquarters at 864-5285 or KU Info at 864-3506 about confidential meetings. Applications for the undergraduate National Security Education Program (NSEP) grants have arrived. For students who want to study abroad, $8,000 per semester is available. Applications are available at the Office of Study Abroad, 203 Lippincott Hall. For more information, call Mary Elizabeth Debicki at 864-3742. OAKS — Non-Traditional Students Organization will have a brown bag lunch from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. today at the Rock Chalk Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Gerry Vernon at 864-7317. The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an informational meeting for students interested in studying in French-speaking countries at 4 p.m. today in 4049 Wesco Hall. For more information, call the office at 864-3742. KU Karate Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Brad Bernet at 832-2157. Amnesty International will meet at 6 p.m. today at Alcove A in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Danelle Myron at 842-5407. "Windblown," the student organization of the Mustard Seed Christian Fellowship, will meet at 7:30 tonight at Alcove F in the Kansas Union for worship, bible study, prayer and fellowship. For more information, call Hugh at 841-2647. Inspirational Gospel Voices will meet at 6 p.m. today in 328 KU Triathlon and Swim Club will meet at 7:30 tonight in Robin- son Center. For more information, call Sean Roland at 865-2731. Original Klub of KU Looney Tunes (OKKULT) will meet at 7:30 tonight at Alcove G in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Julie Dublinski at 864-1233. KU Fencing Club will meet at 7:30 tonight in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Jen Snyder at 841-6445. Native American Student Association will meet at 7 tonight in 3012 Haworth Hall. For more information, call M.C. Baldwin at 842-1174 or Johnne Young at 864-4351. KU College Republicans will host a meeting with U.S. Representative Jan Meyers at 7:30 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Leigh Smith at 832-8566. Christian campus ministries will sponsor Taize Prayer at 8:30 tonight in Danforth Chapel. For more information, call Leah Peck at 841-8912. Murphy Hall. For more information, call Kim at 748-3819. Buy 1 Large PYRAMID PIZZA With two toppings for only $7.99 and get 1 liter of pop for no buck$ no buck$ no buck$ TERRIFIC TUESDAY PYRAMID 842-3232 CARRY OUT, DELIVERY OF EAT AT THE WHEEL ONLY GOOD WITH THIS COUPON Kansan Card offer good carry out only. WEATHER Omaha: 1'/-12' Kansas City: 7'/-13' LAWRENCE: 8'/-11' St. Louis: 6'/-5' Wichita: 18'/1' Minneapolis: -14'/-20' Phoenix: 76'/50' Salt Lake City: 45'/24' Seattle: 47'/39' TODAY Tomorrow Sunday Partly cloudy, Wind chills from -15' to -25' F High: 8' Low: -11' Partly cloudy High: 25' Low: 10' Sunny and warmer High: 33' Low: 19' Source: Eric Renner, KU Weather Service; 884-3300 Sunny ON THE RECORD 623 Vermont, Lawrence police reported. A suspect has been arrested. A KU student reported the theft of two sweatshirts, five pairs of blue jeans and one shirt, valued together at $615, on Wednesday in the 1300 block of West 24th Street, Lawrence police reported. A Lawrence woman reported a terrorist threat and aggravated assault Sunday in the 600 block of Kentucky Court, Lawrence police reported. A KU student was robbed of his wallet Friday in an alley outside of Rick's neighborhood Bar & Grill. Daily Kansan Classified Ads Get Results! Night Through July 31, 1994 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN C A R D Valid Through July 31, 1994 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN C A R D That's right...this is one card you don't want to leave at home when you go not in Lawrence. This is the first time such a valuable product has been offered to the KU Community. With the Kansan Card, you get a listing of businesses and their exclusive Don't leave home without it... - Incredible discounts 20% Off any regular priced item - Buy one get one free Free medium beverage or fries - Free appetizer w/purchase of entree Kansas Cards may be purchased at the Kansas Business office; KU Booksstore, Kansas and Burge Unions; University Book Shop and Jayhawk Bookstore for only $1.00! offers to cardholders. The Kansas Card exists for no other reason than to SAVE YOU MONEY!!! The card offers you great discounts on car repairs, clothing, food and much more. And better yet, the card is valid at other participating universities across the nation.Don't get caught in Lawrence or another participating university without the card...it's an expensive world out there and the Kansan Card is your only weapon against high prices. Just remember.. Don't Leave Home Without It! Don't Leave Home Without It! BUM SMOK'N DEALS! • FREE Delivery • 10% off KU Catering • Buffet - Tuesday, Thursday & Sundays 841-SMOK(E) THE BUM STEER THE BUM STEER THE BUM STEER 711 W.23rd Malls Shopping Center MCAT Are you prepared? We are. -SMALL CLASSES GROUPED BY TEST-TAKING ABILITY - GUARANTEED SCORE IMPROVEMENTS -VALUABLE TEST-TAKING TECHNIQUES COMBINED WITH A THOROUGH REVIEW OF THE CONCEPTS TESTED ON THE MCAT BEGIN PREPARING NOW!! Register TODAY and get FREE MCAT Review software. Classes are forming now for the April exam. THE PRINCETON REVIEW Questions? Please call our office at (800) 865-7737 4 CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Tuesday, January 18, 1993 3 Cold snap brings shivers illness, fears of frostbite By Ashley Schultz Kansan staff writer Baby, it's cold outside. Mike Summers, Dodge City graduate student, didn't get much pity from his peers Friday, when windchills made the morning low of 13 degrees feel like 22 degrees below zero. "Yeah right," Summers said. "No way, no pity." Summers issues tickets for the Parking Department. He worked from 7:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Friday. He did not check the forecast before work and forgot his hat. "The wind is the kicker," Summers said. The wind is the kicker, Sunnivers said. The air mass that swept over Lawrence Jan. 10 is a very strong arctic outbreak, said Paul Castleberry of the KU Weather Service. A morning low of 11 degrees below zero was forecast for today, with a high of 8 degrees. The extremities of the body, where circulation is not as strong, are the areas most susceptible to frostbite, said Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins Health Center. Students are particularly at-risk when they have been drinking alcohol. The biggest source of heat loss is breathing cold air in and warm air out, Yockey said. Amy Solt/KANBAN "The air you breathe in—when it reaches the bottom of your lungs—has to be body temperature," he said. "When you breathe through your nose, your nose acts like a radiator and warms that air up to body temperature, which is 98.6. But if you breathe through your mouth, you bypass that warming mechanism, and then you lose body heat through your trachea." I Breathing in this cold air does not cause colds. Yockey said. "But getting cold stresses your body's immune system," Yockey said. People generate heat when they are out in the cold with the intense muscle contractions involved in shivering. Yockey said. Mount Oread may cause KU students to shiver more than other Lawrence residents, said Castleberry, a Lake Charles, La., graduate student and teaching assistant in the department of atmospheric science. "Cold air is heavier than warm air," he said. "Up there on top of Mount Oread, you have all the cold air pooling, and then it Braving the cold to get good seats for the Kansas-Kansas State game, Krista and Karie Shipley, Lenexa freshmen, stand in line outside Allen Field House. starts going down the Hill. Sharon England, manager of Sunflower, 804 Massachusetts St., said a nylon outer shell would take care of students trekking up the Hill to class. 'Hawks fans' faces freeze before basketball game Tom Spencer, Dodge City senior, wore tights to the basketball game against Kansas State last night. By Ashley Schultz Kansan staff writer He began his shift for the parking department at noon. By 7:15 p.m., he was feeling no pain and had no numbness, but the four layers of clothes he wore were not very comfortable. Spencer wore a stocking hat under the hood of his sweat jacket. Over the sweat jacket, he wore an army surplus jacket, and under it he wore two thermal shirts and a turtleneck. His legs were protected by a pair of pants, a pair of sweats, a pair of thermals and the pair of tights. He wore two pairs of socks under his combat boots. "When it gets too bad, we back to the car for a break." Soencer said. "We use the heater." The tip-off temperature was 8 degrees outside but windchills made it feel like zero degrees, according to the KU Weather Service. Brian Hensyl, Topeka sophomore, was turned away from Allen Field House the first time he went because he didn't have a spring semester enrollment sticker on his KUID. The second time he came clutching his student schedule in his gloved hand. Hensyl said his mother probably would have approved of the way he dressed for the cold. She bought most of this for me," he said. "I hope she would, except she would probably want me to wear a stocking cap." Journalist to address hate speech Kansan staff report Paul McMasters, vice president of the Freedom Forum and executive director of the Freedom Forum First Amendment Center at Vanderbilt University, will speak at 5 p.m. today in 100 Staffer-Flint Hall. McMasters, who also is the national president of the Society of Professional Journalists, will talk about hate-speech codes and the First Amendment on college campuses. McMasters joined The Freedom Forum, a non-partisan, financially independent foundation dedicated to free speech and free press, in 1992 after a 31-year career in daily journalism. He has worked as the associate editor of USA TODAY's editorial page and is a member of the American Society of Newspaper Editors' Freedom of Information Committee. I AM SAD. I AM FEARFULLY I AM SAFE. I AM SAFE FOR MY DREAMS. I AM SAFE FOR MY LIFE. I AM SAFE FOR MY CHILDREN. I AM SAFE FOR MY GOD. I AM SAFE FOR MY LOVE. I AM SAFE FOR MY HEALTH. I AM SAFE FOR MY WORLD. I AM SAFE FOR MY RIGHTS. I AM SAFE FOR MY HAPPINESS. I AM SAFE FOR MY SUCCESS. I AM SAFE FOR MY JOY. I AM SAFE FOR MY SUCCESS. I AM SAFE FOR MY HAPPINESS. I AM SAFE FOR MY SUCCESS. I AM SAFE FOR MY JOY. I AM SAFE FOR MY SUCCESS. I AM SAFE FOR MY HAPPINESS. I AM SAFE FOR MY SUCCESS. I AM SAFE FOR MY JOY. I AM SAFE FOR MY SUCCESS. Speakers urge activism, education Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. Lee Kathryn Counts places the M.L. K. Community Youth Choir at Lawrence High School, 1901 Louisiana. The Gospel musical took place Sunday evening and was part of Lawrence's Martin Luther King Jr. day celebrations. Jennie Zeiner / KANSAN African Americans encouraged to shed role of society's victim By Jennifer Freund In the spirit of Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., both Tony Brown and Rev. Frederick G. Sampson appealed to African Americans to take an active role in improving their community. "Blacks who have made a religion of being victims will have to find a new religion," Brown said. "Racism is not fair, but so what? When it gets cold it's not fair. You get a coat." Brown spoke to an audience of nearly 300 Saturday at the Kansas Union Ballroom. The speech was part of the Ninth Annual King Holiday Celebrations presented by the Ecumenical Fellowship. Brown is the host of "Tony Brown's Journal," which airs on PBS. Brown told African Americans not to view themselves as victims, but to educate and arm themselves both economically and spiritually. He pointed out that African Americans spend only 6.6 percent of their income among themselves. "We can't blame 100 percent of our problems on whites when 90 percent of our money goes to whites," Brown said. Brown said education also was essential for self-empowerment. While Asian Americans were getting degrees in chemistry and physics, only a small number of African Americans obtained doctorate degrees in the natural sciences, he said. To solve the problems of violence and the spiritual deterioration of the African-American community, Brown called on ministers to lead the way in the healing process. Churches must lead in morality and give vision and spiritual guidance, he said. Ministers must tell their congregations to avoid promiscuity and the self-hatred found in music like gangsta rap. Two-thirds of African Americans go to church. Monique Garcia, Wichita senior, said she enjoyed Brown's speech. "It pertained to all minority groups," she said. "It's all of our responsibilities to take constructive steps and to be more aware. We can't feel sorry for those who cry victim anymore." If African Americans do not turn to God to end the violence on the streets of America they may succeed in harming their community, Sampson said. Rev. Sampson, who spoke to more than 1,000 people at a commemorative service yesterday at the Lied Center, lectured on leading people away from victimization. Sampson is pastor of the Tabernacle Missionary Baptist Church in Detroit. "Today we're more afraid of our young people than the grandparents were of the KKK," he said. Sampson encouraged African Americans to teach children values in the home before they reached school age. "Parents need to teach their child who he is, so that he will not go around acting the fool," he said. Three important steps would help African Americans realize King's dream, Sampson said. African Americans must clear their history, claim their history and creatively confront chaos. "We will not be victimized," Sampson said. "We will be victors in the midst of a dying world." The biggest savings of the heating season are here now! Every Vermont Castings stove, fireplace or fireplace insert is on sale now, with savings up to $400. Wood, gas and pellet burning models available, and they install almost anywhere in the home! But hurry, sale ends February 5! A 1033 VEBMCNT, LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 824 591 787 SAVE $100-$400! SPA, POOL & FIRESIDE 913-841-7787 "90 Days Same As Cash" Vermont Castings More Than Heat Warmth 66 66 66 66 66 66 66 66 66 66 66 THE HARBOURLIGHTS Now a full service bar after 57 years of downtown tradition 1031 Massachusetts Downtown Off Mass., but not out of sight SPECTRUM OPTICAL SPECTRUM OPTICAL ALL PRESCRIPTION EYEWEAR FREE ADJUSTMENTS Not valid in conjunction with other coupons. Good on the January 31, 1984 date. Save big on designer fashion eyewear. High turnout, low temps mark KKK rally in Topeka Jaduren, Logo, Calvin Klein, Guess, Geoffrey Been Bru Tower, and many others! Two people sought treatment for problems caused by Saturday's cold temperatures while a diabetic required an ambulance, said Terry Maple, public information director for the Kansas Highway Patrol. Roy Tower, and many others! By Denise Nell Kansan staff writer Ponce made no arrests but they did intervene in two incidents: a man trying to climb the six-foot fence police set up to keep counter-protesters away from the KKK and an argument between two people in the crowd, which police broke up immediately. Two hours earlier, King supporters held a rally on the south Capitol steps. Police used metal detectors to check each of the nearly 300 people in the crowd as they entered the fenced-off area. Among the speakers at the King rally were Elma Broadfoot, mayor of Wichita, and Attorney General Bob Stephen. C.E. "Sonny" Scroggins, one of the organizers of the rally, also spoke. He encouraged the crowd to unite against racism. Meneley said at past KKK demonstrations, violence broke out at the end of the rally when the gathering crowds reached the members. Police estimated that a crowd of 400 to 500 people stood behind the fences, holding signs and shouting at the nearly 25 Klansmen who stood on the north steps of the Capitol. The Klansmen held a single Christian flag along with many Confederate and American flags. They demanded that the FBI open to the public 845 records concerning King. The records now are sealed until 2027. 4 East 7th (Downtown • Lawrence, 841-1113) Medical emergencies outnumbered incidents of people causing trouble at the Ku Klux Klan's Saturday protest of the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday at the Capitol in Topeka, police said. The Klansmen were escorted through an underground tunnel to the Capitol for the rally. When the rally was over, they followed the same procedure and were escorted away from the Capitol. This route kept the Klansmen out of contact with protesters. ome in and register for a free pair of euglasses 4 East 10th (Mountain) Avenue, B6A1113 "We wouldn't be here if we didn't think we could get new members," he said. 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 Michael Lowe, the grand dragon of the Texas KKK, spoke to reporters before the protest began. Lowe said the KKK had intended to recruit new members at the rallies it held in eight cities over the weekend. The security police provided for the Klansmen also helped maintain peace. Meneley said. "It's better to be over-prepared than under-prepared," said Dave Meneley, sheriff of Shawnee County. "I think the good Lord helped us today with the cold weather. It kept the crowds down." About 330 officers from the highway patrol, Topeka police and Shawnee County sheriff's office were on hand at the event. Leaders of all three organizations said they sent many of their units home early because they were not needed. "Our purpose here is not to protest the Klan, but the Klan mentality," Scroggins said. "All of us must be courageous witnesses and come forward and speak and do some problem solving." layhawk Bookstore "Your Book Professionals" "At the top of Naismith Hill" Hrs: 8-7 M-th., 8-5 Fri., 9-5 Sat, 12-4 Sun. 843-3826 --- FUTON • SALE Cheapy Sleepy frame & foam-core futon starting at $119 People Sleeper frame in twin size $170 Metro Light & foam-core futon full size $259 Our lower cost futons are foam core, not all cotton like most others available! generic futons twin 95 full 120 queen 135 Futon manufacturers since 1982 Our premium futon mattresses are on sale 15% off! Five styles and two thicknesses to choose from BLUE HERON 937 Mass. St., Lawrence, KS. (913) 841-9443 S170 --- --- 4 Tuesday, January 18, 1994 OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN A VIEWPOINT Finney's linking of issues inappropriate strategy Political blackmail is once again upon us. The issue this time is Gov. Joan Finney's attempt to link the entrance of Washburn University into the Board of Regents with the Partnership for Excellence. Finney has said that the two plans are a package, and she will veto Washburn's entry into the Regents system if the Partnership doesn't pass. Because of Finney's political maneuverings, Washburn may become an unfortunate victim. The plans are independent of one another. Washburn's entrance into the Board of Regents gives the school increased state funding. The Partnership raises faculty salaries at the Regents schools, partially through a tuition increase. If passed, the Partnership will begin next the next fiscal year. But Washburn's entry into the Regents system will not be completed until 1997, further separating the plans. Support for Washburn's entry into the Board of Regents is strong. The Partnership for Excellence, by contrast, is in serious jeopardy. Linking the two plans will force those legislators who support one plan and oppose the other to compromise their positions. A better strategy would be to sell the two plans based on their own merits. This would allow legislators the opportunity to vote on the plans individually. COLLEEN McCAIN AND NATHAN OLSON FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD Cases of harassment call for clear-cut policy Swarthmore College has done everyone a disservice in its mishandling of a recent sexual harassment case. Last fall, Ewart Yearwood, a student at the suburban Philadelphia college, was accused of harassment by a female classmate, Alexis Clinansmith. After Yearwood violated an agreement to stay at least 40 feet away from Clinansmith, Swarthmore attempted to suspend him. When he threatened to sue, the college cut a deal with Yearwood. Swarthmore agreed to pay Yearwood's tuition and book and transportation costs for this semester at the college of his choice — if he would attend college somewhere else. Swarthmore claims credit for sending the message that "intimidation is not to be tolerated at Swarthmore College." But the message sent is that, in the absence of any ethical convictions, Swarthmore is primarily interested in appeasing and silencing potentially expensive troublemakers. Swarthmore should stand behind its policies. If Yearwood's behavior violates those policies, he should be appropriately punished. If the college decides it is not its place to regulate such behavior, he should be left alone. It is difficult to argue that this was much of a victory for Clinanssmith, whose allegations were completely undermined by the college's concessions to Yearwood. She may be immediately gratified that Yearwood is absent for the time being, but justice has not been served. In fact, this represents a step backward for the issue of sexual harassment. Almost any decision on Swarthmore's part would have been preferable to this ridiculous payoff. MARGARET BECK FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD KANSAN STAFF BEN GROVE, Editor BEN GROVE, Editor LISA COSMILLO, Managing editor TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser BILL SKEET. Systems coordinator Editom Assistant Managing Editor...Dan England Assistant to the editor...J. R. Clairborne News...Kristi Fogler, Katie Greenwald, Todd Selfert Editorial...Colleen McCain Nathan Gloon Campus...Jesa DeVonn Sports...David Dorsey Photo...Doug Hesse Features...Sara Beaner* JUSTIN GARBERG Business manager JENNIFER BLOWEY Retail sales manager JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser Business Staff Campus sales mgr...Jason Eberly Regional sales mgr...Troy Tawry National & Co-op sales mgr...Robin Kring Special Section mgr...Shelley McConnell Production mgrs...Laure Guth Gretchen Kootenhoerrlich Marketing director...Shannon Reilly Creative director...John Canton Classified mgr...Kelly Connelye Teareshire mgr...Wing Chan 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 Alabama have a special honorary status. 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 Stauffer-Fint Hall. Guest columna should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed. America must act before '1984' becomes political reality of 1994 I love my country. I fear my government. So read a bumper sticker I spotted on a car outside The Bottleneck not long ago. Ajudge took a child from his mother because the mother is a lesbian. The federal government attacked the home of the Branch Davidians near Waco, Texas. The state holds out its loving cup, singing power to the people, but their power's corrupt. So go the lyrics to a song, "In for the Kill," on Winger's new album. COLUMNIST There is a growing realization that we should fear an omnipotent government. Our government, more of a levianthan every day, is oppressing and terrorizing us. Happy New Year, and welcome to 1983. COLUMNIST ALLEN TIFFAN I say 1983 because a little time remains. Fortunately, there exists a slim possibility that we can stop the expansion of the government and the erosion of our rights. Yes, I am idealistic, but I won't compromise my beliefs. There is still time for us — I am including you — to slow the emergence of a totalitarian American state. It is going to take some work, however. You are going to have to learn how to think critically. In short, if we continue to let others do our thinking for us and if we continue to believe the unprincipled "leaders" of our day, tomorrow will dawn dark and gloomy when we sit in dungeons built with our labor. an every day and to suggest some ways in which we can regain our freedom. There is little new that I can say to the horrors of the huge, modern, monstrously evil state. George Orwell ("1984"), Ayn Rand ("Atlas Shrugged"), Aldous Huxley ("Brave New World"), Alexander Solzhenitsyn ("The Gulag Archipelago") and many other writers have chronicled and anticipated the innumerable evils of oppression. I will use this column to illustrate that our government is becoming more totalitarian. I see little help coming from America's two largest and most entrenched political parties. For one thing, there is little difference between the Democrats/liberals and Republican/conservatives. I know of no candidates or proponents of these country-club affiliates whose actions show anything except an unquenchable desire to expand their own power. Conservatives, in particular, seem sanctimonious to me. As they bemoan the liberals' rush to make the United States a socialist prison, which is a redundant description because socialist states are prisons, the conservatives have been no less willing to deny our rights. So what should an idealist do? We can do something to fight back. When people tell us the state knows more about how to run our lives than we do, we must make them prove it. And if they can't, we must publicize it. We must tell our friends and neighbors that we can think for ourselves, that we are mature enough to take responsibility for our actions. Then we must write our elected representatives and tell them that we are not interested in their totalitarian, socialist state. the penultimate sentence of Wilhelm von Humbolt's classic book, "The Limits of State Action," summarizes his feelings: "I have felt myself animated throughout with a sense of the deepest respect for the inherent dignity of human nature, and for freedom, which alone befits that dignity. I, too, feel such excitement and optimism when I speak about human rights." Ultimately, oppressive states will fail because of their own "inherent" contradictions. "I do not wish to wait, however. I want to live freely now. Like you, I can make my own decisions about how I live my life, and I can take responsibility for my actions. I love my country, but I am beginning to fear my government. Now is the time to start the long process of changing our government into one that protects, rather than infringes on, our freedoms. Allen Tiffany is a Lawrence graduate stu- dent in English. MARX LENIN ZHIRINOVSKY HOOD UPK 94 Love stranded on island Recently, my wife and I decided to put some "zing" back into our marriage by going to a "couples only" resort. This is a popular new type of resort that does not allow you to bring your children, the theory being that it is difficult for you and your spousal unit to get into a romantic mood if one of you has to pause every 45 seconds to shout, "JASON! I TOLD YOU NOT TO SQUIRT SUN BLOCK INTO ASHLEY'S EAR!" The resort we went to is in St. Lucia, a small and lovely island nation way out in the Caribbean, not far from Grenada, which is the island that Ronald Reagan rescued from the Communist Menace. Frankly, I am amazed that the Communist Menace was a problem in that area because to get there you have to spend all day scrunched up in various airplanes. I would have thought that by the time the Communist Menace finally arrived and located its luggage, all it would have wanted to do was lie down and enjoy a refreshing popular local beverage consisting of rum mixed with rum. COLUMNIST DAVE BARRY That's what we wanted to do when we got to St. Lucia, but we had to spend the first hour and a half riding in a small, couple-filled van from one end of the island to the other on the main road, which apparently also doubles as a strip mine. Technically, you're supposed to drive on the left-hand side in St. Lucia, but the drivers swerve all over the place to avoid the holes, which means that sometimes both your vehicle and an oncoming vehicle are in the same lane. At one point — I am not making this up — our van was driving down the middle of the road, and oncoming traffic was passing us ON BOTH SIDES. This occurred when we were making our way through a traffic jam caused by the largest banana spill I have ever seen. This was on a steep hill, where a massive load of bananas had slid off a truck, thus forming a tremendous natural defense in case the Communist Menace ever comes back to the area with tanks." (Drive down that hill, Comrade." "OK! Here we goooOOOONOOOO...") Eventually we got to our resort. It is what the travel industry calls an "allinclusive" resort, which means that you pay a flat amount of money each day, and the resort sets out large amounts of food, and you try to include it all in your body. "Hey, I PAID for this food," is what you are constantly telling yourself, to justify the fact that you are already mounding your plate with lunch even though you have not, technically, finished chewing your breakfast. The food was served on a veranda next to a lovely, palm-fringed beach, so at every meal we enjoyed a breathtaking view of various guys' armpits. A lot of guys, when they are on vacation in a tropical climate, wear tank-style tops, so that if you happen to glance up from your food mound just as a guy at the next table raises his arm to signal the waiter for another rum and rum, you find yourself staring into his hairy armpit, hovering in front of you like some hideous mutant alien space rodent. I think there should be a "No Armpits" section. But getting back to our all-inclusive resort. For those brief interludes when we were not eating, we were encouraged to engage in a constant barrage of organized fun activities such as volleyball, water polo, sailing, hiking, sightseeing, windsurfing, snorkeling, scuba-diving, ball-hitting and bun-flexing. At night there were talent shows, newlywed games, group singing, movie-showing, limb-dancing and of course more food-eating. This level of fun takes a physical toll. If you are a middle-aged person such as myself, by the end of just one day, your marriage has about as much zing as a severely over-steamed carrot, if you get my drift. To avoid total exhaustion, we let the resort compound several times. On one day we courageously rented a car and drove around with another couple, Eileen and Steve. Steve likes to fish, a fact that produced the following actual dialogue: EILEEN (looking at a guidebook Steve, it says here that in this town, you can sometimes see local fisher- men gut their catch on the beach! STEVEN YOUSS! We drove to a village called Canaries, where we decided to stop, primarily because our route was blocked by a highway construction crew, probably constructing new holes in the road. We got out, went into a local establishment and purchased some beers from a bartender who was maybe 10 years old. Nearby, three elderly people, two men and a woman, were sitting by the side of the road, passing a bottle around. The woman laughed, leaned way back, and opened her mouth wide. ULIUUVE, she sang, is a MANY SPLENDORED thing... The people in Canaries seemed very relaxed, despite the fact that they were not, technically, on vacation. I'm not sure what their secret is. Maybe it's an all-inclusive village. Dave Barry is a syndicated columnist for the Miami Herald. NATIONAL PERSPECTIVE Marijuana as medicine is decision for doctors A Clinton administration spokesman said the Public Health Service is taking another look at its ban on marijuana for medical use. The review — and reversal of the present policy — is long overdue. From 1978 until 1992, Uncle Sam allowed certain patients to apply to the Food and Drug Administration for permission to use marijuana to ease their pain and suffering. The Food and Drug Administration ought not be deciding which patients should be allowed to use marijuana for medicinal purposes; the patients' doctors are best qualified to decide that. There's no evidence that marijuana is a cure for cancer or AIDS and no one is promoting it as such. But there is evidence that it has a place Three years ago, a survey of cancer specialists found that more than half of them agreed that marijuana should be legalized for medical use. in the doctors' arsenal of drugs to alleviate their patients' discomfort Legalizing marijuana for medical uses under the same prescription strictures that govern other, more powerful medications, is a sensible course. The Sun-Herald Biloxi, Miss UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Tuesday, January 18, 1994 5 Administrators propose campus improvements By Jamie Munn Kansan staff writer A grassy lane in place of Jayhawk Boulevard, renovated buildings, the latest in technology and increased child and elder care facilities could all be part of KU in the near future. These are just some of the proposals now being discussed for development by the University's governance committee. Eventually these ideas, proposed by Executive Vice Chancellor Ed Meyen and other administrators, will be reviewed by a long-range planning committee. These plans then will be developed into a campus master plan for the next 20 years. "We're looking to the future." Meyen said. "I am very pleased with the committee's progress and confident about it." The long-range committee's focus will be a broad look at campus improvements, Meyen said. "The University is going to be here for a long time." he said. For example, Meyen said limiting Jayhawk Boulevard to pedestrians only would help deal with the increased traffic of students, staff, faculty and visitors. "With the closing of Jayhawk Boulevard, we'd be trying to preserve the campus atmosphere as it is being expanded," he said. He also said the committee would work on rerouting traffic and consider allowing limited access to campus buses. University architect Allen Wiechert said one concern of the plan was keeping service access open to Strong Hall and Bailey Hall. Keeping a route open for fire protection of those buildings also would be a problem, he said. Another proposal, environmental preservation, would include everything from the Campanile to shrubs to campus lighting. Meyen said. "Basically, it's the aesthetics of the campus," he said. A task force is reviewing child and elder care on campus, and Meyen said he expected a report from it soon. Meyen said the plan also would allow for expanded student fees to pay for renovation and improvements in technology. "As the technology is available, we want to have the infrastructure to accommodate it." he said. Enrollment limitations are a part of the plan. Meyen said he wanted to allow for reasonable growth in enrollment, but he was concerned that University resources would not parallel student expansion. Bob Friedu, head of the Senate Executive Council, said SenEx supported some of the plans but not those for special fees and building funding. Friauf said there were already special fees to pay for faculty salaries, new equipment and library enhancements in the engineering and law schools. "We really hate to see this proliferate," he said. "But being in the physics department, I know the abysmal equipment problems." However, Friauf said he had no specific information about which departments might have to initiate the special fees. One proposal SenEx endorsed heavily was the protection of the campus environment, and this approval will be recommended to the long-term committee in the spring. Wiechert said the changes would depend on the availability of funds and the priority of other projects, such as remodeling and renovation. Although state funding for capital projects is scarce, money for the improvements could come from federal funds or other sources, he said. Even when exact solutions to these problems are found, the construction process could take some time. Wiechert said. "They could be completed within a couple of years if the all the money is in order." he said. The final version of the 20-year plan isn't expected until 1995. KU's master plan Proposals for campus improvements presented by Executive Vice Chancellor Ed Meyen include: limiting undergraduate enrollment increases at the Lawrence campus to 10 percent during the next 10 years. increasing use of computers for instruction and research. n diversifying the student body in age, career objectives, ethnic origins and instructional needs closing Jayhawk Boulevard to all but pedestrian traffic and/or converting the street to a grassy area. n initiating special fees to compensate for increasing costs of degree program enhancements, including faculty and staff costs. - increasing child and elder care services. - requiring departments to identify funding sources for new building construction or renovations. protecting the campus environment from the effects of weather and campus expansion. Source: Executive Vice Chancellor Ed Meyen KANSAN Improvement proposals prompt varied reactions Reactions to campus improvements presented by Executive Vice Chancellor Ed Meyen are as varied as the different proposals. Increased child and elder care and possibly closing Jayhawk Boulevard to traffic are among the top concerns of KU's students, staff and faculty. By Jamie Mun Kansan staff writer James Sherman, head of the human development and family life department, said that current child care services were able to accommodate some of the needs of students, faculty and staff but that those demands were growing. "Obviously there are additional needs that need to be worked out over the next couple of years," Sherman said. KU has no services for elder care right now, Sherman said. However, with increased medical care and longer life spans, older adults will need more support. "It's not clear where all that's going to be coming from," he said. "Family members are accepting more responsibility, and this will result in better care of parents." Another proposed improvement, closing Jayhawk Boulevard, received mixed reviews from those who use it. University architect Allen Wiechett said limiting access to Jayhawk Boulevard to only pedestrians, much less converting it to a grassy area, would take a lot of planning. The first investment in the change would have to be made in traffic routing. One alternative road could be Memorial Drive, Wiechert said. Ernst Dick, professor of Germanic languages and literature, said he was in favor of the proposed changes for Jayhawk Boulevard. He said he thought the amount of pollution and noise was incredible. "But right now, it's not designed for that," he said. "I wish they would close it up and stop all this traffic and pollution." Dick said. "Everybody can walk for two minutes." Michael Shaw, professor of classics, said that he had tried to bring classes outside to do poetry readings but that distractions had made it difficult. "You don't realize how noisy it is," he said. However, he said closing the street would cause problems for people who were unable to walk from farther down Mount Oread. People who use the street to drop off children or family members also would be affected, he said. "It would be a very pleasant place with pedestrian mall." Shaw said. "But these are problems that are not easily solved." Graduate teaching assistant David Becker said he liked being able to be dropped off at Watson library by a friend, and the only things on Jayhawk Boulevard that annoyed him were the buses. "They are so noisy, and they pump out all that exhaust," Becker said. Max Sutton, professor of English, said he would be in favor of closing the street to outside traffic, but that the change should be gradual. "It's nice to be let off," Sutton said. "But a mall would be a beautiful idea." JAYHAWK SPIRIT JAYHAWK 20% SPIRIT OFF storewide sale Some item in stock include: Check out our back-to-school sale! Some items in stock include: KU Gifts T-Shirts Jackets Knit & Shirts Sweatshirts Lined Caps Offer good only from Jan. 11 - 18 935 Massachusetts Open Mon.-Sat. 9:30-5:30 Thu. until 8:00; Sun. Noon-5:00 Since WATKINS 1907 "We Care For KU" Busy schedule? Watkins Pharmacy Is Conveniently Open TII 9 p.m. Monday-Thursday. Pharmacy Hours Monday-Thursday 8 a.m.-9 p.m. Friday 8 a.m.-6 p.m. Saturday 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Sunday 11 a.m.-3 p.m. STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES 864-9500 Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students Finding a Course for Your Spring Schedule Just Got Easier ... ... Earn University of Kansas Credit through Independent Study. Stop by Independent Study Student Services, Continuing Education Building Annex A, Just north of the Student Union for a catalog or call 864-4440 for information. 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Confidential Affordable Free pregnancy tests Birth control Sliding fee scale STD screening Planned Parenthood Qualityreproductive health care for men and women Now Open in Lawrence 1420C Kasold Drive (Orchards Corners) 832-0281 PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS 842-1212 1601 W.23rd Southern Hills Center "NO COUPON" SPECIALS EVERYDAY TWO-FERS 2-PIZZAS 2-TOPPINGS 2-COKES $900 PRIMETIME 3-PIZZAS 1-TOPPING 4-COKES $11^{50} PARTY "10" 10-PIZZAS 1-TOPPING CARRY OUT 1-PIZZA 1-TOPPING 1-COKE $350 $30^{00} DELIVERY HOURS MON-THURS 11 AM-2 AM FRI-SAT 11 AM-3 AM SUN 11 AM-1 AM FRESHMEN SOPHOMORES JUNIORS Train to be a Marine Corps Officer while you're still a full-time student. Gain management experience and be guaranteed a position as a pilot or lawyer. EAGLE Qualify for the GI Bill and graduate degree programs for advanced study. 青 NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN U.S. MARINE CORPS Be commissioned as a second lieutenant after graduation at a starting salary of $24,680 to $28,620. Receive $100 a month while in school and $1,650 to $2,750 during summer training. C Hours later, Kerrigan skated publicy for the first time since the Jan. 6 clubbing in Detroit. Kerrigan practiced for one hour at a rink in her hometown of Stoneham, Mass. NO OBLIGATION EXCEPT FOR SUMMER TRAINING. "I was kind of stiff at first — my knee, especially," Kerrigan said. "After I kept going, it loosened up more and more." US MILITARY MARINE CORPS OFFICER SELECTION TEAM CAPT. EVERETT & GUNNERY SGT. DEANS 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. JANUARY 18 The Kansas Union 1-800-531-1885 Kerrigan would not comment on the legal aspects of her case. Harding was scheduled to meet with the Multnomah County district attorney's office, assistant district attorney Norm Frink said. He did not say when the meeting would take place. Minorities and Women are encouraged to apply. PORTLAND, Ore. — Tonya Harding prepared Monday for her first questioning by the district attorney and reports that her ex-husband was about to be arrested and that funds from the U.S. Figure Skating Association (USFSA) may have been used to finance the attack on Olympic skating rival Nancy Kerrigan. Harding set for questioning Gillooly and Harding, who were divorced last year but have reconciled, have denied any wrongdoing. Kerrigan tests wounded knee Harding sneaked out of her house around midnight Sunday and practiced for the first time since winning the U.S. Figure Skating Championships. The Associated Press NBC News reported that authorities have bank and wire transfer records that could tie Jeff Gillooly to the three men already in custody in the alleged conspiracy. NBC said the records could confirm bodyguard Shawn Eckardt's claim that Gillooly financed the Jan. 6 attack in Detroit. accused of clubbing Kerrigan on the leg, has waived extradition from Phoenix and was scheduled to fly to Portland today under guard by sheriff's deputies, the Multnomah County Sheriff's Department said. Stant turned himself in last week after learning there was a warrant for his arrest in Oregon. NBC also confirmed a report in the Oregonian newspaper that investigators suspect Gillooily paid for the attack with some money donated by Harding's supporters to finance her skating. The money, the reports said, may have come from the USFSA and other benefactors Shane Minoaka Stant, the man Bosnian Serbs say all-out war possible BIJELJINA, Bosnia-Herzegovina Bosnian Serb leaders threatened Monday to unleash "all-out war" against the Muslim-led government if coming peace talks end without agreement. With time running out on their demands for autonomy, 15,000 Zulus brandished spears and guns Monday in a show of strength outside President F.W. deKlerk's office. "If it becomes clear there will be no peace, we shall have to prepare for all-out war," said Radovan Karadzic, adding that the Serbs would launch an offensive to capture about 20 percent of the land now held by the government. THE NEWS in brief PRETORIA, South Africa Zulu leaders seek autonomy Croatian Foreign Minister Mate Granic also claimed on Croatian television that "war will spread" if there is no agreement in talks that open Tuesday in Geneva. As Bosnia's Serbs, Croats and the Muslim-led government prepare for the new round of talks, Serb comments at their assembly in Bijeljina reflected deep frustration. At the last negotiating session in December, the government rejected a Serb-Croat proposal that would have given it control over one third of Bosnia's territory, saying its demands for access to the sea and to the Sava river in the north had not been met. In Geneva, U.N. Secretary Boutros Boutros-Ghali closed himself with top aides Monday to discuss invoking NATO air strikes against Serbs. Boutros-Ghali also met with foreign ministers of the 51-country Organization of the Islamic Conference, which endorsed the strikes. The rally came as de Klerk met with Zulu King Goodwill Zwelehini and Mangosuthu Buthelezi. leader of the kwaZulu homeland, in another bid to persuade Zulu leaders to support the nation's first all-race election in April. Compiled from The Associated Press. PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 1029 Massachusetts phone 841-PLAY JD's Baseball Cards & Sports Nostalgia Shop 711 W. 23rd 842-1002 We buy back used baseball cards We buy back used baseball cards BREAK BETTER! SPRING BREAK COMPLETE FIVE & SEVEN NIGHT TRIPS $69 13TH SELLOUT YEAR AS LOW AS PARTY SOUTH PADRE ISLAND DAYTONA BEACH SINCHINA BREATHING PANAMA CITY BEACH STEAMBOAT VAIL/BEAVER CREEK LAS VEGAS ORLANDO/DISNEY WORLD MUSTANG ISLAND BRECKENRIDGE/KEYSTONE * PER PERSON DEPENDING ON DESTINATION / BREAK DATES / LENGTH OF STAY. FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS 1•800•SUNCHASE FARMS Tailgate Party Time B-B-Q Beef $1.00 9th and IOWA Kraut and Sausage $1.59 Sat. 10:00-1:00 OPEN 8 a.m., 10 a.m., 7 days a week Coca-Cola CLASSIC Sprite Sprite $499 Limit 1 with $10.00 purchase 24 pack Coke Sprite BAGU HOLIDAY WATER HILES BAGU HOLIDAY WATER HILES Ragu Spaghetti Sauce Buy One Get One 30 oz. jar Free! Nintendo Switch Nintendo Switch American Beauty Spaghetti Buy One Get One Free! 24 oz. Saltines Saltines IGA Saltines Buy One Free! Get One 16 oz. box Campbell's SOUP Campbell's SOUP Campbell's Family Size Soup Buy One Get One 26oz. Free! Keg Beer $3999 16gallon Alvin's Call 843-2313 9th and Iowa, Lawrence, KS Open 6 a.m. to Midnight Call 843-2313 IGA HOMETOWN PROUD 1 80 9400 752 6474 6433 6403 6403 6403 6403 6403 6403 6403 6403 6403 6403 6403 6403 6403 6403 6403 6403 6403 6403 6403 6403 1 style William Alix / KANSAN From left, brothers, Dan, a Lawrence resident, and Chris Spurgin, Wester Groves, Mo., senior, grew goatees for more than aesthetic reasons. By Kevin Hoffmann Kansan staff writer They pop up everywhere these days. They can be seen on the movie screen, the ball fields and in the schoolrooms. They can be found in grocery stores and gas stations. They cling to the faces of men and demand attention. Photo courtesy of KU Sports Information They are goatees, and for better or worse, they have made their way back into the mainstream of men's fashion. Once associated with the rebellion of the late 1950's beat generation, this facial fashion is now popular with clean-cut kids and modern-day beatniks. Goatees galore KANSAS 11 KU Once associated with the beatnik generation of the late 1950's and 60's, the small, pointed chin beard accompanied by a mouth-framing mustache used to be considered a trademark of rebellion. Today, even mainstream professionals wear goatees. RC, "Rock Chalk," Pewtress, owner of RC's Stadium Barbery, 1033 Massachusetts St., has been a barber for 18 years. He said the goatete tends to appear in men's fashion in two- to three-year intervals. "I think a goatoe is more of a social statement." Pewtress said. Goatse seem to be everywhere these days. Even Kansas guard Jacque Vaughn, Pasadena, Calif., freshman, has one. Pewtress, who wears a full beard, said he had worn a goatee in the past. "I was running from the law, and I wanted to change my image," he said, putting the finishing touches on the final customer of the day. After turning the "open" sign over and locking the door, Pewtress paused to reflect. "My parents called me a bum when they saw my beard," he said. "Then they asked why I shaved it off when I shaved. They said they had gotten used to it. So I decided you just kind of do what you want." Pewtress said many men had simple reasons for growing goates. "Haircuts, beards and mustaches are meant to be fun," he said. "They grow back or can be shaved off." Pewtress said he and other barbers lost the chance to shave goatees a few years ago when Kansas outlawed the practice of shaving in barber shops. This was done to prevent the spread of infectious diseases such as hepatitis and HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. "Tiat's kind of strange," he said. "It used to be that the first two hours a barber shop was open, you couldn't get a haircut, only shaves." Chris Spurgin, Wester Groves, Mo., senior, has worn a goattee on and off since he got out of the Air Force in 1989. Spurgin said that the freedom of getting out of the military may have led to the goatee, but that now he wore a goatee to weed out certain employers. Spurgin, who studies architecture, said he feared being hired by a firm that put restrictions on haircuts and facial hair. "A company shouldn't be so restrictive in an artistic field," he said as he sat down from a game of pool at a local tavern. Spurgin's younger brother, Dan, Lawrence resident, also wears a goatette. "It makes me feel good about myself ," he said. "I felt like I was more attractive. I'm sure at one point I'll shave it off because I'll feel that's more attractive." The goatee-wearing brothers said they didn't plan the similarity. "It's kind of interesting," the younger Spurgin said leaning on a pool stick. "We hadn't seen each other for awhile and the last time I did, he was all clean cut and everything. Then I come home and we're both wearing goatees." Dan Spurgin said he began wearing a goatee because he had trouble growing a full beard. "My friend started calling my beard a goatee," he said. In the past, some parents have frowned on young people who wore goatees, but not in the case of the Spurgins. Howard Spurgin, Chris and Dan's father, said he was surprised, but not shocked, when he saw his sons' goatees. He said he did not try to persuade them to shave. "As long as it's not illegal, immoral or something like that, they can't do much that will bother me," he said. "I was more surprised that Dan made it from Seattle to Maine in his $400 Toyota." While some men seem to think women are attracted to goatees, Dan Spurgin wasn't sure why. "Are woman attracted to the goatee, or the man who chooses to wear a goatette?" he asked. "Besides, it's not like a goatette is gonna get you past anything other than an introduction." Patty Zerrer, Leavenworth senior, said the current trend toward facial hair had diminished the goatess attractiveness. "I think they were real cool, but now that everybody has one I don't like them as much," she said. Rita Byrd, Shawnee junior, said she thought a goatlee could give the wrong impression. "You have to have the right facial features, or else it makes you look mean," she said. While goatees may have come back into fashion, not every man has a worn goat. "I've never worn one," said Mike Isaacson, Lawrence resident. "Unless you count the time I drank too much at a party and woke up the next morning with a red magic marker goatee." THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN JANUARY 18, 1994 PAGE 7 KU Life Your guide to Entertainment in the Lawrence Area. WEIRD - In October, a young couple had to be treated for hypothermia at a Germsheim, Germany, clinic after the parked car in which they were having sex rolled down a boat ramp into the Rhine River. Another man, who owned the car, was cited by authorities for the water pollution caused by the leaking gasoline. - -The Toronto Globe & Mail reported in December the imminent publication of Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafah's first collection of short stories, to be titled "The Village ... The Village. The Land is the Land and the Astronaut Commits Suicide." - In November, a man whose name was withheld by reporters was rescued by firefighters after spending the night in the pit of an outhouse at a boat landing near Eugene, Ore. The man claimed that he had been high after sniffing glue, had heard someone calling for help from the pit, had fallen in while looking for him, and could not get back out. - In November, campus police at California Polytechnic University at San Luis Obispo ejected David Potter Lawler, 40, from campus after seven episodes in which they say he stealthily approached women in the library, dropped to his hands and knees, and sniffed their beards. Describing his confrontation with Lawler, a police investigator said, "The sweat was running off his head. He looked like a rain forest." The University Daily Kansan Card...a semester of savings for just $1.00 ATTENTION SCHOLARS! COLLEGE BOWL 1994 Vitruvian Man THE "VARSITY SPORT OF THE MIND" SPRING LEAGUES ARE FORMING NOW AT THE February 12, 1994 Kanjas Union 8 a.m. until 4 p.m. $20.00 per Team Call 864-3477 for more info presented by: PRESENTED BY: BURNSU SHION ACTIVITIES SUA Jaybowl KANSAS CITY Sign up in person, or by phone Pay for 13 weeks in advance, get two weeks free. Free shoe rental for league bowlers Sign up in person, or by phone Jaybowl KANSAS UNIVERSITY Four Leagues Available: Monday Mixer Tuesday Varsity Mixer Wednesday Mixer Thursday Mixer Located on Level One of the Kansas Union 864-3545 STÜSSY STUSSY We're Loaded With It! 100's Of Hats, T's Sweatshirts, Jeans, Etc. 701 W 9th (9th and Indiana) Kansas City Mission, KS BannisterMall 6518 Martway SHARK'S SURF SHOP SHARK'S SURF SHOP 8 Tuesday, January 18, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN MICOM COMPUTERS & SERVICE CENTER MICOM COMPUTERS & SERVICE CENTER New Years Special Port User System 486 DX32.ppl @ $1999 486 SX33. $1249 "We Buy & Sell Useful PC's Parts & Software" 832-8831 947 E. 23rd Street • Lawrence 90¢ Bowling 3:30-6:00 p.m. Mon-Thur Jaybowl KINDER UNION Not just for bowling any more! 864-3545 Zaybowl SAN DARWIN UNION DICKINSON HEATRES Dickinson 6 861 8400 2339 South Iwo 51 Grumpy Old Men PG*13*14*20,7/20,9/5 Beetlethorn's PG*14*15,7/15,9/35 Shadowlands PG*0.05,7/00,9/45 Iron Will PG*30,7/00,9/35 Sister Act II PG*2*,15,7/10,9/45 House Party III P*18*,7/25,9/40 3 Premises Show (a) Hearing Impaired Stereo Premises City Animation Impared Stereo --- SUNDAY UNION ACTIVITIES SUA FILMS January, Sunday, January 10-22 The Lover Tues. 7:00 pm Wed. 9:30 pm Vincent and Theo Tues. 9:30 pm Thurs. 7:00 pm Blow-Up Wed. 7:00 pm Thurs. 9:30 pm ALL SHOWS IN KANSAS UNION TICKETS $25.00 MINTAGE $3.00 FREE WITH SUA MOVIE CARD. CALL 817-SHOW OR MINT-INFO. Crown Cinema Learn to Fly 842-0000 CROWN CINEMA BEFORE 6 PM ADULTS $3.00 (UMIDITED FOR SEATING) SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00 VARSITY BETTING MASSACHUSETTS 841-5191 Pelican Brief PG-13 5:00, $0.00 HILLCREST 925 IOWA 841-5191 1029 Massachusetts phone 841-PLAY 32 Toppings to choose from!!! Rudy Tuesday 2 Pizzas ONLY $899 2 toppings plus tax 2 drinks RUDY'S PIZZURIA 749-0055 Now located at 704 Mass. 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HAPPY up to 875 CCA 70 MONTH 1050 CA 675 CCA 59.92 70 MONTH 895 CA 770 CCA 49.92 60 MONTH 860 CA 550 CCA 42.92 60 MONTH 600 CA 500 CCA 36.92 50 MONTH 540 CA 450 CCA 32.92 40 MONTH 440 CA 400 CCA 29.92 CA – Cranking Amps at $32° CCA – Cold Cranking Amps at 0° Warranty details at store FREE INSTALLATION 'All or nothing' package worries some Finney asks Legislature to combine proposals By David Stewart Kansan staff writer In her address to the Legislature last week, Gov. Joan Finney expressed her support for two higher educational bills: the Partnership for Excellence plan and the inclusion of Washburn University into the Board of Regents system. But Finney surprised some listeners by announcing that the Legislature should consider both the Partnership bill and the Washburn bill as a single package, saying it was both bills or nothing. Assistant professor of social welfare and State Rep. Forrest Swall, D-Lawrence, said he had hoped Finney would support the Partnership for Excellence on its own merits. Swall said he did not think Finney's dual proposal was good legislative policy. "They're two separate issues," Swall said. "It may be a good way to lose both of them. It may be a good way to get acceptance from both of them. But they should be debated separately." "Topeka representatives were not supportive of the state universities when Washburn was being rejected as a Regents school," Salisbury said. "This bill could give some buoyancy to people who don't care if Washburn After hearing Finney's speech, State Sen. Alisha Salisbury, R-Topeka, said she thought the strategy to link the two proposals may work best among state representatives. "Her view to tie the increased salaries while bringing in Washburn University into the Regents system is a reasonable strategy," said Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor. Finney's intention to vet either part of the two education bills without passage of the other made political sense to some KU officials. is part of the Regents or not." Meyen said he did not expect Finney's decision to unite the two bills as one package would have any serious consequences for the Partnership for Excellence plan. Under the guidelines of Finney's proposal, legislators who had supported adding Washburn University to the Regents system may show more support than expected for the Partnership plan, Meyen said. "Clearly she's elevated the Partnership plan so anyone who has support for Washburn would want to support the Partnership," Meyen said. Along with providing a better package of education, John Shoemaker, student body president, said Finney might have wanted to ensure passage of both bills by presenting them as a single piece of legislation. For some professors, Finney's decision to include Washburn's entrance into the Regents may have come down to politics and could jeopardize both programs. "I'm not sure that there is deliberate attempt to link them as there is to make sure they both pass," Shoemaker said. "I hope they are not presented together in a formal package." Because the two parts of the Finney proposal would address distinct issues, the governor may have Dual Decision The Partnership for Excellence: ■ would increase out-of-state tuition by 13 percent and in-state tuition 5 to 9 percent at the six Regents institutions. ■ would increase faculty salaries at Regents schools by 6 to 9 percent. The Washumba University Plan: ■ would allow Washumba, a public institution since 1941, to become a Regents member by July 1, 1997. Source: Kansan staff reports grouped the bills together to ensure their passage, said T. P. Srinivasan, head of the Senate Executive Committee. "On their own merits, the issues are different," Srinivasan said. "But this is a political judgment. I certainly would not preempt Governor Finney's reason for tying the two together." Though each part of the Finney proposal may have problems passing through the Legislature individually, neither can be assured the votes by linking them together, said Felix Moos, professor of anthropology and president of the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors. "To tie them together makes it that much more difficult to pass either program," Moos said. "The issue of Washburn is a very complex one. If we don't have the funds for the Regents universities now, how can we afford another university?" In addition to KU, the Regents preside over Emporia State University, Fort Hays State University, Kansas State University, Pittsburg State University and Wichita State University. FREE BEDROOM! RENT A TWO BEDROOM AND GET THIRD BEDROOM FREE NEWLY REMODELED! 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MICROTECH COMPUTERS 2550 Iowa St. Tower Plaza next to Applebees (913)842-2667 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Tuesday, January 18, 1994 Jayhawks left out in the cold Loss to K-State may put No.1 ranking on ice By Gerry Fey Kansan sportswriter KANSAS Losing a game on a last-second shot was not as disappointing to Kansas coach Roy Williams as his coaching performance in Kansas' 68-64 loss to in-state rival Kansas State last night. K-State senior guard Anthony Beane ended the Jayhawks' first defense of a No. 1 ranking this season by making a one-handed jumper with 12 seconds left in the game, giving K-State a 66-64 lead. Kansas dropped to 16-2 overall and 1-1 in the Big Eight, while K-State improved to 12-3 and 1-2. The Kansas players played well, Williams said, but he didn't coach well. "In the last three minutes of the game I did a poor job of coaching," Williams said. "It's my responsibility to do a better job than I did tonight." After Beane made what became the game-winning shot, Kansas did not call a time out. Instead, Kansas senior forward Patrick Richey missed a shot. Beane came up with the ball and was fouled. He hit both free throws to end the game. Kansas State 68 Kansas 64 Looking back, Williams said he wished he would have called a time out. He said he usually didn't call time outs with more than seven seconds left. KANSAS (16-2, 1-1) Tom Leininger/KANSAN Although the finish was close, K-State had a 36-32 lead at halftime and was controlling the rebounds 22-15. Williams said the Wildcats were more intense in the first half. Player fgm/fga ftm/fta tp Beane 5-10 6-7 18 Jones 9-16 3-4 26 Davis 4-7 0-0 9 Lucas 0-5 0-0 0 Cunningham 2-11 2-3 6 Hamilton 0-1 0-0 0 Noland 2-6 1-2 6 Gavin 1-1 0-0 3 Lewis 0-0 0-0 0 Totals 23-57 12-16 68 "Give credit to them," Williams said of K-State. "They were more enthused and more intense than we were earlier in the game. In the first half, they really hurt us on the offensive boards." K-State was led by senior forward Askia Jones' game-high 26 points, including going five for eight from three-point range. The first half took its toll on Kansas' top two scorers. The Jayhawks had to take senior forward Richard Scott out with foul trouble, and senior guard Steve Woodberry was shooting uncharacteristically poor from the field with only two points. Woodberry ended with eight points, 7.4 points less than his season average. Scott was sent later to Lawrence Memorial Hospital. He is listed as probable for Saturday's Iowa State game. However, Scott was out permanently with 15:49 left in the game when he suffered a mild concussion while scrambling for a loose ball. Williams said Scott was unconscious for 20 seconds but regained consciousness. Richey said losing Scott was hard on the team, but it was no excuse. Player fgm/iga tfm/fta tp Vaughn 2.5 0-1 4 Woodberry 2.11 4-5 8 Richey 2.5 2-2 6 Scott 5-7 1-1 11 Ostertag 1.5 0-0 2 Pollard 1.4 0-0 2 Rayford 1.4 0-0 2 Gurley 2.5 0-0 6 Pearson 6.8 2-2 15 Proud 0-0 0-0 0 Williams 3-6 2-6 8 Totals 25-60 11-17 64 "You've got to give K-State a lot of credit," Richey said. "They answered our run. I'm not going to make any excuses. We lost Richard, and we've got to come together as a team." K-State built on its lead to open the second half, pulling out to a 55-42 lead. Kansas freshman forward BJ Williams then took an alley-oop pass from freshman guard Jacque Vaughn Kansas guard Jacque Vaughn fends off Kansas State's Anthony Beane, who scored the Wildcats' final eight points in K-State's 68-64 victory last night in Allen Field House. Beane score 1B points and had six assists while playing a game high 37 minutes. Halifine K-State 36, Kansas 32 3point game K-State 10.17 17 (Jones 5, Beane 24, Davis 1, Noland 1-2, Gain 1-1, Lucas 0-1, Kansas 31 (Gurley 2-4, Pearson 1, Vaughn 0-1, Woodberry 7-7, Raydon 0-2) Rebounds K-State 44 (Cunningham 10), Kansas 32 (Woodbury 6). Aasisite K-State 12 (Beane 6), Kansas 12 (Vaughn 8) Total fouls K-State 16, Kansas 14 Attendance 15,800 and dunked it. That play started a 13-2 run for the Jayhawks which tied the score at 57-57. Roy Williams said the Jayhawks' intensity picked up. "We didn't play well until that stretch," he said. "We did some great things at that point. We got back and tied it up. In fact, I think we tied it up twice. We never got over the hump. I don't think we ever got the lead with the ball." Kansas sophomore forward Sean Pearson filled in for Scott, scoring a team-high 15 points. He also hit a three-pointer with 43.6 seconds left that tied the game at 64. Pearson said he was hoping his shot would motivate the team. "I thought it was going to pick us up and have us play more intense on defense," Pearson said, "so we would stop them and come down and hit the last shot." Williams said K-State's experience was the key at the end. "I think that's extremely important experience factor that you've got," Williams' said. "We made a great comeback on them, and I don't think they got rattled." "We can use it to realize that a lot of teams are going to come out trying to beat us," he said. "We have to come out ready to play every night." Even though Kansas will most likely fall from its current No.1 ranking, Pearson said Kansas could gain something from the defeat. AP Top 25 Kansas was ranked No. 1. before last night's loss. The Jayhawks will most likely lose their No. 1 status in next week's poll. record votes team record votes pw 1. Kansas (29) 16.1 1,552 1 2. UCLA (26) 11.0 1,514 5 3. Arkansas (3) 12.1 1,548 4 4. North Carolina (1) 13.2 1,425 1 5. Duke (2) 11.1 1,393 2 6. Massachusetts (4) 13.1 1,360 7 7. Kentucky 13.2 1,226 8 8. Indiana 13.2 1,160 1 9. Alaska 13.2 1,106 1 10. Connecticut 14.1 949 14 11. Temple 9.2 917 13 12. Purdue 14.1 879 9 13. Louisville 12.2 843 15 14. Wisconsin 12.1 788 12 15. Michigan 11.3 787 10 16. Syracuse 10.2 536 16 17. Georgia Tech 10.4 524 18 18. Ala.-Birmingham 10.3 413 22 19. Cincinnati 12.3 384 20 20. Minnesota 11.4 391 17 21. Xavier, Ohio 11.1 256 25 22. Saint Louis 14.0 254 — 23. West Virginia 10.2 172 23 24. Maryland 10.2 130 — Others receiving votes: Boston College 1,24, Oklahoma State 7,4 Florida 66, Illinois 65, New Mexico St. 43, Missouri 42, Nebraska 21, Marquee 20, Mississippi 1,4 LSU 18, Michigan 16, Ohio 9, Penn 5, Peml 5, Seton Hall 4, Alabama 3, DePaul 3, New Orleans 3, Wake Forest 3, George Washington 2, Providence 2, Tn-Chattanooga 2, Vanderbilt 2. Beane bags Wildcat victory Rv Mark Rutton Kansan sportswriter Source: The Associated Press KANSAN The clock read 0:43 with the score tied at 64. Kansas State point guard Anthony Beane stood dribbling at half-court. Kansas point guard Jacque Vaughn crouched one foot away, ready to defend Beane's inevitable drive to the basket. The previous 39 minutes and 47 seconds of the game did not matter. All that mattered was the two opposing guards, the senior, Beane, and the freshman, Vaughn. The shot clock wound down, as did the game clock. With :05 on the shot clock and :15 on the game clock, Beane gave Vaughn a head-and-shoulder fake to the right and then dribbled past him to the left. "The the first thing I think about in those situations," Beane said, "is getting by my man. And then I just take what they give me." Beane got by his man, despite Vaughn's reaching around him and trying to knock the ball away. And he took what the Jayhawks gave him — an 11-foot limper in the paint. The ball swished through the net, and the Wildcats upset the Jayhawks. Again. In the last meeting between the two Kansas schools, K-State defeated the Jayhawks 74-64 in the semifinals of the Big Eight Conference Tournament. But the game didn't end with Beane's jumper. And if Kansas had it to do over again, Coach Roy Williams said he would have done things differently. "We should have run at him, we should have double-teamed him there," Williams said of Beane's heroic possession and shot. "We should have made something happen quicker, and even if he makes the shot, we have more time on the other end." The K-State bench erupted in anticipation of victory by Beane's jumper fell through the net. The clock showed 0:12. Nine seconds ... eight seconds ... Vaughn found senior forward Patrick Richey 15-feet from the basket, at the elbow of the free-throw line. Richey turned, fumbled the ball for a moment, and shot it. Instead of calling a timeout — Williams rarely calls one with more than seven seconds remaining - the Jayhawks inbounded the ball with Vaughn pushing it up the court. "I thought it was good when I shot it," Richey said. "I was comfortable with the shot." As good as it looked, it bounced off the back of the rim and shot up. Richey and freshman teammate EJ. Williams crashed the boards. Williams tipped the ball, hoping it would fall. It didn't. The 5-foot-10 Beane grabbed the rebound. Beane was fouled, canned the two free-throws and put the final two nails in the Jayhawks' coffin. Beane said playing against the highly touted Vaughn did not bother him. "Jacque is a good player, and he'is going to be great," Beane said. "But it doesn't matter who I'm playing. That's just the way I am. I'm goingto play hard no matter who guards me." Beane, however, wasn't the only Wildcat hero. Senior guard Askia Jones tossed in a game-high 26 points, including swishing five of eight three point shots. The Wildcats as a team also out-rebounded Kansas 44-32. K-State senior center Deryl Cunningham led the team, and the game, with 10 rebounds. "Iknew if we got beat on the boards tonight, we wouldn't have a chance," K-State coach Dana Altman said. "And we go out and win by 12 on the boards. I thought that was key." AP Top 25 The Kansas women remained No. 8 for the second consecutive week. Colorado moved up one spot to No. 7 | team | record | votes | pw | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 1. Tennessee (66) | 14.0 | 1,674 | 1 | | 2. Iowa (1) | 11.0 | 1,601 | 2 | | 3. Penn St. | 12.0 | 1,524 | 3 | | 4. Texas Tech | 14.1 | 1,450 | 5 | | 5. Vanderbilt | 13.2 | 1,365 | 6 | | 6. Colorado | 13.2 | 1,292 | 7 | | 7. North Carolina | 13.2 | 1,292 | 8 | | 8. Southern Cal. | 13.2 | 1,216 | 8 | | 9. Stanford | 11.3 | 1,174 | 9 | | 10. Connecticut | 12.2 | 1,048 | 11 | | 12. Virginia | 12.2 | 976 | 12 | | 12. Purdue | 12.3 | 835 | 13 | | 14. Louisiana Tech | 11.3 | 750 | 14 | | 15. Alabama | 11.3 | 727 | 16 | | 16. Washington | 11.3 | 639 | 16 | | 17. Florida International | 12.1 | 635 | 19 | | 18. Ohio State | 9.4 | 451 | 17 | | 19. Northwestern | 7.9 | 394 | 18 | | 20. Kentucky | 9.3 | 316 | 20 | | 21. Montana | 12.2 | 310 | 22 | | 22. Boise State | 12.2 | 261 | 23 | | 23. Auburn | 9.2 | 205 | 21 | | 24. Seton Hall | 12.5 | 191 | 25 | | 25. UNLV | 10.2 | 177 | 24 | Others repleting votes: Southern Misa. 101, Toledo 65, Florida 61, Santa Clara 34 Creighton 34, Georgia 24, Notre Dame 19, Hawlett 18, George Washington 16, Misissippi 16, SW Mississippi 16, Marquette 14, Oklahoma 11, Stephen F. Austin 9, Clemenson 8, N. Illinois 7, Maryland 6, Oklahomia 6, Kentucky 5, Wisconsin 4, Tulane 5, Ala. Birmingham 4, Durham 3, Rutgers 4, San Diego St. 4, UCLA 4, Arizona 2, Gonzaga 2, Indiana 2, Texas A&M 2, Lafayette 1, Minnesota 1; New Mexico St. 1. Source: The Associated Press KANSAH No.8 Jayhawks win twice on the road, return home Friday The Nebraska and Iowa State women's basketball teams obtained their much-needed Big Eight Conference victories this weekend. However, the team they beat was clad in purple and white rather than crimson and blue. Women's team successful, defeats 'Huskers,Cyclones Both Iowa State and Nebraska defeated Kansas State this weekend, but both fell victim to No. 8 Kansas. The Jayhawks took road victories at Nebraska and Iowa State this weekend. By Matt Siegel Kansan sportswriter "We don't think of road trips as fun and games," sophomore guard Charisse Sampson said. "We have to think of their court as our court. We have to think of it like we are playing at home." Whatever method the Jayhawks are using, it has helped them to a 7-1 record on the road, and a 4-0 record in Big Eight Conference play. "Our team is showing a lot of determination and courage," Kansas coach Marian Washington said. "We have been down and come back. We have been involved in tight games and then broke it loose." Against Nebraska on Friday, Kansas went on a 15-2 run midway through the first half to build a 41-25 halftime lead and put the game out of reach. Overcoming Nebraska forward Naessah Brown's game-high 22 points, the Jayhawks took a 78-57 victory. The Jayhawks, paced by junior guard Angela Aycock's 17 points, had four players score in double figures. On Sunday, the Jayhawks did not enjoy big cushion at halftime against Iowa State. They only led the Cyclones 32-31 at halftime. "We were rushing our shots early," Washington said. "We shot the ball better in the second half. Also, we shot 93 percent (26-28) from the free-throw line. I don't think we have shot 93 percent from the free-throw line in a long time." One of the keys to the Jayhawks' success this season has been their defense. They lead the conference in both scoring defense and field goal percentage defense, limiting the opposition to 36 percent shooting. "Our defense wasn't good in the first half against Iowa State," Sampson said. "We knew that we could play better than we did. Coach kept on stressing that at halftime, and we came out and got out in the passing lanes. We played our defense in the second half." Kansas, behind 50 percent shooting in the second half, outscored the Cyclones 52-40 on its way to an 84-71 victory. Sampson had a team high 21 points. The victory improved Kansas to 13-1 overall and improved their current winning streak to eight. The Jayhawks return home Friday to face Oklahoma, which is second in conference play with a 3-0 record. The fact that the game pits No. 1 against No. 2 in the conference, or that the Jayhawks are No. 8 in the nation, does not mean slot to the players. Brian Vandervliet / KAMBAN "Being No. 8 In the nation is a tremendous honor, but rankings are nothing." Sampson said. "Most people get caught up in the polls. Polls are just something that fans pick. The only time polls matter are at the end." MILWAUKEE Chad Johnson, Minneapolis junior, clears the bar during the men's high jump competition. The Kansas Invitational was held Saturday at Anschutz Pavilion. Home meet spurs Kansas runners Kansanstaffreport The Kansas track teams got off to a good start when they played host to their first indoor meet of the season Saturday at Anschutz Sports Pavilion. The Jayhawks placed first in 22 events at the meet, and the men were led by sophomore sprinter Billy Davis and senior sprinter Joe Pickett. Davis placed first in the men's 55-meter dash, clocking at 6.39 seconds. Pickett took first in the 600-yard run with a time of 1:11.39. The distance runners also performed well for the Jayhawks. Michael Cox and David Johnston, seniors, finished first and second respectively in the mile run. The women also were paced by a strong showing in the distance events, led by junior Melissa Swartz. Swartz placed first in both the mile run and the 800-meter run. Julia Saul, senior, placed first in the 3000-meter run, and Kristi Kloster, junior, won the 1000-meter run. 10 SPORTS Tuesday, January 18, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence's Newest COLLECTIBLE USED BOOK STORE Old Pharmaceutical & Medical Books VAGABOND BOOKMAN 1113 Mass 842-BOOK Hours: Mon - Sat 10-6 We buy and sell old hardback books EVERYTHING BUTICE - Beds - Desks - Chest of Drawers - Bookcases Penguin layhawk Bookstore 936 Mass. 843-3826 "Your Book Professionals" "At the top of Naismith Hill" Hrs: 8-7-M-Th, 8-5-Fri, 9-6 Sat, 12-4 Sun. The Etc. Shop The Look of Lawrence Gifts Something special for everyone Something special for everyone Sunlasses Ray-Ban, Serengeti, Revo, Vuarnet Women claim victory at invitational Bomber J Jewelry Sterling Silver - Huge unique selection Accessories Formal Wear - Sales & Rentals THIS IS A FUN STORE! 928 Massachusetts * 843-0611 2 Doors North of Pizza Hut • Parking in the Rea Swimmers split meet, No.16 men lose to Minnesota The Kansas swimming team did what it was expected to do Saturday when the No. 18 women defeated unranked Arkansas 68-45 and the No. 16 men fell to No. 12 Minnesota 135.5-109.5 at the Kansas Invitational. "Im pleased," Kansas coach Gary Kempf said. "The ladies stayed focused and made some progress in some events." Led by sophomore Donna Christensen's victory in the 200-meter individual medley, the women cruised to an easy victory. "Everyone swam the way Gary (Kempf) thought we would," Christensen said. "For the way we practiced, we did well. I went a season's best in the 200 IM. That was exciting. But we still haven't shown what we were capable of doing." The women's team will be racing against Southern Illinois on Saturday in Carbondale, Ill., and the team looks to improve. "We're not fast, but we're consistent," Kempf said. "But we will be getting progressively faster in the next five weeks." "I think we did a good job," Christensen said. "We tended to turn the excitement toward the men." Minnesota defeated the Jayhawks for the second time this season. They raced in November at the Minnesota Invitational. Minnesota won the meet, and the Kansas men finished If you change the outcome of three races this weekend, then it's a different story," Kempf said. But Minnesota deserved to win. fourth. "The score was not indicative of how close the meet was," Kempf said. "We made a step forward." One of those steps was taken by junior sprinter Marc Bontrader. Bontrager led the Jayhawks with victories in both the 50- and 100-meter freestyles. Bontrager, who finished sixth at nationals last year in the 50-meter freestyle, was positive going into the meet. "I'm pretty happy," Bontrager said. "I expected to win both the 50 and the 100." Bontrager also anchored the Jayhawk 400-meter freestyle relay team of Scott Townsend, Dan Phillips and Curtis Taylor to a victory. "It was really a matter of pride," Bontrager said. "We haven't been beaten this year, and I was surprised it was as close as it was." Although they lost the meet, he looks toward higher goals in the future. "As the weeks go on, we'll get faster and faster," he said. Kempfagreed. "Our sprinters showed why we're one of the best sprint teams in the country," he said. Overall, Kempf said he was pleased with all aspects of his teams' performances this week. "I expected our kids to be good," Kempf said. "I also expected them to be focused. I'm proud of their effort and character." Valid Through July 31, 1994 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN C A R D AT&T Spend $1...Save hundreds THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Valid Through July 31, 1996 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN C A R D AT&T Spend $1...Save hundreds Membership has its privileges... THESE DISCOUNTS AND OFFERS ARE GOOD THROUGH JULY 31, 1994! JUST SHOW YOUR CARD...USE AS OFTEN AS YOU LIKE! LOTHERS Britches Corner • 843 Massachusetts • 843-0454: Buy 1reg, price Tommy Hilfiger, get the 2nd of equal or lesser value at 2 Cleopatra's Closet • 743 Massachusetts • 749-4664: 15% off everything in store (excluding sale items) The Etc Shop • 928 Massachusetts • 843-0611: 20% off Etc Shop brand sunglasses Harper's Fashions • 835 Massachusetts • 749-0626: Additional 20% off all regular price merchandise KU Bookstore • Kansas and Burge Unions • 846-6440: $5 off any gift or clothing purchase of $25 or more Natural Way Natural Fiber Clothing • 820 Massachusetts • 841-0100: 15% off all regular priced clothing Outfitters Clothing Co. • 740 Massachusetts • 843-3933: 15% off the regular price of guy's and gal's jeans Outfitters Clothing Co. • 740 Massachusetts • 843-3933: 10% off tuxedo rental University Bookshop • 1116 W 23rd St • 749-5206: 20% off all clothing (except sale items) Weavers Department Store • 991 St. American Bistro · 701 Massachusetts · 841-8349: 10% off any entree (limit one) RESTAURANTS & BARS American Bistro • 701 Massachusetts • 841-8349: 10% off any entree (limit one) Bonanza • 2329 Iowa • 842-1200: All-you-can-eat-Freshstakkens Food & Desert Bar for $2.99 Dos Hombrés Vi • 815 New Hampshire • 841-7286: Buy 1 menu item, get the 2nd for 1/2 price Dunkin Donuts • 521 W 23rd • 749-5015: 15% off any purchase Fifi's Restaurant • 925 Iowa • 841-7226: 10% off any entree (limit one) Imperial Garden • 2907 W 6th St • 841-1688: 10% off any dinner entree (limit one) Johnny's Tavern • 401 N 2nd St • 842-0377: Buy a cheeseburger w/fries at reg. price, get the 2nd for $1 (Good Mon - Fri, 4pm to 9pm) Little Caesars Pizza-Pizza • 1410 Kasold, 865-5400/520 W 23rd, 842-8000: FREE Crazy Bread w/y pizza/pizzal purchase Perkins Family Restaurant • 1711 W 23rd, 842-9040: $1.00 off any entree, 24 hours a day Pizza Shuttle • 1601 W 23rd • 842-1212: 1 carryout, 1 topping pizza w/alg. coke for $4.00 Plum Tree • 2620 Iowa • 841-6222: FREE appetizer (2 crab rangoons or 1 egg roll) w/purchase of any entree Pyramid Pizza • 507 W 17th St (under The Wheel) • 842-3232: $4 $4-mo $6-md-$8-ea add topping 75¢ (Void w/other offers) Shoney's Restaurant • 2412 Iowa • 843-3519: FREE salad bar w/y purchase of a sandwich and fries Vista Drive in • 1527 W 6th St • 842-4311: FREE reo, French Fru w/purchase of a Vistaburger & drink The Athlete's Foot • 914 Massachusetts • 841-6966: $10 off a shoe purchase of $65 or more MERCHANDISE & PRODUCTS The Athlete's Foot • 914 Massachusetts • 841-6966: $10 off a shoe purchase of $65 or more Community Mercantile • 901 Mississippi • 843-8544: 15% off any coffee purchase Cycle Works • 1601 W23rd • 842-6363: FREE lock set w/ new bike purchase Englewood Florist • 939 Massachusetts • 841-2993: 3 FREE latex balloons with any purchase of $20 or more Francis Sporting Goods • 731 Massachusetts • 843-4191: 15% off all Champion Sportswear It's Your Party • 1601 W23rd • 749-3455: Buy any 3 greeting cards and get 1 FREE Jaybowl • Level 1-Kansas Union • 864-3545: FREE shoe rental during open bowling Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826: Get an extra 5% CASH back during Semester Buyback Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826: Save 10% on Computer Softwear EVERYDAY! Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826: Blue Books for 10¢ Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826: 20% off Blank Computer Diskettes Jayhawk Spirit • 935 Massachusetts • 749-5194: $1.00 off all adjustable hats, $2.00 off all fitted hats Jayhawk Nike • 940 Massachusetts • 749-4495: 15% off all shoes Junior's Farm • 924 1/2 Massachusetts • 842-3344: Buy 2 CD's at reg. price, get the 3rd (equal or lesser value) at 50% off Laser Logic • 865-0505: 20% Off Recycled Laser Printer Toner Cartridges (FREE pick-up and delivery) Miracle Video • 1910 Haskell, 841-7504/910 N 2nd St, 841-8903: Rent 1 video, get 2nd FREE (Sun thru Thurs) Denton USA • 1741 Massachusetts • 749-1695: 25% off all rentals Sports Fan-Attics • 422 Massachusetts • 842-2323: 15% off everything in store (excluding sale items & leather jackets) Union Technology Center • Level 3-Burge Union • 864-5690: 10% off any accessory (disks, diskholders, cables, paper, surge protectors, etc.) Video Biz • 832 Iowa • 749-3507: 2 For Tuesday! Rent 2 Videos for the Price of 1 (Tuesday only) Vernor Studio & College 1 Riverfront Plaza Ste. 321 - 749-0745: 15% off of framed prints of KU and sororites The Auto Medic • 3631 W 10th St • 842-0384: 20% off any service call B.C. Automotive • 510 N 6th St • 841-6955: 20% off tune ups and brake repair Copy Co • 1401 W 23rd • 832-2679: 10% off all merchandise or services Enterprise Rent-A-Car • 3030 Iowa • 842-8040: 10% off car rental Fantastic Sam's • 2223 Louisiana • 749-1976: 15% off any regular price service or product NailTique • 2449 Iowa, Ste N • 832-2900: $3.00 off any service Planned Parenthood • 1420 Kasold-Orchards Corners • 832-0281: 25% off initial or annual visit plus 12 free condoms RC's Stadium Barbery • 1033 Massachusetts • 749-5363: $5.50 haircut Sonny Hill Chevrolet-Geo-Oldsmobile • 3400 S Iowa • 843-7700: 10% off all parts and service Ultimate Tan • 2449 Iowa, Ste O • 842-4949: 1 FREE session with the purchase of a 9-session package ($5 value) The University Daily Kansan • 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall • 864-4358: 10% off any private party classified advertisement SERVICES Terms and conditions. The following terms and conditions relate to candidates for use in *The University Dinkan Kami Card (DRC) at Participation Merchants (PMR)*. The DRC must be agreed to be valid, is non-transferable, and PM may request identification, correlation of bids by any one other than the candidate. Candidate's signature on a use of the DRC shall constitute agreement to be bound by these terms and the directories of the Director(s). A 21-Decimal Special Offer Discounts are not valid with other offers or special promotions of PMs. You do not apply to a candidate per purchase; you only apply to a candidate's reasonable personal purchase to total purchase tax (as determined by PM), so your own DRC purchases are part of the total purchase; d are only available if they are made to the candidate's reasonable personal purchase to total purchase tax (as determined by PM); otherwise, d are not available. If you wish to purchase a candidate's reasonable personal purchase to total purchase tax (as determined by PM), you do not apply to a candidate per purchase; you only apply to a candidate's reasonable personal purchase to total purchase tax (as determined by PM); otherwise, d are only available if they are made to the Jayhawk Bookstore AVAILABLE AT TRESE LOCATIONS: 1420 Crescent Road 843-3826 S Kansas and Burge Unions • 864-4640 UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP 1116 W.23rd St *749-5206* KU KU BOOKSTORES THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358 Keep the cycle going . . . Recycle this paper! 100s Announcements 108 Personal 110 Business Personal 120 Announcements 130 Entertainment 140 Lost and Found 200s Employer 235 Typing Services 205 Help Wanted 228 Professional Services 237 Classified Policy The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on nationality, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or 100s Announcements Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are subject to the above conditions. Mr. Marks All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1988 (FHA), which requires a certain experience, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or dis- Y Love always Pistachio 105 Personals Thanks for the weekend and Sundays. I'll always be grateful for your heart" and a new best friend, even if you can't see him. 110 Bus. Personals DU/MIP/Fake ID's Office located right next to campus Elizabeth Leach Attorney & Law-Female Prosecutor 414 W 14th 749-0087 WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO Cap'n Cinos Espresso Bar in Port at Aivin 's Bakery 9th and iowa. Best Bins on Great Espresso Drinks, Mochas, Cakes, Cappuccinos & Espresso. Open Nightly t10 pm. WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO REALLY Listen Call or drop by Headquarters We're here because we care. 841-2345 1419 Mass. We're always open WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500 Urgent Care (Additional Charge) Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm Sunday 8am-4:30pm Regular Clinic Hour Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm Saturday 8am-11:30am X Pharmacy Hours Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm Friday 8am-6pm Saturday 8am-9pm Sunday 11am-9pm KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services 120 Announcements CALCULUS Workshop. Learn skills for success in Math 115 & 116. FREEL. No registration required. 9 p.m., Jan 19, 4035 Wesco. Presented by the Student Assistance Center. NEED A RIDE/IDRIDE Use the Self Serv Car Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union. COMMUTERS: Self Serve Car Exchange. Main Lobby, Kansas Union. Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union. TUTORS. List your name with us. We refer student inquiries to you. Student Assistance Center, 133 Strong 305 For Sale 340 Auto Sales 360 Miscellaneous 370 Want to Buy WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of avail- bilities. Student Assistance Center, 138 Stro- nell Drive. CALCULUS WORKSHOP Learn skills for success in Math 115&116 FREEL! -Kansan Classified: 864-4358- Wednesday, January 19 7-9 pm 4035 Wescoe Presented by the Student Assistance Center 400s Real Estate 405 Real Estate 430 Roommate Wanted SCHOLARSHIP OPPORTUNITIES! INTERNSHIP OPPORTUNITIES! GRANTS AND LOANS! CASHE-PLUS SCHOLARSHIP SEARCH UNIVERSITY SCHOLARSHIP CENTER CALL OR DROP BY FOR DETAILS 33 STRONG HALL 864-5439 Access KU and the Internet SEMESTER SPECIAL Internet Made Easy Call ATABANK DATABANK Your Key to the Internet Voice 842-6699 Data 842-7744 Slip is Available Hillel Upcoming Events Shabbat Dinner Shabbat Dinner This Friday 6:00 pm Hillel House Sign up in the Hillel Office or call 864-3948 by Friday! DISCO HAVDALAH HAVDALAH Kansas Room, Kansas Union Havdalah: 8:00pm Dance: 8:30pm Entrance fee after 8:30: $1 or 1 can of food UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Tuesday, January 18, 1994 130 Entertainment Drummer with live and recorded experience looking for creative and serious band to join or musicians to form band. Many influences. Open to ideas. Call Tim 833-0772. 11 Buy your Kansan Card for only $1.00 today Brother, can you spare a dollar? SELL IT FAST IN THE KANSAN CLASSIFIED Available through February, 2018 at the Kansas and Burgs Univ; University Book Center, Kansas State University. 140 Lost & Found Found white Labrador, around one year old, wearing a red collar, very friendly. Call 845-5366 男 女 200s Employment 205 Help Wanted 600 CAMP IN THE USA, RUSSIA AND EUROPE NEED YOU THIS SUMMER. For the best summer of your life-see your career center or contact: Camp CounselorsUA 420 Florence St. Palo Alto, CA 94301 babyssitter at our home 8 miles from KU, 12 hrs a week, schedule negotiable, $0.50/hour. 841-1690 Babyssitter needed Monday-Friday, 8-noon in room and transportation required. $1.50/hour. 842-4232 CAMP SEQUOA in New York's Catkill Mills, (mns NYC) has summer jobs available. Cabin counselors, specialty instructors for sports, swimming, dance and golf. Outdoor art, English Hearse Basking, Outdoors Adventure Programs and more! Competitive Salary, room, board, travel allowance and laundry. See us at The Summer Employment Fair in the Kansas Union Ballroom on G-12-7-8. dry. See us at The Summer Employment Fair in the Kansas Union Ballroom on Ground Gig's Day, February 2nd. For more information call SEQOIA at (914) 679-3291. *Daycare are reliable assistants. Work with children 12 months old to 50 years. Ramp up to 60 feet. Responsible for safety. Child care for 8 yr. old, near campus, 5:05-3:49 PM Pay call 823-3811; evening, 642-2090 Call day 823-3811; evening, 642-2090 Campsite history in entry level, on-board positions available, great benefits. Summer or year round. (813) 229-5478. Custodian, Burge Union. Tuesday 9pm-midnight and Saturday 1am-11pm. Previous janitorial experience preferred. Able to lift 50 pounds. Work with minimal supervision. Snack Bar Attendant-KU attendance-Murphy-Mon-Fri-10am 3pm. Previous cashinger Attendance-KU attendance-Murphy-Mon-Fri-10am 3pm. Clerk, Office Assistant, KU Bookstore, Monday thru Friday 11am-4pm, type 40vwm, valid driver's license, Macintosh experience preferred. Knowledge of basic office procedures. All jobs pay $2.45 per hour. Apply Kanaas and Boeing at Personnel Office, Level 5, Union BOEQ Maid, Kansas Union, Saturday and Sunday 5am- 3:30pm; must be female, prefer previous house- keeping experience, of average or above physical strength. Do you like preschool children 3 to 5 years old? Do you want to make a difference in a child's life? Do you have a little free time? Volunteer at Head Start a day a week. For information call 924-2155. EOI. Female babysitter needed late afternoons & cve Female babysitter must be able to maintain transportability 861-949 861-949 Evening and weekend CNA's need to work with clients in their homes. Reliable transportation necessary. Call Sharon at Douglas County Visiting Nurses 835-3788. Greenspace in now hiring intelligent energetic staff. Fill position positions available. Staff. Full and part-time positions are available and include guaranteed wage and benefits. Call 1-800-324-8686 today, for more information. Everyone is welcome. Hobby Town USA is looking for responsible people to help in our new Lawrence franchise store. PT/FTA by writing to H.T.U., P.O. Box 11483, LAKES, KS 60079-1483. I am looking for a student to play with my 1/3 year old boy, Monday through Friday, 1-5 p.m. Please call Janalym at 842-3705. If you can only work certain days, please ask me. Excellent job! By donating your life saving blood plasma WALK-INS WELCOME! NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750 I CAN'T BELIEVE IT'S YOGURT New listing ASSISTANT MANAGER (Full or Part Time) Orchards Corner, 18th and Kaiseld-Lawrence PART TIME HELP Louisiana Purchase 23rd Louisiana Reply in person. Kenna position 15 hrs/wk included weekend & holidays. No phone calls please apply in person. Lawrence Veterinary Hospital 1145 W 23rd St. Looking for individual to watch Looking for individual to watch school-age children before and after school. Call 855-321-4670. PART-TIME EVENING DELIVERY PERSON must have own car. Apply in person Peking Restaurant (32rd and Iowa behind Hastings) 749- 0003 Freshman Substitute. Preference training and experience with young children. Sunshine Area School Part-time clinical job available now. Flexible hours. Call 842-2744. Philips 66 seeks cashiers to work the following shifts -5pm, 10am, 12am. Must be neat, clean and enjoy working with the public. Apply in person to Philips 66 900 low. PROMOTE our SPRINGRENAK package with our posters and flyers, or SIGNUP NOW for Springreena's rooms. Daytona, Panama, Padre, Miami. Tights #7; nights 19pm, up Call me: 1-800-423-5264. Duke University Talent Identification Program Resident Advisor and Teaching Assistant positions with TIP for a 3-week summer program at the University of Kansas. Programs also held at Duke, Davidson, and the Texas A&M and Duke Marine Labs. If you have a science background, ask about Scientific Field Studies. For information, write or call: Duke University TIP Box 90747 Durham, NC 27708-0747 (919) 684-3847 Apply by January 31, 1994 Apply by January 31, 1994. TiP SHIPPING ASSISTANT Lawrence-based, growing, international, technical publishing company has a part-time (15 hours per week) position available. Duties include shipping computer disks to the fulfillment leader as needed. Previous experience in computing computer disks for inventory, taking the mail to the office daily; and providing backup support to the fulfilment leader as needed. Previous experience working as a team required. Ability to maneuver up to 50 pounds and 50 wpm preferred. This position is part of our internal clerical support team (F) and helps other areas of the company as needed. R & D Publications. In an equal opportunity employer concerned with creating a pleasant work environment, we provide an enjoyable work environment with a reliable company, please contact us at 1016 West 46th Street Suite 200, Lawrence, KS PYRAMID PIZZA Now Taking Application "We Pile It On! Looking for enthusiastic people who understand what great service is all about! Now Hiring Drivers Must have car and insurance. Fast growing company. Looking for quality minded people. Good opportunity for growth. Full & Part Time Apply in person 14th & Ohio(under the Wheel) STUDENT CLERICAL ASSISTANT Deadline: 01/28/94. Salary: 43$/hour. Duties include assisting in invoicing; billing & timing of Computer Center operations; assisting with computer ledgers; assisting in Repair Shop orders; making daily deposits, recording microcomputer work records, and maintaining the office on a fill-in basis; and miscellaneous Business office duties to apply to complete a job application to the Office of the Computer Center. EO/AA EMPLOYER STUDENT SYSTEM TESTING PROGRAMMER. Deadline: 01/21/94. Salary $550-650/month. 20hrs per week. Duties include designing and writing programs, maintaining, or enhancing existing computer systems and libraries library maintenance. Required qualifications: currently enrolled at the University of Kansas, demonstrated experience in designing computer languages including Pascal or C. Good oral and written communications skills, experience and/or ability in software testing. Ability to maintain effective working relationships with customer representatives is desirable. To apply. complete an application available in Room 202 of the Computer Center. EO/AA EMPLOYER. EARN CASH STUDENT APPLICATIONS PROGRAMMER. DATE: 01/28/09. Salary: $450/month. 30 hrs per week. Duties include programming in C, K-SHELL, FOXPRO and/or other languages on ALK, OSF1, VMS, CMS and or LAN. Complete job description available in Rm2. Computer Center location available in Rm2. At the Computer Center and return to AimR. EAT/OA EMPLOYER. The Lawrence Bus Company is now taking applications for SAPERID DRIVE members. It has 2,1 have a clean drive record, and be familiar with Lawrence. Up to 15 hr/wk. If interested call 683-744-3900. $15 Today $30 This Week Plus a $3 Bonus By donating your blood plasma Walk-ins welcome Lawrence Donor Center Tennis Jobs-Summer Children's Camp-Northeast-Men and women with good tennis background can teach them to play tennis. Good salary, great training. write: Camp Vega, P.O. Box 1771, Duxbury, MA 02333 (617) 843-6538. Men call or write: Camp Winadu, 255 Glades Rd., Suite 4002, Boca Raton, FL 32531 (007) 994-5000. We will be on campus in the afternoon up to noon in 6/31 in the GREAT and Regional roomates. Vista Drive-e is now taking applications for full and part-time help. Apply in person. 1827 W. 6th. Waitewissa positions available: 1pm to 2am shifts M W F. Call Dug at 0837 0477 morning. 225 Professional Services 816W.24th Christian Daycare offers the best care at low rates. Preschool and kindergarten opening. Transporta- tion available. Call (864) 735-2100 for details. 616 W. 24th Behind Laird Noller Ford 749-5750 Hours: M-F9-6 NABI The Quality Source TRAFFIC-DUIS Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of TRAFFIC-DUI'S Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kesee 16 East 13th 842-1133 INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS DV1. green card Program Sponsored by the U.S. nurse resident status, Citizens of almost all countries are allowed to take part. Students, tourists, anyone may apply. For info and more. New Era Legal Services, 20231 Stag St, Canoga Park, CA 91418 DONALDG. STROLE Tel; (818) 998-4425; Fax; (818) 882-9681 OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense Rick Frydman, Attorney 823 Missouri 843-4023 VIDEO EDITING AND PRODUCTION SERVICES A/B production team with EDL. 3D computer animation. His field production package. Award winning screen writer PRIMAL SCREEN MEDIA UNICATIONS 913-841-6030 Attorney at Law General Practice Traffic Tickets, Misdemeanors, Landlord/Tenant BRAXTON B. COPLEY $ 719 Massachusetts 749-5339 235 Typing Services 1-der Women Word Processing, Former editor transforms scripts into accurate pages of letter format. - Looking for a good type * * Paper, Applications, Charts * Lesson to WOW! your prof's * Grammar and spelling free * 18 years experience * call Jack at * Make the Grade 865-2853 * 300s Merchandise 305 For Sale Almost new twin matte and box springs. $50 o.b.o. Call 841-5945. Beds, desks, bookcases, chest of drawers. Everything But Ice. 938 Mass. FALSE ALT. Mountain bike, oversized aluminum 20 in. frame; Deere DX throughout; $1150 new. Asking 600 Call Ben 841-9117. For sale. Unsigned foil. Mountain Bike. 9,2 Giant Iguana, Excellent Condition; 87/20 buc on call at 843-5988 Mac SE 20 ID, SVS7 T. Excel, updated memory, modem, imageWriter, carrying case, $95/obo to obtain. (800) 264-3311. 2and 3 bedroom apartments now available. On bus route. Call 748-1500. 340 Auto Sales and manuals $600 call 79-2839. IBM computer monitor disk drive, and software Queen size futon mattresses and wooden frame. Excellent condition. 775 Phone # 695-055 and 695 1482. Queen size custom futon bed, solid carpet w/ macr oil finish. $40 188-7114 for Sherri $40 188-7114 for Sherri Beas -$125, Ball Pythons -$45. Other lizards also Call Greg at 749-196 and leave message. 1973 Volkswagen Super Bug, good condition, great car student, car 840-843-1732 1 bedroom for sublease. 1 block from campus. 2 bedrooms, first mo., free Jan-Pebt August 4 through September 30. Graphing Calculator, almost 500 →80 offer, contact Contact for more info at (913)838-425 offer. Trek Carbin Fiber Roadlead w/sti-$699 Kristel Rollers w/stand.$200 7-spd Durace/Campy Tubulars-unsed$150 Super Nintendo 8/w games-$150 cassette. Runs great. $859 firm. 843-7032 85 Pontiac Firele, New red paint. Runs perfectly. A/C, Stereo, 5 speed. Cok guzel. 849.99. Call 749-3989 1862 Buckley Reg. new engine, S3K, Great A/M/FM cassette. Runs great. firm $425. firm $82. 3000 Buckley Reg. new engine, S3K, Great A/M/FM cassette. Runs great. firm $425. firm $82. Happy hours everyday from 3-4pm. All soft drinks are available at 3:30 and 7:30 at Buckley's. Hammersmith at 16th and 25th floors. 3 furnished rooms in ince spacious house close to St. Michael's St. Rachel/Washer/Dryer, A/C $25, Phillip Place $19, Available immediately! bjdm apc.1 1142 Ohio HU 50,063 compu.1 compu.2 1142 Ohio SCR- Pin, 1000 compu.1 compu.2 1142 Ohio SCRmarcus 31r 2lr, Georgetown Apartments, W/D marcus 41r 2hr, free queen waterbed, 4445 mary. 848-606-7888 Available now, studio apartment in nicely removed older house. Private entrance, separate bedroom, ceiling fan, room A/C. No pets. 1300 block Vermont. $296/month. 841-1074. Sony 10x Handycam w/case-$600 Call 841-9940 Female roommate needed. 1380 Ohio. 1 block off campus. Leave naive and number on answering phone. No phone calls. Numeral 1, 2 and 3 BR apartments available for August '94. *Washer/dryer, dishwasher, microwave, private patio/balcony. Avoid the Reserve your place now! 11/81-8468 or 14/85 370 Want to Buy Dispenely seeking roommate to live in 3 bedroom apt. Call Dave at 708-625-4100 or Rena at 708-625-4101. 1 bdm, furnished apt. for rent in private Private entrance, 1床room from KU, avail now Female graduate student preferred. No pets. $300/mo includes all utilities a cable. 686-8944. Careusel Slide Projector, Raymond, 2315 Arkansas, 419-8334 400s Real Estate Leaning until the end of July '94, 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, Coburn Woods *$460/mo*; Colonnade Woods * $475/mo*; Carpenter's Grove *$80/mo*; Campus Locations MASS. STREET, Lovely new 1 BR, ceiling fanning, Blinds, parking, quiet area, accessible /1/2 Floor space, 789-364-7894 405 For Rent meadowbrook COMPARE - Convenience - Location - Apartment Size - Cost Per Month - Surroundings - M-F8-5:30 - Lifestyle (Sorry, No Pets) Sat 10-4 Sun1-4 EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY 15th & Crestline Nice. 1 bedroom close to campus. Hard wood furniture. Parking on 4th floor in street parkia Day. 749-8219. Earnings: 83-99-99 One bedroom apartment, sublease immediately. On bus route, quiet, clean. Grayson Street frontments. 842-4200 Studio apartment now available close to campus Utilities paid, $350. 6 month lease availability 41-854-2972 Park25 We are now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature studio1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. We also have 3 bedroom, 2 1/2 bath townhomes. We presently have available a select few 1 & 2 bedroom apartments for immediate occupancy. *2 Pools *On KU Bus Route with 4 Stops on Property 4 Stopson Property *2 Laundry Rooms Hookups *2 Laundry Rooms *Some Washer/Dryer Call or stop by today. 2401 W. 25th, 9A3 842-1455 (sorry no pets) Hookups Sublease till July, new 2 bedroom in aplex Central and dorm. per +1m. monterey 843-709-7486 or 7486- 805 Monterey 843-709-7486 Sublease 2 Bedroom apt. Available February 1st. On KU bus route. 843-4097 Now leasing for Spring! we're making life easier! available for January MASTERCRAFT We now have SUBLEASES available for January - Weekly Maid Service •Front Door Bus Service •"Dine Anytime" with Unlimited Seconds •Laundry and Vending Facilities •Free Utilities Completely furnished 4 bedroom apts. Call or go to: Sundance • 841-5255 Regents Court • 749-0445 430 Roommate Wanted are looking for 3rd roommate for little room in a bedroom appt. rear campus, $140 + 5/10 utilities. 2 female roommates desperately needed for spacious 3 bdrm apt, on bus route, dishwasher. WE HAVE TO MOVE! Call 842-7647 utilities paid. $215.00/month. Call Ivan. 461-4699 2 to share spacious house, completely furnished, in walking distance to campus, $250/month + utilities. call 749-218-165 or 2 roommates needed for new 3 bedroom apt. 220/m² + 1/3 utility. Near campus. W/D in apt. are looking for 3rd roommate for little room edroom apt. near campus, $10 + 1/4 uf - Free Utilities College-large roommate needed now for 3 BR apartment home. HI/tsr/mv water, pd. Jan. rent free. NAISMITH Female roommate, beautiful 3 bedroom town- home. Available in 1, 749-288 or 0 no smoke. Available in 1, 749-288 or 0 no smoke. Female, non-smoking, roommate, immie- fice, apartment home, bedroom, wash/dryer, ironing board 1800 Female roommate needed for 3 bedroom very close to campus. $192.50 + fee. Call Jalata at 416-785-8314. Naismith Drive THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Female roommate wanted for 2 bdm apt. close to campman $200 per month, includes rent and utilities. Female femalemate wanted to share a bldm, I bath duplex # microwave, W/D/C, A/OmRU bus route. Have your own room, covered parking, private drive fire place, dishwasher, etc., for only $499. Male Grad student seek M/F/m不愿 atacker at great age and not have any experience in dishwashing, disposal, and contain air/air block from bus route and convenient to downtown. Avail. immediately. Call Kevin at 842-8294. Male/Male roommate needs one (one $300/month, Bills p. call 86-812-9100) Male/Male roommate needs a nice nixie phone. Call 86-812-9100 Roommate needed for 3 berm furnished rent. Pkt is +1/4 v/slice on n/c bus route AND W/D. For extra room please call +1(212)697-8000. room house. $100 per person. Male or female roommate to share 2 br. house. Non-smoker. Quiet and considerate. CA, W/ D, W/D. 875 (i.tl. inc.) Call: 748-5411. Need 1 female immud for 2nd form, bikes from Bkun bt, rw d, $300 + /$100, call 749-888-0 or 841-4365 Needed by Feb. 1. NSLRM Go to shares 3 DB Pkx 0.5 Need 1 female immud for 2nd form, DW, paddle 5 min. fm. Bkun Bt, Rul C. 841-144 - By phone: 864-4358 Female N/L roommate for 2 BDRM, 2 bath furn. except for bdm. W/D, fireplace, pool. Near campus, on bus route. $240/mo. and %/u'll., cable paid. contact 82-8333. How to schedule an ad: Koordinate needed to share 3 barm, townhouse. Very nice. Price $165/mo + 1/2 utilities Call Jule Tower, 247-698-0555 or jules@tower.com 2 roomsmate to share brand new condo for $150,000. Wanted: Female roommate to share new and condo with 3 other female college students. Walking distance to campus. 6 month lease available. Necessary proof of residence. Roommate wanted to share 2 br. house in quiet neighborhood. 817-701-8433. moa. 433-4388. Roommate needed for 4 bdms inous near campus, WD, appliance, furnished except for bdrm. Will have with part of rent, pets possible. Call 860-2431. Roommate needed to share 3 bdms from campus. Wanted: one roommate, pennmaster to share a bedroom from campus. Two full baths. 842-445 Ade phone in may be held by your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made. **name:** 119 Shawford Flint Stop by the Kansas offices between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or Visa. Classified Information and order form You may print your classifier order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas offices. Or you may choose to have它 billed to your MasterCard or VISA account. Aids that are billed to VISA or MasterCard quality for a refund on aused days can be cancelled before their expiration date. Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of agile lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run. Redundancy When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available. The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kanean office for a fee of $4.00. Name. of insertions: 3 lines 4 lines 5-7 lines 8+ lines Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Classifications Cost per line per day 1X 14K 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 30+X 2.05 1.55 1.65 .85 .75 .50 1.99 1.18 1.05 .70 .65 .45 1.85 1.05 .75 .65 .65 .45 1.75 .60 .65 .60 .55 .35 305 for sale 300 auto sales 360 miscellaneous 105 personal 110 business personals 129 announcements 120 material entertainment 1 2 3 4 5 ADS MUST FOLLOW KAKANS POLICY Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print; 378 want to buy 485 for root 430 rodentmate wanted Classification: Address: Address: Total days in paper VISA Meiod of Payment (Check one) ☐ Check enclosed ☐ MasterCard ☐ Visa (Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansas) Furnished with the information you provide your ad: Account number: Expiration Date Print exact name appearing on credit card: MasterCard Signature: The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence. KS. 66845 THE FAR SIDE By GARY LARSON © 1994 FarWorks, Inc. Dist by Universal Press Syndicate Karvon 1-18 "Oh my God, Alice! ... Heading right for us! A chewed-up No. 2 pencil!" 12 Tuesday, January 18, 1994 The Etc. Shop TM Ray-Ban BENCHMARK & VINYL Sunglasses for DRIVING Pancho's MEXICAN RESTAURANT Homestyle Mexican Food 23rd & Louisiana 843-4044 SPORTS Rings Fixed Fast! Kizer Cummings jewelers 749-4333 833 Mass • Lawrence, KS Camera America ONE HOUR PHOTO Lawrence's Largest Supplier of Darkroom Materials 1610 West 23rd Street 841-7205 DON'S AUTO CENTER "For All Your Repair Needs" *Complete Auto Repair *Machine Shop Service *Parts Department 841-4833 920 E. 11th Street LAWRENCE & PARKS TAE-KWON-DO SCHOOL LAWRENCE S Increase your self-value through being a Martial Artist! Learn Martial Arts from an Original Master Master Ki-June Park, Ph.D. Best Price in Town: 715 High St., Baldwin 10th & Massachusetts 843-2121 WATKINS 1907 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN "We Care For KU" Anonymous HIV Antibody Testing What? The Test for HIV - the AIDS virus Where? Watkins Health Center When? Mondays Cost? $18.50 cash (paid at initial visit) How? By Appointment Only 864-9507 STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES 864-9500 "Anonymous Testing" means that you do not use your real name when being tested. Your test results will be provided to you in person two weeks after your initial visit. Testing includes pre- and post-test counseling. 864-9507 Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students The Lowest CD Prices In Town! Current,Popular CDs for $5.95! Buy 5 or more CDs for $4.95! For the Best Values in Town Visit Also available, special selection CDs $3.95! Buy 10 or more CDs for $2.50 each! Lawrence Pawn 843-4344 718 New Hampshire Volleyball coach dismissed By Andrew Gilman Kansan sportswriter Frankie Albiz, Kansas women's volleyball coach, will not be returning to the Jayhawks next season. Albitz did not comment on why she was dismissed. "We appreciate Frankie's contributions to the volleyball program, and we wish her success in her future endeavors," Frederick said in a written statement. Assistant coach Karen Schonewise was named interim head coach. Dr. Bob Frederick, Kansas athletic director, said Friday that the letter of appointment for head volleyball coach Frankie Albitz will not be renewed when it expires June 30, 1994. "They gave me reasons," she said. "But I'm not comfortable with discussing them. They have their opinion, and I have mine. If I had to say anything, I think it was miscommunication and misunderstanding." "I'm sure I made some mistakes," Albiz said. "But I think the program is headed forward, and I think I had a big part in that." "It's hard to describe," she said. "It's not shocking, but I'm disappointed. The team has done well, and I'm proud." Although she was positive about the program, she felt that starting new traditions was a difficult task. Albizt said that she was not surprised with the news. "I think there were a lot of things I had to do, including stepping out of my personality." All said. "I don't regret it, when you are changing traditions. It was necessary to step away from my personality to shake things up and make some positive changes." Albitz said that, in spite of the problems she endured, her relationship with Frederick remained stable. "I thought he was very patient with me," she said. "He and I had our differences, but I admired him." Albitzsaid she was not sure of her future. FRANKIE ALBITZ CAREER: Frankie Allitz not will be the head volleyball coach for the Jayhawks next season. She compiled a 151-141 record during her nine-year career at Kansas. PETER PARKER During her 18-year coaching career, she has amassed a 358-332-7 record. Albitz also has coached at Oral Roberts and Oklahoma State. Her season by season records at Kansas are: "I need to take the next step," she said. "I Source: Kansas sports information. really don't know what I'm going to do, but I'm open-minded about everything." Overall, Albitz was happy with her progress at Kansas. "The program has increased by leaps and bounds," she said. "We all contributed, it took a total team effort. Though the team's foundations were slow to materialize, Albitz said the program is on the right track. KANSAN "The program was neglected for awhile, but now I think the administration is moving in the right direction," Albitz said. "They've always listened to me, and they've done some real nice things. I think the team is going to be a national contender next year. I hoped I helped the program." Albiz had nothing but good words to say about the future of Kansas volleyball. "I wish everyone well," she said. "The administration was doing what they thought was right. I think we need to keep working in the right direction." Albiz coached the Jayhawks to an 18-14 record last season. YARNBARN Beginning and Intermediate Knitting Classes Starting Soon! Beginning Knitting: Learn by making a sweater! $20.00 for 8 weeks. 20% off class yarns - Jan 20 - Feb 7 (Mon) 7-9 p.m. (Thurs) 7-9p.m. - Feb 16 (Wed) 9:30 - 11 a.m. • Mar 8 (Tues) 7-9 p.m. Complete schedule of all classes available at Yarn Barn 918 Mass. St. YARN BARN United Parcel Service Part time Jobs ups ups $8 Hour ups Interviews will be held Wednesday, Jan.19 from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Sign up in the placement center, 110 Burge Union E/O/Em/f GOING OUT OF BUSINESS SALE Inventory Liquidation! Everything on Sale! Entire Inventory Included! S E WOMEN'S: CAMBRIDGE... Up to 50% OFF SPORTSWEAR IN SOUTHWEST LOOKS WOOLRICH & BOULEVARD ... FROM $69$99 OUTERWEAR & JACKETS CAMBRIDGE SPORTSWEAR... FROM $3499 DENIM TOPS & SKIRTS EAGLE'S EYE & C.J. COTTON... FROM $39'99 SWEATERS-BASICS & FANCIES RIVER CITY FROM $3499 KHAKI SKIRTS/SLACKS CALVIN KLEIN FROM $3999 ALL DENIM JEANS MEN'S: DRESS SLACKS ... FROM $29.99 Poly-Wool & All Wools COLOURS FROM $3599 SHIRTS & KNITS FROM $6999 WOOLRICH & BOULEVARD ... OUTERWEAR & JACKETS DESIGNER SWEATERS ... FROM $39 99 SIZES THROUGH 2x JEANS & KHAKIS ... FROM $29.99 ALL BRANDS JJ FARMER & HENRY GRETHEL ... $34$99 *SPORT SHIRTS & DRESS SHIRTS* MEN'S & LADIES' WOOL BLAZERS... FROM $99.99 MEN'S & LADIES' ACCESSORIES... UP TO 1/2 PRICE DRESS & NOVELTY TIES, BRAIDED BELTS, TIGHTS, JEWELRY, PURSES & SOCKS Permit #94-00 UP TO 1/2 OFF! UP TO 1/2 OFF! AIR LIFE 919 MASS 842-6069 HUNTERS LTD. CLOTHING COMPANY DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE Hours: M-S 9-6 Thurs. 11: 8:30 Sun 12-5:30 SPORTS: Kansas senior forward Richard Scott's concussion hurt him and the Jayhawks. Page 11. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS VOL.103,NO.82 KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL, SOCIETY TOPEKA KS 66612 WEDNESDAY JANUARY 19.1994 ADVERTISING:8644358 (USPS 650-640) NEWS: 864-4810 Quake leaves Southern California battered LA copes with loss of lives, freeways, water, electricity The Associated Press LOS ANGELES — Under skies as bright and blue as ever, Southern Californians confronted a changed world yesterday. The defining features of this region's life — water, power and freeways — were suddenly uncertain. In their place, long lines, hellish commutes and constant earthquake aftershocks. A 16th body was found inside a flattened apartment building in Northridge, near the epicenter of Monday's powerful earthquake, bringing the death toll from the quake to 34. At least 2,600 people were injured. But that was only the worst toll paid by people in this battered city. Once again, the rhythms of life in QUAKE in LOS ANGELES Southern California were snapped by disaster, much as they were after last fall's wildfires and the Los Angeles riots 21 months ago. the effects of this disaster on the day-to-day lives of residents were likely to reach farther and fast longer. "The days ahead will also be rough for us," Mayor Richard Riordan warned people in Los Angeles, even as he praised them for a cool-headed response to the crisis. "Let's all stick together." A snapshot of a region in crisis yesterday: Many offices, schools and stores were closed, and workers were urged to stay home. But the closure of four of the nation's busiest freeways still made commuting a frustrating adventure. Aftershocks, some as strong as 5 on the Richter scale, continued to jolt the region. About 100,000 homes remained without power, and between 50,000 and 100,000 were without water, almost all of them in the hard-hit San Fernando Valley. The Department of Water and Power said it could be a week or more before water was restored. A Pacific Bell representative said telephone lines were overloaded but not damaged. The governor's Office of Emergency Services said only that property damage would be in the "hundreds of millions" of dollars. Pete Wilson, who has fended off fire, flood, riots and recession as California's governor, answered questions outside the crushed apartment building in Northridge, the site of the greatest number of fatalities. Unfortunately, Wilson said, it would take up to a year to rebuild fallen bridges that carry Interstate 10, the Santa Monica Freeway, over surface streets in Los Angeles. Several hundred thousand people a day use the Santa Monica Freeway, making it the nation's busiest highway. Near the fallen bridges yesterday morning, traffic crawled on Fairfax Avenue at a rate of about four blocks an hour. Fear drives many from homes The Associated Press LOS ANGELES — Iva Erwin spent her 80th birthday sitting on a curb without her medicine, her shoes or a roof over her head. Yesterday, she was tired, confused — and scared to go home. A few feet away, Jacqueline Jacquez, age 6, was clutching her father, her head burrowed in his shirt, still shaking from the predawn jolt that tore her from the warmth of her bed a day before. For the young and old, the initial terror of Monday's earthquake is over, but the aftershocks and the fear that next time it could be the "Big One" have left them stunned, shaken and sleepless. "I won't go back. No-ooo," said Erwin, who moved to a Red Cross shelter after her apartment building was heavily damaged in the quake, which struck on her 80th birthday. "It just isn't safe." "Scared is not the word," said Marion Sweet, a 44-year-old secretary staying in the shelter with her two teen-age sons, "I thought I woke up in hell. ... You don't want to go to sleep. You're afraid if you do, you'll go through the same night." Sweet and nearly 400 others spent Monday night on cots or in the parking lot of Granada Hills High School, about five miles from the quake's epicenter. Many, including Sweet, didn't lose their homes but were afraid to return immediately because windows were blown out, furniture was overturned and walls were cracked. [Image of two men engaged in a conversation, one wearing a suit and the other in a blazer. The background is blurred with indistinct figures.] Martin Altstaedten / KANSAM Paul McMaster, right, vice president of the Freedom Forum Center, talks with Paul Wenske, assistant professor of journalism. McMaster discussed issues regarding free speech on college campuses yesterday in Stauffer-Flint Hall. Bans on speech illegal, he says Speaker warns of loss of freedom By Susan White Kansan staff writer College campuses have been experiencing a growing phenomena stemming from the burning of books in the past, said the vice president of the Freedom Forum Center — the trashing, burning and stealing of school newspapers. "Mark Goodman, the executive director of the Student Press Law Center, calls it an epidemic," said Paul McMasters, who spoke before a group in the auditorium of Stauffer-Flint Hall last night. "I call it an outrage." McMasters spoke about the curtailing of the free-speech rights of students. He said the perpetrators of these acts had been administrative officials, faculty and some students who claimed that the newspapers were too insensitive about racial issues or too explicit about items that should have been censored. McMasters said the reaction of university officials to the destruction of newspapers by students had been appalling. "They have been scolding the campus police for trying to stop the actions," he said. "They call the newspaper trash, little more than litter. Far too many policies of the college officials have been to wink and walk away." He said he thought that paper burning could become one of the most dangerous expressions of outrage. He said he feared that all discussion about issues would cease. "There are a number of reasons why speech codes should be on the way out," he said. "They enforce a form of ignorance rather than encourage education and enlightenment. They divert the dialogue from a focus on fairness to a preoccupation on censorship. They fail to adequately define acceptable and unacceptable. They trivialize debate. They exacerbate racial and other tensions." "It's a sad recourse for people to come to an institution of higher learning where this is going on," McMasters said. "It it scares me. It is very important to get involved to stop censorship now." McMasters said that campus speech codes — including those found in the KU Student Handbook — should be done away with. But McMasters said not all campus Students cannot simply depend on the administration to provide the right to free speech, McMasters said. They should empower themselves to fight for their First Amendment rights. "They must take a stand," he said. "it's difficult to do." "You should be more involved," he said. "You are better than all of this. You are the hope of the future. You are the leaders and thinkers of tomorrow." officials across the nation wanted censorship. Philip Alfano, president of the KU chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists, said he had found the speech to be thought-provoking. "McMasters came off as more extreme than I thought," he said. "I didn't realize that he defended everything about the First Amendment." Students volunteer services worldwide Work experiences offer new outlooks on cultures, they say By Mark Burnstein Kansan staff writer "You can talk about helping people and compassion, but the key is putting words into action," said Richard Sheriff, Minneapolis, Minn., senior. Sheriff spent 10 days in December working in a medical clinic in the Philippines. Past and present KU students who go to the other side of the world to do volunteer work find the experience is well worth it. Sheriff went to the Philippines as part of a medical mission sponsored by the Philippine Medical Society of Greater Kansas City. This was the group's first year, and it included doctors and nurses from Overland Park Regional Medical Center. But this is not the only avenue for volunteering. Two former KU students recently completed two years in the Peace Corps. "The great thing about the Peace Corps is that you come back empowered," said Barbaria Hilman, who spent from 1990 to 1992 in Poland. "You feel like you can do anything that needs to be done." Jane Hundley, a 1901 KU graduate who returned from Mali in July, said the experience had taught her something that she never could have learned at home. "I got a very personal and intimate appreciation of a culture I knew very little about." she said. All of the volunteers said they thought that their experiences would be useful in their future endeavors. The experience was invaluable, Sheriff said, because he was allowed to do things that he would not be able to do in the United States, like perform simple surgeries and help deliver babies. He also had contact with patients that he normally would not get until medical school. The experience was such a positive one that he plans to go again next year and maybe again after that, he said. "I will want to do volunteer work more as a doctor because I will have more to give," he said. The medical mission also had an unintended positive effect, Sheriff said. The presence of the medical group spurred the Philippine government to fix up its medical facilities. Medical missions may be a new idea for KU students, but the Peace Corps has been in existence since 1961. Hundley is one of many KU graduates who have taken advantage of the program. There are now 46 KU graduates serving in the Peace Corps and 12 who are planning to go on an assignment in the near future. And she did. "I wanted to travel and see another part of the world," Hundley said. "I really wanted to learn about a different culture." Hundley lived in a two-room mud brick house with another Peace Corps volunteer in a village of 350 people. The house had no running water or electricity, and she received most of her news by listening to BBC broadcasts on a transistor radio. Hilman, who graduated from KU in 1960 and is now a Peace Corps recruiter assigned to the University, went into the Peace Corps because her own life took a turn for the worse, and she wanted reassurance that it wasn't that bad, she said. Hundley said she had felt isolated at first but soon became busy with health demonstrations in villages in the Bambara area of Mali. "I wanted to go help somebody in worse shape than me," she said. "My problems turned out to be nothing compared to the people I saw." Sheriff also came back with a new perspective. Hilpman agreed. "It really made me appreciate the health systems in the United States," he said. "It's a very rewarding experience," she said. "You definitely get more than you give." INSIDE Practice and Expenses INSIDE Practice and Expenses Students in bands worry about more than just music Page 3. Students in bands worry about more than just music Page 3. CNN anchor to receive journalism award By Stephen Martino If one staff writer nansanstan writer The spotlight is the last place that journalist, such as Bernard Shaw, want to be. Shaw anchors "Prime News" and "Inside Politics" for the Cable News Network. His travels have taken him to Iraq, where he was one of CNN's three reporters who covered the bombing of Baghdad at the outset of Operation Desert Storm. He contributed 30 continuous hours of live coverage to the student uprising at Tiananmen Square in Beijing, China, and he has moderated a presidential debate and several presidential primary debates. But Shaw will have to step into it long enough to accept the William Allen White Foundation's national citation in February at the University of Kansas. "Bernard Shaw is an example of the best that television news has to offer," said Mike Kautsch, dean of the School of Journalism. "While his medium is different than that of William Allen White, I believe Mr. White would have respected the diligence of Shaw's reporting and the insight he provides to his viewers." The citation is presented annually to a journalist who "mirrors White in service to profession and country." White was a Pulitzer Prize-winning editor of the Emporia Gazette. The school is named in his honor. "Bernard Shaw is at the forefront of upholding the highest ideals of reporting and journalism," said Del Brinkman, journalism program officer with the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation in Miami. Brinkman, former dean of the school and vice chancellor for academic affairs, said White would approve of having his name attached to anyone who was a top-level journalist, even a nonprint journalist. "Bernard Shaw epitomizes what journalism is," said Adrienne Rivers, associate professor of journalism. "He has a firm conviction to get out and get the story for his audience. He has a consistency that is always there, and he isn't afraid to ask the tough questions." Shaw has been able to maintain a consistent image because of his straight-forward, no-nonsense style, said John Broholm, assistant professor of journalism. Shaw will receive the citation and give the annual William Allen White Day address at 1:30 p.m. Feb. 11 at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. It is part of the two-day celebration commemorating White and recognizing contributions of modern journalists. BERNARD SHAW HOMETOWN: Chicago CAREER: 1971-1977 Correspondent in CBS Washington Bureau 1977-1980 Senior Capitol Hill correspondent for ABC News MICHAEL J. SMITH Anchor of CNN's "PrimeNews" and "InsidePolitics" 1980-present — With Cable News Network since its inception Reported live from Baghdad, Iraq, during first wave of Allied attacks during Operation Desert Storm Reported for 30 straight hours from Tiananmen Square in Beijing, China, during student protests Moderated one presidential debate and several presi- dential primary debates KANSAN 2 Wednesday, January 19, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The University Daily Kansan (UPSP 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-FlintHall; Lawrence, Kan 68045. "Home of the Pocket-Za" .357 Special Wednesday carry out only $3 small 1 topping $5 medium 1 topping $7 large 1 topping tax not included RUDY'S PIZZERIA 749-0055 Now located at 704 Mass. ON CAMPUS DIVE into SPRING BREAK ROATAN, HONDUAS March 21-26 $898 Certified Diver $760 Non-Diver ADVENTURE TRAVEL INTERNATIONAL 1-800-537-3865 OAKS—Non-Traditional Student Organization will hold a brown bag lunch from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. today at Alcove H in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Gerril Vernon at 864-7317 ■ University Forum will sponsor "Our Juvenile Offenders: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly" at noon today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread. For more information, call Thad Holcombe at 843-4933. St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today in Danforth Chapel St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a Catholic student discussion group at 1:10 p.m. today (following 12:30 Mass) at Alcove B in the Kansas Union. For more information, call 843-0357. The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an informational meeting for students interested in studying in Great Britain at 4 p.m. today at Room 3 in Lippincott Hall. For more information, call the office at 864-3742. KU Gamers and Roleplayers will meet at 5:30 p.m. today on the third floor of the Burge Union. For more information, call Alex Baker at 864-7316. KU Kempo Karate Club will meet at p. 6 m.p. today in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Mandana Ershadi at 842-4713. KU Environers will meet at 6 p.m. today at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Amy Trainer at 841-4484. KU Tae Kwon Do Club will meet at 6 p.m. today in 207 Robinson Center. For more information, call Jacob Wright at 749-2084 or Jason Anishansilin at 843-3099. KU Equestrian Team will meet at 6 p.m. today at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Kari Frederick at 841-3139. Chi Alpha Christian Fellowship will meet at 7 tonight at the Frontier Room in the Burge Union. Everyone is welcome. For more information, call Stephen Swanson at 832-1242. University Dance Company will sponsor company auditions at 7 tonight in 242 Robinson Center. Auditions are open to all KU students, and no solo material is required. For more information, call Janet Hambarg at 864-4264. KU Sailing Club will meet at 7:30 tonight at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Tom Connard at 841-4597. Jayrunners, KU's long-distance running club, will have an organizational meeting at 7:30 p.m. tonight at Parlors A and B in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Kimberly Brungardt at 864-1507. **Watkins Memorial Health Center will sponsor an eating-disorders support group from 7:30 to 8:30 tonight at the second-floor conference room in Watkins. For more information, call Sarah Kirk at 864-4121 or 749-5725.** WEATHER Omaha: 16'/1" LAWRENCE: 29'/7" Kansas City: 27'/4" St. Louis: 20'/2" Wichita: 36'/12" Minneapolis: 6'/-18' Phoenix: 77'/47' Salt Lake City: 52'/28' Seattle: 50'/37' TODAY Atlanta: 32'/9' Chicago: 10'/12' Houston: 48'/26' Miami: 68'/56' Minneapolis: 6'/-18' Phoenix: 77'/47' Salt Lake City: 52'/28' Seattle: 50'/37' Tomorrow Friday us 5-10 mph Rough: 29' Low: 7' Warming slightly and breezy High: 34' Low: 14' Sunny and breezy High: 43' Low: 26' WEATHER Omaha: 16'/1' LAWRENCE: 29'/7' Kansas City: 27'/4' St. Louis: 20'/2' Weather around the country: Atlanta: 32'/9' Chicago: 10'/12' Houston: 48'/26' Miami: 68'/56' Minneapolis: 6'/-18' Phoenix: 77'/47' Salt Lake City: 52'/28' Seattle: 50'/37' Tulsa: 41'/17 Sunny Sun Sunny and breezy High: 43° Low: 26° KANSAN ON THE RECORD The owner of Stereo Lane, 2024 W. 23rd St., reported a burglary at the store on Sunday. Stereo equipment with a total value of $24,133 was taken. The thief had apparently broken through the wall of an empty commercial space next door, then disabled the alarm system, Lawrence police reported. A KU student reported the theft of two electric guitars, a cassette recorder and an Aesis guitar-effects processor, valued together at $2000, at 3:45 a.m. in the 1300 block of West 24th Street. When the student returned home he found his door unlocked with no signs of forced entry, Lawrence police report. CORRECTION A cutline on Page One of yesterday's Kansan contained incorrect information. Travis Gross is a Kansas City, Mo., junior. UNIVERSITY DANC COMPANY AUDITION We Wednesday, January 19th 7:00 p.m. Studio 242 Robinson No solo material required. For more information, please call 864-4264 Out on a limb? Need another course? Enroll today! Earn University of Kansas credit through Independent Study. Stop by Independent Study Student Services, Continuing Education Building, Annex A, Just north of the Student Union for a catalog or call 864-4440 for information. You've Always Wanted to Try Tae Kwon Do! With Our Great New Year's Special, NOW IS THE TIME! FITNESS You've always known the Martial Arts would improve your fitness for alonger, healthier Life. But... ...Build Confidence and Self Esteem,which will help you or your children make the right decisions in Life! Instructors: Mr. & Mrs. Don Booth Did you know martial arts: • Improve Concentration and Self Discipline, which will often lead to increased performance at work or school? Did you know Martial Arts: ...Are a great way to Relax and relieve Stress. relieve Stress. ...And of course, if you're ever in a bad situation, it can save your Life! On top of everything else, Martial Arts lessons are Fun! So, don't wait another minute, make that resolution to get involved today! Call now to take advantage of our great New Year's Special. New Year's Special Free Uniform When you Join! (S-40 value) Call Now! 749-4400 New Horizons Black Belt Academy of Tae Kwon Do Holiday Plaza Shopping Center 25th & Iowa, Lawrence THE VHARBOURLIGHTS Home of the original 32 ox Jam Inv Monday ...$1.00 Draws and $1.25 Premium Draws Tuesday...$2.50 Premium Jam Jars Wednesday...$1.50 Wells LIVE MUSIC ALL NIGHT Thursday...$1.50 Jam Jars Friday...$1.50 Miller Highlife Bottles Saturday...$2.75 Big Import Bottles Sunday*...$1.75 Margaritas and Bloody Marys A Downtown Tradition Since 1936 A Downtown Tradition Since 1936 1031 Massachusetts Buy a book you can actually use. Macintosh PowerBook 145b 4/80 The Campus Software Set for Macintosh When you are out buying books for this semester, there is one book you can't afford not to buy. The PowerBook 145b 4/80 is so versatile that it can help you through even the toughest classes. The PowerBook 145b 4/80 has the portable convenience of a textbook and the power capability of a conventional Macintosh. And now is the best time to purchase because the Union Technology Center has the PowerBook 145b 4/80 with Claris Works, the Campus Software Set and a laser quality StyleWriter II printer all for the special student rate of only $1639^{00} Macintosh. The Power to be your Best at KU. Macintosh. It does more. It costs less. It's that simple. union technology center KU Academic Computer Supplies, Service & Equipment VISA MasterCard DCWV1R KU Apple Academic Computer Supplies, Service & Equipment Burge Union *Level 3* = 1034-861-5690 VISA MasterCard Visa Card DISCOVER > CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, January 19, 1994 3 Students to rebuild old school By Roberta Johnson Kansan staff writer This summer, KU students can take part in rebuilding history. The Barber schoolhouse, a 123-year-old abandoned building west of Lawrence, is undergoing a restoration project through the School of Architecture and Urban Design. Students can earn six credits in the course ARCH 359, Historic Preservation Practicum and Studio. The course will be taught by Barry Newton and Harris Stone, assistant professor and professor of architecture and urban design respectively. Enrollment in the school is not required to participate in the program. "The only prerequisite is knowing how to prevent constant chigger attacks," Newton said. A meeting for all interested students will be at noon today at the Jury Room in Marvin Hall. This is the second year that the school has offered the project, which includes physical rebuilding, architectural planning, historical research and tours and studies of buildings that are similar to the schoolhouse. A portion of the schoolhouse will be rebuilt during the next four summers, Newton said. The southwest corner and most of the roof were unsafe and were torn down during the summer. "Most of the roof had rotted out," said Kristin Gossman, Peculiar, Mo., senior. "The back wall had crumbled on. There was a big crack down the back wall in the stone." The students and professors had to stabilize the building because it had no existing foundation, Gossman said. They also took out several stones to help stabilize the schoolhouse, and they clipped out old mortar. The Barber school was named for abolitionist Thomas Barber, who was shot near the site in 1855. The school was built in 1871 and remained open until 1946. It closed because the school district had only two students. Newton said that the building had been neglected for 20 years and that people had vandalized and stolen stones from it during that time. The class is working with the Douglas County Preservation Alliance. Once restored, the building will be used by the preservation alliance and other community and civic groups for meetings, Worster said. LesBiGaySOK offers acceptance Group battled for recognition By Denise Nell Kansan staff writer Scott Manning, Lawrence graduate student, once heard a rumor that a KU teacher said he wished that all gay and lesbian students would be locked up in a cellar in Strong Hall. "I hear a lot of really homophobic remarks in classrooms, sometimes by teachers," he said. "I'm a teacher, and I've heard my own students say stuff like that." Manning, the co-director of LesBiGay Services of Kansas, said this type UNITING TO BE HEARD of discrimination had prompted the creation of LesBiGaySOK, an organization for lesbian, bisexual and gay KU students. The group sponsors programs such as the safe zone program, in which red signs are placed in office windows to let students know that they will be accepted there. Karl Woolz, a Fair Oaks Ranch, Texas, graduate student and an assistant for gay, lesbian and bisexual concerns in the Student Assistance Center, said he had helped begin that program in October for National Coming Out Day. "What the sign does, hopefully, is to show a lesbian, bisexual or gay person — or a straight person — that this is a place they can find support, someone who will listen to them, that this person is someone actually trying to educate himself or herself about Les-BigGay issues," he said. Lesbian, bisexual and gay students didn't always have as much help finding support on campus. An article in the Vanguard, a magazine published by LesBiGaySOK during 1992's Gay and Lesbian Awareness Week, said that the group — known in the 1970s as the Lawrence Gay Liberation Front — started in 1970 with a lawsuit for official recognition by the University. In 1973, the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the University's position. The group appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court, but the court refused to consider the case. After the case, the University enacted a policy for student organizations. The policy said an organization could not promote or oppose "particular and customarily private activities, habits or proclivities." This denied organization status to the Lawrence Gay Liberation Front. In 1980, David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, submitted a proposal to then-Chancellor Archie Dykes asking to abolish the policy. It was approved, and by the 1980-81 school year the group was registered as an organization and was eligible for Student Senate financing. name changes since then. It was expanded to include lesbian students in 1981 and bisexuals in 1993. The current name, LesBiGaySOK, was adopted in May. Woelz said that most of the lesbian, bisexual and gay students with whom he talked thought that KU's campus had a relatively friendly atmosphere. Today, the group has about 100 members and sponsors dances and other social events throughout the year. It also provides peer counseling for students. "My sense of the campus in talking with other queer people is that it's a relatively safe place physically," he said. "It's rare that there are instances of physical abuse. My experience with people is that more often than not, they're willing to be open." Photographer captures wetland's plight Photo courtesy of Vic Banks I A caiman, a relative of the crocodile, is a common sight in Brazil's largest wetland, the Pantanal. Vic Banks, a photo- journalist, documented the Pantanal in a photo exhibit, which is on display at the Museum of Natural History until April. By Angelina Lopez Kansan staff writer Vic Banks loves the underdog. As a science writer and a photojournalist, he has been defending one of the world's largest underdogs for the last 10 years — Brazil's Pantanal. The Pantanal is the largest wetland in the world and is home to rare birds, plants, reptiles and mammals. Banks said. The Pantanal's environment and life forms are constantly threatened by man. "This is a world-class region going rapidly to the dogs, and no one is doing anything about it." Banks said. Little attention has been given to the plight of this area because of the emphasis placed on the Amazon rain forest, said Kathryn Wiese Morton, coordinator of marketing and public relations at the Museum of Natural History. Banks, however, has spent seven years of his life, has written a book, and has produced an audio cassette, a documentary film and a traveling exhibition on the Pantanal. The photo exhibition, "The Pantanal: Brazil's Forgotten Wilderness," is on display at the Museum of Natural History until April. The Pantanal covers an area about the size of Wyoming and lies around the head of the Paraguay River. Although "pantanal" means "swamp land" in Portuguese, the Pantanal resembles the dry savannas of East Africa half the year, Banks said. However, from December through April, the savanna is flooded. This flooding causes vast, shallow seas known as water holes. These water holes attract an exotic array of animals. More than 600 species of birds congregate around the water holes to feed on the fish that are caught in them, Banks said. Fish — such as piranhas and flesh-eating catfish — may do the feasting, as well. Endangered animals — such as the spotted jaguar and the caiman, the cousin of the crocodile — roam the land and run from the illegal hunters who prey upon them. "Vic is very committed to bringing awareness to the public," Morton said. "To him, it's a personal matter." Morton said the museum tried to attract exhibits that opened the public's eyes—exhibits such as Banks'. She said people should be aware of the Amazon rain forest but should realize that there were other areas with beautiful animals that were just as important. "You can go around the corner and be awe-struck," Banks said. Courses teach fluency outside language classes By Susan White Kansan staff writer According to a 1909 study by the Department of Education, only 8.5 percent of all college and university students in the United States studied a foreign language. KU students are no different, said Terry Weidner, associate director of the Center for International Programs. He said most KU students did not take foreign language classes beyond their college requirements. But Weidner said the center was trying to change that through its new program, KU's Language Across the Curriculum. The program allows students to take courses in humanities and social science partially or wholly in a foreign language. "It will supplement normal language programs to allow language students to become more fluent while working on regular course work," said Weidner, director of the program. The program offers students six new courses this semester, five in Spanish and one in French. The program began in the fall with three classes: Topics in the Economy of Latin America, Latin American Reference Resources and Ancient American Civilizations: Mesoamerica. John Hoopes, assistant professor of anthropology and instructor of one of the classes, said the students in his class had been allowed to attend a one-hour Spanish discussion in addition to the regular three-hour class. Those who did attend, he said, got a lot out of it. "The students participated with a lot more enthusiasm than the students in the English part of the class," he said. Octavio Hinojosa, Hutchinson senior, said the class had been beneficial because it allowed him to use what he knew about the course and apply it in Spanish, his native language. He recommended that other students who wanted to practice language skills take one of the classes. "There's something about a class in a foreign language," Hinojosa said. "I was really comfortable with the whole discussion in Spanish." Luis Villaba, a Lawrence graduate teaching assistant of Latin American history, taught Topics in the Economy of Latin America in Spanish. He said students had been given the opportunity to learn the language while studying economics. "They were able to actively use the language in context," he said. "It was a small class, so there was a lot of time for interaction and more discussion." Weidner said the Office of International Studies and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences had contributed funds to the program so it could provide students with classes in German and Russian in future semesters. He said he also wanted the program to extend to KU's professional schools. The classes are not full, so students still can add one of the classes to their schedules. Spanish Courses Diversityinclass Spanish Courses HIST 401: Topics in the Colonial History of Paraguay, Argentina and Uruguay Instructor: Luis Vilala EPL 598: Hispanic Education and Culture — undergraduates only Instructor: Adriana Hernandez LAA 232: Language and Society in Latin America Instructor: Anita Herzfeld INMA 502: Patterns in Latin America LAA 502: Topics: Patterns of Sociolinguistic Inequality in Latin America Instructor: Anita Herzfeld HIST525: Modern France: From Napoleon to DeGaule Instructor: John Sweets Source: Kansan staff reports ULTIMATE TAN Get that sunny beach feelin' How to rid the Winter Whites The Ultimate Tan solution: WE HONOR KANSAN - 8 New 36 Bulb Double Facial Beds - Free Facial Beds - Largest Salon in Lawrence with 16 Wolff System Beds - Professionally serving Lawrence for 6 years 2449 Iowa Suite O Lawrence, KS • 842-4949 (Just south of Molly McGees) BRITCHES CORNER WINTER CLEARANCE HALF PRICE SALE UP TO HALF OFF ALL WINTER CLOTHING For Men & Women From: Tommy Hilfiger, Cambridge Dry Goods, Cotton Supply, and French Connection. Men's: Suits & Coats ...From $159^{90}$ Sweaters & Sweater Vests...From $129^{90}$ Turtlenecks...$^{91}$ Sports Shirts & Slacks...From $19^{90}$ Women's Wool Blazers...*99∞ Colored Denim...From *39∞ Skirts & Pants...From *12∞ French Connection Ravon Shirts...*19∞ 4 Wednesday, January 19, 1994 OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VIEWPOINT All races are affected when scholarships cut The Black Coaches Association is mistaken in turning the NCAA's elimination of a basketball scholarship into a racial issue. The issue affects all who play the sport. Though a boycott was averted over the weekend, the issue is far from over. And it's far from merely a sports issue, judging from the Justice Department's offer to mediate the dispute. The BCA is claiming that, because about 64 percent of Division I men's basketball players are African American, the cut scholarship hurts African American players most. The NCAA contends that it does not have the resources to continue funding the extra scholarship. Given the enormous revenue college basketball generates, the NCAA's position may be questioned. But it is difficult to see how the NCAA is motivated by race. According to NCAA figures, Indiana University graduated 75 percent of its white players and zero African Americans between 1983 and 1987. Indiana'a graduation rates are not atypical. The coaches' argument that one lost scholarship denies minorities an education is undermined by the low graduation rates among minority athletes. Another problem is the implication that the only way a minority has a chance to get an education is the extra scholarship. The NCAA represents one of many opportunities for minority students to obtain a college education. If a student wants to play ball, the student probably can find a way to get the money to go to school wherever he or she wants. Increasingly, today's issues focus on questions of race. This issue should not. Everyone suffers when scholarships are cut. CARSON ELROD FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD Greek hazing deters potential candidates It used to be executed publicly on a lawn or up on campus, but today it is shrouded in secrecy and often denied by the participants. Each year it claims the lives of unsuspecting victims such as Texas Tech student Jed Halverson, who lost his life this past week, and rivets repugnance in the public. It is called hazing. The real question is why it has persisted in the face of national fraternity and sorority restrictions against it and a public repulsed by it. Initiation and hazing occur annually on this campus, especially at the beginning of the spring semester, just as it does at many other universities. Fortunately, the KU Greek community has not experienced a hazing-related tragedy in years. Inevitably the argument is made that "the house that hazes together stays together." It may be justified if one considers that initiation and hazing of pledges are the events that have the largest turnout among fraternity and sorority members. But what is the value of members as brothers or sisters if the only events they truly can be counted on to attend are ones in which they humiliate new members? The threat of hazing has turned more than a few quality candidates and quality people, away from joining a greek chapter. Young men and women choose instead to live in a scholarship hall or volunteer for a community service organization, things greek chapters strive to ingrain in their members. Hazing deters many of the achievers greeks seek to fill their ranks. If you look at the people that are sacrificed for hazing, it makes little sense to support its proliferation or existence. CHRISTOPHER LIVINGSTON FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD KANSAN STAFF BEN GROVE, Editor LISA COSMILLO, Managing editor TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator JUSTIN GARBERG Business manager JENNIFER BLOWEY Retail sales manager Assistant Managing Editor ...Dan England Assistant to the editor ..J. R. Clairborne News ..Kristi Fogler, Katie Greenwald, ...Todd Selfort Editorial ..Colleen McCain ...Nathan Olson Campus ..Jess DeHaven Sports ..David Dorsey Photo ..Doug Hesse Features ..Sara Bennett JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser Business Staff Campus sales mgr ... Jason Eberly Regional Sales mgr ... Troy Tarwater National & Co-op sales mgr ... Robin Kring Special Sections mgr ... Shelly McConnell Production mgrs ... Laura Guth Gretchen Kottenbehrlinch Marketing director ... Shannon Reilly Creative director ... John Carlton Classified mgr ... Kelly Connealy Tearheels mgr ... Wing Chan 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. Guess guest shapes should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be The Kansan reserves the right to re edit or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. photographed. The fengan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, must columns and cartoons. They can From Kirk to Picard, Star Trek's message of harmony remains Fifty years from now, students will write dissertations on Star Trek. We sometimes laugh at those television shows now, with their enthusiastic fans and goofy trappings. But in the future, historians will find Star Trek to be an important pop culture window into the late twentieth century American mind, illuminating matters such as race relations. In 1967, Star Trek aired an episode entitled "Let That Be Your Last Battlefield." It featured two aliens resembling bizarre mimes, with their faces divided down the middle in black and white. One alien's face was white on the left side, the other on the right. The mime aliens hurled vicious insults at one another, physical blows, and finally destroyed themselves. The Enterprise crew was shocked that anyone could hate so deeply on the basis of skin color. COLUMNIST BRIAN DIRCK The episode is a maudlin television reflection of Martin Luther King's "I Have a Dream" speech, given on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial only four years previously. The mime aliens represented the insanity of basing one's judgments and identity on race. The crew members were symbols of a hopeful, colorblind future. Worf discovers a community where Klingons dwell side by side with Romulans, their blood enemies. The community is led by an elderly Romulan who has taught the groups to forget their differences. Worf discovers to his horror that the Klingons know nothing of their cultural heritage, and aggrily dismantles the community. Twenty-five years later, Star Trek The Next Generation aired two-part episode revolving around Worf, the Enterprise's Klingon security officer. One reviewer called Worf a "metaphorical angry black man." This Next Generation episode says much about the troubled state of race relations in the 1990s. Gone are the appeals to racial harmony of the old Star Trek series. The supposedly deluded old Romulan is a metaphor for the misguided efforts of Americans to ignore racial differences. Now many Americans celebrate differences and embrace their disparate cultural identities in an increasingly balkanized social landscape. If Dr. King were alive today, he would be cast as the tired old Romulan. Diversity and division are all the rage these days, and King would face many Worfs. They are everywhere, from angry young people who mistake King's nonviolence for passivity, to vehement critics of "cultural genocide" who oppose programs like interracial adoption. They would tell King that his vision of racial reconciliation is unrealistic and even harmful. Difference is strength, they would say, and an America free of racism and prejudice is a pipe dream and a sham. The mime aliens had a point. How would Dr. King respond? He would probably point out the high costs of our infatuation with difference, and he would remind white and Black Americans of their similarities and common interests. Precious few of our leaders, white or lack, talk of community and interracial solidarity nowadays. We could use a more old "Romanuls" like Dr. King. Brian Dirkel is a Conway, Ark. graduate student in history. EVEN WITH THE NEW COMMERCIALS ABOUT "PROTECTION"... THERE'S STILL NO SUCH THING AS "SAFE SPORTS" KERRIGAN HOOD Tasteless speech still free The battle the Templin Hall residents are fighting is far from inane. What is appalling is that those in the journalism profession at KU have been thus far unable to see what is really going on. The students are fighting a battle for free expression. Granted, their choice in a door hanging may not be overly tasteful, it may even be quite offensive, but it is protected by the First Amendment. When they first put those pictures up, they probably had no intention for them to become symbolic speech. However, as soon as a sexual harassment charge was made, the picture(s) in question definitely became a form of symbolic speech. The real issue here is the protection of symbolic speech, and according to recent Supreme Court cases, it is included in the protections provided by the First Amendment. The pictures were removed because they violated a Residence Hall Contract that prohibits door hanging in public areas and do not comply with --- Clearly, hanging a picture is not "of a sexual nature." The picture was most likely "of a sexual nature," but it is incredibly vague what contributes to an "intimidating, hostile, or offensive working or academic environment." Essentially, the University Policy on Sexual Harassment contains what amounts to a highly controversial speech code prohibiting freedom or expression guaranteed to every student in their Student Rights and to every U.S. citizen in the Bill of Rights. GUEST COLUMNIST STEVE CHURCH Let's consider the implications of the speech code contained in the "University Guidelines" through a hypothetical example. Assume that I must walk past a particular office everyday on my way to class in Wescoe. One day, I notice that posted on the office door is a sign that reads, "MEN! STOP RAPING!!" Feminine POWER." The sign really makes me uncomfortable. I feel as if I'm being blamed for something I'dn't do. Why blame me? I haven't raped anyone. censorship of the Templin residents, we will have to force the person responsible to remove the sign. Granted the Templin residents choice of expression may not have been sensitive or liberal-minded, but a failure of the Kansan to recognize the implication of censoring symbolic speech is simply unacceptable. If we are to be consistent with the The best way to teach those Templin residents something productive is not to censor them or call their battle "inane" but to counter with powerful speech of your own. The residence hall could offer talks on sexual harassment or have meetings with a chance to speak out on why such forms of expression are offensive. University Policy on Sexual Harassment. The part of the policy used by the Kansan and other Templin residents to condemn those responsible for the pornography prohibits verbal or physical conduct when "such conduct has the purpose or effect of unreasonably interfering with an individual's work or academic performance or creating an intimidating, hostile, or offensive working or academic environment," (Spring '94 Timetable). The policy not only prohibits "actions of a sexual nature" but also expression of the same nature. Plain and simple, do something productive and intelligent. Don't fall back on an extremely controversial speech code to teach someone a lesson. Silencing them will only make their cause that much stronger. Roaches preferred to fish Steve Church is a Lawrence senior in philoseomy and anthropology. After experiencing several dysfunctional relationships last year, I've decided that I want a solid relationship. I want a pet. I'd like to get a guard dog and name it "Slasher" or "Butch," but I have this slight problem. "Fish in aquariums are the only pets allowed in residence and scholarship halls," states page 29 of the Housing Handbook. So the dog's out of the question. And theoretically, if I name the cockroaches scutting around my residence hall, housing officials will confiscate my "pets." But if I request pest control, I'll probably be sharing my room with Kafka's Gregor Samsa, post-metamorphosis, until May. Fish! I will never, ever have fish in aquariums, fish in my coffee mug or fish anywhere else in my room. I abhor seafood, living or dead. It all goes back to My Childhood. I got my first pets in second grade. Sea Monkeys can be purchased at select toys stores nationwide. They are happy, crown-wearing creatures that COLUMNIST ALISHA ARORA resemble humans. They cavort joyously in a special Sea Monkey Tank Or so the package said. The tank had weird cloudy bumps on its sides. I looked through one and saw a peach-colored blob. I set the tank down to see what the blob was, but it disappeared. Puzzled, I picked the tank up. The blob reappeared. It was my finger. When I realized the bump had magnified, pangs of apprehension hit me. How cute could a creature be if it needed a magnifying tank to be seen? But I forgot ahead. "Mix in Water Purifying Crystals." No problemo. "Fill tank with water," the instructions said. Easily enough. "Stir gently," the instructions commanded. I tried to, but some water sloshed out. As it turned out, those few deaths were nothing compared to what was to come. Two days later, the crucial moment arrived. It was going to go pretty quickly, according to the directions. It went quicker than I would have ever imagined. I opened packet number two, Sea Monkey Eggs, and dumped the contents into the water. "Let stand for 48 hours." Pardon me? 48 hours! Sea Monkeys were supposed to be instant, not time-release pets. But then I began to see reason. These were going to be my first pets. I certainly didn't want to endanger their fragile lives with polluted water. I looked closely into the tank and saw little creatures swimming by. But wait! These weren't cute creatures. I didn't see any crowns or flippers. Not one smiled or cavorted joyfully. All I saw after squinting closely were little white specks. I had a tankful of lint, I looked at the tank. The white dots drifted to the bottom of the tank like snow. They didn't get back up. My illusions were crushed. All I had was Sea Monkey Food that looked like smashed ants. Sea Monkeys are brine shrimp, I found out later. They smell bad when they die. They die easily. Several more attempts at growing Sea Monkeys resulted in one Sea Monkey that grew to 1/4 inch long. Unfortunately, Flipper got stuck to the feeding spoon and dehydrated on my dresser. As you can guess, aquatic organisms bring back painful memories for me. It looks like I'll be alone in my residence hall world. Except for Gregor. But he's sleeping under the bed. Allaha Aorra is an Overland Park freshman in biology and English. > UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, January 19, 1994 5 Governor's budget proposal would save parks from cuts By Ashley Schultz Kansan staffwriter Before Gov. Joan Finney released her budget proposal Clinton and Perry state parks were being considered for closure because of a lack of funds. After her proposal, the assessment at the Department of Wildlife and Parks has become much less grim. +1, Kevin Coullard, who manages the administration of all state parks, said public sentiment had been a catalyst. Interaction between the governor, the office and the Division of Budget brought about the budget change, Kirker said. "We're looking a lot better than we did two weeks ago," said Tom Kirker, chief of staff for the Office of the Secretary, which is in the department. "The state parks and wildlife areas draw in a lot of recreation business for the districts," he said. "So the people are going to be talking to their legislators to make sure that these facilities are open." In September, the Division of Budget recommended an 'A-level' budget for all agencies, which called for a bare-bones budget, Coullard said. Four to six parks were to be cut from Kansas' 24-park system. Finney rejected the proposal, instead recommending a B-level budget for the department, which means operating as usual, Couillard said. The governor's budget report, released Jan. 11, recommends appropriations of $500,000 from the State General Fund for fiscal 1994 and $1 million in fiscal 1995 for repairs stemming from the 1993 floods. July 1 is the first day of Kansas' fiscal year. Parks spared the axe Clinton and Perry state parks were in danger of closing before Gov. Finney's budget proposal. Her budget, now before the Legislature, would allocate money to repair damage from this summer's flooding. Perry State Park 24 Perry 70 Clinton State Park Lawrence WAKARUSA RIVER KANSAS RIVER 59 N The report also recommends that $400,000 for fiscal 1994 and $400,000 for fiscal 1995 be transferred from the fund to the Park Fee Fund to help make up for revenues lost Joe Harder/KANSAN 944 Mass. 832-8228 because of the floods. Kirker said that geography would have played a significant role in park closure. The department took into account the proximity of alternative sources of recreation, of other state parks and of state fisheries. Patronage and revenue also were considerations. Seven state parks were affected by the flooding, with damages estimated at more than $5 million, and consideration also was given to the cost of repairs. Kirker said that Clinton had received minor flood damage and that Perry had received considerable flood damage. The governor submitted her budget to the Legislature for review last week, and it is under consideration by legislative committees. They may make further recommendations and adjustments as they see fit, said Gloria Timmer, director of the budget. Hearing set for city improvements By Cheryl Cadue Kansan staff writer Students who have grips about narrow streets or think that Lawrence needs another park soon will have the opportunity to voice their ideas and complaints. The Lawrence-Douglas County Metropolitan Planning Commission will sponsor a public hearing Jan. 26 at City Hall to receive suggestions and comments for the 1995-2000 Capital Improvement Plan for the City of Lawrence. The plan is a six-year schedule for projects such as street widening and land acquisition. Past hearings have not generated many ideas, but the annual hearing is the first opportunity for residents to suggest projects that have a required minimum cost of $25,000, said David Gunter, Lawrence city planner. Rod Bremby, assistant city manager, said that Lawrence would benefit from students' suggestions. "Sometimes there's a lack of awareness by the students on how they can provide input," Bremby said. "Students should be aware of what's going on. They should see Lawrence as the community where they actively live." "What would they want a southern bypass for, so they can go home to Johnson County and wash their laundry?" Holroyd said. "They're not going to be the ones paying for it anyway." But not all Lawrence residents agree. Dave Holroyd, who manages several area apartments, said KU students should not care about local issues because students lived in Lawrence only until they graduated. Guntert said funds for the projects were generated from area tax revenues, user fees and grants from the state and federal government all of which students paid, directly or indirectly. Red Lyon Tavern Mike Mills, Liberal junior, said that students were important contributors to the city's economy and that students were short-changing themselves if they thought that they were outsiders in the community. "I think we should care, we're here for a minimum of four years," said Mills, who also he would like to see Tennessee and Kentucky streets widened. "We spend our time and money here, so we should have some kind of voice." Jonathan Allen, Lawrence graduate student, said that while working as an intern in the Lawrence city manager's office he had learned that students should participate in community issues. "Students are regular citizens of this city," Allen said. The planning-commission hearing will be at 6:30 p.m. in the commission-meeting room on the first floor of City Hall, 6 E. Sixth St. ENTIRE INVENTORY OF FALL AND WINTER MERCHANDISE SAVE 30% TO 50% EASTON'S LTD. CLEARANCE SALE POLO RALPH LAUREN RUFF HEWN JOHNNY COTTONS EVERYTHING IS ON SALE !! OUR ENTIRE INVENTORY OF FINE MEN'S SUITS 1/2 839 MASS. EASTON'S E LIMITED 843-5755 S layhawk Bookstore "Your Book Professionals" "At the top of Naismith Hill" Hrs: 8-7 M-Th, 8-5 Fri, 9-5 Sat, 12-4 Sun. 843-3826 Futons & Frames On Sale! BLUE HERON where comfort and quality is assured. 937 Mass. 841-9443 EVERYTHING BUT ICE G - Beds - Desks - Chest of Drawers - Bookcases 936 Mass. The Etc. Shop The Look of Lawrence Gifts Something special for everyone The Look of Lawrence Gims special special for everyone Sunglasses Ray-Ban, Serengeti, Revo, Vuarnet Leather Bomber Jackets, Belts, Ladies Handbags Jewelry Sterling Silver - Huge unique selection Accessories Formal Wear - Sales & Rentals Costumes Costumes & Accessories on 2nd Floor Novelty Lingerie THIS IS A FUN STORE! 928 Massachusetts * 843-0611 Zoores North of Pizza Hut - * Painting in the Rear BASKETBALL NET No. 1 Sale FREE '93 HAWKS DOMAIN T-SHIRT With the purchase of any one basketball design sweatshirt. FREE Champion U.S.A. LOGO T-SHIRT With the purchase of any one Champion product. Check our large stock of Champion shirts and sweatshirts priced 20-40% below the regular price! Sale ends Friday, January 21 Not valid in conjunction with coupons or discount cards. Save your cash and check receipts for a rebate next semester! KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store offering rebates to KU students KU KU BOOKSTORES Kansas Union 864-4544 Burge Union 864-5697 KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store offering rebates to KU students 10 Tans for $20 (Must purchase by 2/15/94) Sun THE SUN DECK - 8 Wolff Systems Beds - Airconditioned Rooms - Money Saving Packages - Open 7 Days a Week - Private Rooms with Stereo 842-SUNN 9th & INDIANA 149 6 Wednesday, January 19, 1994 Bottleneck 913-641-live Tonight Zulu Spear 18&over Thursday Sinister Dane John Brown's Underground Friday Millions Walking on Einstein ► Confidential ► Affordable ► Free pregnancy tests ► Birth control ► Sliding fee scale ► STD screening You gotta check us out! Planned Parenthood Quality reproductive health care for men and women Now Open in Lawrence 1420C Kasold Drive (Orchards Corners) 832-0281 Saturday Common Ground travelMate™ WinSLC ...only $1,699 • 486SLC, 4Mb RAM • DOS 6.0, Windows 3.1, Mouse • 80/160Mb Hard Drive (w/compression) • Affordable color option available TEXAS INSTRUMENTS Laptop **Business World Software—At Educational Discounts!** * Norton Desktop. $75^{00}$ * Quattro Pro/Windows. $49^{00}$ * CentralPoint AntiVirus. $49^{05}$ * Turbo C++. $49^{05}$ Many more titles available! ConnectingPoint COMPUTER CENTER 813 Mass • Downtown Lawrence • 843-7584 YARNBARN Beginning and Intermediate Knitting Classes Starting Soon! Beginning Knitting: Learn by making a sweater! $20.00 for 8 weeks. 20% off class yarns - Jan 20 (Thurs) 7 - 9 p.m. - Feb 7 (Mon) 7 - 9 p.m. - Feb 16 (Wed) 9:30 - 11 a.m. - Mar 8 (Tues) 7 - 9 p.m. Complete schedule of all classes available at Yarn Barn 918 Masa St. YARN BARN Do you like to make movies? Sure, we all do. You are invited to the first FOKUS Student Film Festival Alderson Auditorium Jan.22,1994 5:00 pm-7:00 pm ONE NIGHT ONLY! lawrence thletic Men $95 per semester Women $60 per semester Monthly rate S25 lub - Over 100 Stations - Over 100 Stations * Neutilus Equipment (formerly Junkyard's Jym) Hours - Nautilus Equipment - Stationary Bikes * Free Weights 6 a.m.-10:00p.m. M-F 8a.m.-8:00p.m. Sat. - Free Weights 1410 Kasold 842-4966 11a.m.-6:00p.m. Sun. NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Defense nominee withdraws Defense President begins search to fill post The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Retired Adm. Bobby Inman withdrew yesterday as defense secretary nominee, saying he was "distressed and distracted" by attacks on his character and reputation. President Clinton accepted the surprise withdrawal and began a fresh search to fill the post Les Aspin is soon to leave. The Texas businessman, a former deputy CIA director, accused his critics of "modern McCarthyism." "I did not want this job," Inman, 62, said in a rambling hourlong news conference in Austin, Texas. In particular, he lashed out at the news media and accused New York Times columnist William Safire and Senate Republican leader Bob Dole of plotting to undermine his nomination. Even though Clinton had been given advance word of Inman's decision, the dramatic exit sent shock waves through Washington and mystified lawmakers of both parties. "He's probably not qualified to be secretary of defense if he has fantasies like that," Dole said in a speech to a business group in Columbia, S.C. White House aides privately, and some Democratic lawmakers openly, expressed relief with Inman's decision after watching his news conference. Among those mentioned for the defense post at the time of the Aspin resignation were deputy defense secretary William Perry, CIA Director James Woolsey and Norman Augustine, who runs the defense contractor Martin-Marietta Corp. Possibilities from Capitol Hill include former Republican Sen. Warren Rudman of New Hampshire, Democratic Rep. John Murtha of Pennsylvania, the chair of the Appropriations subcommittee on defense and Sen. Sam Nunn of Georgia, the head of the Armed Services Committee. But Inman suggested that neither of these concerns had been the deciding factor in his decision. Inman, a retired four-star admiral, had been expected to face questions about his private-sector dealings with the defense industry in confirmation hearings scheduled for next week. In addition, he was expected to be asked about his failure to pay Social Security taxes for a domestic helper. He recently paid about $6,000 in back taxes. Woman allowed to attend Citadel The Associated Press CHARLESTON, S.C. — The Citadel's last defense against women in day classes crumbled yesterday when Chief Justice William Rehnquist cleared the way for Shannon Faulkner to take courses with the military college's cadets. "We knew it was coming," said freshman cadet Timothy Terese. "It's been going on for the whole semester now. But no matter what, we didn't lose faith, and we're hoping the lawyers will come through for us." Faulkner immediately started packing for the trip to Charleston. At The Citadel, where the cadet corps has been all-male for 151 years, the news was met with disappointment. Faulkner plans to start classes tomorrow, on her 19th birthday. "I've gotten off one roller coaster, and I have to get on another one. I'm still not a member of the corps of cadets yet," she said from her home in Powdersville, S.C. 220 miles away. The Citadel and Virginia Military Institute are the nation's only allmale, state-supported military colleges. The institute's admission policy is also the target of a federal lawsuit. A federal district judge ruled in August that while her lawsuit was pending, she could attend day classes but not join the 1,964-member cadet corps or live in the barracks. Faulkner was accepted by The Citadel last year after she had references to her gender deleted from her high-school transcript. When officials discovered that she was a woman, they withdrew the invitation, and she sued, charging a violation of her equal protection rights. Yesterday, Rehnquist dissolved his stay that had blocked Faulkner from starting classes. He issued it last week at the school's request, a few hours after Faulkner became the first woman to register for classes as a day student. Women are allowed to attend night classes. U. S. Attorney General Janet Reno, who spoke with Faulkner by phone last week, was pleased with the decision. "The battle has been long, but it is not yet over," she said. The Justice Department remains "committed to challenging what we believe is The Citadel's unconstitutional, male-only admissions policy." Reno said. Citadel attorney Dawes Cooke said he was disappointed, but the school would not seek further Supreme Court review. "I think contrary to the plaintiffs contentions, (a woman's presence) will be a disruption to the corps of cadets." Cooke said. FREE! QB1 NFL Superbowl Giveaway Round trip tickets to Las Vegas For the first time in history, you can actually interact with live TV football games via satellite right here. Compete with other players here and nationally by anticipating live quarterback plays. A panel of experts developed the ultimate fun trivia contest that pits your skill and knowledge against other players here in our place and players all across the country. TRIVIA Only at 6th & Kasold 865-4040 SPORTS EMPORIUM & FUNDRINKERY JOX (in the Westridge Plaza) - send written comments to Prof. J. P. Davidson, Chair, Senate Committee on Libraries, 502 Watson Library, by January 27th. --- If you wish to comment on the proposed Code, please: CALL FOR COMMENTS ON CHANGES PROPOSED IN THE KU LIBRARIES' LENDING CODE In response to a charge from SenEx, the University Senate Committee on Libraries has reviewed the KU Libraries' Lending Code. After consultation with the Dean of Libraries and discussion throughout the Fall Semester, the Committee voted to recommend a revised code to University Council and the University administration, pending receipt of comments from faculty, students, and staff. Copies of the full text of the current and proposed Code, as revised by the Senate Committee on Libraries, are available at the circulation desks of the following libraries: Anschutz Science Library, Art and Architecture Library, Government Documents and Map Library, Music Library, Spahr Engineering Library Regents Center Library, Watson Library - attend an open meeting on the Code, scheduled for January 27. 1994, at 7:30 pm, Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union and/or INTRAMURAL BASKETBALL MANAGERS'MEETING 44 Mandatory Managers' Meeting Monday,January 24 at 7:00 pm in Robinson, Room 115. Rules will be discussed. All managers attending the meeting will have first opportunity in signing up for league play. NOTE: - Entries are accepted on a 1st come, 1 st serve basis beginning at 8:30 am thru 4:00 pm on TUESDAY, JANUARY 25 and WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 26. *All team managers who do not attend the MANAGERS' MEETING will not be allowed to sign up until JANUARY 26 at 2:00 pm. DIVISIONS: MEN'S, WOMEN'S, CO-REC Open, Greek, Residence Hall, Law, Jayhawk ENTRY DEADLINE: WEDNESDAY, JAN.26@4:00PM ENTRY FEE: $25/TEAM SPONSOREDBY KURECREATION SERVICES 208 ROBINSON 864-3546 --- Wednesday, January 19, 1994 NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 7 Prosecutor says Reagan set stage for illegal acts The Associated Press WASHINGTON President Reagan acquiesced in a cover-up of the Iran-Contra scandal that was spearheaded by Attorney General Edwin Meese and carried out at the top levels of the Reagan administration, the prosecutor concluded in his final report yesterday. In two volumes that were immediately denounced by Reagan, Meese, former President Bush and others, the Iran-Contra prosecution declared that Reagan's aides withheld information on the scandal from prosecutors and Congress. Impeachment of Reagan "certainly should have been considered" by the congressional committees investigating the Iran-Contra affair, prosecutor Lawrence Walsh said in a news conference. But Walsh would not say whether he had favored impeachment and added that the cover-up made it hard for Congress to consider such a step. Reagan called Walsh's report a "vehicle for baseless accusations that he could never have proven in court." Walsh's report portrays Bush as more fully informed about the scandal than he has acknowledged. And it reveals that prosecutors wanted to question Bush about entries in his diaries suggesting a high-level effort in November 1986 to coerce Secretary of State George Shultz into following the administration line on Iran-Contra. Walsh also criticized Bush's pardons of former Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger and five other Iran-Contrafigures as either "an act of friendship or an act of self-protection." The pardons were issued on Christmas Eve 1902, two weeks before the scheduled start of Weinberger's criminal trial — in which Bush was a potential witness. "President Reagan, the secretary of state, the secretary of defense, and the director of central intelligence and their necessary assistants committed themselves, however reluctantly," to security arming the Nicarara guan Contras and to dealing arms to Iran to gain release of Americans held hostage in the Middle East, Walsh's report said. "They skirted the law; some of them broke the law, and almost all of them tried to cover up the president's willful activities," Walsh's report concluded. Walsh's portrait of misconduct at the top of the administration rewrote the history of the seven-year-old scandal that was originally dismissed by the Reagan administration as involving illegality and later portrayed by congressional investigators as the product of a handful of uncontrolled aides. Walsh's report said there was "no credible evidence that President Reagan violated any criminal statute. "Nevertheless, he set the stage for the illegal activities of others by encouraging and in general terms ordering" military aid to the Contra rebels in Nicaragua at a time when Congress banned such aid, the report said. Peace accord could face vote The Associated Press JERUSALEM — Israelis on both the left and right objected yesterday to Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin's plans for a referendum on a possible "painful" land-for-peace deal with Syria. "A significant withdrawal might also include dismantling of (Jewish) settlements, and I want the decision on this to be made by the entire people." Rabin told reporters. But some members of Rabin's center-left government and the conservative opposition said any accord on the Golan Heights should be decided by calling early elections and putting the governing coalition's fate in the hands of voters. Syrian President Hafez Assad recommitted Syria to the peace process after a meeting in Geneva on Sunday with President Clinton. Press reports in Israel said Assad had mentioned a year-end deadline for an agreement. Rabin said the price of peace with Syria might be higher than expected by Israelis hoping for something less than full withdrawal from Golan, a key highlands captured by Israel in 1967. "If and when we come to a draft agreement between Syria and Israel and it demands a painful price — perhaps more than the residents of Israel expected — then we will need to bring it to a referendum," said Rabin. Jewish settlement leaders in the Golan welcomed a referendum and asked opposition parties to cancel plans for a parliament motion reaffirming Israel's 1981 annexation of the area. Israeli commentators suggested that a referendum would put Assad on notice that he would have to persuade the Israeli public he was sincere about peace. In Taba, both the Israeli and PLO sides reported progress on the details of handing over civilian authority in the Gaza Strip and Jericho on the West Bank. Shaaht told reporters after yesterday's talks that there was improvement in the tone of negotiations and minor headway on technical details like issuing visas. "Last week we were almost fighting each other ... (Now) we are looking at the papers paragraph by paragraph. This is the advanced stage." he said. Israeli representative Ami Gluska reported "agreement in principle on the issue of dividing security responsibility" between the Israeli army and Palestinian police. He gave no details. CASH IN A FLASH $15 Today $30 This Week Plus a $3 Bonus Plus a $3 Bonus By donating your blood plasma Walk-ins welcome Lawrence Donor Center Hours: M-F 9-6 Sat 10-3 NABI 816 W. 24th Behind Laird Noller Ford 749-5750 $ See our ad in the classified section JD's Baseball Cards & Sports Nostalgia Shop 711 W. 23rd 842-1002 We buy back used baseball cards *APPLICATIONS MUST BE TURNED IN BY FRIDAY, JANUARY 21ST. NATURALWAY natural fiber clothing 820-822 Mass St. 841-0100 THIS IS SPRING BREAK. THIS COULD BE YOU. Best on the Beach! 1-800-222-4010 210-756-6551 Texas 1-800-672-4747 APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE IN THE STUDENTSENATE OFFICE 410 KANSAS UNION, CALL 864-3710 FOR QUESTIONS. S Ask About Our Advance Reservation Specials Sheraton Fiesta South Padre Island BEACH RESORT LOOKING FOR THE BEST PLACE TO GET IN SHAPE? JOIN NOW TOTAL FITNESS ATHLETIC CENTER - Cardiovascular Training Area: Stairmasters, Treadmills, and Life Cycles NOWACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FORTWO LIBERAL ARTS and SCIENCES,NUNEMAKERandOFFCAMPUS REPLACEMENTSENATORS - The most advanced machine and free weight area - 1300 sq. ft Aerobic Floor - Boxing Area and Classes is - Youth Activity Center Pro Shop - AND MORE!!! *Self Defense Classes *PNR4/BEM4 - Tanning Beds, Jacuzzi, Saunas TOTAL FITNESS ATHLETIC CENTER WE'RE EVERYBODY'S CHOICE FOR TOTAL FITNESS! 2108 West 27th, Suite C Park Plaza Shopping Center (912) 893-0919 (913) 832-0818 STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE STUSSY We're Loaded With It! 100's Of Hats, T's Sweatshirts, Jeans, Etc. --- 701 W 9th (9th and Indiana) Kansas City Mission, KS BannisterMall 6518 Martway SHARK'S SURF SHOP STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUAK THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Be a campus leader! Student Union Activities is taking applications now to fill their four officer positions for the 1994-95 school year: President, Vice President of Administrative Affairs, Vice President of University Affairs,and Vice President of Membership due to program events? Student Union Activities will have applications available on January 24 for the 1994-95 coordination board. These positions include: Fine Arts, Special Events, Live Music, Public Relations, Feature Films, Recreation and Travel. Like to program events? Student Union Activities will have applications available on January 24 for the 1994-95 coordinating board. These positions include: Fine Arts, Special Events, Live Music, Public Relations, Feature Films, Recreation and Travel, Spectrum Films, and Forums. Applications are available Applications are available in the Student Union Activities Office, Fourth Floor, Kansas Union. Officer Applications are due Thursday, February 3. Coordinator Applications are due Monday, February 28. Interviews will follow application deadlines. Activities Office at 861 3477 Be a campus leader! Student Union Activities is taking applications now to fill their four office positions for the 1994-95 school year. President, Vice President of Administrative Affairs. Vice President of University Affairs, and Vice President of Membership Development. Applications are available in the Student Urban Activities Office. Fourth Floor, Kansas Union. Officer Applications are due Thursday, February 3. Coordinator Applications are due Monday, February 28. Interviews will follow For more information call the Student Union Activities Office at 864-3477. 8 Wednesday, January 19, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN N Rentco USA 749-1605 Student Discount Low Carrying Computers 1741 Massachusetts Metropolis BBS 832-0041 Louisville's Multimedia Entertainment Hub Kenwood Glass For All Your Glass Needs All automotive glass replacement & insurance claims handled. 730 New Jersey 843-4416 Kennedy GLASS 642 Mass Holly Hunter & Harvey Keitel in THE PIANO(R)(4:15), 7:00, 9:30 DICKINSON THEATRE 841 6400 Dickinson 2339 South St. Grumpy Old Men PG-13 *A* 2.20, 9.50 Boehven the 2nd PG-14 *A* 1.75, 9.35 Shadowlands PG-0.5 *A* 9.00, 9.45 Iron Will PG-0.4 *A* 7.00, 9.35 Sister Act PG-0.25 *A* 7.10, 9.45 House Party IR PG-0.4 *A* 7.25, 9.40 $3 Primetime Show (11) of Hearing Dobby Senior Editorial Asthma - Imaged Scree STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUAX FILMS TUESDAY-SUNDAY, JANUARY 18-22 VINCENT AND THEO TUES. 7:00PM WED. 9:30PM THE LOVER Tues. 9:30PM THURS. 7:00PM WED. 7:00 PM THURS. 9:30 PM ALL SHOWS IN KANSAS UNION, TICKETS $2.50, MIDNIGHTS $3.00 FREE WITH SUA MOVIE CARD. CALL 864-SHOW FOR MORE INFO. Crown Cinema BEFORE 6 PM ADULTS $3.00 (limited to SEATING) SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00 VARSITY 1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841-5191 Pelican Brief PG-13 5:00,8:00 HILLCREST 825 IOWA Mrs. Doubtfire PG-13 4,45 Heaven and Earth R 9,248 Air Up There PG 9,098 Tombstone R 7,935 Philadelphia PG-13 7,158 Philadelphia R 7,950 CINEMA TWIN ALL STAR 311/OWA 441 $191 $1.25 Malice R 5.00, 7.20, 9.45 MyLife PG-13 5.00, 7.30, 9.45 SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY b Team HairExperts DesignTeam $5 Off Hair Design Not valid with any other offer EXPIRES 3/31/94 149 WOMEN ONLY Discover Our Difference. gn Holiday Plaza • 25th & Iowa 841-6886 I am a music teacher at a school in Shanghai. I teach piano, singing, and playing the guitar. I also play the violin and cello. I love music and want to help students learn to play better. Fitness Club BodyShapes Semester Membership $32/Month 40% Off Charter Membership 843-4040 3320 Messa Way STOP RAPE Research has found that approximately 1 in 6 women have been sexually assaulted by the time they leave college. These women aren't just numbers-- They are your friends, partners, and sisters. To learn more about rape and how it can be prevented, join us for a discussion of this very important topic. Tuesday, January 25th,1994 Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union 7:00 p.m.-9:00 p.m. Discussion Leaders: Peer Educators from the Sexual Assault Prevention and Education Program Peer Educators from the Sexual Assault Prevention and Education Program Sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, 115 Strong Hall. For more information, contact Susan Hickman at 864-3552. CITY OF LAWRENCE RECYCLING INTERNSHIPS CREDIT/UNPAID ELIGIBLE MAJORS: ART & DESIGN EDUCATION ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES JOURNALISM AND MASS COMMUNICATION RADIO/TV JOURNALISM CONTACT PATRICIA OR SCOTT IN THE RECYCLING OFFICE 832-3330 APPLY BY JANUARY 28, 1994 DIV AIM HIGH AIM HIGH If you have a GPA of 2.5 or higher and are a full time student, you can qualify for an Air Force ROTC scholarship. In addition, you will receive $100.00 each academic month for our last two years of college. This scholarship is available to ANY ACADEMIC MAJOR The deadline to apply for the fall 1994 semester is rapidly approaching. For more information on this exciting opportunity talk to Captain Brad Gentry or Captain Bob Wicks at 864-4676. $2000.00 SCHOLARSHIP AIR FORCE ROTC Since WATKINS "We Care For KU" 1907 CPR Training 864-9570 V Date Jan. 26 & 27 Jan. 31 & Feb. 2 Feb. 7 & 9 Feb. 16 & 18 Feb. 22 & 24 Mar. 5 Mar. 12 THE NEWS in brief Dav(s) Time Date Saturday class (includes break) and 2-session class train you in adult/child/infant CPR through the American Heart Association. There is a $5 charge for training. Day(s) Time WR 6-9 p.m. MW 6-9 p.m. MW 6-9 p.m. WF 6-9 p.m. TR 6-9 p.m. Sa 9 a.m.-2:30 p.m. Sa 9 a.m.-2:30 p.m. MOSCOW STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES 864-9500 Reformer reportedly resigns from Cabinet as reform push slows The government's key reformer reportedly resigned from the Cabinet yesterday amid signs that Russian president Boris Yeltsin is slowing radical reforms after the electoral victory of communists and nationalists. In another indication of a possible turnabout by Yeltsin, Russia's foreign minister called yesterday for keeping Russian troops stationed in other former Soviet republics. Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students Finance Minister Boris Fyodorov, an advocate of fiscal and monetary restraint, resigned yesterday, the ITAR-Tass news agency and radio Ekho Moskvyk said. Fyodorov'representative Olga Leonova denied the reports but said it was unclear whether Fyodorov would stay in the Cabinet. Economists and analysts said that Fyodorov's reported departure — the latest in a series of reformers' resignations — would indicate a victory for the "go-slow approach" to reforms advocated by Prime MinisterViktor Chernomyrdin. White House officials said yesterday that Fyodorov's reported departure did not suggest that Yeltsin had broken the commitment he gave President Clinton last week to continue reforms. SAN ANTONIO Cult accused of ambushing agents The Davidians also fired first, said Roland Ballesteros, although he acknowledged that contradicted a statement he had made 10 days after the raid that the agents probably had fired first. The Branch Davidians set up an ambush for federal agents by luring them as far into the cult's compound as possible before opening fire, an ATF agent testified yesterday. Four agents of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms were killed and 16 wounded during the Feb. 28, 1993, raid. Six cult members also are believed to have died in the shootout. The 11 cult members are charged with murder and conspiracy to murder federal officers. If convicted, they face up to life in prison without parole. The raid touched off a 51-day standoff that ended April 19, 1939, when cult leader David Koresh and about 80 followers died in a fire that authorities had been set by the cult. Many also had been shot. Ballesteros said he had been assigned to enter the compound through the front door. The ATF agent said that when he approached the city-block-sized structure, there had been fire coming from the compound. Defense attorneys say the cult members acted in self-defense after being fired upon by black-clad agents who piled out of two unmarked trailers. CHICAGO Elderly woman found frozen to floor "She was saying, 'Oh God, Oh God' in Polish. I believe that's what pulled her through," Staszkiwicz said. Police sent to check on 01-year-old Victoria Moryn found a harrowing sight. The frail immigrant was frozen in inch-thick ice on the floor of her unheated house. When one officer touched her "she started moaning," said neighbor Chris Staszkiewicz, who accompanied police. He nearly jumped out of his skin. The woman was in a kneeling position with her knees, toes and bare feet frozen to the floor, and police had to chip away at the ice to free her, said Set, Michael McMahon. Moryn was in critical condition yesterday with severe frostbite on her hands and feet, hypothermia and unstable blood pressure. Moryn, a native of Poland, is a widow who kept to herself and lived alone in the two-flat duplex she owns on the city's near West Side. Neighbors hadn't seen her for a week, and friends who used to take her food and coal called police when they noticed no smoke coming from her chimney. "We thought she had died," Staszkiewicz said. Water leaking from broken pipes had formed a layer of ice on the floor, and Moryn somehow became stuck there. McMahon said. Compiled from The Associated Press. 骑马 U. EQUESTRIAN TEAM Organizational Meeting 6:00 pm Tonight Walnut Room EVERYONE WELCOME For Information, call: Kari Fredrick 841-3139 or Mary Roth 841-3648 KARAOKE HORSE Jumping Every Wednesday Fun for Everyone! M WAZUSI DISCO TECH 18 to enter / 21 to drink Spicy House Grooves - Club Classics Maximum Jungle Boogie DJ Ray Velasquez Thursdays 10 pm - 2 am DOS HOMBRES RESTAURANTE 815 New Hampshire 841-7286 .ecycle you recycle enjoying recycle the recycle paper? ARIZONA Trailrides, Horsepack, or Backpack Spring Break March 19-23 Starting at $525 - airfare included. Adventure Travel International 1-800-537-3865 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN CARD Victoria Through July 31, 2004 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN C A R D Don't leave home without it... - Incredible discounts 20% Off any regular priced item • Buy one get one free Free medium beverage or fries • Free appetizer w/purchase of entree Kansas Curda may be purchased at the Kansas Business office: KU Bookstores, Kansas and Burge Unions; University Book Shop and Jayhawk Bookstore for only $1.00! offers to cardholders. The Kansas Card exists for no other reason than to SAVE YOU MONEY!! The card offers you great discounts on car repairs, clothing, food and much more. And better yet, the card is valid online. nation.Don't get caught in Lawrence or another participating university without the card...it's an expensive world out there and the Kansan Card is your only weapon against high prices. Don't Leave Home Without it! music AUGUST 1986 Tom Leininger / KANSAN Die Waiting members Chris Nemeth, bass player, and Bob Springer, vocalist, perform at Benchwarmers. Die Waiting formed in May when Andrew Shriver of the Millhous Nixons answered the "guitarist wanted" ad that Nemeth and Springer had placed in Pitch weekly magazine. The performance at Benchwarmers was Saturday night. "When you're in a band,free time doesn't exist. It's study time. Sometimes I'd bring my books and study during the soundchecks." Andrew Shriver Guitar player for Milhaus Nixons and Die Waiting Tom Leininger / KANSAN T Jeff Cye, lead singer of the semi-defunct band Millhous Nixons, sings at Benchwarmers. Millhous Nixons were together for three years before members of the group ventured off into the real world of jobs. They occasionally play when all five members are in town. VINCENT RAYMOND William Alix / KANSAN Members of Bastard Squad practice in a house on Mississippi Street. From left, guitarist Mike MacFarland, Manhattan senior; in the background, trumpeter Aaron 'Rev' Morris, Wichita senior; and in the foreground, trumpeter Gerry Leopold, Wichita senior. Of bands and books Making it in the music business is tough enough without having to do homework, too. By Cathleen Siechta Kansan staff writer The first time a girl asked for his autograph, Andrew Shriver of the Milhaus Nixons and Die Waiting laughed at her. “It's just strange,” said the McPherson, Ks., senior. "I mean, I gave her my autograph, but it's strange. People seem attracted to us just because we're in a band. They think we're already rock stars when we're just normal guys." Rock stars or not, students involved with bands have less than normal lives. They must take on the enormous responsibility of balancing practices and performances with academics. "When you're in a band, free time doesn't exist," Shriver said. "It's study time. Sometimes I'd bring books and study during the sound checks before we went on." The members of Bastard Squad, an up-and-coming "funk-elemented" student band, have been juggling their schedules since last fall. "It gets really hectic," said Mike MacFarland, Manhattan senior, who plays guitar and keyboards for the band. "We've had to do a couple of gigs without our trumpet players because they were performing with the marching band. But we get by." MacFarland said that finding times when all six members of the band were available to practice and perform was difficult. "Last semester, performances were real sporadic," he said. "But since then we've got an agent, and now it seems like things are just falling into place." See Bands, Page 10. [Image] Two individuals are handling a long object with multiple arms. They appear to be working together, possibly in an artistic or scientific setting. The background is dark, suggesting an indoor environment. Melissa Lacey / KANSAN Creating shadowed figures from behind a lighted cloth screen are Leonidas Kassapides and Christina Navratilova of the Paranio Poor Theatre Company. The two were performing scenes from a traditional Greek shadow play that will air on Lawrence cable TV. They will perform shadow theater Saturday at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St. Puppet company performs dying art By Cathleen Siechta Kansan staff writer Leonidas Kassapides and Christina Navratilova stood behind a cloth screen, waiting to perform their puppet show for a television camera crew. The puppet of a gnarled old man appeared on the screen and growled, "Double shadows are our enemies." Kassapides and Navratilova were filming a sample of their work to appear on the Cable Channel 6 program, "Silhouettes." They are members of the Paranoix Poor Theatre "They'll make a double shadow," said Navratlova. "Aren't you going to shut off those lights?" asked Navatilova. "I don't think they'll be a problem," the cameraman said. Company, a non-profit touring company that specializes in productions combining shadow puppets, masks and the human form to create a magical, illusionary world. "Shadow puppets are really the first form of cinema that existed," Navratilova said. "The first cartoons were actually filmed shadow theater. We like to call the contemporary productions with the human form a new, organic approach to cinema. It has the qualities of a movie, but it's live." Kassapides said he felt adults were not interested in puppy because they thought it was entertaining only to children. "It's interesting how people see puppetry," he said. "They tend to think of the Muppet Show." People are prejuare due FEBRUARY 15 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN See Puppets,Page 10. JANUARY 19.1994 PAGE 9 KULife People and places at the University of Kansas. calendar PERFORMANCES KU Department of Music and Dance: Faculty Recital by John Perry, piano 7:30 p.m. Monday. Jan. 24, 1994, at Swarthout Recital Hall. Free. Lied Concert Series: Bobby McFerrin and the Kansas City Symphony 8 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 25, 1994, at the Lied Center. Renegade Theatre Company of Lawrence presents "East Side Comedy Shop" 8 p.m. Friday, Jan. 21, 1994, and 7 and 10 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 22, 1994, at Renegade Theatre, 518 E 8th St, $5 public. EXHIBITIONS AND LECTURES Lecture - Music of Argentina: Colonial to modern by Professor Estela Telerman 3:30 p.m Wednesday, Jan. 19, 1994, in the Skilton Lounge at Murphy Hall. Tour du jour—graphic arts intern Jill Vessely 12:15 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 20, 1994, at the Spencer Museum of Art. Lecture—Dr. Janis Tomlinson, assistant professor of 19th-20th-century European art and 16th-19th-century Spanish art on "Putting the Caprice back into Los Caprichos" 7 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 20, 1994, at the Spencer Museum Auditorium. Exhibition—"The Sleep of Reason: Reality and Fantasy in the print series of Goya" Jan. 9-Feb.20,1994,at the Spencer Museum of Art. Exhibition—Dennis Oppenheim: Drawings and Selected Sculpture Jan. 16-Feb. 27, 1994, at the Spencer Museum of Art. Exhibition—Sculpture by Douglas Wamock Saturday, Jan. 22-Feb. 10, 1994, at The Lawrence Arts Center, 200 W. 9th St. Exhibition—Paintings by Susan Grace and ceramics by Glenda Taylor Jan. 3-20, 1994, at the Lawrence Arts Center. ATTENTION "PRE-EDUCATION" STUDENTS Applications for admission to: - Elementary - Elementarv/Middle - Middle Only - K-12 (in C & I) - Middle/Secondary English - Middle/Secondary Social Studies - Secondary Social Studies - Secondary English APPLICATION FORMS ARE NOWAVAILABLE IN 117BAILEYHALL SPRING LEAGUES ARE FORMING NOW AT THE Sign up in person, or by phone Pay for 13 weeks in advance, get two weeks free. Free shoe rental for league bowlers Jaybowl KANSAS CITY Four Leagues Available Monday Mixer Tuesday Varsity Mixer Wednesday Mixer Thursday Mixer Located on Level One of the Kanss Union 864-3545 10 Wednesday, January 19, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The University Daily Kansan Card...a semester of savings for just $1.00 CYCLE WORKS 1601 W 23RD SOUTHERN HILLS MALL CYCLING AND FITNESS • SCHWINN • UNIVEGA • MONGOOSE KLEIN • PARAMOUNT • LITESPEED • KESTREL APPRAISALS TRADE INS LAYAWATS 4000 SQ FEET OF BICYCLES, ACCESSORIES, APPAREL & FITNESS EQUIPMENT SANTANA YAKOTA BURLEY OAKLEY 21 YEARS OF SERVICE CUSTOM SERVICE • FAIR PRICE • PROFESSIONAL ADVICE ABXΛEΦΓHI9KLMNOPΠOРΣTYcΩΆΨZABXΔEΦΓHI9KLMNOPΠOРΣTYcΩΆΨZABX The women of the Panhellenic Association and the men of the Interfraternity Council would like to welcome back all KU students INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS PANHELLENT ASSOCIATE We hope you had a great Winter Break and wish you best of luck this semester. ABXΔEΦΓHI9KLMNOΠΘPΣTYζΩΣΨZ ABXΔEΦΓHI9KLMNOΠΘPΣTYζΩΣΨZ ABX 18th AMENDMENT It's your right to enjoy our daily specials: Wed-50 cent draws Thurs-Retro/Disco Night/$2.50 big beers Fri - $1.00 jello shots Sat - $1.00 house shots Sun-Import Night Join us for Lawrence's Hottest Super Bowl Party Sunday, Jan. 30th! 10 ft. Projection T.V. plus big screens and more. Super Bowl Snacks Giveaways and Raffels All this and more for only $1.00 cover BXAÆF∏HJ9KAMN0ΠΟΡ2TYQΣΨZABXΔEΦTHI9KAMN0ΠΟΡ2TYQΣΨZABXABXΔEφHI9 1340 Ohio 843-9273 Hours: Sun-Sat 3p.m.-2a.m. - Join us for all your college and professional sporting events. --bars. The Milhaus Nixons performed for free at parties, fraternity houses and friends' private homes for publicity. BANDS: Students struggling to make it big Continued from Page 9. Aaron Morris, Wichita senior and trumpet player for Bastard Squad, said that it was the band's agent that got the ball rolling toward booking performances for Bastard Squad. "I guess we're all leaders in our own way," Morris said. "But no one wanted to assume the role as leader. Our agent saw potential in us, but we had no business sense." Morris said that since most of the members had been in bands before, they already had their own equipment, so it was not too costly to start Bastard Squad. "Our parents helped us a lot," said Mark Pfeutze, a former KU student who plays bass guitar for the group. "They bought us our whole PA system. They were hesitant at first, but they knew we were serious about it. And we paid them back right away." The Milhaus Nixons, however, did need help when they started their band. Shriver said the band cut costs by handling all of their booking themselves. They also marketed the band by putting up creative flyers around town and in The Milhaus Nixons' last album, "Fran," was carried by local merchants, and the band sold it at performances. Another hardship student bands face is trying to survive as a performing group when a member leaves town to pursue a career or further his or her education Pfueztle currently is attending the Berklee College of Music in Boston. Because of his absence, the Milhaus Nixons have fallen back into the shadows. "Mark is the reason we've played this week." Shriver said. "Whenever he's here, we'll play again. I believe in original line-ups. I don't like it when bands replace their members." MacFarland said making enough money from Bastard Squad to support himself was still a long-term goal. Shriver said he wanted to keep performing after the Milhaus Nixons parted ways, so he collaborated with other area musicians to form the band Die Waiting. "There are no weak links in this band," he said. "And MacFarland seemed satisfied with Bastard Squad's line-up. "I look at the situation like that of a student athlete," he said. "It's like when a basketball player is good and could very well go pro, but realizes that it is so difficult to make it that he has to have something to fall back on. we all get along really well, which is rare for six people." Kent Mitchell, Junction City junior and drummer for Bastard Squad, thought that communication was vital for any band to be successful. "Starting a band is like starting a new relationship," Mitchell said. "But then it's so much more complex. A lot of thought needs to be put into it. Everyone has to want the same thing out of the band. You also have to just get along and learn to cope with anything that comes up." "We really haven't reached the point yet where we're making a lot of money," he said. "I don't think that quitting school would be a good career move. We're just taking things as they come and having fun." Bastard Squad will begin frequent local appearances in late February. The members said that they were excited but that they have mixed feelings about what they would do if they became too busy with music to focus on academics. formance major." Mitchell had a different opinion about academics. "I've put everything I've learned in school into a package," Morris said. "My classes have definitely helped give me direction, but I would make a commitment to the band if we got big. I'm a performance major, and that's the whole point of my major. Graduation is not the point of a per- "What we're doing now is fun, but to give up an academic career would be very stupid." "I've made my four best friends in this band," Shriver said. "We've done everything together. It's really something special that you don't want to let go, even though it's kind of inevitable." According to Shriver, that's the best thing a student band can do. PUPPETS: Shadow puppetry is a dying art Continued from Page 9. diced to performers because they see them as gypsies or homeless people. In some areas, puppeteers are as respected as priests." The Paranox Poor Theatre Company was founded in 1909 by Kassapides, who is originally from Thessaloniki. Greece. Kassapides learned the art from his grandfather and various teachers. Although the company does a great deal of traditional Greek shadow puppetry, they will use a more contemporary style in their experimental version of "The Wizard of Oz," which will be performed Saturday at Liberty Hall. Kassapides said shadow puppetry had its roots in many different cultures but that it was new to the United States. In shadow theater, figures are cut out of cardboard and other materials. The figures are held behind a lighted screen to create images of the characters in the productions. "Greek shadow theater is most comedy," he said. "There is Turkish, which more slapstick and political. And Polynesian shadow theater is more of a religious ritual." Andrew Tsubaki, director of International Theater and Arts for the Theatre and Film department, said puppetry often did not receive the recognition it deserved. "In Asia, shadow theater is fully appreciated in the performing arts," he said. "It's too bad that, in America, puppets are seen as crude and for children. It's actually ingenious that two people can operate an entire 30-minute show." Kassapides said the contemporary version of "The Wizard of Oz", which uses human forms and masks, took a lot of effort to produce. But he said he would not mind as long as people saw the production. "It's a dying art," he said. "We're trying to keep it alive." The Paranoix Poor Theatre Company production of "The Wizard of Oz" will be performed at 1 p.m. and 8 p.m. Saturday. Tickets are $3 for children and $5 for adults. MCAT Are you prepared? We are. -SMALL CLASSES GROUPED BY TEST-TAKING ABILITY - GUARANTEED SCORE IMPROVEMENTS -VALUABLE TEST-TAKING TECHNIQUES COMBINED WITH A THOROUGH REVIEW OF THE CONCEPTS TESTED ON THE MCAT BEGIN PREPARING NOW!! Register TODAY and get FREE MCAT Review software. Classes are forming now for the April exam. THE PRINCETON REVIEW Questions? Please call our office at (800) 865-7737 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, January 19, 1994 11 KANSAS 50 STATE Tom Leininger / KANSAN Kansas freshman forward B.J. Williams, playing for the injured Richard Scott, is boxed out by Ron Lucas of Kansas State. The Jahways were out-rebounded by the Wildcats 44-32. 1984 Martin Altstaedten / KANBAN Young guard finds success on, off court Freshman guard Angela Halbleb, who averages 11.8 points a game, has led the 'Hawks in scoring three times. By Matt Siegel Kansan sportswriter Whoever coined the phrase "Appearances can be deceiving" must have been describing freshman guard Angela Halbleib. But success comes naturally to Halleib. On the surface, Halbleib's high school record indicates that she is a model of success from hard work. Besides being a four-year letter winner in volleyball, basketball and softball in high school, Halbleib was a National Honor Society member and class valedictorian. "I am not one to study that much," she said sheepishly. "I'm a person who studies in front of a television the night before a test. I can't explain my study habits." Sometimes incoming freshmen basketball players have a tendency to play timidly, especially in the early part of the season. But in Halleib's third game of the season, she led the team with 28 points. Halbleib was chosen the most valuable player of the Dial Soap Classic, and has led the team in scoring three times. "It took me awhile to get my confi dence," Hallebib said. "I still struggle with my confidence level some games." Confidence was something she did not lack during her high-school career in Wisconsin. She averaged more than 20 points a game her first three years and 30 points her senior year at Middleton High School. Halbleib not only was the Badger Conference scoring champion in each of her four seasons, but she also became Wisconsin's all-time leading scorer in the history of girl's basketball. She finished her career with 2,378 points, eclipsing former Stanford All-American Sonja Henning's mark. "I was never one to get wrapped up in awards," Halbleib said. "Finishing second in the state championship my senior year is something that I'll always remember. Nobody was expecting us to do anything because the year before we were 8-13 and we had a new coach. We sold out the field house for the first time in history." She opted for Kansas because she wanted to step into a successful program, she said. The early season results indicate that she has found the success she sought. However, she was also tied to one of her hometown college team's success. Hablebli's accomplishments did not go unnoticed. She was recruited heavily before narrowing her list to Purdue, Florida State and Kansas. "When my parents came to visit me they brought enough Rose Bowl stuff to fill my closet," she said. One of the reasons why Hallebib has found success on the court and has become such a prolific scorer is because of her jump shot. She currently shoots 47 percent from the field and 38.2 percent from three-point range. "I think that Angie is one of the finest shooters that this conference will see." Kansas coach Marian Washington "She can develop into one of the finest shooters in the nation, if she keeps on working on her game." Halbleib said she needed to work on her game so she would be a better player next season. Just like she needs to study more, right Angela? Scott listed day-to-day after forehead injury Pollard's knee puts forward into hospital By Gerry Fey Kansan sportswriter Players were sprawled out on the floor for the elusive basketball, a common scene in the No.1 Jayhawks' 68-64 loss to Kansas State on Monday night. But the difference this time was the consequence. Kansas senior forward Richard Scott suffered a mild concussion on the play. He was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital, where he stayed overnight. Doctors performed a CAT scan, which showed no problems, said Mark Cairns, team trainer. With 15:45 left in the game, Scott dove into a pile of players for the ball. A K-State player recovered the ball, and both teams headed down the court. Scott, however, lay motionless where the scuffle had occurred. He apparently had been knee in the forehead by freshman center Scot Pollard. Officials stopped play while Kansas coach Roy Williams and Cairns went to check on Scott. He made it off the court and into the locker room with assistance but was sent to the hospital. Cairns said Scott had been unconscious for about 30 seconds when the two tried to get a response from him. "When I checked with him this morning, he had a pretty good headache and some neck pains," Cairns said yesterday. "That's what we're checking out with X-rays. If everything goes well, chances are he will be released sometime today." A hospital representative said last night that Scott had been released from the hospital at 2:18 p.m. "I think some of us were just worried about him," Pearson said. "We realized we just had to come together as a team and do it without Richard." When Kansas lost Scott, the averages 15.5 points a game, the Jayhawks lost their leading scorer and a valuable senior under the basket. Pearson and freshman forward B.J. Williams had to fill in at Scott's vacant position. Roy Williams said he was happy with the play from both players. He said that losing Scott had been tough but that K-State had played well. "We got some good play out of Sean, and we got some good play out of B.J.," he said. "That's important to us. It's important to our team because we need those guys." Pearson said his performance had been his best this year. He shot four for six from the field and ended with a team-high 15 points. "I just had to go out there and do whatever it took to help the team," Pearson said. "It helps my confidence. It makes me realize that now, the more I get into it on defense, the offense will come." Cairns said that Scott was listed as day-to-day for the Iowa State game Saturday in Ames, Iowa. Monday night's Kansas K-State game was the 100th game played between the two schools in Allen Field House. Kansas holds a 66-34 advantage. "With this kind of situation, you have to observe him for a couple days," he said. "This morning he was doing good, I'm not saying he was doing great. He was doing good." The Jayhawks also were ranked No. 1 last season before they played the Wildcats, but Kansas escaped Manhattan with a 71-65 victory. But in its first top-ranked defense at home, like this year's, Kansas lost 64-49 to Long Beach State. - Pearson led the Jayhawks with a season-high 15 points, missing his career high by 4 points. It was the first time a starter has not led the team in scoring since junior guard Greg Gurley scored 17 points against North Carolina State on Dec. 8. The Jayhawks are 15-0 when they win the battle of the boards. K-State out-rebounded Kansas 44-32. This season, Kansas is 1-2 against the opposition when it is out-rebounded. Kansas opens season ready to earn respect By Andrew Gilman Kansan sportswriter The No. 25 Kansas baseball team will have the chance to prove that last season was no fluke when they begin play Feb. 11 in Kissimmee, Fla., at the fifth annual Olive Garden Classic. The Jayhawks, who begin practice today, will have less than a month to prepare for the four-team tournament. "It's an early start." Kansas coach Dave Bingham said. "It's a difficult situation, with four games in three days." The Jayhawks will play No. 14 North Carolina State at 1 p.m. Feb. 11 and then will take on No. 10 Tennessee at 4:30 p.m. the same day. Kansas will play unranked Central Florida at 1 p.m. Feb. 12 before playing in either the consolation or championship game Feb. 13. All four teams qualified for the NCAA tournament last year. Lack of confidence will not be a factor when the Jayhawks try to return to the College World Series. "We know we can play," senior pitcher Chris Corn said. "We've always been able to. We've learned from our mistakes. I came back for my senior season because I want a national championship." Corn is coming off a 9-4 season, in which he anchored a strong pitching staff.Bingham won't be worried about his pitchers, either. The Jay-hawks will have a strong nucleus on the pitching staff. They return starters Corn, sophomore Jamie Splittorff and senior David Meyer. "We've asked our pitchers to start early," Bingham said. "Physically, they'll be ready for 100 pitches, but we won't put any kid at risk. We're sure going to watch them." Pitching won't be the only bright spot for the Jayhawks. They also return $ a_{2} $ solid outfield for the 1994 season. Senior captain Darryl Monroe, who sports a career .343 batting average, will be joined by junior Josh Igou and senior Ron Oelschlager. Monroe and the Jayhawks have some lofty goals for the season. "Our goals were set in the fall," Monroe said. "We're here to win the Big Eight and win the College World Series." To do that, the team will have to prove itself early in the season against some high-quality competition. "This team is able to go out early," Monroe said. "We've accomplished a great deal in the fall." Success in the fall may not be enough for Bingham, who looks at last year as an indicator. "The College World Series is the greatest thing that could have happened to us," he said. "You are what you've accomplished, and we want that challenge." Hadl honored Kansanstaffreport John Hadi, a former All-American at halfback and quarterback for Kansas, was chosen Monday for admission into the College. Hall of Fame. "I spent the first half of my life playing football," Hadd said. "It is nice to be associated with great goddess." John Hadl players that I played against and know personally." Hadi, who is the associate athletic director and Williams Fund director, led Kansas to a 33-7 victory against Rice in the Bluebonnet Bowl in 1961. It was Kansas' first bowl victory. After graduating from Kansas, Hadl went onto a 16-year professional football career in the AFL and NFL. He played for San Diego, Los Angeles, Green Bay and Houston. The highlight of his professional football career was being named the league's most valuable player in 1973. Wednesdays Only! As Easy as 1-2-3! PYRAMID PIZZA "We Pile It On!" Wednesdays Only! As Easy as 1-2-3! PYRAMID PIZZA "We Pile It On!" Buy a large, get a second of equal value for $3! Buy a medium, get a second of equal value for $2! Buy a small, get a second of equal value for $1! Wednesdays Only! As Easy as 1-2-3! PYRAMID PIZZA “We Pile It On!” Buy a large, get a second of equal value for $3! Buy a medium, get a second of equal value for $2! Buy a small, get a second of equal value for $1! Kansan Card offer good carry out only I want you to call me for Student Loans! "Service, service, service." That’s the motto at Mercantile Bank. If you want service in addition to your PLUS, SLS, or Stafford Loans, you want Mercantile! Call now: 865-0278 CHINESE Buffet Lunch/Dinner $4.95-$6.75 All-You-Can-Eat 北京 饭店 Peking Restaurant Free Delivery 749-0003 23rd and Iowa (Behind Hastings) WE HONOR KANSAS I want you to call me for Student Loans! "Service, service, service." That's the motto at Mercantile Bank. If you want service in addition to your PLUS, SLS, or Stafford Loans, you want Mercantile! Call now: 865-0278 MERCANTILE BANK Attention PWC Lakewood ID 914958 Bewald Opportunity Loader CHINESE Buffet Lunch/Dinner $4.95-$6.75 All-You-Can-Eat 北京 饭店 Peking Restaurant Free Delivery 749-0003 23rd and Iowa (Behind Hastings) 北京饭店 12 Wednesday, January 19, 1994 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Orr supports aims of boycott by BCA The Associated Press AMES, Iowa — Iowa State's Johnny Orr thinks that the nation's basketball coaches are still on the same page in their dispute with the NCAA. He just hopes they stay that way. Orr is a former president of the National Association of Basketball Coaches, which has stayed in the background while the Black Coaches Association has led the protest of the NCAA's stand on scholarships and other matters. Many white coaches have supported the BCA's stand, and Orr said Monday that he hasn't seen any signs of a split between that group and the basketball coaches association. Orr was the president of the basketball coaches association during the 1992-93 season. "I hope it doesn't come to anything like that, where there's any division in the ranks," he said. "The big thing I see is we've tried for two or three or four years to get these things done. Last fall, we had our summit in Charlotte, and the black coaches decided to bowie it. "They felt we weren't getting it done as a unit. They felt maybe they could get it done themselves. I think everyone agrees with that." The BCA threatened to boycott last weekend's games after delegates at the NCAA convention rejected a 14th scholarship for men's basketball. The threat was put on hold when the Justice Department offered to help get the two sides together. BCA director Rudy Washington said his group was willing to try to talk things out for now. But if the black coaches don't see any movement on the NCAA's part, they will renew their boycott threat, Washington said. "I think there'll be a series of meetings in which the NCAA will try to show its sincerity," he said. "If they continue to make dumb statements, if they continue to act as if we don't exist, then it's inevitable that some kind of work stoppage or job action will take place." Orr said the NCAA's refusal to raise the scholarship limit to 14 and to address other concerns of the BCA was a blow to the group. "They had worked awfully hard and lobbed and they didn't get it. We didn't get it," he said. "That was very upsetting and disappointing I'm sure. It was a disappointment to me." "They think they can do it. Hopefully they can. But it's not going to be done before 1995, I think." Iowa State center injured when truck runs into train DES MOINES, Iowa — Center Loren Meyer's broken collarbone is probably punishment enough for breaking a team rule, Iowa State coach Johnny Orr said yesterday. The Associated Press Meyer, the Cyclones' starting center and leading scorer and rebounder, had his collarbone broken when a 1985 Chevrolet S-10 pickup driven by William Finnegan, 21, of Des Moines crossed into the path of a slowmoving train on Des Moines' east side at about 4:30 a.m. yesterday. After being treated at Iowa Methodist Medical Center, Meyer issued a statement apologizing to the Cyclone team and coaches for breaking a team rule prohibiting players from being out after midnight. "It was a mistake on my part. I feel lucky to be alive, and it will never happen again," Meyer said. Orr, his voice cracking, wavered between being on the verge of tears and being upset at Meyer. "I'm happy he didn't get any more injured," Orr said. "You don't get hit by a train—too many people—and get to live and be perfectly healthy. So he should feel very lucky." If Meyer is out six weeks as expected, he would miss the rest of the regular season, which ends March 6. Meyers said he hopes to be ready to play by the time the Big Eight tournament begins March 11. Finnegan said he and Meyer and a third passenger, Marie Miller, had been returning to Finnegan's Des Moines apartment when the accident occurred. "I feel terrible that Loren will be out, but thank goodness no one was seriously hurt," Finnegan said. Finnegan said he stopped at the flashing railroad signals but simply did not see the approaching train. When he drove around a crossing guard gate, a freight train struck the passenger side of the truck. Des Moines police said that alcohol had not been a factor in the accident. Finnegan was ticketed by the police for failure to obey a railroad signal. Miller was treated for minor injuries and Finnegan was not hurt. MAZZIOS PIZZA Buffet Hours 11:00-1:30 $2.99 lunch buffet (add .70 for salad) 2630 Iowa 843-1474 We Buy, Sell, Trade & Consign USED & New Sports Equipment PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 1029 Massachusetts phone 841-PLAY BRING 'EM IN! Sub&Stuff Sandwich Shop "We honor all competitor coupons, always have, always will." 1618 W 23rd 841-6104 Optical Dispensary and Lab formerly fortition eyeland - New Services Optical Perspectives - New Owners - New Services New Book - New Products Your Hometown Doctor's Prescriptions Welcome 600 Lawrence Ave. (913) 841-6100 eTo LAWRENCE'S FOREMOST NAME IN OUTDOOR CLOTHING SUNFLOWER 804 MASSACHUSETTS CURE FOR THE COMMON COLD THERMAL UNDERWEAR • GLOVES • MITTENS LINERS • SOCKS • BOOTS • OUTERWEAR WOOL • COTTON • FLEECE. Lawrence's Largest Supplier of Darkroom Materials 1610 West 23rd Street 841-7205 Camera America ONE HOUR PHOTO CHINA Advocacy Support - Fraternity & Sorority Letters * Baby Jayhawk Tattoo * Bring your own design or choose from our extensive selection * Reasonably priced * Hospital sterilized Rings Fixed Fast! Kizer Cummings Sweets 749-4333 833 Mass • Lawrence, KS Prevention Awareness STUDENT SENATE For more information or to speak to an advocate call Headquarters Counseling Center at 841-2345 MICOM COMPUTERS & SERVICE CENTER New Years Special Power User System 468 DX33 only...$1999 468 BX23 $1,249 "We Buy & Sell Used PCs Ports & Software" 832-8831 947 E. 23rd Street * Lawrence RV5S A.S.A.P Rape Victim Fine Line Tattoo Inc. Support Pancho's MEXICAN RESTAURANT Homestyle Mexican Food 23rd & Louisiana 843-4044 Mon - Sat 29* Mass. St 12 - 8pm Topeka Tues. till 6pm 233-8288 THE SANDBAR 17 E. 8TH STREET MON. $1.25 DOMESTICS TUES. $1.00 ANYTHING WED. $1.50 WELL DRINKS THURS.MARGARITA NITE! FRI- SHRIMP 3-7 SAT. $1.00 DRAWS SUN. $1.75 ANYTHING!!! OPEN EVERYDAY!!!! Vitruvian Man February 12, 1994 Kansas Union 8 a.m. until 4 p.m. $ 20.00 per Team Call 864-3477 for more info ATTENTION SCHOLARS! COLLEGE BOWL 1994 presented by: EUBRENE SUNCH ACTIVITIES SIA UNIVERSITY OF BANGLADESH presented by: THE "VARSITY SPORT OF THE MIND" Body Be Your Best in '94 Begin at Body Boutique 10 Tans for only $20 exp. 2-2-94 749-2424 No joining fee! $139.00 off Special rates for graduating seniors avg. $20/month exp. 2-2-94 925 Iowa BODY OUTIQUE The Women's Fitness Facility 17 The Etc. Shop RAVEN SUNGLASSES 928 Mass. 843-0611 Ray-Ban AUDIO 4.0 MAGIC 5.0 Sunglasses for DRIVING Classified Directory 100s Announcements 105 Personal 110 Personal 120 Personal 120 Announcements 130 Entertainment 140 Announcements 200s Employmen 20U5 Employment 209 Help Wanted 202 Professional Services 208 Typing Services Classified Policy The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or rule. Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available. All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 and requires a court appearance, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or dis- 100s Announcements Mr. Marks- I Thanks for the weekend and Sundays. I'll always enjoy the "shape of your heart" and a new best friendship, even if you have ngs. Love always. Cinco Cinos Espresso Bar in Port at Alvin's Bakery 9th and Iowa. Best Prices on Great Espresso Drinks, Mocha, Cakes, Capuccinoes & Espresso. Open Nightly t10 pm. 110 Bus. Personals SpringBreak1994 SOUTH PADRE from #159 Other destinations available Lowest price guaranteed CANCUN from #439 Call 865-1352 WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO Really Listen Really Listen Call or drop by Headquarters We're here by cause we care. 841-2345 1419 Mass. We're always open WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500 Urgent Care (Additional Charge) Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm Sunday 8am-4:30pm Pharmacy Hour Monday, Thursday 8am-9pm Saturday 8a.m-12:30p Sunday 11a.m-3pm KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services Regular Clinic Hours Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm Saturday 8am-11:30am 120 Announcements Hillel Upcoming Events 300s Merchandise Shabbat Dinner This Friday 6:00 pm Hillel House Sign up in the Hillel Office or call 864-3948 by Friday! DISCO HAVDALAH Kansas Room, Kansas Union Havdalah: 8:00pm Dance: 8:30pm Entrance fee after 8:30: $1 or 1 can of food 305 For Sale 306 Auto Sales 308 Miscellaneous 310 Want to Buy DISCO HAVDALAH - Kansan Classified: 864-4358 400s Real Estate 405 Real Estate 430 Roommate Wanted FREE! CALCULUSWORKSHOP Learn skills for success in Math 115&116 FREE! Presented by the Student Assistance Center Wednesday, January 19, 7-9pm 4035 Wescoe CALCULUS Workshop. Learn skills for success in Humla 115 & 116 Lesson 2. No registration required. 7-9 p.m., Jan 19, 4035 Wesco. Presented by the Student Assistance Center. 13th YEAR! SPRING BREAK94 Hot! SOUTH PADRE ISLAND NORTH PADREMUSTANG ISLAND ORLANDO/WALT DISNEY WORLD F.L.O.R.I.D.A DAYTONA BEACH STEAMBOAT VAIL/BEAVER CREEK BRECKENRIDGE/KEYSTONE N·E·V·A·D·A- LAS VEGAS RESERVATIONS AVAILABLE NOW CALL TOLL FREE FOR FULL DETAILS AND COLOR BROCHURE! DETAILS AND COLOR BROCHURE 1 • 800 • SUNCHASE --- S·O·U·T·H C·A·R·O·L·I·N·A HILTON HEAD ISLAND SCHOLARSHIP OPPORTUNITIES! INTERNSHIP OPPORTUNITIES! GRANTS AND LOANS! CASHE-PLUS SCHOLARSHIP SEARCH UNIVERSITY SCHOLARSHIP CENTER 33 STRONG HALL 864-5439 CALL OR DROP BY FOR DETAILS 130 Entertainment Drummer with live and recording experience lookin- for creative and serious band to join or musicians to form band. Many influences. Open to ideas. Call Tm 832-0772. 140 Lost & Found Found white Labrador, around one year old, wearing a red collar, very friendly. Call 843-5866 200s Employment 205 Help Wanted 600 CAMPUS IN THE USA, RUSSIA AND EUROPE NEED YOU THIS SUMMER. For the best summer of your life-see your career center or contact: Camp Counselor USA 420 Florence St, Palo Alto, CA 94301 BabySitter needed Monday-Friday. 8-noon BabySitter needed References and transportation required.$20/book Child care for sr. age, near campus, 5:00-8:30 Pay call; 843-267-1111; 843-267-0611 Call date; 843-267-2111; evening: 843-267-06 Christian Day needs relocation assistants. Work 8am-11am or mапр help help 1pm-3pm . 500 rooms. Send resume to: info@christianday.com Counselors/Support Staff-Children's Camps-Northeast Top-School, RM/BD/Laundry, travel allowance. Must have skill in one of the following sports: basketball (jazz, tap, ballet), drama, drums, fieldockey, football, golf, guitar, gymnastics, ice hockey, horseback riding-hunt seat, karate, lacrosse, nature, photography, piano pioneer, swim team, tennis team, theater, technicians, track, water, skiing, WSI, wind surfing, wood kitchen steward, cooks, buses drivers, maintenance, swim team, tennis team Cruise line, entry level, on-board positions available great benefits. Summer and year round 18-24. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, January 19, 1994 13 Custodian, Burge Union, Tuesday 9 mid-mingh and Saturday 10 mid-1am. Previous janitorial experience preferred. Able to lift 50 pounds. Work with animal supervision. Clerk, Office Assistant, KU Bookstore, Monday thru Friday 11am, 4pm type, 40pm, valid driver's license, Macintosh experience preferred. Knowledge of basic office procedures. Maid, Kansas Union, Saturday and Sunday 8am- 2:30pm, must be female, prefer previous house- keeping experience, of average or above physical strength. All jobs pay $2.95 per hour. Apply Kansas and Personnel Office level, 5 Level, Union Boeing, EOE Evening and weekend CNA's need to work with clients in their homes. Reliable transportation necessary. Call Sharon at Douglas County Visiting Nurse 843-3738. Greenpeace is now hiring intelligent energetic workers to provide a safe, rewarding lobbying and fundraising role. Full-time positions include management and include guaranteed wage and benefit. Call 813-834-0804 today, for more information. Every day at Greenpeace. I am looking for a student to play with my 3-year old boy, Monday through Friday, 1-8 p.m. I please call Anamylm at 862-7305. If you can only work certain days, please call me. Firewall on! I CAN'T BELIEVE IT'S YOGURT Now hiring ASSEMBLE MANAGER Triumph (Full or Part) Orchards Cormorants and Kaslan-Lawrence PART TIME HELP Louisiana Purchase 23rd and Louisiana-Lawrence Reply in person. Johnny T. Kennedy Walmeir positions available 11pm to 2am shift M W F: Call Dopeq at 03456789 10am to 3pm shift M W F: Call Dopeq at 03456789 EARN CASH ON THE SPOT $15 Today $30 This week By donating your life saving blood plasma WALK-INS WELCOME! NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750 bearing for individual to watch my school-age children before and after school. Call 855-2973 from a phone number below. Part-time clerical job available now. Flexible hours. Call 842-2744. Kennel position-18 to 18w includes weekdays & holidays. No phone calls please apply in person. Lawrence Veterinary Hospital 1104 W 29th ST. children need deferral if host, Call 615-347-2042. PART-TIME EVENING DELIVERY PERSON Must have own car. Apply in person Peking Restaurant (32rd and Iowa behind Hastings). 769- 0003 Part-time help and party pic photographers need experience experience. Use at Tru-Colors Trucks. Freschool Substitutes. Preference training and experience with young children. Sunshine Acres School PART-TIME. Students need for Intramural Basketball Officials and Scorekeepers. No experience necessary. Training provided. Flexible time. Should call 864-3546 for more information. PROMOTE our SPRINGREAK packages with our posters and flyers, or SIGNUP NOW for Springbreak rooms. Daytona, Panama, Padma, India. 7 nights; 7 nights up. Calm MCU. 1:00 - 8:23 PM. SCHOOL CROSSING GUARD CITY OF LAUDUNE SHIPPING ASSISTANT Responsible part-time work directing children on foot & motor traffic at school crossings. Approx. 17-20 hrs a week. $4.25 per hour. Must be in good physical condition with no loss of sight or hearing. Required for a admin. Services, third floor, City Hall, 8th Massachusetts, Lawrence K 60044 M/E/F/D growing, international, technical publishing company and the weekly week) position available. Duties include shipping orders; copying and mailing statements; computing computer disks for inventory, taking the mail to the post office daily; and providing backup systems in the office. Experience working with high volume and working as a team required. Ability to maneuver up to 50 pounds and 50 wpm preferred. This position is part of our internal clerical support team and helps other areas of the company as needed. **STUDENT APPLICATIONS PROGRAMMER.** Die day: 01/28 / 9A $ salary: $450, 20 hours. bra works. Duties include programming in C, K-SHELL, FOXPRO and/or other languages on AIX, OSF/1, VMS, CMS and/or LAN. Complete job description available in Rm 202. Computer Center. Complete job description available in Rm 202 at the Computer Center and return to Amn.Rt. EOFA.EMOYLOPER. R & D Publications, Inc. is an equal opportunity employer in the State of California. If you are looking for an enjoyable work environment with a reliable company, please come and fill out an application at 1601 West 23rd Street, San Francisco, CA 94107. STUDENT CLERICAL ASSISTANT: Deadline: 10/28/94. Salary: $4.35/hour. Duties include assisting in invoicing, mailing & billing of Computer Center billings; maintaining Accounts Receivable ledgers; assisting in Repair Shop orders; making daily deposits; record microcomputer workshop registrations; performing receptionist duties in the Library; performing office duties. To apply, complete a job application available in Room 922 of the Computer Center EO/AA EMPLOYER PYRAMID PIZZA Now Taking Applications Fast growing company. Looking for quality minded people. Good opportunity for growth. Now Hiring Drivers Must have car and insurance Full & Part Time Apply in person 14th & Ohio(under the Wheel) The Lawrence Bus Company in now taking applications for SAFER DIEVER drivers. Must have 21, have a clean driving record, and be familiar with the Campus Up to 18 hr/wk. If interested call 654-6544. Vista Drive-in is now taking applications for full and part-time help. Apply in person. 1327.W 6th. STUDENT SYSTEM TESTING PROGRAMMER: Deadline: 01/21/94. Salary $550-800. Month: 30 bursa per week. Duties include designing and writing programs, maintaining, or enhancing existing software applications, and maintaining library maintenance. Required qualifications: currently enrolled at the University of Kansas, demonstrated experience in designing and writing programs, knowledge of at least 2 programming languages, proficiency in computer and written communications skills, experience and/or ability in software testing. Ability to maintain effective working relationships with customers and staff. Complete job description available upon request. Application in Room 202 of the Computer Center. EO/AA EMPLOYER 225 Professional Services **TRAFFIC-DUI'S** Fake DUI's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters the law of offices *DONALD G. DUISSE* Gordie G. Stroffe Sally G. Kelsey 16 East 13th 842-1133 Christian Daycare offers the best care at lowrates. Preacher Churches offer openings. Transportation is available. DUI/MIP/Fake ID's Office located right next to campus Elizabeth Leach Attorney at Law-Farmer Prosecutor 414 W 14th 749-0087 INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS DV-1 green card Program Sponsored by the U.S. Immigrant Protection Program of almost all countries are allowed to take part. Students, tourists, anyone may apply. For info & forms. New Eria School. 2023 Stagli S., Canoga Park, CA 91206 Tel; (818) 998-4425; Fax; (818) 882-9681. T T OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense For free consultation call Rick Frydman, Attorney 823 Missouri 845-4023 VIDEO EDITING ANI VIDEO EDITING AND PRODUCTION SERVICES A/B rollout training with EDL. 3D computer animations. H18 field production package. Award winning screen writer. PRIMAL SCREEN COMMUNICATIONS Internet Made Easy Access KU and the Internet SEMESTER SPECIAL Your Key to the Internet Voice 842-6699 Data 842-7744 SLIP is Available DATABANK ADVERTISING WORKS! BRAXTON B. COPLEY Attorney at Law General Practice Traffic Tickets, Midemeanors, Landlord/Tenant 719 Massachusetts 749-5333 235 Typing Services Looking for a good type? *Papers, Applications, Spreadsheets, Charts *Laser prints of your profs *Grammar and spelling tree *18 years experience call Jacki at Makin' the Grade accounts 1-der Womenscherm Workposition. Firmer吏母 1-der Womenscherm Workposition. Firmer吏母 Open: 10-6Mon.-Sat. 10-8Thurs. 300s Merchandise 1347 Mass. St. 843-3535 Fisher 41-L Mountain bike, oversized aluminum frame, large tires, $159 each, asking 800. Call Bani 641-917-41 Almost new twin mattress and box springs. $50 o.b. o.f. Call 841-3941. Showusyour KUID andget 305 For Sale Acoustic guitar thruJanuary The Midwest's finest selection of electric and acoustic guitars, keyboards, amps, sound gear, recording equipment and accessories. MASS STREET MUSIC For sale. Queen-sized futon mattress, well used. 830 Call 823-1693. Beds, deks, bookcases, chest of drawers. Everything But Ice. 938 Mass. *EXTRA DISCOUNTS *PURCHASE BONUSES IBM compatible computer with printer, software, and manuals, 5001 Call 749-2839 IBM computer monitor disk drive, and software for sale. $99.00 call 842-3543 a/k for Akiyo. Size que futon matresie and wooden frame. Stage 7. Phone 855-955 and ask for Tom. Queen size classic futon bed, solid maple w/ matre- ial finish. 4000 hull. 8400-7814 ask for Sherri $Boas - $125, Ball Pythons - $45, Other lizards also Call Greg at 794-196 and leave message. TI 81 Graphing Calculator, almost new, 800 or best offer, contact Contact for more info at (913) 834-2678 Trek Carbon Fiber Roadbike w/sti-$699 Krieler Riefer w/stand=$200 7-spd Carriage/Campy Tubulars-unused=$200 Super Nintendo w/8 games=$150 Dryden Bodycam v/cam=$600 Call 841-9940 340 Auto Sales 1973 Volkwagen Super Bug, good condition, great student car, $800 145-1722 Happy hours everyday from 3-4pm. All soft drinks are $5, 35 and 89 at 7:30. Baxk's Ham garners at 9:30 and 11:30. $5 Pentel Micro, New red paint. Runs perfectly. $5 Pentel Micro, 5 speed. Kogui. $699. Call 799-3412. 360 Miscellaneous 370 Want to Buy A Carousel Slide Projector, Raymond, 2515 Arkanas, 841-8534 405 For Rent 400s Real Estate 1 bedroom for sublease 1 block from campus $80/month+units-first free mo. free FJ-Fill till June 30th 2 and 3 bedroom apartments now available. On bus route. Call 749-1556. 2 BDRM townhouses w/ AC and basic cable paid. Conveyance $60/month. Peta possible. Contact 914-298-2868. 2 furnished rooms in nice spacious house close to campus and 23rd St. Washery/Dryer. A/C $252 JEFFERSON CENTURYFARMS APTORTE LIVING Stocked fishing lake, courtyards w/fountain, sand volleyball, pool jacuzzi & exercise facility EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY The Best Place to Live at KU is in K.C.! Available immediately! lbm apt. at 1212 Ohio Btwn downtown and campus. Close to GS-Corb. no pet's $27 dep. plus electric. 841-1207 Available now, studio apartment in nicely renovated room with entrance, separate bedroom, ceiling fan, ceiling fan. No pets. 1000 block Vermont. $296/month. 841-1074 764-1471 119th&1-35 Call or go to: Sundance • 841-5255 Regents Court • 749-0445 Completely furnished 4 bedroom apts. Wenowhave SUBLEASES available for January MASTERCRAFT meadowbrook COMPARE Newer 1, 2, and 3 bedroom apartments available for August '94. Washers/dryer, dishwasher, microwave, private patio/balconies. Avoid the place your new place !!! Call 709-1568 for details. - Apartment Size - Convenience Departately seeking rommate to live in 3 bedrooms, 967-711 or Ross at 862-853 and leave message. Campus Locations Cost Per Month Sat 10-4 - Location - Surroundings Leasing for June and August. New 4 bedroom, 2-bedroom flat with private gas fireplace, fire cable, fam-cable 1500 sqft, feet and covered parking avail. Early sign-up special offers. For more information call Dave at 841-756-6292. One bedroom apartment, sublease immediately. $26/month. On bus route. Quel, clean. Graystone Apartments. 841-5306. leave message. MASS STREET, Lovely new 1 BR, celling炉 MASS STREET, Lovely new 1 BR, celling炉 1/2 fee less thru August Renewal $895 2/3 fee less thru August Renewal $695 Sun1-4 Park25 Female roommate needed: 1238 Ohio I block off the same name and number on answering machine for Wetland. 15th & Crestline Nice,clean. 2 BDRM spi. EXCELLENT LOCATION-WALK TO CAMPUS AND SHOPPING. - Lifestyle (Sorry,No Pets) We are now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature studio1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. We also have 3 bedroom, 2 1/2 bath townhomes. We presently have available a select few 1 & 2 bedroom apartments for immediate occupancy. EQUAL HOUSING Opportunity *2Pools *Volleyball Court 842-4200 *On KU Bus Route with 4 Stops on Property *2 Laundry Rooms Hookups Callor stop by today. 2401 W. 25th, 9A3 842-1455 (sorry no pets) Studio apartment now available close to campus paid. $850 6 month lease available. Call 749-1566 Sublease 2 bedroom apt. Available February 1st. On KU bus route. 843-8097 Also Leasing For Spring & Fall! SouthPoint APARTMENTS 2 & 3 BEDROOMS AVAILABLE NOW!! LUXURY New appliances New bath fixtures Mini & vertical blinds Walk-in closets Water, heating of water & trash paid!! Patio balconies available Swimming pool and Sand volleyball court Small pets OK with deposit Ample off-street parking LOCATION GREATLOCATION!!! West of Iowa on 26th Street K L bus route K.U. bus route Walk to shopping, banking, Restaurants & six theaters Next to new Holcom Recreational Center - Basketball, baseball, indoor Track, racquetball and Aerobics. 843-6446 TU March 31, 21c. Georgetown Apartments; WJD hospice; WJD appliances, free water queeter Sibaslee ill July 119, new 2bedroom a glendale, central oem + dop 80 Montenere力宿 843-260-7482 mo + dop 80 Montenere力宿 843-260-7482 Now leasing for Spring! we're making life easier! *Weekly Maid Service *Front Door Bus Service *"Dine Anytime" with Unlimited Seconds *Laundry and Vending Facilities A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere - Close to campus • Spacious 2 bedroom • Laundry facility • Swimming Pool • Waterbed allowed 430 Roommate Wanted 9th& Avalon 842-3040 VILLAGE SQUARE apartments - Weekly Maid Service 1 or 2 rooms needed for new 3 bedroom apt. 10/20 mo. +/- utilizes Near Campus W/D in apt. Available now. Call for details. 841-6844. 2 female roommates desperately needed for spa room. Please call 843-767-9471, WASHER HAVE TO MOVE! Call 843-767-9471 Pemale, non-smoking, roommate needed, im- pregnant or pregnant; clean washer/dryer; $199. +/- utilities 842-5000 2/-1 m/sale roommates for 4b house. D/W, DW, al- utilities paid. 8215.00/month. Call Ivan. B41-6489 College-aged roommate needed now for 3 BR Ava- lance room. water .dan. pJ. rent free. please call B41-9494 ers. Available Jan. 1, 749-2888 or 850-6888. Female roommate needed for 3 bedroom very close to campus. $182.50 + ½ utilities. Call Julia at 855-0565. NAISMITH Naismith Drive Female romann resume for b1rm ap, close to campus, $20 per month, includes rent and utilities. Male Grade student seeks M/P/nominee at great apt on Rt and Mh. All amenities including dishwasher, garbage disposal, and central heat /air /& water. Call Kevin Avali at 123-456-7890, c THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Male Grad Student to share a birmish house with $00/ month. Billds pts. Call 843-419 --big distance to campus's 8 month lease avail. Rent $850/month. Call 769-5483 or 135-8483-843. Wanted: One roommate, nonsucker to share a bedroom from campus. Two full baths. 842-4454. Female roommate wanted to share 3 bmfr. I tablehroom w/microwave, W/D, C/A on RU bus room. I have a full HDTV/PS4 & gaming PC. Male or female roommate to 3 br. house, W/D, and consider roommate. W/D, DWL (util) room, 769-841 DWL (util) room, 769-841 Have your own room, covered parking, private bedrooms, private baths, for only 800 +1000 units + mail call 749-623-8251 Male rominate for a 8 bterm 2 furnished apt. $70/mo. + 1/4吐乳 1 bit to KU. Need 1 female immed. for 2nd sem b kicks from UK. bust rd, bwc + 800/ + 1017. Call 749-3808 or M-41-835 Needed by Feb. 1: NS RM to share 3 BP Dplx w/2 mgr students G/W, D/W, D/P. WD, D/W M-41-835 Roommate wanted to share 3 br. house in quiet neighborhood. 8178 mo. ma3-4338 Roommate needed for 4 dbm house near campus. W/D, appliances, furnished except for bdrm. Willing to help with part of rent, pets possible. Bdm 865-2451. Roommate needed to share 3 berm townhouse. Very only. $168/$m + 1/5 utility. Call Jule Steinberg. Roommate needed for 3 kbmr furnished apt. Rent is $15 + ½ units, on UK bus route AND W/D/ Call 855-2384 for all the juicy details. Female N/S roammate for 2 DBRM, 2 bath furn. except for bdm. W/D/ fireplace, pool. Near campus, on bus route, $240/mo, and 1/2 util., cable naid. contact 82-8633 Wanted: 1 or 2 roommates to share brand new condo for $600. Call 789-834-2124 or 789-834-3810. Wanted: Female roommate to share new large condo with another female college students. Walk-ins welcome. Rent $852/month. Call 789-830-034 or (213) 344-8443. Wanted: One roommate to share brand new condo for $600. Call 789-834-2124 or 789-834-3810. Ads phone in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made. In "incurred" 161 Other Incurred Line Refunds: Stop by the Kansas offices between 8 a. m. and 5 p. m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged Classified information and order form You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansan offices. Or you may choose that you have billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Ads that are billed to Visit or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date. Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of gate lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of slots in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run. The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.90. 3 lines 4 lines 5-7 lines 8+ lines Num. of insertions: deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. When canceling a classified that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available. Classifications CXL per min per day 1.5x for 2-3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-28X 20+X 2.05 1.95 1.65 .85 .75 .59 1.99 1.15 1.00 .70 .65 .49 1.95 1.05 .75 .65 .65 .49 1.75 .60 .65 .60 .55 .39 305 for sale 340 auta sales 360 miscellaneous 188 personal 189 business persons 190 amusements 198 entertainment 140 lost & feud 205 helped久望 225 professional services 225 typing services 379 want to buy 485 for rest 430 roommate wanted Name: ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print: Date ad begins:___ Total days in paper Total ad cost:___ Classification:___ 1 2 3 4 5 Address: **VISA** Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □ Visa (Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansas) Furnish the following if you are charging your ad: Expiration Date: Print exact name appearing on credit card: MasterCard Signature The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence. IS. 66445 THE FAR SIDE By GARY LARSON © 1994 FarWorks, Inc./Delt by Universal Press Syndicate © 1994 farWorks, Inc./Dist. by Universal Press Syndicate "Today, our guest lecturer is Dr. Clarence Tibbs, whose 20-year career has culminated in his recent autobiography, 'Zoo Vet — I Quit!'" 14 Wednesday, January 19, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN GET SENTENCED TO FIVE WEEKS OF HARD LABOR. AND LIKE IT? Sullivan Higdon & Sink is looking for a chain gang of six students who want to learn about advertising the tough way. Do time at SHS, and you'll gain the hardened edge it takes to break into advertising. You'll learn the secrets of survival from advertising and public relations pros, and do real work for real clients. To find out how you can get convicted, contact your advisor or call Kelli Frazier at (316) 263-0124. MAY 31 - JULY 1 SULLIVAN HIGDON & SINK - WICHITA, KS SULLIVAN HIGDON & SINK ADVERTISING • MARKETING • PUBLIC RELATIONS BOLI EAST INDUCTION & POST OFFICE BOX 11099 WICHITA KANSAS 7202-8703 • 318-2631-0214 A Sale Like This Happens Only Once A Year... 3 DAYS ONLY ENTIRE INVENTORY 1/2 PRICE HURRY, SALE ENDS SATURDAY! (Sorry, previously purchased items not included) HARPER'S S F A S H I O N S 835 Massachusetts In Beautiful Downtown Lawrence Juicers Showgirls The Midwest's Most Elite Juice Bar Opens at 7:00 pm 913 N Second (l-70 West to 204 Exit, turn left, Just past Tanger Factory Outlet Lawrence, KS 913-841-4122 First Amendment promotes diversity, judge tells students By Roberta Johnson Kansan staff writer The First Amendment guarantees freedom of speech. But the amendment also protects the right not to speak, an Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals judge said yesterday. Judge Morris S. Arnold told an audience of about 30 in a classroom in Green Hall that the constitutionality of an individual's right not to speak had been established in 1943. A student refused to salute to the American flag and say the Pledge of Allegiance, and the question rose as far as the Supreme Court. "The young man's desire to stand there and say nothing was a desire to say something." he said. Arnold said that the court had decided that the government could not enforce intellectual conformity. "The Constitution and the Bill of Rights is about intellectual diversity," he said. Today the government faces another case of the right to speak vs. the right not to speak, Amold said. The National Endowment for the Arts, in which the federal government sponsors artists and purchases works, has sponsored pieces _ such as Andre Serrano's "Piss Christ" _ that some groups have labeled offensive. Arnold said that although the sponsorship could be considered an issue of free speech, some had a different viewpoint. People also could see the art as ideological, and under the establishment clause of the Constitution they could argue against using tax money for other ideologies, he said. "If you think about it as ideological views, then the expenditure is unconstitutional," he said. "The creation of ideological proposition through the use of tax money can be offensive to our democratic tradition." Arnold said that serious pursuit of this idea could undermine many state institutions, such as public schools. libraries and museums, because they may be deemed ideological. Some members of the audience disagreed with him. "There is an important difference between NEA and the right not to speak," said Tom Stacy, professor of law. "In the latter case, the freespeech case, there is a more important correlation between the individual and the message." Stacy said that there was not a tight connection between paying taxes and supporting controversial artwork. Others said this was an occasion of minority groups overriding the majority. "The government established programs providing funds to unsubsidized artists, then changed the rules in the middle of the game," said Scott Hatttrup of Overland Park, second-year law student. "Maybe the government needs to re-evaluate the program, but don't yank the funding because you don't agree with the viewpoint." Most of Kansas was expected to stay in the deep-freeze today, bringing no relief to overcrowded homeless shelters and raising concerns about utility bills. Frozen spell keeps its grip on Kansas; Shelters fill quickly Today's highs are expected to reach only 10 degrees in northeast Kansas. Highs in the southwest part of the state are expected to reach into the upper 20s. The Associated Press Homeless shelters in Wichita reported that they were filling up fast as the mercury plunged on Monday. Health officials warned people to avoid frostbite by staying indoors when possible or to wear several layers of clothes when outside. Valid Through July 31, 1994 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN C A R D AT&T THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Spend $1...Save hundreds Membership has its privileges... THESE DISCOUNTS AND OFFERS ARE GOOD THROUGH JULY 31, 1994! JUST SHOW YOUR CARD... USE AS OFTEN AS YOU LIKE! LOTHERS Britches Corner • 843 Massachusetts • 843-0454; Buy 1reg, price Tommy Hilfiger, get the 2nd of equal or lesser value Cleopatra's Closet • 743 Massachusetts • 749-4664: 15% off everything in store (excluding sale items) The Etc Shop • 928 Massachusetts • 843-0611: 20% off Etc Shop brand sunglasses Harper's Fashions • 835 Massachusetts • 749-0626: Additional 20% off all regular price merchandise KU Bookstore • Kansas and Burge Uniones • 843-6464: $5 off any gift or clothing purchase of $25 or more Natural Way Natural Fabric Clothing • 820 Massachusetts • 841-0100: 15% off all regular priced clothing Outfitters Clothing Co. • 740 Massachusetts • 843-3933: 15% off the regular price of guy's and gal's jeans Outfitters Clothing Co. • 740 Massachusetts • 843-3933: 10% off of tuxedo rental University Bookshop • 1116 W 23rd St • 749-5206: 20% off all clothing (except sale items) Weavers Department Store • 901 Massachusetts • 843-6360: 20% off all lingerie, hosiery, or intimate apparel RESTAURANTS & BARS American Bistro • 701 Massachusetts • 841-8349: 10% off any entree (limit one) Bonanza • 2329 Iowa • 842-1200: All-you-can-eat-Freshestastics Food & Desert Bar for $2.99 Dos Hombres VI • 815 New Hampshire • 841-7286: Buy 1 menu item, get the 2nd for 1/2 price Dunkin Donuts • 521 W 23rd • 749-5015: 15% off any purchase Fifi's Restaurant • 925 Iowa • 841-7226: 10% off any entree (limit one) Imperial Garden • 2907 W 6th St • 841-1688: 10% off any dinner entree (limit one) Johnny's Tavern • 401 N 2nd St • 842-0377: Buy a cheeseburger w/fries at reg. price, get the 2nd for $1 (Good Mon - Fri, 4pm to 9pm) Little Caesars Pizza Room • 1410 Kasold, 865-5400/520 W 23rd, 842-8000: FREE Crazy Bread w/ any pizza/pizza purchase Perkins Family Restaurant • 1711 W 23rd • 842-9040: $1.00 off any entree, anytime, 24 hours a day Pizza Shuttle • 1601 W 23rd • 842-1212: 1 carryout, 1 topping pizza w/ a lg. coke for $4.00 Plum Tree • 2620 Iowa • 841-6222: FREE appetizer (2 crab rangoons or 1 egg roll) w/purchase of any entree Pyramid Pizza • 507 W 14th St (under The Wheel) • 842-3232: $4 sm-$6 med-$8 lg-ea add topping 75e (Void w/ other offers) Shoney's Restaurant • 2412 Iowa • 843-3519: FREE salad bar w/your purchase of a sandwich and fries Vista Drive In • 1527 W 6th St • 842-4311: FREE reg. French Fry w/purchase of a Vistaburger & drink MERCHANDISE & PRODUCTS The Athlete's Foot • 914 Massachusetts • 841-6966; $10 off a shoe purchase of $65 or more Community Mercantile • 501 Mississippi • 843-6344 • 15% on any store purchase Cycle Works • 1601 W 23rd • 842-6363 • FREE lock set w/ new bike purchase Englewood Florist • 939 Massachusetts • 841-2999 • 3 FREE latex balloons with any purchase of $20 or more Francis Sporting Goods • 731 Massachusetts • 843-4191 • 15% off all Champion Sportswear It's Your Party • 1601 W 23rd • 749-3455 • Buy any 3 greeting cards and get 1 FREE Jaybowl • Level 1-Kansas Union • 864-3545 • FREE shoe rental during open bowling Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826 • Get an extra 5% CASH back during Semester Buyback Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826 • Save 10% on Computer Softwear EVERYDAY! Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826 • Blue Books for 10¢ Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826 • 20% off Blank Computer Diskettes Jayhawk Spirit • 935 Massachusetts • 749-5194 • $1.00 off all adjustable hats, $2.00 off all fitted hats Jock's Nitch • 840 Massachusetts • 842-2442 • 15% off all shoes Junior's Farm • 924 1/2 Massachusetts • 842-3344 • Buy 2 CD's at reg. price, get the 3rd (equal or lesser value) at 50 Kansas Sports Club • 837 Massachusetts • 842-2992 • 20% off KU sweatshirts Laser Logic • 865-0505 • 20% Off Recycled Laser Printer Toner Cartridges (FREE pick-up and delivery) Miracle Video • 1910 Haskell, 841-7504/910 N 2nd St, 841-8903 • Rent 1 video, get 2nd FREE (Sun thru Thurs) Rentco USA • 1741 Massachusetts • 749-1605 • 25% off all rentals Sports Fan-Attics • 942 Massachusetts • 842-2323 • 15% off everything in store (excluding sale items & leather jackets) Stere Lane • 2024 W 23rd • 865-2677 • $10 off any purchase of $50 or more Union Technology Center • Level 3-Burge Union • 864-5690 • 10% of any accessory (disks, diskholders, cables, paper, surge p Video Bloc • 832 Iowa • 749-3507 • 2 For Tuesday! Rent 2 Videos for the Price of 1 (Tuesday only) SERVICES Video Biz • 832 Iowa • 749-5507; 2:00 p.m. Tuesday & Hourly 2 hrs. Video only Vormehr Studio & Gallery • I Riverfront Plaza, Ste 321 • 749-0744; 15% off of framed prints of KU and sororities The Auto Medic • 3631 W 10th St • 842-0384: 20% off any service call B.C. Automotive • 510 N 6th St • 841-6955: 20% off tune ups and brake repair Copy Co • 1401 W 23rd • 832-2679: 10% off all merchandise or services Enterprise Rent-A-Car • 3030 Iowa • 842-8040: 10% off car rental Fantastic Sam's • 2223 Louisiana • 749-1976: 15% off any regular price service or product NailTique • 2449 Iowa, Ste N • 832-2900: $3.00 off any service Planned Parenthood • 1420 Kasold-Orchards Corners • 832-0281: 25% off initial or annual visit plus 12 free condoms RC's Stadium Barbery • 1033 Massachusetts • 749-5363: $5.50 haircut Sonny Hill Chevrolet-Geo-Oldsmobile • 3400 S Iowa • 843-7700: 10% off all parts and service Ultimate Tan • 2449 Iowa, Ste O • 842-4949: 1 FREE session with the purchase of a 9-session price ($5 value) The University Daily Kansasan • 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall • 864-4358: 10% off any private party classified advertisement **Term and conditions.** The following terms and conditions regard to cardholders of *or the University Daryan Kauri Card (DBC) at Participating Merchant* (PM): The DBC must be signed to be valid, is non-transferable, and PM may request identification, Confirmation of the Card used by any person other than the cardholder. Cardholder's signature on one of the DBC shall constitute payment to be bound by these conditions and the conditions of the Directory of PM. DBC 29 Special Offer Discounts are not valid with other offers or special promotions of PM; PM do not apply to tax position of purchase; PM can apply only to cardholders reasonable personal purchase in the total purchase amount; PM does not apply to the specified address of PM; PM does not apply to the specified mailing M AVAILABLE AT THESE LOCATIONS: Jayhawk Bookstore Kansas and Burge Unions •864-4640 1420 Crescent Road 843-3826 1116 W. 23rd St · 749-5206 UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP KU KU BOOKSTORES THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358 ✓ SPORTS: Kansas' football future looks bright with a promising recruiting class. Page 9. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA KS 66612 VOL.103,NO.83 THURSDAY, JANUARY 20, 1994 ADVERTISING: 864-4358 Debate squad in line for title (USPS 650-640) NEWS:864-4810 By Stephen Martino Kansan staff writer It is Kansas' only competitive team that runs at 100 mph. At the mouth, that is. The KU debate squad is one of the nation's most successful, winning four national championships in the past 40 years, second only to Dartmouth College. In the past 30 years, more than 900 students have passed through the debate program. Yet, in many ways, the debate squad is something of an enigma to the University community. "At the institutional level, I'm sure that there is support for debate," said Scott Harris, debate coach and assistant professor of communication studies. "At times, we might be so focused on competition that we lose sight of self-promotion." But there is plenty to promote about KU debate, including its position as the fourth-ranked team in the nation and its first legitimate shot to win the national championship in the past few years. The championship will be March 17 in Louisville, Ky. Josh Zive, Reno, Nev., senior, and Ryan Boyd, Lee's Summit, Mo., Junior, have competed against top-ranked teams in debate this year, and the results have been encouraging. "We probably have the best winning percentage against teams in the top 10 of any team in the top 10," Zive said. "We have as good of odds as anyone to win the national championship." It will be another feather in the cap of one of America's most elite debate squads if Zive and Boyd win this year's championship, Harris said. "The history of KU debate is tremendously strong," he said. "When you consider that we go up against squads like Harvard, Dartmouth, Northwestern, Texas and Michigan, the competition is intense." The modern history of Kansas debate goes back to 1924, said Donn Parson, professor of communication studies and KU debate coach from 1964 to 1988. In 1946, KU joined the circuit of the National Debate Tournament, winning the championship in 1954, 1970, 1976 and 1983. If anything holds KU debate back, it is money, Harris said. "Many schools we compete against don't have the same problems with scholarships that we do," he said. K-State has won two national championships in the past four years in a different tournament than KU teams. The championships have resulted in signs posted on the interstate proclaiming K-State's prowess. He said that if students were talented, schools such as Harvard University and Dartmouth would find money. Despite the limits on scholarships, the University attracts some high-quality debaters. Zive said. Yet, for all the hard work and sleepless nights of cross-country travel to reach tournaments, nothing chafes the KU debate squad more than the publicity generated by the success of the Kansas State University squad. "K-State gets a tremendous amount of publicity for its success at a lower level," Harris said. "Their championships are comparable to winning the NAIA tournament. Any tournament win is great, but we compete against the tough teams." One man's desire to maintain arts in the community led to the expansion and development of KU's department of theatre and film. Studio aids film department Oldfather Studios, 1621 W. Ninth St., has been a part of the department for two and a half years. The building was bought by the University after Charley Oldfather, Lawrence resident, donated the money, saidJoe Anderson, professor of theatre and film. By noberta Johnson Kansan staff writer Darrin Lile, Lawrence graduate student, said the acquisition of Oldfather Studios had dramatically changed the production possibilities for theatre and film students. He said that before, there had only been sound equipment. Oldfather Studios has recording studios, editing rooms and a sound stage. Students also create short movies for class projects, Anderson said. A few films, such as "Eyes Upon Us" by Lile, have won awards at the local Kan Film Festival. Anderson said that the facilities were open to use and that appointments could be made by calling 749-1130. One student said the department's development was the reason he had come to Lawrence. "Before there was hardly any film program at all," said Phillip Brown, Tulsa, Okla., sophomore. "Oldfather Studios is the reason I came back to school." Enrollment drops at professional schools By Jamie Munn Kansan staff writer Although total KU enrollment for the spring semester dropped only 1 percent from the 1993 spring semester, few schools survived the transition without losing students. Total enrollment for the University drop, ped to 26,079 students, a loss of 274 from last year, according to KU reports. The School of Medicine gained 35 students, the largest gain of any school. Rise and Fall Rise and Fall Some schools experienced increases in enrollment though others had considerable losses. However, the School of Journalism led the schools in losses with a decrease of 143 students, followed by the Schools of Architecture and Urban Design, Business and Social Welfare. Dana Leibengood, placement director for journalism, said that he wasn't surprised that the school had lost students but that he was surprised by the number. 20 Avg. Increase- 5.595 % 10 Avg. Decrease- 4.596 % 0 -10 -20 percent ■ Applied English Center + 9.433 % ■ Special University + 19.750 % ■ Architecture & Urban Design - 8.259 % ■ Journalism - 18.77 % "It's more than we expected," he said. Another reason for the drop in enrollment, she said, is that social welfare has an admissions and enrollment-management program that can restrict admittance. Max Lucas, dean of architecture and urban design, said that the losses Source: Department of Educational Services Leibengood said advertising and business communications specifically had experienced losses. Black said she thought the question of finances that affected social welfare had influenced total campus enrollment. "We're all suffering under the constraints that the budget dictates," she said. "We're taking additional steps to brace ourselves for that," Kautsch said. Mike Kautsch, dean of journalism, said, "We did take steps to control the enrollment in the early 1990s." Kautsch said the school had experienced an ebb two years ago in pre-enrollment interest from high-school graduates. But this summer the interest was un again, he said. Edith Black, assistant dean of social welfare, said she also had expected the decline but for slightly different reasons, including a lack of money. had been expected because undergraduates would be allowed to enroll in a new professional master's degree program in architecture this fall. Downsizing enrollment is just part of a 10-year transition plan for the new program, he said. Joe Bauman, dean of business, said that although the University was experiencing a decrease in undergraduate enrollment, graduate enrollment had slightly increased. "We just have so much space available for the professional program," Lucas said. "It's a trough in terms of interest experienced nationwide," Bauman said. Bauman said that freshmen and sophomore interest in pre-business courses had increased but that enrollment was at the bottom of a two-year valley. THE MIDDLE SCHOOL DISTRICT MAGAZINE Marginal increases at the Applied English Center, however, didn't reflect the total number of students in the program, said Elizabeth Soppelsa, director of the center. Bauman said enrollment in business courses at the Regents Center had grown because employed people saw the courses as career enhancers. She said that more than 200 students who were enrolled in other degree programs also took courses at the center. A line forms in front of the Enrollment Center and stretches past the rotunda in Strong Hall while students wait for an evening add/drop session. Many students waited in line for more than an hour before entering the center. Add/drop will continue until Tuesday. INSIDE On their toes The University Dance Company auditioned dancers for its Lied Center performances. Page 3. Mentor program smooths transitions By Denise Nell Kansan staff writer When Topeka freshman Christina Carey's grandmother had a stroke during final week this fall, Carey had no time to get money together for a trip to Arkansas to see her. Not knowing where to turn. Carey called her mentor — Sandra Olivas, Kansas City, Kan., junior. The two were introduced in the Students Together Excelling as Peers, or STEP, program through the Office of Minority Affairs. The program is designed to connect minority freshmen with minority upperclassmen, who help them adjust to University life. Olivas said she had taken Carey to the office, where they had been able to arrange an emergency grant to obtain the money to send Carey to Arkansas. "Itook the bus home and was able to see my grandmother," Carey said. "And she's doing much better." Enrique Torres, assistant director of minority affairs, said the program had existed for about five years. Six mentors, who are upperclassmen in good academic standing, serve as mentors to about 25 freshmen and transfer students. "What we're trying to do is make them feel comfortable, make them feel welcome at the University and try to alleviate homesickness and personal pressures," Torres said. "The number of minority students not going to college is very high, and the number dropping out is even higher." Torres said the mentors were not only academic tutors to the new students. Besides studying together, the students go to movies or get together Olivas said the program was helpful for students who had not been exposed to life on a college campus. and talk, he said. The program also sponsors cultural events and provides information about subjects such as financial aid. Olivas said she helped motivate Carey to study. The two often go to the library together, or Carey meets her at the Chi Omega sorority house, where Olivas is a member, for dinner and studying. The program may even keep minor- students in college, Torres said. "A lot of students come up here, and they're first generation KU students," Olivas said. "Their parents can't help them." 一 Valerie Bontrager / KANSAN Christina Carey, Topeka freshman, studies with her mentor, Sandra Olivas, Kansas City, Kan., junior, at the Chi Omega sorority house, 1345 West Campus Road. They are participants in the Students Together Excelling as Peers program, which connects minority freshmen and transfer students with minority upperclassmen to help them adjust to University life. 2 Thursday, January 20,1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Red Lyon Tavern 944 Mass. 832-8228 The University Dally Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-FlintHall, Lawrence, Kan. 68045. AIM HIGH AIM HIGH $2000.00 SCHOLARSHIP If you have a GPA of 2.5 or higher and are a full time student, you can qualify for an Air Force ROTC scholarship. In addition, you will receive $100.00 each academic month for our last two years of college. This scholarship is available to ANY ACADEMIC MAJOR. The deadline to apply for the fall 1994 semester is rapidly approaching. For more information on this exciting opportunity talk to Captain Brad Gentry or Captain Bob Wicks at 864-4676. AIR FORCE ROTC I want you to call me for Student Loans! "Service, service, service." That's the motto at Mercantile Bank. If you want service in addition to your PLUS, SLS, or Stafford Loans, you want Mercantile! Call now: 865-0278 MERCANTILE BANK Member FDIC Leader ID 490609 Federal Opportunity Leader ON CAMPUS Canterbury House (Episcopal/Anglican) will celebrate Holy Eucharist at 12:05 p.m. today in Danforth Chapel. The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an informational meeting for students interested in studying in Great Britain at 4 p.m. today at 3 Lippincott Hall. For information, call Nancy Mitchell at 864-3742. KU Karate Club will meet at 5:30 today at 130 Robinson Center. For information, call Brad Bernet at 832-2157. Student Senate will sponsor a Center for Community Outreach meeting at 6 p.m. today at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For information, call julie Harris or Shanda Vanguard at 845-3710. The Vietnamese Student Association will meet at 6 p.m. today at 223 Haworth Hall. For information, call Cuong Luy at 748-4065. KU Champions Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at Parlors A, B and C in the Kansas Union. For information, call Erik Lindsley at 841-4585. InterVarsity Christian Fellowship will meet at 7 tonight at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call David Zimmerman at 864-7117. KU Karate Club will sponsor a free karate demonstration at 7 tonight at 130 Robinson Center. For information, call Brad Bernet at 832-2157. Psychology Club will meet at 7 tonight at 547 Fraser Hall. For information, callJennifer Wallace at 749-1086. KU Triathalon and Swim Club will meet for swim practice at 7 p.m. today at the Robinson Natoratior. Anyone is welcome. For information, call Sean Roland at 865-2731. LesBiGay Services of Kansas will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. For information, call Scott Manning at 864-3091. Asian American Student Union will meet at 7:30 tonight at 100 Smith Hall. For information, call Arthur Chin at 832-8332. Amnesty International will sponsor a letter-writing session at 8 tonight at the Glass Onion, 624 W. 12th St. Jayhawker Campus Fellowship will meet at 8 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. For information, call John Dale at 864-1151. United Students will sponsor an informational meeting at 8 tonight at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Jon Paul Shores at 864-6473. KU Fencing Club will meet at 8:30ton at 130 Cabron Center. For more information, call Jen Snyder at 841-6450. ICTHUS Christian Outreach will meet at 8:30 tonight at the Big Eight Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Mark Winton at 843-2260 or Noel Storey at 749-5891 WEATHER Weather around the country: Atlanta: 42'/19' Chicago: 11'/2' Houston: 59'/40' Miami: 74'/60' Minneapolis: 10'/15' Phoenix: 79'/52' Salt Lake City: 50'/26' Seattle: 57'/35' Omaha: 15'/1' LAWRENCE: 29'/15' Kansas City: 27'/14' St. Louis: 19'/11' Wichita: 30'/16' Tulsa: 33'/23' TODAY Tomorrow Saturday Sunny Partly cloudy, variable winds 10-15 mph High: 29* Low: 15* Sunny day Partly sunny and breezy High: 40' Low: 16' Sunny Partly cloudy and much warmer High: 49° Low: 22° ON THE RECORD A KU student living in Gertrude Sellards Pearson-Corbin Hall reported a harassing phone call Tuesday, KU police reported. A KU student's purse was stolen Jan. 11 at the Burge Union. Don't leave home without it... Exclusive offers for the KU Community.. Valid through July 31, 1994! SUNGLASSES The Etc. 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CLOTHING COMPANY DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE Hours: M-S 9-6 Thurs th 8:30 Sun 12-5:30 919 MASS 842-6069 18th AMENDMENT Fri - $1.00 jello shots Sat - $1.00 house shots Sun-Import Night It's your right to enjoy our daily specials: Wed-50 cent draws Thurs-Retro/Disco Night/$2.50 big beers Join us for Lawrence's Hottest Super Bowl Party Sunday, Jan. 30th! 10 ft. Projection T.V.plus big screens and more. Super Bowl Snacks Giveaways and Raffels All this and more for only $1.00 cover 1340 Ohio 843-9273 Hours: Sun-Sat 3p.m.- 2a.m. Join us for all your college and professional sporting events. 2. The first letter of the second line is an 'a'. UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N Thursday, January 20, 1994 3 Company concerts The University Dance Company has announced its spring concerts. Student dancers will be selected today for the company. Auditions were held last night. Shows will be presented at 8 p.m. April 21 and 22 at the Lied Center. Admission is $3 for students and $6 for general admission. Between 30 and 35 students will make up the group. ■ An informal concert will be held at 7:30 p.m. March 15 in Sherbon Theater in Robinson Center. The concert is free. A student choreographers concert will be at 2 p.m., April 16, also in Sherborn Theater. It is free. Source: University Dance Company KANSAN m z l i n e Jennie Zeiner/KANSAN Strike a pose Michelle Reiter, Lawrence freshman, stretches before she tries out for the University Dance Company. Reiter was one of 28 people — 26 women and two men — who tried out for the company last night at Robinson Center. The company will perform April 21 and 22 at the Lied Center. Because dancers are chosen by talent and not by a quote, the size of the company is not predetermined. Main campus reaches KC with Regents By Gennifer Trail Kansan staff writer The KU Regents Center, 12600 Quivira Road in Overland Park, has become an accessible resource to students who are unable to drive to Lawrence from the Kansas City area. A survey of the center's students by the staff at the center showed that most of its students were nontraditional. The average age of students is 33. Almost three-fourths of the students are married, and 68 percent are employed. About half of the students have school-aged children. To cater to these students' needs, classes are taught in the late afternoon or evening. The classes are concentrated, which means they may meet once a week for three hours instead of three times a week for one hour. "You have a more serious kind of student at the Regents Center, but some are also anxious because they haven't been back to school in awhile," said Alice Ann Darrow, associate professor of music education-music therapy and special education. The center offers 10 master's degrees, including engineering management, which is not offered at the Lawrence campus. The center is in a building that opened just one year ago, said Bruce Lindvall, assistant dean of the center. The Regents Center program began in 1975 at a former elementary school, Linwood Elementary, at the corner of 99th Street and Mission Road in Prairie Village. "The other school just wasn't adequate for our expanding Engineering Center program," Lindvall said. "This new building was designed with college students in mind. Every classroom is equipped with a 27-inch TV, VCR computer, projector, large screen and white board. We have three computer labs and a state-of-the-art library." The library is setting up a system that would allow students to tap into all KU library computers by modem. They could work on papers from Master's degrees Business administration Public administration Education Architecture management Architectural engineering Civil engineering Engineering management Journalism Health administration Social welfare Engineering management Source: KU Regents Center KANBAN home or office computers and receive help from a librarian who monitors the calls. Lindvall said he was especially enthusiastic about the center's interactive televised-classroom capabilities. This technology allows two classes in separate locations to be taught simultaneously by one teacher. A course on teaching special-education classes is taught in this manner between the center and the Lawrence campus. "If more classes were taught using this system, we could allow greater choice and flexibility to the students here who can't drive into Lawrence." Lindyda said. Every year, enrollment grows at the center. From the time the center opened in 1975 to the new center's opening in Spring 1993, enrollment has more than doubled. On Jan. 8, 1993, more than 900 students went through enrollment, but Lindwald said he expected a total enrollment of about 1,500 students. CAMPUS BRIEFS "The Regents Center is a real convenience for students who work full time," Darrow said. "The program reaches out to communities that otherwise wouldn't have the opportunity to receive a graduate education." Lindvall said he thought that the center's agenda for the future was to be more responsive to the public. "Are the masses going to move to us, or are we going to meet them?" Lindvall asked. Study Abroad program offers scholarships Kansanstaffreport The Office of Study Abroad has announced that grants are available for students to study in countries other than Canada and those in western Europe. The grants are part of the National Security Education Program and are available to freshmen, sophomores, juniors and nongraduating seniors. Scholarship awards last for a minimum of one academic term. The program will begin in Summer 1994 and will continue through Spring 1995. Freshmen and sophomores can apply for the summer semester. Sophomores may apply for the 1994 fall semester and the 1995 spring semester. Up to $8,000 will be available each semester. Tribal arts on display Interested students should contact Mary Elizabeth Debicki in the office, 203 Lippincott Hall. Applications are due Monday, Jan. 31. On-line mail service links historians The KU Anthropology Museum in Spooner Hall will be opening a new exhibit Saturday called "The Menhner Collections of Tribal Arts." The exhibit represents an entire collection from the southwest United States and artifacts from North, Central and South America. The artworks include Navajo rugs, pottery vases and Hopi kachina dolls. The exhibit runs until April 10. The museum is open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday and 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday. The artifacts come from the collection of Karl Menninger and his wife. They collected the items during various trips to the southwest, Africa, Oceania and the Orient. By Susan White Kansan staff writer Kansan staff writer Sending a letter the traditional way — and not being sure whether it will reach its destination — soon could become a novelty act. Lynn Nelson, professor of history, said that four years ago he had gotten the idea for an on-line mail service from the bulk mailings that were sent by computer to academic departments. He decided to start mailing lists in the academic world, where everyone on the list would receive mail from other people on the list. Such a list will help scholars of history, said Charles Stansifer, head of the department of history. "It's a means of exchanging information among individuals who know a lot about the subject, from modems across the world," he said. Nelson started his eighth mailing list, Kansas-L, in August. The list, On his computer, Nelson sends out an updated list of all the on-line mailing systems that are available from the department. Then, historians can join the list. Until this summer, the department had seven mailing lists. which consists of people interested in Kansas history, is the first list devoted to one state. Nelson said sending a letter through the network was not difficult. "The person just sends a message to Kansas-L, and that message is received here and then sent to everyone else on the list," he said. One of the first people to go on the computer mail line was a woman who grew up in Kansas. "She is working on her Ph.D. at the University of California," Nelson said. "She said that sometimes she gets homesick and wanted to talk to Kansas folk." He said he had gotten messages from the other side of the world. "A fellow came on the list and had a question as to whether anyone knew the name and addresses of other discussion lists," he said. "I sent him a phone list so he could get a hold of other addresses. He came back almost immediately with, 'Where are you?' I replied that I am in my study, which is located in the basement of my house, working. A letter came back in seconds, in capital letters, 'I mean where are you physically?' I couldn't understand why this person Connecting the World Lynn Nelson, professor of history, has created a computer service that allows students of Kansas history to communicate globally. S. A. Moore / KANSAS was so insistent. Then it struck me his address was Perth, Australia. "In answer to his question, I said, 'I come from a land far away where the national product is wheat and the national religion is basketball,'" Nelson continued. "He replied back, 'You're from Kansas?' If students want to send a message through Kansas-L, they should send it to: listserv@ukanai.xc.ukans.edu. Also, they should indicate that they want to get on the maillist by leaving the message: SubKansas-L, followed by their electronic address and their name. 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BLUE HERON where comfort and quality is assured.. 937 Mass. 841-9443 4 Thursday, January 20, 1994 OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VIEWPOINT Term limits for Congress restrict personal choices The primary design of the Constitution was to ensure governmental control by the people. Unfortunately, term-limit legislation is doing just the opposite by taking away people's right to vote for whomever they choose. Other than age, citizenship and state residency requirements,the Constitution places no qualifications on running for office. Our founding fathers had the democratic idea that members of Congress were to be held accountable by election not by states placing extra-constitutional restrictions upon candidates. fifteen states presently have term limits. The citizens of these states are potentially at a disadvantage because their representatives are less experienced. Term limits advocate inexperience over experience. Entering term limits into law suggests that people cannot make intelligent decisions themselves. Contrary to what the pro-term-limit supporters may lead people to believe, the electorate is not consistently bamboozled by incumbents who are able to secure votes by outspending their opponents. Trying to pin the problems of Congress on the length of time its members spend in office is shortsighted. Term limits are wrongly being championed as a remedy for congressional problems that have nothing to do with time spent in office. WILLIAM GIST FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD Legislature must fund National Merit waivers Last month, the Board of Regents voted to ask the Legislature for money. The money they seek will be used to offer Kansas National Merit semi-finalists a full waiver of tuition and fees at Regents schools. The recommendation needs to be adopted if Kansas hopes to retain its most intelligent students. A 1993 Emporia State University study revealed that only 38 percent of Kansas' National Merit semi-finalists enrolled at Kansas universities. Though some semi-finalists undoubtedly will choose Ivy League schools, many talented students must consider financial constraints when selecting a university. Kansas universities lack the financial incentives for those students to remain in the state. Other universities offer National Merit semi-finalists impressive scholarships, but Kansas universities do not. Any semi-finalist who enrolls at the University of Oklahoma, for example, will receive scholarships totaling more than $37,000 during four years. The Regents estimate that more than $600,000 will be needed to offer the students a full waiver of tuition and fees during the next four years. The program's returns far outweigh its costs, though. Recruiting is not new to Kansas universities. These universities spare no expense to recruit and retain top athletes. Attracting the state's academic standouts should be at least as important. National Merit semi-finalists represent the state's best and brightest students, and every effort should be made to keep these students in Kansas. The Legislature must offer adequate scholarships if it hopes to retain top scholars. COLLEEN McCAIN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS: SAMANTHA ADAMS, MARGARET BECK, KRISTIN BRUMM, RICHARD BOYD, J.R. CLAIRBORNE, CARSON ELROD, WILLLAM GIST, BEN GROVE, DONELLA HEARNE, DAN JANOUSEK, CHRIS LIVINGTON, COLLEEN McCAIN, NATHAN OLSON, GERALDO SAMOR, DAVID ZIMMERMAN KANSAN STAFF BEN GROVE, Editor LISA COSMILLO, Managing editor TOM EBLEN General manager. news adviser Editors BILL SKEET. Systems coordinator Assistent Managing Editor...Dan England Assistant to the editor ...J. R. Clairhome News ...Kristi Fogler, Katie Greenwald, ...Todd Selfert Editorial ...Colleen McCain ...Nathan Oloon Campus ...Jess DeVaven Sports ...David Dorsey Photo ...Doug Hesse Fantasies ...Sara Bennett JUSTIN GARBERG Business manager JENNIFER BLOWEY Retail sales manager JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser Business Staff Campus sales mgr...Jason Ebery Regional sales mgr...Troy Tawarvey National A Co-op sales mgr...Robin Kring Special sections mgr...Shelly McConnell Production mgr...Laura Guth Gretchen Kotterhelmeltb Marketing director...Shannon Reilly Creative director...John Carlton Classified mgr...Kelly Connelys Tearheads mgr...Wing Chen Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position. Guest letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be pleased to receive 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. The death of a family member severs ties that seemed binding My girlfriend's great-grandmother died on New Year's Day. She was only 86. COLUMNIST JACOB ARNOLD Korrie, as a child, had been close to her great-grandmother, and she respected Elsie a lot. Naturally, I agreed to drive her to the funeral in Arkansas. We arrived at Korrie's grandmother's house at 1 a.m., but some of the family members were still gathered around the kitchen table talking and reminiscing. Korrie's mother, Cheryl, who lives in Maryland, hugged us tightly. I was introduced to the other family members in the room. It was an awkward way to meet Korrie's family. When Korrie and I were dressed, we were fussed over and forced to smile for a thousand pictures. Desperately, the two generations before Korrie tried to grasp at and retain our youth. We were as they once had been, not as Elsie had become. At last everyone reluctantly drifted off to bed. Death and sleep are so similar; one makes us uncomfortable with the other. We then went to Elsie's house. Still more introductions to the relatives of a woman I never met. Korrie and I ducked out the back door. She led me around the farm, showing me her childhood haunts. Here was her great-grandfather's old work area. We drove to the funeral home to view the body. More introductions that I would forget as soon as a new name and hand were thrust at me. It seemed unreal and unnatural to be pleasant in the room that held the empty shell of a once vibrant woman. Kids bounced on their mothers' knees, not really comprehending the significance of death. Try as I might, neither could I. I went outside for a breath of crisp air and life. Harley had died 10 years earlier, almost to the day. Then we went into the root cellar, Korie's play house. In her eye, it had changed little in 15 years. I saw an overtured bench and a chair, cobwebs and old leaves. In the morning, Korrie and her mom rushed off to find Korrie a black dress. I sat and picked dog hairs off the suit I did not have time to dry-clean. Korrie saw much more. She saw youth, happiness and security. We went into the big red barn that every old farmhouse must have as a companion. It was empty except for some broken implements but still serviceable. It seemed lonely. Out back, Korrie took me to a bluff where you could see the whole valley below. As a child, it must have seemed like the whole world to her. Now it was filling with houses, and Korrie knew all too painfully what was beyond those distant hills. The funeral was full of good words about a person who could no longer hear them. I will never know what kind of woman she was — you can't trust a preacher at a funeral. As the body left the church, Molly, Elsie's oldest child, finally broke down. There is nothing sadder then seeing an old woman cry. Her lined face already held a lifetime's worth of sorrow, and only great misery could bring those tears to the surface again. Cheryl, one of Elsie's favorite grandchildren, tried to comfort her mother, knowing someday soon she would be the one needing comfort from her daughter. The final words were said. The coffin was lowered into the hole. Dirt filled over. The people left. A long and full life was permanently sealed off with only a stone to mark 88 years of trial and tribulation, of joy and depression, of love and hate. $^{13}$ We returned to Elsie's home, which was already being parceled out by the siblings. It would be a bitter fight over who got what and deserved the most. It was sad to see this proud woman's legacy reduced to a squabble about material goods. Korrie slipped out the back with a night light she had used as a kid and an old flannel work shirt of Harley's. $^{(1)}$ Our steel carriage took us into the night, leaving behind the last remnants of Korie's childhood. She would never return. The last string that had held together this far-flung family was broken. Jacob Arnold is a Wichita junior in Journalism. SO POST-COLD WAR FOREIGN POLICY IS A SNAP, HUH? "AMERICA NO LONGER NEEDS OL' GEORGE," EH? HA HA HA HA HAAA... FREN 1954 YUDK. SOMALIA BOSNIA QUSTA IRAQ 'Math-a-thon' is open for your call The other day, I was awakened from a sound drooling on my algebra book by an angel, an angel with a tiny wand and addition signs for wings. Unto me the angel said, "Scott, math is GOOOOOD...math is your FRIEND..you'll NEEED math...you-" WHAM! I smashed her in my book. I don't need some not-snored angel saying what's good for me. I mean, no offense to people who enjoy the stuff, but math makes me physically ill. It's boring. It it's unnecessary. It's not even tax deductible. I'm in 002 for the THIRD CONSECTIVE SEMESTER, and until now I've been one of those math-impaired people who always complained about it but never did anything. And then I had a thought. There has to be some way of making the topic of math seem less threatening while at the same time exposing its apparent worthlessness to people COLUMNIST SCOTT AGIN --- like Ed Meese. That way is through a telethon: a "Math-a-thon." In order for most people to make donations, all we would have to do is stand around on national television and make fun of math. For the benefit of those viewers who do not have Budweiser-can sculptures in their living rooms,however, there would probably have to be entertainment. I think, for starters, that we could situate a panel of the nation's leading mathematicians on stage, bound in straitjacks, and directly in front of them we could have a group of third and fourth graders, normal kids, who ALWAYS forget to carry their two's in long division, and the mathematician who could keep from cringing to death would receive an all-expenses-paid trip to the Bahamas. Next, there would be people wearing big number-shaped foam costumes bearing resemblance to some of history's most prominent figures, like a huge "4" with Winston Churchill's face. The numbers would clomp around stage, espousing in loud, pompous voices the virtues of getting a proper background in math. They would probably cut to commercial right after this. Also, to further the progress of government aid to math-related programs, we could have Chelsea Clinton come on. She would be given a random set of problems from KU 002/101 math tests, with up to seven seconds to answer each one, taking extreme care, by God, to Simplify to Lowest Terms. Ideally, she would be given a take-home test that has several story problems about the deficit. I know this idea would rake in millions for mathematically challenged people everywhere, and I'm sure that you'd want to help. But if you don't have time to sit around watching telethons, I understand. You can just send your donation directly to me, and I'll make sure it gets to the people who really need it. And hey, no personal checks. Scott Agin is a Topeka sophomore in journalism. Increasing traffic threatens city When students return to the University of Kansas, several things occur in Lawrence: Retailers rejoice, police perk up and locals retreat. The impact of 27,000 students on a city the size of Lawrence can be summarized in two words — traffic snarl. Among academics, these two words translate into mass transit. An inter-urban transportation system between Kansas City and downtown Lawrence may seem like a social-engineering pipe dream, but there was a time when austerity and foresight shared the same tracks. From 1916 until 1935, the Kaw Valley Line Trolley System shuttled students and businesspeople between Kansas City and Lawrence. The electric trolley operated between 6:30 a.m. and 11:30 p.m., carrying 60 passengers from the Lawrence depot, now Free State Brewery, every hour. COLUMNIST GREG THONEN Faced with the highest growth rates in the state, Lawrence city commissioners could stand a "back to the future" perspective on dealing with the city's growing pains. Though Lawrence has been successful at staving off shopping malls in order to preserve the downtown atmosphere, it's still trying to accommodate the automobile. In addition to the swelling of 23rd Street, a possible effect of a proliferation of automobiles in Lawrence is a parking lot on Mount Oread. Jennifer Brown, Mount Oread Neighborhood Association coordinator, says the Association has agreed upon a parking-permit proposal that soon will be submitted to the City Commission. The lack of residential parking caused by student commuters who park close to campus has resulted in this proposal. Its effects are farreaching and involve zoning and building codes, says Brown. The proposed South Lawrence Trafficway and East Parkway also exemplify the city's ongoing attempts to handle the influx of an important segment of this city, you and me. Where the city's responsibility ends, and our's begins, is a matter of considerable debate. Consider some alternatives, though. Will we turn Memorial Stadium into a parking garage? Maybe commuters will be forced to park in lots on the edge of the city and take shuttle buses The impact of individual behavior is something we tend to see only from a personal perspective. For some of us, a car is an entitlement. To say that the city can sustain only a certain number of automobile owners and that the rest must do without would be absurd. into town. The commission recently passed a $100,000 transit plan that will reportedly expand door-to-door public transportation in Lawrence. Students constitute half of the population of Lawrence three-fourths of the year. Those who live here have a transportation choice. Those who commute from outside the city do not. With a developing K-10 highway corridor, traffic in Lawrence will undoubtedly get worse. Lawrence, whose motto since 1863 has been, "From ashes to immortality," could be facing its most insidious enemy — unabated growth. For J.J. Heim, the Kansas City Brewer and Kaw Valley Trolley owner, the advent of automobiles and buses meant the end of an astute era. For us, it derailed a future we have been trying to regain ever since. } Greg Thonen is a Kansas City senior in journalism. NATION/WORLD a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Thursday, January 20, 1994 President pledges aid to earthquake victims The Associated Press LOS ANGELES — On the brink of a gaping hole in the freeway, President Clinton lamented the awesome destruction of an earthquake that could toss around concrete "like a piece of paper." He pledged fast and aggressive federal help. The president brought encouragement for quake victims yesterday starting with a down payment on government assistance for the shaken San Fernando Valley. He released $45 million for immediate highway repairs and Small Business Administration money that could make available $239 million in low-interest loans. Clinton said he would ask Congress for an emergency supplemental appropriation to bolster federal disaster funds sure to be depleted by the quake. Clinton came within a few miles of the epicenter of Monday's quake on a quick afternoon visit in which he surveyed highway damage, visited with residents of one stricken neighborhood and held a recovery round table with state and local officials. QUAKE in LOS ANGELES The president said that while television had presented graphic images of the earthquake, "there's a difference in ... actually standing here looking at the size of this highway and thinking that in a matter of just a few seconds all that massive amount of construction can be moved around like a piece of paper." Officials of the Federal Emergency Management Agency say there is about $1.1 billion remaining in its disaster fund after the Midwest floods and the Los Angeles wildfires last fall. Kansan tested for hantavirus TOPEKA — A southwest Kansas resident may have suffered the often deadly hantavirus in recent months and lived, state health officials investigating the case said yesterday. State epidemiologist Andrew Pelletier said the national Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta was studying blood samples from the patient. A determination is expected by next week. The Associated Press The Kansas Department of Health and Environment found "evidence of hantavirus infection" in the patient's blood and was compiling additional information, but the patient now "is fine and is not suffering from the illness at this time." Pelletier said. EVERYTHING BUTICE EVERYTHING BUT 1CE • Beds • Desks • Chest of Drawers • Bookcases 936 Mass. PENGUIN 5 NEC Ready 486ES CD/DVD ROM - Internal CD-ROM (380ms) * 16-bit Sound Card * Stereo Speakers w/ Fusion CD 16 Sound System *486X5, 25MHz* *Ammo, 1700 Mb, Mouse* *SVGA Color Display* *DOS, Windows* *Add Multimedia to you* *PC for us$590* oi ui ge gu or so in be fu gu oe se se Add Multimedia to your existing PC for just $599 installed. only $2,199 - Norton Desktop ... $75^90 • Quattro Pro/Windows ... $49^95 • CentralPoint AntiVirus ... $49^95 • Turbo C++ ... $49^95 Menu more titles available! Point COMPUTER CENTER 813 Mass • Downtown Lawrence • 843-7584 Be Your Best in '94 Begin at Body Boutique B Be Your Best in '94 Begin at Body Boutique 10 Tans for only $20 exp. 2-2-94 No joining fee! $139.00 off avg. $20/month exp. 2-2-94 Special rates for graduating seniors 749-2424 925 Iowa BODY OUTIQUE The Women's Fitness Facility BODY OUTIQUE The Women's Fitness Facility TALENT AUDITIONS FOR SINGERS • DANCERS This could be the start of something big! Worlds of Fun is searching for the Midwest's most talented singers and dancers to appear in our 1994 show program. Performing at Worlds of Fun is the perfect summer job for students. If you work the entire season (six days per week in the summer, and weekends in the spring and fall) you can earn over $7,000! "All the Words a Stage" at Worlds of Fun, from our lively 50's-60's rock revue, STAX OF WAX, to our spectacular new Country music show at the Tivoli Music Hall. Performing at Worlds of Fun is fun, and it can be that important First Step. More than 1.3 million-Worlds of Fun visitors are waiting to discover YOU! If you are a singer, please sing one verse and the chorus of two contrasting styles of song; one uptempo and one ballad. Sing any type music you enjoy; rock, country, show tunes, etc. (no rap.) Please limit your material to no more than three minutes in length. Dancers should prepare one song to sing and a jazz routine no longer than 2 minutes. AUDITION INSTRUCTIONS: We are not auditioning bands, solo instrumentalists or dramatic actors. You must provide your own accompaniment whether it be a pianist or a cassette tape. We will provide a cassette deck and a piano. - KANSAS CITY, MISSISSAU Saturday, January 22: The Adam's Mark Hotel 9103 East 39th Street (I-70 at the Truman Sports Complex) 10:00 a.m. (Registration closes at 1:00 p.m.) - LAWRENCE, KANSAS Thursday, February 3: The University of Kansas In the Kansas Room (level 6) at the Kansas Union. 3:00 p.m. (Registration closes at 5:00 p.m.) THE CLOSEST AUDITIONS: Worlds of Fun KANSAS CITY KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI - KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI Saturday, January 29 The Adam's Mark Hotel 9103 East 39th Street (t-70 at the Truman Sports Complex) 9:00 a.m. (Registration closes at 2:00 p.h.) · KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI For more information and a complete audition schedule, contact the Worlds of Fun Show Productions Department, at (816) 454-4545. Ext. 1350. PERSONAL HEALTH CARE FOR WOMEN CONFIDENTIAL ABORTION SERVICES PROVIDING QUALITY HEALTH CARE TO WOMEN SINCE 1974 1907 - Complete GYN Care - Pregnancy Testing - Depo Provera & Norplant - Tubal Ligation COMPREHENSIVE 345-1400 health for women 4401 W. 109th (I-435 & Roe) Overland Park, KS 1-800-227-1918 TOLL FREE injury plan acceptor VISA MasterCard WATKINS "We Care For KU" Busy schedule? Watkins Pharmacy Is Conveniently Open Til 9 p.m. Monday-Thursday. Pharmacy Hours Monday-Thursday 8 a.m.-9 p.m. Friday 8 a.m.-6 p.m. Saturday 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Sunday 11 a.m.-3 p.m. STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES 814-9500 Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students HARBOUR LIGHTS lift a full service bar after 57 years of downtown traffion 1031 Massachusetts Downtown A Rentco USA 749-1605 Student Discount Now Carrying Computers 1741 Massachusetts For All Your Glass Needs Kennedy All automotive glass replacement & insurance claims handled. 730 New Jersey 843-4416 Pancho's MEXICAN RESTAURANT Homestyle Mexican Food 23rd & Louisiana 843-4044 Introducing Full Service Engraving Name Tags, Name Plates, Plaques and More! Jaybowl ADAMS UNION Not just for bowling 864-354-5 Jaybowl KANSAS UNION ALL NATIONAL BRAND DOG & CAT FOOD 18LB. OR LARGER CHECKERS INVOICE COST EVERYDAY ALL NATIONAL BRAND DOG & 18LB. OR LARGER 1¢LB. OVER CHECKERS INVOICE COS DAILY SPECIAL BANANA$19¢ O DOLE 3 MONIAL MARCAS 98¢ 24 PACK. 1 LAGO CANS LIMIT 1 ADDITIONAL PURCHASES 24PK $755 NATURAL LIGHT 100 CANS BONELESS K.C. STRIP STEAKS 388 LB. FAMILY PACK FRESH 1/4 PORK LOIN 138 LB. 9-11 ASST. PORK CHOPS SMOKED PICNIC HAM 79¢ LB. BLUE BONNET SPREAD 3 LEA TUB 98¢ LIMIT 1 FRESH CALIFORNIA CARROTS 99¢ 5LB. BAG NAVEL ORANGES (LARGE 72 CT., BOW OR WASHINGTON RED DELICIOUS APPLES) (LARGE 88 CT.) 6¢/$1 85% LEAN GOLDEN GLO GROUND TURKEY 58¢ LB. BLOWED IN A BOX GRADE “AA” LARGE EGGS 58¢ DOZ. I.Q.F. COD FILLETS 249 LB. FAMILY PACK FROM THE BAKERY FRESH BAKED BUTTER & EGG ROLLS 99¢ DOZN CREME OR FRUIT FILLED MELTAWAYS 6 CT.$1 29 LB. SUGAR CREEK'S OLD COURTHOUSE BACON 88¢ 1 LB. PACKAGE MOOSE BROTHERS PEPPERoni PIZZA 588 LARSON 12 BOWL BLUE BELL ICE CREAM OR YOGURT 288 12 BOWL CTN. FROM THE BAKERY SUGAR FREE APPLE PIE 199 30.26 OZ. PHOTO SPECIAL PRINTS $299 Details at www.checker.com Checker LOW FOOD PRICES OPEN 26 HOURS WEEKLY NAVEL ORANGES (LARGE 73 CT. BIS) ON WASHINGTON RED DELICIOUS APPLES (LARGE 88 CE. BIS) 6:$1 85% LEAN GOLDEN GLO GROUND TURKEY GROUND TURKEY 58¢ 1 LITER WATER BOTTLE 1 LB. GOLDEN GLO GROUND TURKEY ROLL 68¢ PORK LOIN 138 LB. 9-11 ASST. PORK CHOPS FRESH CALIFORNIA CARROTS 99¢ 5LB. BAG GRADE "AA" LARGE EGGS 58¢ DOZ. BONELESS CHUCK ROAST 98¢ LB. FAMILY PACK ALL PURPOSE RUSSET POTATOES 188 20LB. BAG TIGER ALMA KANSAS MILD CHEEDAR CHEESE 298 IMPORTED FROM MORRIS JAMILSHERG SWINS CHEESE $ 4.99 LBS. PHOTO SPECIAL 4X6 PRINTS $2.99 Details at store OPEN 24 HOURS www.checkers.com Checkers LOW FOOD PRICES 23RD & LOUISIANA LAWRENCE 6 Thursday, January 20, 1994 JD's Baseball Cards & Sports Nostalgia Shop 711 W.23rd 842-1002 We buy back used baseball cards. Billiards $2.40 per hour until 6:00 p.m. --- Not just for bowling Jaybowl 864-3545 Zaybowl ANYTHER UNION DICKINSON THEATRE Dickinson 6 411 8000 2339 Southwa St. Grumpy Old Men PG*13-4,20; 7.9:50 Beetowners B*2,4*15; 7.15; 9.35 Shadowlands PG*4,0.05; 7.00; 9.45 Iron Will PG*4,0.05; 7.00; 9.35 Iron Act I Plg*4,25; 7.10; 9.45 House Party IHR*4,0.4; 7.25; 9.40 3 Primerism Show (1) of Healing Dolby Solar City Ammune and Imagine Stages SUA FILMS TUESDAY - SUNDAY, JANUARY 18-23 The Lover Tues. 7:00 pm Wed. 9:30 pm Blow-Up Wed. 7:00 pm Thurs. 9:30 pm Vincent and Theo Tues. 9:30 pm Thurs. 7:00 pm ALL SHOWS IN NAPAKEE UNION TICKETS $2.50 MONTHS $3.00 FREE WATER SUMA VISION.CARD CALL 814-SHOW FOR ENTRY NUMBER Thursday. Friday. Saturday. Sunday. January 20. 21. 22. 23 4 DAY FEEDING FRENZY 3 Hard Shell Tacos for 99¢ TACO JOHN'S. TACO JOHN'S. 1626 w. 23rd 2309 Haskell. 1101 w. 6th TACO JOHN'S TACO JOHN'S. TACO JOHN'S. 1626 w. 23rd STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA FILMS Hockenbury Tavern 1016 Massachusetts Fri. - Lonesome Houndogs Sat. - Monterey Jack 865-4055 J FRI.. JAN. 21 — SUN.. JAN. 23 DAZED AND CONFUSED DIZZED MAIN COMPANY FRI. & SAT. 7:00PM FRI. & SAT. 9:30PM SUN. 2:00PM FRI. & SAT. MIDNIGHT HIGHLANDER Crown Cinema Legal Services for Students BEFORE 6 PM. ADULTS $3.00 (UNITED TO SEATING) SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00 Yes, under most leases. 148 Burge 864-5665 STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF MASS SENATE VARSITY 1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841 5191 PelicanBrief PG-13 5.00,8.00 HILLCREST 925 IOWA. 841-5191 Malice $ ^{R} $ 5.00, 7.20,9.45 MyLife PG-13 5.00, 7.30,9.45 SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY CINEMA TWIN 3110 IOWA 841-5191 $1.25 If my roommate moves out, do I have to pay all the rent? Mrs. Doubtfire PG-13 7.15,8.40 Heaven and Earth R$^{9}$ 5.00,9.00 Air Up There PG 6.15, 7.00,9.35 Tombstone R$^{9}$ 6.15,8.45 Philadelphia PG-13 7.20,9.50 DISCOVER DAICover MasterCard VISA ALVIN'S Accepted Cost Kutter IGA *Check Cashing *Post Office *Carry Outs 843-2313 9th& Iowa - Deli •Bakery •Videos Sprite Coca-Cola Coke, Sprite Diet $479 Limit 1 with $10 Purchase 24 Pack Angel Soft Angel Soft Angel Soft Bath Tissue 4roll pkg. 3/$200 Blue Bunny Ice Cream 2/$400 1/2 gal squares Dinner Dinner Swanson Four Compartment Dinners 2/$300 10-11 oz. pkg. Armour Chili w/B beans Armour Chili w/B beans Armour Chili 10¢ off label 5 cans/$300 15 oz. can FIVE ALIVE FIVE ALIVE 5-Alive Orange Juice 2/$300 64oz. Keg Beer $3999 16 gal. call 843-2313 Prices good thru Jan. 25. NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Temperatures fall to record lows Cold is responsible for at least 72 deaths The Associated Press With the temperature outside at 11 degrees below zero, the heat was turned off yesterday in a fire furnace at Bethelehem Steel Corp.'s forging plant. Lights in two of the company's office towers clicked off. It was the first time the company had to honor a recent agreement with a utility to curtail its electricity use at a time of peak demand, and demand was high as the Midwest and East shivered in some of the coldest cold Interlaced utilities serving 21 million people from Washington to New Jersey instituted "rolling blackouts" and asked customers to sharply cut back their use of electricity. on record. In a week of daily cold records, the mercury fell to all-time records yesterday in parts of Indiana, Ohio, Kentucky, West Virginia and Pennsylvania. Whiteland, Ind., bottomed out at 36 degrees below zero, the coldest on record in the state. "When you walk out in it, it's like someone hitting you in the chest," said Sgt. Richard Broughton of the Indiana state police. Yesterday's low at Hell, Mich., was 25 below. "It's colder than hell in Hell," said Jim Ley, 62, owner of the Devil's Den gift store. "THRIFTY THURSDAY!" SAVE BIG BUCKS! Single-digit temperatures extended all the way south to Alabama, forcing dozens of schools to close and putting a quarter-inch layer of ice on the alligator pond at the Birmingham zoo. From Your Friends at Pyramid Pizza (of course!) Fast & Friendly Delivery Now During Lunch! (limited area) At least 72 deaths have been reported during a six-day period that began Friday. Most of the victims were killed on ice roads or had heart attacks shoveling snow. Luckily, a warming trend is on the way, with even Wisconsin expecting highs up to 40 by Saturday. Thrifty Thursday Special "That's going to be a heat wave," said Trent Little, a high-school student in Milwaukee. For a small Only $3.49 + tax (carry out only) Frequently used 842-3232 pizza (add. tops only. 75) order 2 or more for free delivery 风吹沙 Good Thursday Only! PYRAMID "Way Pitch It On!" "We Pit It On!" clip me 14th & OHIO (UNDER THE WHEEL) Kansan Card offer good carry out only E Rings Fixed Fast! Kizer Cummings Jewelers 749-4333 833 Maas • Lawrence, KS BRAXTON COPLEY ATTORNEY - General Practice - Traffic - Misdemeanors - O.U.I. - Landlord/Tenant 719 Massachusetts, Suite D Lawrence, KS 66044 (913) 749-5333 If only I would have joined Irony I would have joined your chance! Don'tmiss Student Union Activities is taking Officer and Coordinator Officer applications are available now and due by noon, Thursday, February 3. Officer and Coordinator applications for the 1994-95 school year. Coordinator applications will be available Monday, January 24 and are due by Officers: President, VP of Administrative Affairs, VP of University Affairs. VP for Membership Development Coordinators: Feature Films, Fine Arts, Forums, Live Music, Public Relations Special Events, Spectrum Films, and Recreation & Travel. For more information call 864-3477 INTRAMURAL BASKETBALL MANAGERS' MEETING 44 Mandatory Managers' Meeting: Monday, January 24 at 7:00 pm in Robinson, Room 115. Rules will be discussed. All managers attending the meeting will have first opportunity in signing up for league play. NOTE:- Entries are accepted on a 1st come, 1st serve basis beginning at 8:30 am thru 4:00 pm on TUESDAY, JANUARY 25 and WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 26. *All team managers who do not attend the MANAGERS' MEETING will not be allowed to sign up until JANUARY 26 at 2:00 pm. DIVISIONS: MEN'S, WOMEN'S, CO-REC Open, Greek, Residence Hall, Law, Jayhawk ENTRYDEADLINE: WEDNESDAY, JAN.26 @ 4:00 PM ENTRYFEE: $25/TEAM SPONSOREDBY KURECREATION SERVICES 208 ROBINSON 864-3546 Brian Vandervliet / KANB Megan Irvine, Manhattan sophomore, watches her lava lamp as it begins to bubble. She said the four-year-old lamp was one of her favorite room decorations because it helped her relax. Brian Hott, Wichita sophomore, brings a sense of patriotism to his room in Hashinger Hall. AFTER SCHOOL Brian Vandervliet / KANSAN 100 Brian Vandervliet / KARBAI Pint Larivee, Taunton, Mass., freshman, uses original artwork to cover the walls of his room in McCollum residence hall. Homerooms Making an apartment or dorm room feel like home takes a little creativity. By Kevin Hoffmann Kansan staff writer There's something about a place called home. It's different for everyone but always special. For some people, home may be a place to relax and read a book by the fireplace. For others, home may be the place with the big, comfortable bed, slept in for years. Many KU students must create a home away from home while living in temporary housing. Brian Hott, Wichita sophomore, brought a little of his previous homes with him to Lawrence. Hott, who as a military child followed his father to a number of different countries, hung a collection of full-sized flags from the walls of his room on the fourth floor of Hashinger Hall. "There's one from Germany, France, Bavaria, and of course, the obvious," Hott said, pointing to a U.S. flag. "I try to get new stuff from each place." Brent Dummitt, St. Louis freshman, said his room at Ellsworth Hall contained many items from his room in his parents' house, right down to the cinder blocks where he keeps his shoes. "It's pretty much the same stuff from back home," Dunnitt said. "Except for the wallpaper." That wallpaper" consists of empty Natural Light and Budweiser 12-pack cartons. "We had a lot of help with those," Dummitt said. Laura Ortman tried to keep her home away from home more simple. The Godfrey, III., junior, who majors in painting, said she liked to keep her art work on her walls. "Wherever I've lived, I brought this stuff with me," she said, pointing to her paintings. "None of it is worth anything. I just don't want to throw any of it away." Ortman's decorations also included Christmas lights that hung from one wall to another and a big circular light in the middle of the ceiling. Ortman also stood a bed frame on end, on which she hangs items. Mark O'Connor, Hays junior, created his new home from scratch. "I left most of my belongings in Hays," he said. "I didn't really want to bother with moving all my stuff this far." O'Connor eventually acquired enough furnishings to make his Lawrence apartment resemble his Hays home, he said. "I got this couch, the T.V. and a few other things that's made it a lot like home," he said. O'Connor said that he did not try to emulate his parents' decorating style but that their tastes came out anyway. "My parents were always kind of conservative in their style, and you can see that here," he said. "I don't think anyone tries to copy exactly after their parents, but it's something that gets instilled in you." review 'Philadelphia' brings AIDS issue to forefront "Allow me to introduce myself. I'm Matt, the serious film student and aspiring movie critic. My job every Thursday will be to lead the informed moviegoer to high-quality films, to films that speak with a creative and articulate voice. I will, simultaneously, dissuade those of taste from the crass, the uninspired and the base." Actually, he's just a smart-ass who thinks that he has all the answers. Hi, I'm Sludge. I'm just your average guy. I like ESPN and beer. Matt, on the other hand, has been known to sneak a glass of white zinfandel when no one is looking. "Now, Sludge," I enjoy a good brew just as much as the next guy, but I think that film is an excellent meter for measuring society's attributes and shortcomings and for gauging the social climate." Matt & SLUDGE AT THE MOVIES Why not? It's your middle name. Listen folks, I'm not here to bore you with the tiny intellectual details. I'm here to tell you what's good, what's bad, what's fun and what isn't. I mean, let's be honest here. We're college students, we don't want to go to something where you have to read the bottom of the screen, and we don't want to talk about a movie for two hours after- Movies are for watching and for entertainment. People go to movies for dates and for hangin' out and stuff. Lighten up, Francis! "Don't call me that, Sludge!" Matt Gowen is a Lawrence senior major in journalism and film. Sludge is inspired by a real person. Look for this weekly review column every Thursday. No, I think it's that liquid butter stuff they put on it. wards. I'll show you where the good time is.I'll even tell you who makes the best corncorn. "That's a synecdoche, Sludge." "As you can probably see, Sludge doesn't exactly seek out thought-provoking cinema, although his favorite movie, 'Bull Durham,' was a quick-witted and interesting film. Though I find that independent, small-time films are often far superior to the Hollywood product, I'm not immune to big-time films that live up to their billing, such as last year's 'The Fugitive,' for example. "No, I mean that popcorn is a metaphor for the moviegoing experience." Whatever you say, Matt. Another film surrounded by plenty of hype and media fervor is the new Jonathan Demme picture, "Philadelphia," which Sludge and I saw this weekend. "Philadelphia" is a breakthrough, if for no other reason than it breaks the Hollywood barrier against AIDS and discrimination against homosexuals." All I know is, it's a good thing we brought dates to this movie or we would have had to sit a seat apart, right, so people wouldn't think, you know... I admit it, I've never seen a movie about gays before. "Exactly. Sludge. thank you." "I know what you meant, Slop." "That we were loser movie critics without dates?" No,no,I meant.. "I'm sure plenty of people feel a little threatened with the subject matter, Sludge, but the whole point of a movie like this is to make people more aware and sensitive. That's Sludge. Anyway, the film is definitely Hollywood. Tom Hanks plays Andrew Beckett, a young hot-shot lawyer who's fired from his erudite firm when they begin to suspect that he has AIDS. Denzel Washington plays ambulance chaser Joe Miller, who reluctantly takes Beckett's anti-discrimination suit when his conscience begins to get the better of him. No question about it, this is a powerful film. Demme, however, never quite gets a handle on the material. It's social statement. Now it's a courtroom drama. Now it's an artful statement about pain and suffering. We forget about that, however, when Hanks' numbing performance and the material's inherent significance take over. Washington is equally good as the prejudiced, strong-willed Miller. 'Philadelphia' does have its shortcomings, such as the characterization of Beckett. At times, he is a conglomeration of gay stereotypes, complete with an intense sensitivity to the opera. Beckett's love of opera is played out in his apartment while Miller and Beckett review his testimony for the next day. Red lights flash and the camera dances while Beckett acts out his favorite aria for Miller." That was weird. I felt like I was in the middle of that Bud Dry commercial where those guys are watching the Sad Clown of Death. You know, "Why are foreign films so foreign?" "That's a play on Fellini films, Sludge." I know. "Right" "That scene may have been taking itself too seriously. You're right." All I know is, it was about to turn into a Liberty Hall movie. "Also, Becket's family is too wohl supportive to be believable. With the social THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN See PHILADELPHIA Page 8. KANSAN JANUARY 20, 1994 PAGE 7 KU Life Your guide to Entertainment in the Lawrence Area. calendar NIGHTLIFE 1601 W. 23rd St. Thirteenth Street, N.W. Benchwarmers Sports Bar and Grill 1601 W.23rd St. Mountain Clyde, tomorrow KU/Iowa State game and They Came in Droves, Saturday. Chiefs and Chili (Chiefs vs. Buffalo Bills), Sunday Deep Blue Something, tonic Mountain Clvde, tomorrow KU/Oklahoma State game, Wednesday November, Thursday 737 New Hampshire St. U.K., 10 p.m. Tuesday (18 and over) Chubby Smith and The Lonesome Hound Common Ground, 10 p.m. Saturday Open Mic Night, 9:30 p.m. Monday The Millions, 10 p.m. tomorrow Season to Risk with Barkmarket and Cher U.K., 10 p.m. Tuesday (18 and over) Sinister Dame and John Brown's Underground 10 toult Chubby Smith and The Lonesome Hound Dogs_10 o.m. Wednesday The Thick with Possom Dickson, 10 p.m. Thursday (18 and over) The Crossing Arkansas White Trash Express, 9 p.m. Satur day Full Moon Cafe R03 Massachusetts St. 803 Massachusetts St. Tim Cross Jazz Group, 8:30 tonight Boys from the Prairie, 8:30 p.m. tomorrow Ashiklar, 8:30 p.m. Saturday Jay Keim, 8:30 p.m. Tuesday Tim Cross Jazz Group, 8:30 p.m. Thursday The Jazzhouse The Jazzhaus 926 1/2 Massachusetts St. Richard Johnson, 9:30 tonight O'Ryan Bank, 9:30 p.m. tomorrow O'Ryan Island, 9:30 p.m. tomorrow Morgan岛, 9:30 p.m. Saturday Mango Jam, 9:30 p.m. Saturday Poetry Slam, 7:30-10 p.m. Tuesday Monkey Meet, 9:30 p.m. Thursday monkey Meet, 9:30 p.m. Thursday The Forum The Granada Theater 1020 Massachusetts St. 1020 Massachusetts St. "Whack!" 9 tonight "Whack!" 9 tonight '70s, '80s and Alternative Music, 9 p.m. tomorrow Soushakers with Marqueel Jordan Sextet, 9 p.m. Saturday AFC and NFC Championship games, 11:30 a.m. Sunday Mondo Disco with D.J. Ray Velasquez, 9 p.m. Tuesday '80s Night, 9 p.m. Wednesday "Whack!" 9 p.m. Thursday Dos Hombres O2F New Nomhshire St 815 New Hampshire St. 615 New Hampshire ST Techno Night. 10 tonight Hockenbury's Tavern 1 See NIGHTLIFE Page 8. 8 Thursday, January 20, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ADVERTISING WORKS! Camera America ONE HOUR PHOTO Lawrence's Largest Supplier of Darkroom Materials 1610 West 23rd Street 841-7205 Lawrence's Newest COLLECTIBLE USED BOOK STORE Old Pharmaceutical & Medical Books VAGABOND BOOKMAN 1113 Mass 842-BOOK Hours: Mon - Sat 10-6 We buy and sell old hardback books Moving? Let Lawrence Paper Company Solve your moving hassles Sturdy boxes for moving and storage. Boxes with handles for easier moving. Large quantities at discount prices. Small quantities walk in's welcome Call 843-8111 Ask for sales/service dept THE BACK PACK FASHION IS IN THE BAG AT THE ETC. SHOP The Etc. Shop 928 Mass. Mon.-Sun. Buffet Hours 11:00-1:30 The Lowest CD Prices In Town! Current, Popular CDs for $5.95! Buy 5 or more CDs for $4.95! Also available, special selection CDs $3.95! Buy 10 or more CDs for $2.50 each! Buy 10 or more CDs for $2.50 each For the Best Values in Town Visit Lawrence Pawn 843-4344 718 NewHampshire COLLEGE BOWL 1994 Juicers Showgirls Juicers Showgirls The Midwest's Most Elite Juice Bar Opens at 7:00 pm 913 N Second (I-70 West to 204 Exit, turn left, just past Tanger Factory Outlet Lawrence, KS 913-841-4122 ATTENTION SCHOLARS! VITAMIN C February 12, 1994 Kansas Union 8 a.m. until 4 p.m. $ 20.00 per Team Call 864-3477 for more info THE "VARSITY SPORT OF THE MIND" presented by: STUDENT UNION AGIVESIES SIA INDEPENDENCE OF SAN DIEGO Do you like to make movies? Sure, we all do. You are invited to the first FOKUS Student Film Festival Alderson Auditorium Jan.22,1994 5:00 pm-7:00 pm ONE NIGHT ONLY! LOOKING FOR THE BEST PLACE TO GET IN SHAPE? *Cardiovascular Training Area: TOTAL FITNESS ATHLETIC CENTER Stairmasters, Treadmills, and Life Cycles *1500 sq. ft. Garage Floor *Tanning Beds, Vacuzzi, Saunas - The most advanced machine and free weight area *BOXING NEST Two-classes *Youth Retail Center - Self Defense Classes - Self Defense Classes OND MORELU 2100 West Kildare School for Tolkas WE'RE EVERYBODY'S CHOICE FOR TOTAL FITNESS! (913) 832-0818 PHILADELPHIA: Addresses important issue Aside from a few minor negatives, 'Philadelphia' does what it set out to do: It wakes up Hollywood and America to show how everyday the deadly epidemic of AIDS has become." stigma that is often attached to this disease and lifestyle, such a generally positive environment may be, unfortunately, too much to hope for in the real world. Yeah, I liked it, too. But that gay costume party scene, I was worried that Hanks and his, what?... Continued from Page 7. "Unfortunately, I'll bet a lot of people in the audience were thinking the same thing. But this is the first big-budget film about homosexuality and AIDS, so of course they're not going to go into detail. Maybe someday Hollywood won't have to tiptoe around those subjects." partner, were going to kiss or something. I guess I can respect that. I guess it's good for the public to come to terms with this issue. Sure, it just may take me a little longer to come to terms with it myself. "We'll see." "You do?" "You're not alone, Sludge." Naw, I don't like musicals. How about "Tombastone?" Okay, what are we going to see next? 1016 Massachusetts St. Continued from Page 7. Lonesome Hound Dogs, 10:30 p.m. tomorrow NIGHTLIFE: Lawrence music, film schedules "How about 'The Piano?' Monterey Jack, 10:30 p.m. Saturday The Wine Bottles, 10:30 p.m. Tuesday Flamante, 10:30 p.m. Thursday MOVIES Dickinson 6 Theatres 2339 Iowa St. The Twistoffs, 10:30 p.m. Wednesday Bunkhill Theaters 2339 Iowa St. House Party 3 (R), 4:40, 7:25, 9:40 p.m. Sister Act 2 (PG), 4:25, 7:10, 9:45 p.m. through Tuesday Shadowlands (PG), 4:05, 7, 9:45 p. m. Ironwill (PG), 4:30, 7, 9:35 p.m. Grumpy Old Men (PG-13), 4:20, 7:20, 9:50 p.m. Beethoven's 2nd (PG), 4:15, 7:15, 9:35 p.m. Blink (R), 4:25, 7:10, 9:45 p.m. starts Wednesday Cinema Twin 31st and Iowa streets Malice (R), 5, 7:20; 9:45 p.m., 9:45 p.m. show tomorrow only My Life (PG-13), 5, 7:30; 9:45 p.m. with a 2:30 p.m. show Saturday, Sunday Rudy (PG), 5, 7:20 p.m. starts tomorrow with a 2:30 p.m. show Saturday, Sunday Hillcrest Theatres Hillcrest Theatres Mrs. Doubtfire (PG-13), 4:45, 7:15, 9:40 p.m. with a 2 p.m. show tomorrow, Saturday, Sunday Heaven and Earth (R), 5, 8 p.m. Thursday only 9th and Iowa streets The Air Up There (PG), 5:15, 7:30, 9:35 with a 2:15 p.m. show tomorrow, Saturday, Sunday Tombstone (R), 4:50, 7:50, 9:45 p.m. with a 2:15 p.m. show tomorrow, Saturday, Sunday Philadelphia (PG-13), 4:40, 7:20, 9:50 with a 2 p.m. show tomorrow, Saturday, Sunday Intersection (R), 5:15, 7:30, 9:40 p.m. starts tomorrow with a 2:15 p.m. show tomorrow, Saturday, Sunday ZENITH NOTEBOOK 386SLC/25Mhz - 2MB Ram - 1.44MB Floppy Drive - 85MB Hard Drive - VGA Display - DOS 5.0, Windows 3.1, Mouse - Works for Windows 745 New Hampshire St Lawrence, KS 66044 843-3282 $89500 --- CENTRAL DATA COMPUTER SYSTEMS DON'S AUTO CENTER "For All Your Repair Needs" *Complete Auto Repair *Machine Shop Service *Parts Department 841-4833 920 E. 11th Street Sign up in person, or by phone Jaybowl KANSAS CITY SPRING LEAGUES ARE FORMING NOW AT THE KANSAS UNION Pay for 13 weeks in advance, get two weeks free. Free shoe rental for league bowlers Four Leagues Available: Located on Level One of the Kansas Union 864-3545 - Elementary Four Leagues Monday Mixer Tuesday Varsity Mixer Wednesday Mixer Thursday Mixer Applications for admission to ATTENTION "PRE-EDUCATION" STUDENTS Elementary Middle Only - Elementary/Middle - K-12 (in C&I) - Middle/Secondary English - Secondary English - Middle/Secondary Social Studies - Secondary Social Studies are due FEBRUARY 15 APPLICATIONFORMSARENOWAVAILABLEIN117BAILEYHALL. FREE! Superbowl Giveaway Round trip tickets to Las Vegas QB1 NFL For the first time in history, you can actually interact with live TV football games via satellite right here. Compete with other players here and nationally by anticipating live quarterback plays. A panel of experts developed the ultimate fun trivia contest that pits your skill and knowledge against other players here in our place and players all across the country TRIVIA Only at 6th & Kasold 865-4040 (in the Westridge Plaza) SPORTS EMPORIUM & FUNDRAIKERT 30X --- 1 SPORTS UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N Thursday. January 20,1994 9 MAS 5 21 Tom Leininger / KANSAN Kansas sophomore forward Sean Pearson, guarded by Kansas State's Demond Davis, led the team in scoring with 15 points in Monday's loss to KS-Tate. Kansas basketball team learning through losses Bv Gerrv Fev By Gerry Fey Kansan sportswriter The learning process is continuing for Kansas' young basketball team. The Jayhawks' last lesson came with a 68-64 loss to Kansas State on Monday. Kansas sophomore forward Sean Pearson said he was sure that the team would look at the defeat in a positive way. "We can use it to realize that we have to come out ready to play every game," Pearson said. "K-State was more intense than we were in the first half." Despite dropping its record to 16-2 and 1-1 in the Big Eight, Kansas senior forward Patrick Richey said it was no time for the Jayhawks to hit the panic button. "It seemed like before the season nobody was picking us to do anything, and I kind of like that," Richey said. "It's such a long season. There's 14 games in the Big Eight. We've only played two. We're still 16-2, and I still think we have a great chance to win the whole thing." The team may have learned from the defeat, but Kansas coach Roy Williams said he was not happy that the Jayhawks lost. Kansas' first defeat was against Temple on Dec. 1, after which the Jayhawks won 12 games in a row. "It's not good for my sleep, and it's not good for my mental attitude." Williams said of the defeat. "People say, 'You learned something from the Temple game, and you won a bunch after that.' I happen to think we learned a lot at DePaul, and we still won the game." At the halfway point in the season, Williams said he had seen improvement from some of his voucher players. Against K-State, freshman forward B.J. Williams scored a career-high 8 points, and Pearson scored a season-high 15 points. Both played more minutes than they would have usually after senior forward Richard Scott suffered a mild concussion early in the second half. Scott is listed as probable for the Iowa State game Saturday in Ames, Iowa. Roy Williams said guard Jacque Vaughn and center Scot Pollard, both freshmen, had improved slightly more rapidly than B.J. Williams. "He hasn't progressed as quickly as Jacque and Scot did," Roy Williams said of B.J. Williams. "It's going to take him a little longer just because of the physical part of the game. He needs to be a lot stronger, a lot bigger." Early in the season, the Jayhawks played an NBA-type schedule. Kansas won the preseason National Invitational Tournament and also defeated teams such as Indiana and Georgia. The Jayhawks played several times during that stretch with less than three days between games. Roy Williams said he thought that Kansas' best games were vet to come. "It's crazy," he said. "It's like the year we lost to UTEP in the second round (NCAA). In the Big Eight tournament we beat Oklahoma in the semis, Oklahoma State in the finals and Colorado in the first round. "We were fantastic for three straight nights. And yet the week after that we were coming home. I really believe we're going to continue to improve." Football team bolstered by recruiting prospects Although the Kansas football team finished 5-6 last season, they have established a solid foundation for the future. By Andrew Gilman Kansan sportswriter The Jayhawks also received commitments from two running backs, a linebacker and a quarterback. The Jayhawks, who look to improve their defensive line this season, have received verbal commitments from three line players. The Jayhawks hope to replace NFL-bound senior defensive tackle Chris Maumalanga, among others, for the 1994 season. Brett McGraw, a 6-foot-1, 260-pound lineman from Garden City, should provide some help on the line. "He's got everything you need to make it at the college level," Meadows said. "He's strong, powerful and quick." Although he may be small for the typical college lineman, he's mentally tough, said his high-school coach Dave Meadows. McGraw also has a powerful resume. He was a four-year starter on both offense and defense at Garden City and graduated with a 3.2 grade point average. McGraw made the all-state teams in the Topeka Capital-Journal and the Wichita Eagle. He was all-district his senior season as well as all-conference. Another lineman who will help the Jayhawks next year is Cleve Roberts. Roberts, a 6-6, 265 pound lineman from During his senior year, Roberts attracted many honors, including being named by the Topeka Capital-Journal as one of the top 11 players in the state. Roberts also made all-conference his junior and senior seasons. Buhler, made the Kansas 5A all-state team last season. "He has good foot speed and plays with a lot of intensity," Porter said. "I think he can play line at KU." Jason Thoren, 6-2, 215-pound fullback/linebacker, is just one of many successful Lawrence high-school players who have staved in Lawrence. Although he rushed for 1,254 yards his senior year, he will be playing linebacker for the Javhawks. "I figured I'd be a linebacker," Thoren said. "They knew I realized how many running backs are there already." As well as getting high-school recruits, Kansas has received verbal commitments from several junior-college players, including Trov Harper. Harper, a 6-4, 275-pound defensive lineman, played two seasons at Taft College in Taft, Calif. Heading the list of offensive players is quarterback Brian Gray. Gray, 6-4 and 205 pounds, led his Liberty. Mo., high-school football team to 29 victories in three years. Gray started as a sophomore and inherited a team that had won just once the previous season. He led his team to three conference and district titles and an undefeated home record during his last two seasons. Gray passed for 1,180 yards and ran for 692, averaging more than 5 yards a carry his senior season. "He can play anywhere," Butler said. "He's a smart young man, and I think he'll be a great player." Olathe North High School may be contributing to the Jayhawks running game in a big way for the 1994 season. Running back Julius Bruce and running back/defensive back Janie Harris plan to attend7 Kansas. In two seasons at Oatle North, Bruce gained 1,638 yards on 231 carries for a school record of 7.09 yards a carry. He also scored 23 touchdowns, including 14 this season. He made the all-Sunflower League and second team all-metro. This season he sat out two games but managed to rush for 892 yards. "He has a lot of ability," Coach Gene Weir said. "He has a knack for running with the ball and has a great vision for his future." Harris had 99 tackles, six interceptions and eight eagle recoveries during his career. Harris also was a 1993 all-Sunflower League running back. He gained 1,476 yards on 273 carries and scored 15 touchdowns during his career at Olathe North. But Kansas may want to utilize Harris elsewhere. NCAA scholarship allotment shows disrespect for baseball "He's a better defensive player than offensive," Weir said. "He's an extremely fierce competitor. He has the mentality for a defensive player." A great injustice continues to take place involving the appropriation of athletic scholarships at the Division I level. I am talking about the allotment of only 11.7 scholarships to men's baseball teams. As a Kansas pitcher, I take a special interest in the decisions the NCAA makes involving my sport. Because this sport does not generate a large amount of income at the college level, like football or men's basketball, baseball is often not given the funds or respect it needs and deserves from the NCAA. I have two big problems with the NCAA's mandate of such a ridiculously low number of scholarships. The first of these is that a college baseball team needs at least 20 players to function. By limiting a team to 11.7 scholarships, each team's coach must choose one of two options: 1) divide the scholarships among 20-25 players or 2) have 11 athletes on full scholarship, one on partial scholarship and fill out the team with walkons. GUEST COLUMNIST SCOTT TYTRINGTON At Kansas, Coach Dave Bingham has opted to divide the scholarships among his players. And no matter how the scholarships are divided, some athletes do not receive the aid they deserve. For example, the combined financial aid given by the Athletic Department to the six seniors on the 1994 Jawhayks equals 1.7 scholarships. Considering that the seniors are the backbone of this year's team, it is a shame that they are receiving only 15 percent of the aid that is available. However, with the harsh restrictions the NCAA has adopted, anyway you cut it, somebody is going to get slighted. The second problem is that several prospective student-athletes who are minorities are denied the opportunity to receive an education and continue baseball pursuits. Similar to the argument made by the Black Coaches Association involving a 14th basketball scholarship, it's a sad fact that many of those baseball recruits denied scholarships are minorities from low-income families. This leaves minority baseball players with relatively few options. Those young athletes lucky enough to be drafted by professional baseball teams have the opportunity to con- time their baseball careers. The following scenario, however, often takes place: The athlete, with no college scholarship and no bargaining power, is "low-balled" by the team that drafts him and is essentially forced to sign a contract for less money than he is worth. The odds of reaching the Major Leagues, and therefore, the big money, are low, and many times the athlete finds himself outside professional baseball within five years with no job, no money and no education. Though there is no doubt that the NCAA will never agree to raise the number of scholarships to 20 "full-rides," Bingham feels he has a solution. So could the families of most of the prospective baseball recruits. "The NCAA should allow each school to provide 20 tuition and books scholarships," Bingham said. "The student-athlete would be responsible solely for room and board. I feel Kansas and most other Division I schools could afford this plan." Unless changes are made, the NCAA will never completely shed its image as an organization that looks to further its own cause at the expense of the college athlete. The NCAA must overcome the ignorance it has developed against low-income sports and must provide funds for all athletic programs, including men's baseball, on an equal level. Optical Perspectives Optical Dispensary and Lab formerly fashion eveland • New Owners • New Services • New Products Your Hometown Doctor's Prescriptions Welcome 600 Lawrence Ave. (913) 841-6100 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN You don't have to be a staff member on one of the top college newspapers to receive its rewards. Join us for a new program that is aimed at first-year students who are interested in reporting, editing or photojournalism. Call or write Christine Laue, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4810 ·Organizational Meeting 4:30 p.m. January 27, 1994 Rm. 204 Stauffer-Flint Hall Summer Staff Positions Come to our Video Presentation: Thursday, January 20th 10:00 p.m. Kansas Union, Jayhawk Room A Christian sports and adventure camp for boys and girls ages 8-16 located in the heart of the Quaditation Lake and Mountain Region in Arkansas is now accepting application for summer staff positions. For More Info: Camp Ozark • HC24Rx 190 • Mtida, AR 71907 • 5021677311 Henry T's Bar & Grill 3 dozen wings & A pitcher of beer for $995 6th & Kasold 749-2999 HenryT's Bar&Grill FOR WOMEN ONLY 2 FREE WORKOUTS Body Shapes Fitness Club Semester Membership $32/Month 40% Off Charter Membership 843-4040 3320 Messa Way BodyShapes Fitness Club 8434040 SUNFLOWER SINCE 1972 LAWRENCE'S FOREMOST NAME IN OUTDOOR CLOTHING 804 MASS 843-5000 Backpacks you can depend on. Heavy duty book bags from eagle creek feature taped seams, libvy duty ippers, waist straps, and a lifetime guarantee Half Trek Day Trek Eagle Creek PACK SOME PUNCH! FORMULA ONE *LOOK BETTER *FEEL BETTER *HAVE MORE ENERGY FREE Alibaba USA S&S Distribution 749 3337 Includes five breakthrough mineral nutrient CHROMIUM POOL NATE 10 Thursday, January 20, 1994 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 'Montana mania' mounts in KC Bv Doug Tucker AP Sportswriter KANSAS CITY, Mo. — As the whole town falls deeper and deeper in love, you wonder when starry-eyed fans will decide to rename their team the Kansas City Montanas. To a lot of people, it hardly seems right calling them the Kansas City Chiefs anymore. The Kansas City Chiefs scrimped and scraped and stumbled and fumbled for 20 years without ever getting past the wild-card round. The Kansas City Montanas are just one game away from the Super Bowl. The Kansas City Chiefs, for longer than they care to remember, were insignificant also-rans who went eight embarrassing years without getting invited to play on Monday nights. The Kansas City Montanas are the toast of the league. And in Sunday's AFC title game, they're probably the sentimental favorite of fans nationwide who would rather see Joe Montana make a run at winning his fifth Super Bowl than watch the Buffalo Bills try not to lose their fourth. "I've had a lot of calls from people wishing me luck," said Montana, who has padded his legend the past two weeks by leading the Chiefs to come-from-behind playoff victories against Pittsburgh and Houston. Known in these parts as Montana Mania, the phenomenon took root last spring the minute the Chiefs pried Montana, his mystique and his four Super Bowl rings away from the reluctant San Francisco 49ers. Even before training camp began, it became a potential problem. As the Chiefs' bus rolled into River Falls, Wis., to pitch camp in July, a huge billboard greeted the players proclaiming, "Welcome Joe Montana," and then, in much smaller letters, almost as an afterthought, it continued, "and the Kansas City Chiefs." Amazingly, however, there has not been any apparent breakdown in team morale. If anybody's jealous, they do not show it. Montana may have executed his niftiest plays this season far from the public's admiring eye, convincing his teammates he is just an ordinary Joe. "I addressed that the first day of minicamp, and I touched on it on the opening day of training camp," coach Marty Schottenheimer said. "I have not mentioned it since. "It hasn't been necessary. It was evident that he doesn't particularly care to be in the limelight." "Maybe initially there might have been (some resentment). But at this point, they all understand the way things take place," Montana said. Maybe the players understand. But among Kansas Citians — about half of whom seem to be wearing bright red Chiefs' shirts, caps and sweaters — love knows no bounds. Just ask Robert Norton, the manager of a restaurant opened by an national chain near Arrowhead Stadium this year with the incredibly timely name of The Montana Steak Co. The project was launched in February, long before Joe became a Kansas Citian and has nothing to do with the quarterback. Nevertheless, customers stream in hoping to glimpse the great one. Valid Through July 31, 1994 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN C A R D AT&T Spend $1...Save hundreds Membership has its privileges... THESE DISCOUNTS AND OFFERS ARE GOOD THROUGH JULY 31, 1994! JUST SHOW YOUR CARD...USE AS OFTEN AS YOU LIKE! Britches Corner • 843 Massachusetts • 843-0454: Buy 1reg. price Tommy Hilfiger, get the 2nd of equal or lesser value Cleopatra's Closet • 743 Massachusetts • 749-4664: 15% off everything in store (excluding sale items) The Etc Shop • 928 Massachusetts • 843-0611: 20% off Etc Shop brand sunglasses Harper's Fashions • 835 Massachusetts • 749-0626: Additional 20% off all regular price merchandise KU Bookstore • Kansas and Burge Unions • 864-6440: $5 off any gift or clothing purchase of $25 or more Natural Way Natural Fiber Clothing • 820 Massachusetts • 841-0100: 15% off all regular priced clothing Outfitters Clothing Co. • 740 Massachusetts • 843-3933: 15% off the regular price of guy's and gal's jeans Outfitters Clothing Co. • 740 Massachusetts • 843-3933: 10% off of tuxedo rental University Bookshop • 1116 W 23rd St • 749-5206: 20% off all clothing (except sale items) Weavers Department Store Weavers Department Store • 901 Massachusetts • 843-6360: 20% off all lingerie, hosiery, or intimate apparel American Bistro • 701 Massachusetts • 841-8345 • 10% off any entree (limit one) Bonanza • 2329 Iowa • 842-1200 • All-you-can-eat-Freshstacks Food & Desert Bar for $2.99 Dos Hombres VI • 815 New Hampshire • 841-7286 • Buy 1 menu item, get the 2nd for 1/2 price Dunkin Donuts • 521 W 23rd • 749-5015 • 15% off any purchase Fifi's Restaurant • 925 Iowa • 841-7226 • 10% off any entree (limit one) Imperial Garden • 2907 W 6th St • 841-1688 • 10% off any dinner entree (limit one) Johnny's Tavern • N 2nd St • 842-0377 • Buy a cheeseburger w/fries at req. price, get the 2nd for $1 (Good Mon - Fri, 4pm to 9pm) Little Caesars Pizza-Pizza • 1410 Kasold, 865-5400/520 W 23rd, 842-8000: FREE Crazy Bread w/ any pizza/pizza purchase Perkins Family Restaurant • 1711 W 23rd • 842-9040 • $1.00 off any entree, anytime, 24 hours a day Pizza Shuttle • 1601 W 23rd • 842-1212 • 1 carryout, 1 topping pizza w/a lg. coke for $4.00 Plum Tree • 2620 Iowa • 841-6222 • FREE appetizer (2 crab rangoons or 1 egg roll) w/ purchase of any entree Pyramid Pizza • 507 W 14th St (under The Wheel) • 842-3232 • $4 sm-$6 med-$8 lg-ea ad adding 75¢ (Void w/ other offers) Shoney's Restaurant • 2412 Iowa • 843-3519 • FREE salad bar w/ any purchase of a sandwich and fries Vista Drive In • 1527 W 6th St • 842-4311 • FREE reg. French Fry w/purchase of a Vistaburger & drink RESTAURANTS & BARS The Athlete's Foot • 914 Massachusetts • 841-6966: $10 off a shoe purchase of $65 or more Community Mercantile • 901 Mississippi • 843-8544: 15% off any coffee purchase Cycle Works • 1601 W 23rd • 842-6363: FREE lock set w/ new bike purchase Englewood Florist • 939 Massachusetts • 841-2999: 3 FREE latex balloons with any purchase of $20 or more Francis Sporting Goods • 731 Massachusetts • 843-4191: 15% off all Champion Sportswear It's Your Party • 1601 W 23rd • 749-3455: Buy any 3 greeting cards and get 1 FREE Jaybowl • Level 1-Kansas Union • 864-3545: FREE shoe rental during open bowling Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826: Get an extra 5% CASH back during Semester Buyback Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826: Save 10% on Computer Softwear EVERYDAY! Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826: Blue Books for 10¢ Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826: 20% off Blank Computer Diskettes Jayhawk Spirit • 935 Massachusetts • 749-5194: $1.00 off all adjustable hats, $2.00 off all fitted hats Jock's Nitch • 840 Massachusetts • 842-2442: 15% off all shoes Junior's Farm * 924 1/2 Massachusetts * 842-3344: Buy 2 CD's at reg. price, get the 3rd (equal or lesser value) at 50% of Kansas Sports Club * 837 Massachusetts * 842-2993: 20% of KL lewistonebay Laser Logic *865-0505:* 20% Off Recycled Laser Printer Toner Cartridges (FREE pick-up and delivery) Miracle Video • 1910 Haskell, 841-7504/910 Niles, 8903; Rent 1 video, get 2nd FREE (Sun thru Thurs) Rentoo USA • 1741 Massachusetts, 1741-1605, 25% of price Sports Fan-Attics • 942 Massachusetts • 842-2323: 15% off everything in store (excluding sale items & leather jackets) Staree Lane • 2024 W23rd • 865 26773: $15 off Union Technology Center • Level 3-Burge Union • 864-5690: 10% off any accessory (disks, diskholders, cables, paper, surge protectors, etc.) Video Biz • 832 Iowa • 749-3507: 2 For Tuesday! Rent 2 Videos for the Price of 1 (Tuesday only) Vormehr Studio & Gallery • I Riverfront Plaza, Ste 321 • 749-0744; 15% off framed prints of KI and secreti The Auto Medic • 3631 W 10th St • 842-0384: 20% off any service call SERVICES The Auto Medic • 3631 W 10th St • 842-0384: 20% off any service call B.C. Automotive • 510 N 6th St • 841-6955: 20% off tune ups and brake repair Copy Co • 1401 W 23rd • 832-2679: 10% off all merchandise or services Enterprise Rent-A-Car • 3030 Iowa • 842-8040: 10% off car rental Fantastic Sam's • 2223 Louisiana • 749-1976: 15% off any regular price service or product Nail Tique • 2449 Iowa, Ste N • 832-2900: $3.00 off any service Planned Parenthood • 1420 Kasold-Orchards Corners • 832-0281: 25% off initial or annual visit plus 12 free condoms RC's Stadium Barbery • 1033 Massachusetts • 749-5363: $5.50 haircut Sonny Hill Chevrolet-Geo-Oldsmobile • 3400 S Iowa • 843-7700: 10% off all parts and service Ultimate Tan • 2449 Iowa, Ste O • 842-4949: 1 FREE session with the purchase of a 9-session package ($5 value) The University Dally Kansan • 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall • 864-4358: 10% off any private party classified advertisement Terms and conditions. The following terms and conditions relate to cardholder a use of the *University Daily Kuman Card* (DDC) at Participating Merchants (PMR). This DDC must be issued by a non-tenderable, and PMR may be identified, confounding CDRs used by any other than the cardholder. Cardholder's signature on a use of the DDC shall constitute a purchase to be bound by these terms and conditions of the Director of PMR. 2DIC Special Offer/Discouns. $4 are not valid with any use of the DDC. CDRs purchased from a non-tenderable, or PMR purchased from a non-tenderable, merchant personal purchase to be total purchase tax determined by PMR. 0.01 DDC purchases are part of the total purchase; 4 are only available at the specified listed prices for PMR. 6 may be discounted, at PMR sole discretion, on special Event Day discounts. 5 may be discounted, at PMR sole discretion, on special Event Day discounts. 4 may be discounted, at PMR sole discretion, on special Event Day discounts. 3 may be discounted, at PMR sole discretion, on special Event Day discounts. 2 may be discounted, at PMR sole discretion, on special Event Day discounts. 1 may be discounted, at PMR sole discretion, on special Event Day discounts. 0 Jayhawk Bookstore 1420 Crescent Road 843-3826 Kansas and Burge Unions *864-4640 UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP KU KU BOOKSTORES 1116 W. 23rd St · 749-5206 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358 Classified Directory J 100s Announcements Mr. Marks: Thanks for the weekend and sundaes. I'll always enjoy the sunshine of your heart* and a new best friendship, even if you have nags. 105 Personals 110 Bus. Personals Cap'n Cinco Espresso Bar in Port at Alvin's Bakery 69 and Iowa. Best Prices on Great Espresso Drinks, Mocha, Cakes, Cappuccino & Espresso. Open Nightly t10 pm. Large selection of sterling silver hoops for guys & gals. The Etc. 928 Shop MASS. The Etc. Shop SpringBreak1994 S CANCUNfrom#439 SOUTH PADRE from #159 Other destinations available Lowest price guaranteed Call 865-1352 Regular Clinic Hours Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm Saturday 8am-11:30am WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500 Urgent Care (Additional Charge) Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10p Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm Sunday 8am-4:30pm Pharmacy Hours Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm Saturday 8am-12:30pm Sunday 11am-3pm KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services 120 Announcements FOREIGN LANGUAGE Study Skills Program. Help for student of any language. FIRE Improve conversation skills. Conversational conversation skills. May Jan 24 - 7 p.m. 4035 Wesley. Presented by the Student Assistance Center. FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDYSKILLS WORKSHOP Improve reading, writing, listening, comprehension & conversation skills FREE! Monday, January 24, 7-9pm 4035 Wescoe Sponsored by the Student Assistance Center SCHOLARSHIP CASHE-PLUS SCHOLARSHIP SEARCH CALL OR DROP BY FOR DETAILS UNIVERSITY SCHOLARSHIP CENTER 33 STRONG HALL 864-5439 13th YEAR! SPRING BREAK94 JustHot! SOUTH PADRE ISLAND SOUTH PRAIRIE ISLAND NORTH PADRE/MUSTANG ISLAND NORTH PADREI/MUSTANG ISLAND P-L-O-G-I-D-I-A DAYTONA BEACH PANAMA CITY BEACH ORLANDO/WALT DISNEY WORLD C-O-C-L-E-M-A-D-I-O- STEAMBOAT VAILBEAVER CREEK BRECKENRIDGE/KEYSTONE N·E·V·A·D·A LAS VEGAS RESERVATIONS AVAILABLE NOW CALL TOLL FREE FOR FULL DETAILS AND COLOR BROCHURE! 1·800·SUNCHASE S-O-U-T-H C A-R-O-L-I-N-A NILTON MEAD ISLAND Please be careful. Win a trip to Cancun* Look for details and entry blanks in the coupon section of your new University Telephone Library 1944. Directories are available now at the KU Booktours. Hillel Upcoming Events Shabbat Dinner This Friday 6:00 pm Hillel House Sign up in the Hillel Office or call 864-3948 by Friday! DISCO HAVDALAH This Saturday! Kansas Room, Kansas Union Havdalah: 8:00pm Dance: 8:30pm Entrance fee after 8:30: $1 or 1 can of food 130 Entertainment Drummer with live and recording experiences looking for creative and serious band to join or musicians to form band. Many influences. Open to ideas. Call Tm 833-0772. BENCHWARMERS $.25 draws be there! tonight featuring deep blue something BENCHWARMERS friday january21st mountain clyde with motherwell $2.00 long island ice teas long beach teas saturday january 22nd they came in droves 2 for 1 wells 140 Lost & Found Found white Labrador, around one year old, wearing a red collar, very friendly. Phone 843-5366 FOUND: Wallet at Carson Place Apts. Call 832-3001 to identify. 男 女 200s Employment 205 Help Wanted 600 CAMP IN THE USA, RUSSIA AND EUROPE NEED YOU THIS SUMMER. For the best summer of your life-use your career center or contact: Camp Counselors USA 420 Florence St. Palo Alto, CA 94301 800-929-2257 . UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Thursday, January 20, 1994 11 ARBORES INSTRUCTORS NEEDED. Students are needed now to teach various aerobics classes. Prior experience necessary. $10/hour. Fill out application with Retention Services. 260-Ruthin Babystater needed Monday-Friday 8-even in children's home. References and transportation information. CAMP SEQUOIA in New York is Catfish Music, Inc. (516) 784-3200; campsequoia.com; specialists训教练 for sports, swimming (WSI/LGT), Tennis, Heineck, Gymnastics, Art, English Horseback Riding, Outdoor Equestrian, Intermediate & Junior Salary, room, board, travel allowance and laundry. See us at The Summer Employment Fair in the Kansas Union Ballroom Ground Hog Day, July 19th from 11am to 6pm; information call SEQUOIA at (614) 679-3291. Christian Kids needs relaibl assistance. Work 8am-11am or mwr at 9am-5pm .500-$300. Relocation to San Diego. Call (718) 424-7655. Cruise line, entry level, on-board positions available, great benefits. Summer and year round (812). Custodian, Burge Union, Tuesday 3pm-midnight and Saturday 9am-11am. Previous janitorial experience preferred. Able to lift 50 pounds. Work with minimal supervision. Snack Bar Attendent-KU Concessions-Murphy restraint. Required. Stand for long periods, lulls required. Stand for long periods, lulls Clerk, Office Assistant, KU Bookstore, Monday thru Friday tiam-4pm, type 80wm, valid driver's license, Macintosh experience preferred. Knowledge of basic office procedures. Maid, Kansas Union, Saturday and Sunday sam- 2:30pm, must be female, prefer previous house- keeping experience, of average or above physical strength. All jobs pay $2.45 per hour. Apply Kansas and Permanent Office level, 5 Level, Union Bouldering EOE Do you like preschool children to 3 years old? Do you want to make a difference in a child's life? Do you have a little free time? Volunteer at Head Start 2 hours one day a week. For information call 854-207-9111. Evening and weekend CNA's need to work with clients in their homes. Reliable transportation necessary. Call Sharon at Douglas County Visiting Nurses 843-3798. Greenspace is now hiring intelligent energetic people for its grassroots leaching and fundraising staff. Full and part-time positions are available and include guaranteed wage and benefits. Call 816-531-3844, for more information. Everyone is encouraged to apply. I CAN'T BELIEVE IT'S YOGURT (Full or Part Time) Orchards Corners, Kasol and Kasol-Lawrence PART TIME HELP Louisiana Purchase 23rd and Louisiana -Lawrence Reply in person. Johny's Tampa Wallet Witness positions available: 1pm to 2mails m W F. C. Cougd at 832-697-877 2pm to 4mails m W F. C. Cougd at 832-697-877 Kemal position (13.8 br) w/ includes weekend & hoh Kemal position (13.8 br) w/ includes weekend & hoh Lewisville Veterinary Hospital 118 W 22rd St. Wilson, NJ 07596 PYRAMID PIZZA Now Taking Application TWO DOLLARS 2014 DOLLAR Now Hiring Drivers Must have car and insurance Looking for enthusiastic people who understand what great service is all about! Full & Part Time Fast growing company Looking for quality minded people. Good opportunity for growth Apply in person 14th & Ohio(under the Wheel) Part-time clerical job available now. Flexible hours. Call 842-2744. FART-TIME EVENING DELIVERY PERSON Must have own car. Apply in person Peking Restaurant (23rd and Iowa behind Hastings). 748- 0903 Part-time help and party pie photographers needed. No experience necessary. Apply to Atr-Colours SCHOOL CROSSING GUARD CITY OF LAWRENCE Preschool Substitutes. Prefer training and experience with young children. Sunshine Acre School HART-TIME. Students needed for Intramural Basketball Officials and Screepeers. No expertise necessary. Training provided. Flexible scheduling. Interested students should call 864-790-2315. Responsible part-time work directing children on foot & motor traffic at school crossings. Approx. 17-20 hrs a week. $4.25 per hour. Must be in good physical condition with no loss of height or ability to daintain admin. Services. 2nd floor City Hall, 8th & Massachusetts, Lawrence, KS 69044, EOE M/F/D SHIPPING ASSISTANT Lawrence-based, growing, international, technical publishing company has a part-time (15 hours per week) position available. Duties include ship the materials to customers and provide computer copyders for inventory; taking the mail to the post office daily; and providing backup support to the fulfillment team. The position requires a Master's degree with high volume and working as a team required. Ability to maneuver up to 50 pounds and 50 wpm preferred. This position is part of our internal clerical support team (MASSST) and helps other areas of the company as needed. & d D Publications, Inc. is an equal opportunity employee center and work environment where you can if you are looking for a work environment with a reliable company, please come and fill out an application at 101 West 23rd Street, New York, NY 10017. **STUDENT APPLICATIONS PROGRAMMER.** Date: 01/26/94; Salary: $5400; 20 hours per day. Utilizes include programming in C, K-SHELL, FOXPRO and/or other languages on AIX, OSF/1, VMS, CMS and/or LAN. Complete job description available in Rm 202. Computer Center. To apply, complete a job application available in Rm 222 of the Company Center and return to Ann G. Anderson, Inc. STUDENT CLERICAL ASSISTANT Deadline: Salary: $43.5/hr. Duties include assisting in invoicing, mailing & filing of Computer Center bills; maintaining Accounts Receivable ledgers; assisting in Repair Shop orders; making daily deposits; recording microcomputer workshop registrations; performing receptionist duties on a fill-in basis; and misplacing job application available in Room 202 of the Computer Center. EOYA EMPLOYER STUDENT SYSTEM TESTING PROGRAMMER Deadline: 01/21/94, salary $350-600, 30 hrs per week. Duties include designing and writing program, maintaining, or enhancing existing programs. Participate in systems testing, applications development, or enhancing currently enrolled at the University of Kansas, demonstrated experience in designing and writing programs, knowledge of at least 2 programming languages including Pascal or C, good computer skills, experience and/or ability in software testing. Ability to maintain effective relationships with customers and staff. Complete job description available. To apply, complete an application available at the Computer Center. EOAA EMPLOYER. EARN CASH ON THE SPOT $15 Today $30 This week By donating your life saving blood plasma WALK-INS WELCOME! NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750 Looking for individual to watch my school age assignments and after school. Call 855-2972 at 8pm, Plainville, MA 01460. EARN CASH $15 Today $30 This Week Plus a $3 Bonus Walk ins welcome Lawrence Donor Center Hours: M-F9-6 816 W.24th Behind Laired Noller Ford 749-5750 $ NABI The Quality Source NABI The Quality Source Tennis Job-Summer Children's golf-Northeast-Men and women with good tennis background which can teach children to play tennis. Good salary, room & board, travel time (7 days) Box 177), Duxbury, MA 02332 (617) 943-8536. Men call or write: Camp Winnapo, 225 Ridges Shade, LDS ecole BOC, Ratan FL, 35341 (407) 994-5000. We will be on campus in the Regent School or up to mpm 631 in Greed and Radialistals. The Lawrence Bus Company is now taking applications for SAFERDIVER drivers. Must be 21, have clean driving record, and be familiar with Up to 15 km/wk. If interested call 0804-2564. Wanted: male companion, age 25-45, for semi- farm property. Resume by July 8, 45 per forment. For more information call 843-7412. 225 Professional Services Christian Day offers the best care at low rates. Preschool & kindergarten openings. Transportation. INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS in DV. A graduate of the U.S. Immigration Dept. Green cards provide permanent resident status, Citizens of almost all countries are allowed to take part. Students, tourists, anyone may apply. For info & forms. New Exe Legal Services, 2021 Stagg St., Canoga Park, CA. Tel; (818) 998-4425; Fax; (818) 882-9681 al. (818) 969-4422; Fax: (818) 852-9098. **PRODUCTION SERVICES** A/B roll video editing suite with EDI. Hifi production package. Hifi field production package. Award winning screen writer. PRIMAL SCREEN COMMUNICATIONS 235 Typing Services DESKTOP DOCUMENTS For all of your word processing needs 842.2722 TRAFFIC-DUET'S Fake ID'$& alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of 414W14th 749-0087 Looking for a good type? *Papera, Applications, Charts *Laserdisc, WOW! your profs *Grammar and spelling free *18 years experience *call Jack in *Make the Grade 865-2855 DUI/MIP/Fake ID's Office located right next to carr DONALD G. STROLE Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey 16 East 13th 642-1133 Landford Fortune 719 Massachusetts 749-5333 Internet Made Easy DATABANK Words by Chris Ward Processing High-quality PDF files, spell check words, 800-200-1000 www.chrisward.com Call Access KU and the Internet SEMESTER SPECIAL Attorney at Law General Practice Traffic Tickets, Misdemeanors, Your Key to the Internet Voice 842-6699 Data 842-7744 SLIP is Available justice X For free consultation call Rick Frydman,Attorney 823 Missouri 843-4023 OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense For free consultation call 305 For Sale 300s Merchandise Almost new twin mattress and box springs. $50 o.b.o Call 841-5965. Beds, desks, bookcases, chest of drawers. Everything But Ice 958 Mass. Butt Ice Bike. 305 Maxs. Fisher AL-1 Mountain bike, oversized aluminum 20 in. frame; Doreen DX throughout; $1150 new. Asking $600; Coronel 841-9117 Fraise. Sale: Queen-sized futon mattress, worth $30. Call 823-1693. or sale. $20.00 call 864-1871 ask for Alyson. Jaeen size custom futon bed, solid maple w/ natu- rale finish. Call (864) 353-8499. IBM computer monitor disk drive, and software for sale. $20.00 bill 842-1371 ask for Alyson. Queen size classic tutor bed, bobble huppe w/ natural oil finish. 4400-7-8681 for Sarreri for BBR TT 81 Graphing Calculator, almost new $50 or best offer, contact Contact for more info at (813) 658-7200 Queen size futon matrine and wooden frame. Equipment condition. 7#. Phone 865-985-8 and ask for key. Talk trash, walk trash: DEJA RECYCLED Talk trash, walk trash: DEJA RECYCLED Simple Goods 753 Mass. M-10, 10-30. Thr 8l4 Mass. M-10, 10-30. Thr 8l4 Base—$125 Ball Pythons —$45, Other liarids also. Cloe Green at 749-168 and leave message. SHOES* SoakHem, M-14, 10-30, Thr U18 Good goods, 75 Mass. M-Sat. 10-30, Thr U18 Trek Carbon Fiber Roadbike w/sti-$699 Krietler Rollers w/stand-$200 crop at crayon v4 and have message: Talk trash, walk trash: DEJA RECYCLED 340 Auto Sales Yamaha Acoustic Guitar. Power electric bass and guitar with a six-way neck. 11 guitars. I give you a great call. Call me at 884-2940. 85 Pontia Fiere, New red paint. Runs perfectly Speed 3, speed 5. Coke golf. Cuek 999. Call 740-721-6951 Happy hours everyday from 3-4pm. All soft drinks are $10.99 and 79 at Bucky's Hamburgers at 6th and low ... 360 Miscellaneous 400s Real Estate 405 For Kent 1 bedroom for sublease 1 block from campus 2 bedrooms 1 block from campus free. free.F-Jellill About $40,000 A-Ben 2 and 3 bedroom apartments now available. On bus route. Call 749-1556. % BDIM townhouse w/ AC and basic cable paid. washer $60.00 appliances. $60/mo. Pet池 supplies. $45/mo. 5 furnished rooms in nice spacious house close to the beach. Washer/Dryer/AC / $25 each Phone 91-929-2380 Available Now: Newly renovated studio ap 1300 camera system, window AC, window AC, battery brmr 484/mo. no pet tape. Available immediately by ldrm ppt at 1139 Ohio to be downsized and campus. or been CDR-Conn. To request details, contact: Call or go to: Sundance • 841-5255 Regents Court • 749-0445 Completely furnished 4 bedroom apts. MASTERCRAFT Female roommate needed. 13280 Ohio. 1 block off. Leave name and number on answering phone. No phone numbers or IDs. Disparately seeking room to live in 3 beds and a bedroom. 306-591-274 or Ross at 860-712-1057 and leave message. SUBLEASES available for January Newer 1, 2 and 3 bedroom apartments available for August '94. Washer/dryer, dishwasher, microwave, private baths/balconies. Avoid the place you name! | Call 789-156 for *details*. Cost Per Month - Location - Convenience --- meadowbrook COMPARE Campus Locations - Lifestyle (Sorry, No Pets) Surroundings M-F8-5:30 - ApartmentSize Also Leasing For Spring & Fall! Sat 10-4 Sun 1-4 Sat 10-4 15th & Crestline South Point AFTERMORE LUXURY New appliances New bath fixtures Mini & vertical blinds Walk-in closets Water, heating of water & trash paid! Patio balconies available Swimming pool and Sand volleyball court Small pets OK with deposit Ample off-street parking LOCATION 2 & 3 BEDROOMS AVAILABLE NOW!! West of Iowa on 26th Street K LU bus route GREATLOCATION!!! K. U. bus route Walk to shopping, banking, Restaurants & six theaters Next to new Holcom Recreational Center - Basketball, baseball, indoor Track, racquetball and Aerobics. EQUAL HOMES COMPANY 843-6446 *Leasing for June and August. New 4 bedroom, includes洗衣er, dryer, dishwasher, microwave, gas fireplace, ceiling fans cable, paired 1500 qt. air and covered parking avail. Early sign-up specials offered. For more information call Dave at 811-7849 842-4200 Park25 We are now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature studio1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. We also have 3 bedroom, 2 1/2 bath townhomes. We presently have available a select few 1 & 2 bedroom apartments for immediate *2Pools *Volleyball Court *OrrKU Bus Route with 4 Stops on Property *2LaundryRooms *HomeWeather/Driver Some Washer/Dryer Hookups Call or stop by today. 2401 W. 25th, 9A3 842-1455 (sorry no pets) MASS. STREET. Lovey now I BR. ceiling fan, MASS. STREET. Lovey now I BR. ceiling fan, 1/28 APRIL 2015 MASS. STREET. Lovey now I BR. ceiling fan, Now leasing for Spring! we're making life easier! Weekly Maid Service •Front Door Bus Service •"Dine Anytime" with Unlimited Seconds •Laundry and Vending Facilities •Free Utilities A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere NAISMITH - Close to campus • Spacious 2 bedroom • Laundry facility • Swimming Pool • Waterbed allowed VILLAGE SQUARE apartments 430 Roommate Wanted 1800 Nice. clean. 2 DBDM apr. EXCELLENT LOCA- ments. 3 DBDM apr. EXCELLENT LOCA- ments $90/mo, wrd pr. bd-745-757, leave message. One bedroom apt, sublease next to campus, off street parking. Receives re-fund for month of January. New lease leaves on December 31. Utility apartment now available close to campus Utilities paid, $500. 6 month lease available. Call (212) 743-2421. 1 or 2 roommates needed for new 3 room apt. $220/mo. + /uilities. Near campus. W/D in apt. Available now. Call for details. 841-6844. 2 female rooms desperately needed for spa s's male coquettes for 4 bouse W/D, DW/ ALL utilities paid $15.00/month. Call Vail 841-4689 3 males look for a N/S or female KU/V utilities at 250.00/month, n/bedroom $185 + utilities. Call 841-4745 *Sublase 2 Bedroom app.* Available February 1st. In KU bus route. 843-8097. College-aged roommate needed now for $ BR Avail- ance, water, pad. Jan. rent from call 841-763-5295. Fem. roommate needed for nice old style dress, roommate required for great deal $300/mo. jobs: 149, 267, 307, San Juan Sublease 1: dbrm apt, w/ study. Boardwalk Apts. $300 mo. #94 0145. Sibaneza July 11, July 2, 2014 2 bedroom 4 player. Central. 4 + 4. Montclair May 4, 2015 7 bedroom 3 player. Montclair May 4, 2015 749-786-696 Sublease: 3 bedroom apartment. February-August, 14th and Mass. Hanover Place. 841-1212. May 31 to May 18, Georgetown Apartments. W/D room. Free meals, free queen watered. 8408 mph. 86-958. Female, non-smoking, roommate needed, imm- mature, spacious home, own bed, dairy/desert, laundry, kitchen, spa. Would you like your own bedroom, bathroom, and walk-in room for under $200 a month? 1-645-287-9222 cornade needed to 3 bcp api. 800 mo. in util w/d. darkroom M391 Mainstair. 841-8487. Female roommates, need a 3 bedroom townhome on bus route, $250 + util, no pets, no smokers. Available Jan. 1, 749-3888 or 631-8088. Female roommates needed for a 3 bedroom very close to campus. $183.50 + 1/2 utilities. Call Julia at 605-8056. Male Grad student seats M/P/monitor at great apt on 8th and Mass. All amenities including dishware, food prep, laundry, storage block from bus route and convenient to downtown. Avail. immediately. Call Kevin at 824-8394. Female roommate wanted to share 3 bd/m², 1 bath room with a boyfriend. Move in to $2650/mo. + /v/s utilities. Move in now. 740-848-7982 Male or female counselor to share 8 hr. house, non-smoker and considerate W/D. (Male counselor) phone: 504-6611. - By phone: 864-4358 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Male roommate for 4 bbm2 bath furnished apt. $277/mo. +1/yr. with 1 blk to KU. How to schedule an ad: can need for 4 bdm house near campus. V/D, appliances, furnished except for bdm. Willing to help with part of rent, pets possible. Call 985-4831. Need I need 1 female immued, for 2nd sem bika from KU, buri rf, 7.60; $240 + $1/10. Call 749-3809 or 841-3858 Needed by Feb. 1: NS RM to share 3 BRI Drk 5pm. Bali B, Call 841-3809, D/W, DP sto. w/m From One roommate requires 3 bdm. apt. Close to roommates, pets allowed. AC, lamp, call 8621, ask for Steve. loommate needed for 3 dohm furnished apt. Rent is $185 + /½ utilities, on KU bus route AND W/D/1 all 865-8384 for all the juicy details. Roomate wanted to share 3 br. house in quiet neighborhood. #701 mo. 843-4338. - example R/ S冊/memories for (2 DRM, 2 BHP, turn, except for bwrd. W/ B, fireplace, pool. Near campus, on bus route, $240.mo, & 1/2 util., cable contact, $242-8833. Ads phone in may be held on your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made. A minimum $189 Offer Eligible Wanted 1 or 2 roommate to share new brand condo for $600. C铭 Gatleg at 77-4214 or 71-8214 to 738-519. Wanted: Female roommate to share new large condo with 3 other female college students. Walking distance to campus. 6 month lease available. Rent $28/smile. Call 749-8493 or (315) 749-8493 By Mail: 119 Stauffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 60045 **Please pay your classified order on the form below and mail it to the payment to the Kansas offices. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Ade that are billed to Visa or MasterCard quality for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.** Wanted: one roommate, nonsucker to share a bedroom from campus. Two full baths. 842-445 Classified Information and order form 3 lines 4 lines 5-7 lines 8+ lines Calculating names: Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day intersections and the size of the ad (the number of again lines the ad occupies). To calculate cost, multiply the total number of times the ad is in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run. Join our sentiments: The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00. Rates unless cancelling a ad that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited 1 unpaid夕夕。 Refunds on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available. Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. 140 lost & found 385 for sale 285 help needed 385 out of sale 225 professional services 385 miloceous 295 painter jobs Classifications Cost per line per pair 1X 2-3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-28X 30+X 2.95 1.55 1.65 .85 .75 .90 1.99 1.15 .85 .78 .65 .45 1.85 1.05 .75 .65 .60 .40 1.75 .90 .65 .60 .55 .35 100 personel 112 business personales 128 amoenaements 128 engagement Please print your ad one word per box ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY Classified Mail Order Form • Please Print: 370 want to buy 405 for rent 438 roommate wanted 1 2 3 4 5 Date ad begins:___ Total days in paper Total ad cost:___ Classification:___ METHODS VISA Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □ Visa (Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansan) Furnish the following if you are charging your ad: Account number:___ Print exact name appearing on credit card: Expiration Date: Signature: MasterCard The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Halt, Lawrence, KS. 68445 THE FAR SIDE By GARY LARSON © 1994 FarWorks, Inc./Dist. by Universal Press Syndicate KEYS "I'm sorry, sir, but the reservation book simply says 'Jason.' There's nothing here about Jason and the Argonauts." 12 Thursday, January 20,1994 Jayhawk Bookstore "Your Book Professionals" "At the top of Nalsmith Hill" Hrs: 8-7 M Th., 8-9 Fri, 9-8 Sat, 12-Sun. 843-3825 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN EASTON'S LTD CLEARANCE SALE OUR ENTIRE INVENTORY OF FINE MEN'S SUITS 1/2营 ENTIRE INVENTORY OF FALL AND WINTER MERCHANDISE POLO RALPH LAUREN RUFF HEWN JOHNNY COTTONS EVERYTHING IS ON SALE !! SAVE 30% TO 50% SAVF EASTON'S E LIMITED 839 MASS. 843-5755 Harding's ex-husband arrested The Associated Press PORTLAND, Ore. — Tonya Harding's ex-husband was arrested yesterday in the alleged plot to injure Olympic rival Nancy Kerrigan, and authorities released an affidavit with statements linking Harding for the first time to the Jan. 6 attack. Harding's bodyguard said the ex-husband told him that the skater had made phone calls to determine Kerrigan's practice schedule, according to the affidavit. Harding has not been charged and has denied involvement. Olympic officials have said Harding would be removed from the team if she is implicated in the attack. Jeff Gillooly, who also has denied involvement in the attack, surrendered at the FBI office in Portland. He was charged with conspiracy in a warrant issued Tuesday, the same day authorities questioned Harding for 10 1/2 hours. Harding divorced Gillyoo in August, later resumed living with him, but said Tuesday that the two were separating again. Three other people have been charged in the attack so far. Harding's bodyguard, Shawn Eckard, is charged with conspiracy and is free on $20,000 bail. The alleged "hit man," Shane Minoaka Stant, arrived from Arizona on Tuesday for arraignment yesterday on conspiracy and assault charges. Derrick Smith, who has admitted driving the getaway car, is charged with conspiracy. Eckardt and Smith have both confessed to their roles, the affidavit said. The original plan was to assault Kerrigan in the Boston area where she lives, the affidavit said. When that failed, the plot shifted to Detroit, where the Olympic trials were being held. According to the affidavit from Multnomah County Deputy James McNelly: — Eckardt said Gillooly told him that Harding had made two telephone calls in an attempt to determine Kerrigan's practice schedule in Boston. — Gillooly's bank records show that he withdrew $9,000 in three separate transactions between Dec. 27 and Jan. 6. — Eckardt made wire transfers to Smith. — Stant traveled to the Boston area Dec. 29 and stayed until Jan. 3. - Telephone records show that Stant placed a call Jan. 1 from his hotel room to the rink where Kerrigan conducts her practice sessions. — Smith said Stant had been unable to carry out the assault in Boston so he traveled to Detroit a week before the national championships. Smith said Stant had assaulted Kerrigan after a practice session. - Stant moved to a hotel in Romulus, Mich., on Jan. 4. He received a phone call there. Jam. from Gillooly and Harding's home phone in Oregon. Harding said little when she emerged from the session with the FBI and district attorney late Tuesday. Asked whether she had anything to say to her fans, she said in a trembling voice, "Please believe in me." — Smith admitted driving the getaway car after being paid $2,000 by Eckardt. In a statement issued through her lawyers, Harding said: "I am innocent, and I continue to believe that Jeff is innocent of any wrongdoing. "I wish him nothing but the best, but believe during this crucial time of preparation for the Olympics that I must concentrate my attention on my training." Reduced Prices! Before Tuesday's meeting, FBI representative Bart Gori said federal charges against Harding were "possible at this point but remote." 40% Off Buttery Soft Leather Jackets and Skirts Cartouche, inc. importers 110 Riverfront Plaza 865-8242 Ca the perfect fit at the perfect price at the perfect location UNDERCOVER The pink building 21 W.9th Street BASKETBALL No.1 Sale FREE '93 HAWKS DOMAIN T-SHIRT Sale ends Friday, January 21 Not valid in conjunction with coupons or discount cards. Save your cash and check receipts for a rebate next semester! With the purchase of any one basketball design sweatshirt. FREE With the purchase of any one Champion product. Check our large stock of Champion shirts and sweatshirts priced 20-40% below the regular price! Champion U.S.A. LOGO T-SHIRT KU KU BOOKSTORES Kansas Union 864-864-8644 Burge Union 864-5907 KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store offering rebates to KU students 朋柔流 KU KARATE CLUB Free Demonstration Tonight! When: 7:00 pm Where: Room 130 Robinson On campus for over 25 years. Beginners Always Welcome! - Traditional Okinawan Karate Self Defense and Physical Conditioning. O First Week of Classes Free! For More Information: Barad:832-2157 Ana:841-0574 1 SPORTS: The women's basketball team plays Oklahoma tonight for No.1 in the Big Eight. Page 9. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOL.103.NO.84 THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA KS 66612 ADVERTISING: 864-4358 FRIDAY, JANUARY 21, 1994 (USPS 650-640) NEWS: 864-4810 Council to vote on relationships policy Administrators want stronger statement By Stephen Martino Kansan staff writer The possibility of dismissal will loom for University of Kansas instructors who involve themselves in consensual relations with students they have a power relationship with, according to a compromise worked out by the administration and University Senate Executive Committee. The compromise will affect the Consensual Relationships Policy passed by University Council on Dec. 9. The administration officially responded to the policy in a letter written by Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor, on Jan. 12. He wrote that the administration agreed with the first four points of the policy as passed by Council, but that he wanted a more expansive fifth point which would incorporate a violation of Faculty Code of Conduct for instructors who fail to observe the policy. "We remain convinced that it is in the best interest of students and the University to prohibit romantic or sexual relationships in those situations where a faculty member holds a power differential over the student," Meyen wrote. "The institution must keep in mind the potential for damaging litigation that may arise in the absence of a strong policy on consenting relationships." SenEx addressed the administration's proposed changes Wednesday and submitted a revised policy that will be voted on next Thursday at Council. He said that although the administration would have preferred a stronger statement against consensual relations, they were taking what they could get. The changes suggested by SenEx were acceptable to the administration, said David Shulenberger, vice chancellor for academic affairs. "The University Council statement essentially advised against it, and our experience is such that we believe Shulenberger said the policy passed by Council was probably going to be more acceptable to faculty than the one enacted by the administration in August. that there needed to be a stronger statement," he said. "Ithink what SenEx is going to take to Council next week narrows down this policy to a span that is as broad as the University's interest and no broader," he said. Additionally, the administration expressed its desire not to have superior/subordinate staff relationships in the same light as those between faculty and students. Sulenberger said that even though superior/subordinate relationships were not desirable, they were different because superiors can be easily removed from direct decisions concerning the subordinate while a faculty member's professional relationship with a student was more detailed. Debate started in earnest concerning faculty and student consensual relations with the dismissal hearings of former law school professor Emil Tonkovich. He was dismissed for having allegedly forced a female student to perform oral sex on him. In September, the Special Task Force on the Consensual Relations Policy was formed and given charges from SenEx. Its conclusions, which were revealed Nov. 24, were in part, the basis for the eventual policy considered by Council. Shulenberger said that the policy was needed to provide clear-cut definitions of conduct for instructors. He said it was not intended to drive a stake between the administration and faculty. "The ethical norm of faculty members not having relations with students is one that has been here for the long time," he said. "All we're trying to do is get that written into the code. For that reason, I think if Council passes it, it will be acceptable because it already is. We never thought that there was a great many violations, but there were some, and we know of one." 1970 City seeks 24-hour homeless shelter But facility could meet opposition, mayor says By Cheryl Cadue Kansan staff writer Joe waited all day for the Salvation Army homeless shelter, 946 New Hampshire St. to open. "I didn't know what the homeless situation was," said Joe, who holds two part-time jobs but who still cannot afford housing. "I've learned a lot about survival. It's not a piece of cake, and it's something I'll remember for the rest of my life." On an average winter night, between 30 to 40 homeless people sleep in the shelter, said Captain George Windham, director of the Salvation Army in Lawrence. But Jay Leipzig, Lawrence's housing coordinator, said many of the shelter's residents had nowhere to go during the day because the shelter only was open from 9 p.m. to 9 a.m. To help solve the problem, the Lawrence City Commission applied to the Department of Housing and Urban Development on Jan. 11 for a $718,634 grant, which would enable the city to fund a 24-hour transitional housing center primarily for homeless males. The new center also would offer private rooms. The center would hold 20 people for 21 days and then help subsidize affordable housing through the Lawrence Housing Authority, Leizig said. "I have no idea where it will go, but deciding where it goes will be the biggest battle this town has seen." Nalbandian said. For Joe, the new center would mean not worrying when he got off work before the shelter opened at 9 p.m. John Nalbandian, Lawrence mayor, said the center also would house and counsel alcoholics — services the Salvation Army did not provide. "Sometimes it looks like there's no hope that we're ever going to get out of here," Joe said. "A lot of times we keep each other going." Chuck, who was spending the night at the shelter, said he had spent his days watching television in the Kansas Union before he checked in at the shelter. "There's no doubt that Lawrence needs a regular shelter," he said. "It's a community problem and the problem should be addressed at the community level." Bill Flynn, who also spends nights in the shelter, said he liked shelter but agreed that a full-time shelter was needed. Windham said the community should band together to combat the homeless issue. Above: Bill Flynn has been staying at the Lawrence Salvation Army homeless shelter, 946 New Hampshire St., for the past two months. He said the shelter allowed him to get away from the cold. Right: Chuck settles into his cot for the evening at the shelter open from 9 p.m. to 9 a.m. "People would rather give $250,000 for a youth ballpark park or give $250,000 to build a new homeless shelter," he said. "People are more receptive to youth programs. People just don't want a shelter in their neighborhood." Despite opposition to the new center, some members of the community already have committed themselves to helping. Students at Hillcrest Elementary School, 1045 Hilltop Dr., prepared Wednesday's meal of steak soup and brownies. "More and more, public schools need to see that academics are important, but also that we want the kids to become adults who will pay attention to their community," she said. Carol Abrahamson, Hillcrest teacher, said helping the homeless was a valuable lesson for students to learn. 1973 Brian Vandervile/ KANSAN Executive vice chancellor named to United Way By Ashley Schultz Kansan staff writer The United Way of Douglas County, with the help Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor, is putting forth a united front against inefficiency in Lawrence agencies. Meyen will serve as head of a cooperative health and human services assessment committee. School districts, school boards, and city and county commissions have met for long-range planning to figure out how to maximize resources and to plan together for future facilities and locations, said Marilyn Bittenbender, president of the board of directors for the United Way of Douglas County. The board saw a need to Ed Meyen work together and the United Way saw an opportunity to act as a catalyst. "I think people who provide services need to be absolutely as responsible and careful as we can all be about making sure that the services that are being delivered are squeezing every dollar down to the last drop." Bittenbender said. "That's a collective responsibility." The health and human services assessment is intended to ferret out service duplication, to see if community needs are being met and if inter-agency cooperation would add to program efficiency. It also is intended to help program definition and to help community benefactors have a better idea of where their money is going. The cities of Baldwin, Eudora and Lawrence have joined the effort, along with the Baldwin, Eudora, Lawrence and Perry-Lecompton school districts, the Douglas County government, the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce and the Rice Foundation. Meyen signed on after about three weeks of discussions. His background as a professor of special education has given him a special interest in how communities respond to the needs of children. The project has three prongs, Bittenbender said. The first involves interviews and surveys of agency directors, clients and community leaders who make donations. The second is a meeting for public input. The third is the delivery of the committee's recommendations and action plan. "There are over 100 agencies that deliver health and human services in Douglas County and not all of them are United Way agencies," Bittenbender said. The committee will interpret the data collected by a consulting firm and develop an action plan with recommendations for improvement. That report may be available to the public by October. The committee's first meeting will be at 7 p.m. Jan. 27 at the Lawrence school district's service center, 3705 Clinton Pkwy. INSIDE Wild Art A new mural depicting underwater life is hanging in Wescoe Terrace. The mural has attracted attention from students and University employees alike. Page 6. Graduate students split from Student Senate By Heather Moore Kansan staff writer In an effort to ensure that every student is better represented, the Student Senate approved the creation of a graduate Student Senate Wednesday night. The two senates will have separate and joint accounts with Student Senate. When students pay fees, graduate fees will go to graduate Senate and undergraduate fees will go to Student Senate. The graduate Senate will imitate the current structure of the graduate student council in many ways. The main change will be the formula used to divert student fees. Graduate Senate will use 20 percent of the graduate student fees and put the remaining80percent in a jointSenate fund. There also will be a liaison between the two bodies and graduate Senate will have exofficio voting members on the Student Senate Finance Committee. Chris O'Brien, outgoing executive director for the graduate student council, said that the creation of a graduate Senate would bring about better student government because the student body would be better represented. "There would be a shared student body president, shared financial concerns, and cross-representation that would result in a better graduate voice," he said. O'Brien said the bill would codify practices already in existence. "This package will move graduate Senate on par with Student Senate in the system of university governance," he said. Jeff Bottenberg, graduate senator, said this system was used by graduates and should be incorporated into campus governance. "The body is already there and we want to make it a more effective body," he said. "They would be more effective in what they fund." graduate students. Bottenberg said. There are issues that apply directly to "Grad students aren't welcome in the general population, and they tend to do different things." Bottenberg said. "Graduates have their own interests, such as teaching, research projects, and publications," he said. "The next step is to imbed them into governance boards." John Altevogt, graduate senator, also said he supported a separate graduate Senate. Lynette Sharp, executive director of the graduate Senate, said the new organization would fulfill graduate students needs. "Grad students often don't know who their graduate senators are because they feel isolated," she said. There was no reason to stay connected to Student Senate if the graduates weren't represented, Sharp said. "University officials come to us with questions about graduate student needs," she said. "There is a national trend to have a split senate." "Why should we segregate this group of the student population when they can't fulfill their requirement to the Student Senate?" he said. "Graduate students should get off their butts, come in and be represented in Student Senate." Ken Martin, Association of University Residence Halls senator, said that the entity should stay as one. Travis Harrod, student executive committee chair, also opposed the creation of two Senates. "There's a group of graduate individuals that want to have the same power and same voice in student governance as the faculty and Student Senate," he said. Harrod said he was concerned that Student Senate would no longer be the only student voice. "We'll be dealing with groups that effect the entire student body, but another group will have equal say and yet be addressing one side of the issue," he said. 2 Friday, January 21, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Lawn, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045. JD's Baseball Cards & Sports Nostalgia Shop 711 W. 23rd 842-1002 We buy back used baseball cards Pancho's Paneho's MEXICAN RESTAURANT Homestyle Mexican Food 23rd & Louisiana 843-4044 Pancho's MEXICAN RESTAURANT Homestyle Mexican Food 23rd & Louisiana 843-4044 Futons & Frames On Sale! BLUE HERON where comfort and quality is assured. 937 Mass. . T 841-9443 EVERYTHING BUTICE • Beds • Desks • Chest of Drawers • Bookcases 936 Mass. Futons & Frames On Sale! BLUE HERON where comfort and quality is assured.. 937 Mass. 841-9443 EVERYTHING BUTICE Jayhawk Bookstore "Your Book Professionals!" At the top of Mithill Hihn Nxr: 7-8-M th. 4-Fri. 8-Sat. 12-Gem. Metropolis BBS 832-0041 ON CAMPUS $5 Off Hair Design Not valid with any other offer EXPIRES 3/31/94 Discover Our Difference. Holiday Plaza • 25th & Iowa 841-6886 St. Lawrence Catholic Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m today at Danforth Chapel. The Women's Student Union meet at 5 p.m. today in Alcey D at the Kansas Union. For more information, call 864-7337. The Astronomy Associates of Lawrence will meet to stargaze at 8 p.m. each clear Sunday on the top floor of Lindley Hall. For more information, call Corey Zirlin at 842-2225. St. Lawrence Catholic Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. Monday at Danforth Chapel. KU Tae Kwon Do Club will meet at 6 p.m. Monday at room 207 in Robinson Center. For more information call Jacob Wright at 749-2084 or Jason Anishanslin at 843-3099. St. Lawrence Catholic Center will sponsor a Catholic law student discussion group at 12:30 p.m.Monday in room 109 at Green Hall. For more information, call 843-0357. Clanna Daghda and ValFather (Clans of the Good God and AllFather) will meet at 6 p.m. Monday at Alcove F in the Kansas Union. KU Kempo Karate Club will meet at 6 p.m. Monday in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Mandana Ershadi at 842-4713. Harambe will meet at 6:30 p.m. Monday in the American Baptist Center, 1629 W. 19th. For more information, call Anthony Case at 865-1682. WEATHER St. Lawrence Catholic Center will sponsor a class, "Fundamentals of Catholicism" at 7 p.m. Monday in the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Rd. For more information, call 843-0357. St. Lawrence Catholic Center will sponsor a program, "Exploring the Faith" at 8 p.m. Monday in the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Rd. For more information, call 843-0357. Weather around the country: Atlanta: 48°/21° Chicago: 30°/4° Houston: 55°/47° Miami: 74°/63° Minneapolis: 32°/6° Phoenix: 78°/50° Salt Lake City: 50°/24° Seattle: 50°/43° LAWRENCE: 45°/15° Kansas City: 41°/13° St. Louis: 37°/10° Wichita: 41°/18° Tulsa: 37°/21° TODAY Tomorrow Sunday Sunny and breezy High: 45° Low: 15° Mostly sunny and much warmer High: 52° Low: 32° Sunny and warm High: 57° Low: 37° Sunny Day Sun Source: Mick Delfelder, KU Weather Service: 864-3300 Kansan CLASSICS They work. The Lowest CD Prices In Town! Current, Popular CDs for $5.95! Buy 5 or more CDs for $4.95! Also available, special selection CDs $3.95! Buy 10 or more CDs for $2.50 each! For the Best Values in Town Visit Lawrence Pawn 843-4344 718 New Hampshire Register to win a remote control car by Tyko (value S150). GUARANTEED D WHILE WE WORK WITH THEY WE WORK WITH THEM TREATMENT SOLUTIONS With blues - infected songs punctuated by twin guitars, The Screamin' Cheetah Wheelies are souful beyond their years. The Screamin' Cheetah Wheelies could well re-ignite your passion for timeless burning rock'n'roll. Do you like to make movies? Sure, we all do. You are invited to the first FOKUS Student Film Festival Alderson Auditorium HITS UNDER CONSTRUCTION 1403 W.23RD ST. 842-7173 Stay Streetsmart, Shop Streetsidel STREETSIDE RECORDS HITS UNDER CONSTRUCTION Screamin' Cheetah Wheelies The Screamin' Cheetah Wheelies Specially Priced featuring "Shakin' The Blues" With music infused by his unique style Screamin' Cheetah Wheelies Looking for the perfect gift? Gift Coins available for any occasion. ONE NIGHT ONLY! Jan. 22,1994 5:00 pm-7:00 pm MCAT Are you prepared? We are. -SMALL CLASSES GROUPED BY TEST-TAKING ABILITY - GUARANTEED SCORE IMPROVEMENTS -VALUABLE TEST-TAKING TECHNIQUES COMBINED WITH A THOROUGH REVIEW OF THE CONCEPTS TESTED ON THE MCAT BEGIN PREPARING NOW!! Register TODAY and get FREE MCAT Review software. Classes are forming now for the April exam. THE PRINCETON REVIEW Questions? Please call our office at (800) 865-7737 CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Friday, January 21, 1994 3 Volunteer is Truman nominee KU student says she finds work rewarding --- By Angelina Lopez Kansan staff writer in high school, Jennifer Ford, Lawrence junior, spent her summers working with senior citizens, the mentally ill and the homeless. She said she didn't volunteer to help these people because she was forced to or because her parents had coerced her into it. off. Ford has been a volunteer for one organization or another her entire life, and her commitment has paid She was a volunteer every summer because she loved it. Ford has been chosen as a finalist for the Harry S. Truman Scholarship, a $30,000 scholarship awarded to those interested in a career in public service. She is one of 200 finalists who may qualify for the 85 scholarships, which are intended for graduate school. Ford has volunteered for everything from rest homes to the Boys and Girls Club of Lawrence, 1520 Haskell Ave. Currently, she is involved with Project Acceptance, a half-way house and drop-in center for the mentally ill. "Community service has had a profound impact on how I look at myself and the world," Ford said. Ford, who is majoring in political science and religious studies, said she was interested in ethics, morality and the motivation behind volunteering. "I think volunteering is an invaluable experience for the volunteer, and a real and significant way to combat social problems," Ford said. "It enables people with different backgrounds to work together to build a sense of community, and it fosters mutual respect and tolerance." At the University of Kansas she is the elections commissioner for the Student Senate, a member of the Student Lecture Series Board and a student delegate to the University Honors Council. Her support of non-profit organizations has not gone unnoticed. Ford is the first student to become a voting member of the board of directors of the United Way of Douglas County. She also has been appointed to Lawrence's Recycling and Resource Conservation Advisory Board. "She really believes in what she is doing," said Mary Klayder, assistant director of the honors program, who assisted Ford in entering the scholarship competition. "She really wants to create structures by which other people can become involved in non-profit organizations." I am sorry, but the text in the image is too small to be clearly read. Please provide a clearer or larger image of the text. Jennifer Ford, Lawrence junior, is one of 200 finalists for the Truman Scholarship. She has done volunteer work for the last several years and also is involved in many KU activities. Potter Lake safe, frozen; students go ice skating HOCKEY Warmer weather next week could make ice unsafe By Susan White Kansan staff writer Potter Lake may have enough ice for skating now, but warmer temperatures this weekend could make future trips out on the ice dangerous. John O'Brien, professor of systematics and ecology, said that a lake should have at least four inches of ice on it to be safe. Potter Lake has more than that now. 4 Should that happen, the risk of falling through will increase. Although the weather is supposed to get warmer over the weekend, the ice on the lake should stay frozen, O'Brien said. However, if the weather stays warm through next week, the ice will begin to thaw. "As the central body cools, the lower the body temperature is and the slower a person's responses are," Rock said. "The chances of getting out of the water are less as the body reacts to the cold." Pat Sisco, Chicago freshman, plays hockey on Potter Lake. Sisco said he would skate on the lake as long as temperatures remained below freezing at night. William Alix/KANSAN Randall Rock, a physician at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said that if a person should fall into the water, that person should get out quickly because as the skin gets cold, hypothermia could develop. Anyone who falls in the lake should be brought out as soon as possible and taken to a warm place out of the wind, he said. If the victim has a serious condition, such as hypothermia, he or she should be taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital. Sgt. Rose Rozmiarek, KU police, said the police department had not experienced problems with students skating on the lake in the past because temperatures had not been low enough in the last few years for Potter Lake to freeze. Although she did not know whether the lake was frozen enough to be safe, she said the police department did not have the authority to prevent people from skating on it. "There is no city ordinance that restricts people from going on the lake, so there is nothing we can do to keep them off it," she said. Matt Johnsen, Aurora, Ill., senior, took advantage of the frozen lake Wednesday. "It's my last chance to skate on Potter Lake," he said. Senate denies further funds for Who'sinations By Heather Moore Kansan staffwriter Who'sinations, an alternative student paper, may have a difficult time making it to the printer in the next few months. Student Senate's Finance Committee did not pass a bill that requested $6,340 for Who'sinations. The Student Senate gave nearly $7,000 to Who'sinations last year, but now the paper needs more money to pay for increased publication costs brought on by increased readership. The paper has a circulation of 12,000, and it costs Who'sinations $1,585 per issue to publish. The main reason the bill failed was because of a rule which states that funds cannot be allocated to an organization whose primary purpose is for the fulfillment of academic requirements. Alan Pierce, non-traditional senator, said Student Senate couldn't fund an organization that offers college credit. "Other publications don't offer credit," he said. "Who'sinations is trying to get hold of the media fee." An ad on the back page of the December issue of Who'sinations requested editorial and design interns, offering college credit (up to six hours at KU) to those who qualified. Travis Harrod, Student Executive Committee Chair, said that the ad made it sound like Who'sinations gave course credit. "The English department has a group that advises campus publications and they give the credit." he said. Harrod said that these advisers were never members of Who sinations. "On the surface, the ad violates the rule," he said. "There is a question of precedence. Student Senate does have the prerogative to say no any time because of financial reasons." Bill Ye, Who sinations publisher, said the problem was due to an odd technicality. "No one on the full time staff receives credit," he said. "We wanted to have some interns who needed experience but weren't full time to work." "This is one of the largest venues for student writers who aren't in the J-school," he said. Ye said that the interns needed to be given some credit because they couldn't be paid. Jack Cohn, assistant professor of English, said that students had received credit for many activities, including Who sinations "Who'sinations is not giving academic credit," he said. "The students contribute their labor and get credit from their department." Despite the lack of funds, Ye said that Who'sinations would stay in the game. "We're going to keep up advertising even though we don't have a full ad staff," he said. "We have an issue coming out in February, but we'll have to start worrying about it in three months." By Liz Chadwick Kansan staff writer Youth charged with assault, murder The trial of a Topeka man allegedly involved in an attempted car jacking and murder in Lawrence will begin in Douglas County District Court on Feb. 2. Abraham Orr is charged with first degree murder and aggravated assault. According to police reports, Orr, then 17 years old, and three other youths attempted to rob a Lawrence man, Edward Lees, of his Isuzu Trooper last September. Lees was sitting in his car with his girlfriend and her two children watching the sunset on Sept. 18, when four youths approached Lees and demanded he hand over his keys. When Lees refused and attempted to back away, Orr allegedly shot him. The youths then fled to the turnpike where they were apprehended by police. Orr is the only one of the four youths being tried as an adult. Orr's lawyer, Randy McGrath, had moved to suppress statements Orr made the evening of his arrest on the grounds they were not made voluntarily. McGrath named various factors for Judge James Paddock to consider in making the ruling, such as the fact that Orr, one month shy of his 18th birthday, was not allowed to phone his parents. When Orr made the request, the officer told him he could do so after the interview. McGrath also wanted the length of the interview by police, which lasted four-and-a-half hours, and the fact that the officers conducting the interview wore guns to be considered by the judge. Paddock ruled that Orr's statements given the night of the murder could be used in court. Paddock responded to McGrath's requests for suppression in a memorandum. He said it would be better police practice to permit a minor to call his parents when he makes the request. However, the judge also stated in his decision that the defendant was no stranger to police practices and that Orr had committed crimes in the past that would have been felonies if committed by an adult. McGrath had no comment about Paddock's decision. FREE! QBEI NFL FREE! Superbowl Giveaway Round trip tickets to Las Vegas A panel of experts developed the ultimate fun trivia contest that pits your skill and knowledge against other players here in our place and players all across the country. For the first time in history, you can actually interact with live TV football games via satellite right here. Compete with other players here and nationally by anticipating live quarterback plays. Only at 6th & Kasold 865-4040 (in the Westridge Plaza) STUSSY We're Loaded With It! 100's Of Hats, T’s Sweatshirts, Jeans, Etc. 701 W 9th (9th and Indiana) Kansas City BannisterMall Mission, KS 6518 Martway FREE! Superbowl Giveaway Round trip tickets to Las Vegas QB1 NFL A panel of experts developed the ultimate fun trivia contest that pits your skill and knowledge against other players here in our place and players all across the country. For the first time in history, you can actually interact with live TV football games via satellite right here. Compete with other players here and nationally by anticipating live quarterback plays. Only at 6th & Kasold 865-4040 (in the Westridge Plaza) MTN TRIVIA Only at SPORTS EMPORIUM & FUNDRAINKERY STUSSY We're Loaded With It! 100's Of Hats, T’s Sweatshirts, Jeans, Etc. 701 W 9th (9th and Indiana) Kansas City Mission, KS BannisterMall 6518 Martway SHARK'S SURF SHOP SHARKS SURF SHOP 4 Friday, January 21, 1994 OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VIEWPOINT Proposal to limit access to campus parking unfair The plan for increasing the hours that campus is restricted to vehicle traffic will place undo burden on students and only agitate the problem of parking safely after dark. The Parking Board proposal under consideration by University Governance would change the restricted hours to 7:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. The current restricted times are 7:45 a.m.-4:45 p.m. The board cited pedestrian safety between 5 and 6 p.m. on Jayhawk Boulevard and faculty access to blue zones in the morning as reasons to change the restrictions. The fact that there have been so few accidents involving pedestrians during these times during the past several years raises the question of whether safety is indeed a problem. And though some students do park illegally in blue zones in the morning, not enough do so to warrant penalizing all students. With bus service ending around 6 p.m. on most routes, many students have little choice but to drive to early evening classes. Students with evening classes would be forced to park a considerable distance from their classes and walk in the dark or bitter cold. This safety problem, which is particularly threatening to females, justifies keeping the current restrictions. The answer to the morning-parking problem in blue zones is stronger enforcement of the rules. Evening traffic is expected to be a problem in this day and age. At times, it is easy to forget why the University exists. The campus exists primarily for students' use. When the everyday problems of rush-hour traffic on campus and faculty access to blue zones are used as excuses to justify further parking restrictions, students should be wary. WILLIAM GIST FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD Lawrence should look to curbside recycling 4 Cities across the nation are implementing a progressive program to conserve the earth's natural resources: curbside recycling. Lawrence should follow suit. Curbside recycling enables residents to place common recyclables such as aluminum, glass and newspaper in front of their homes to be picked up periodically. Lawrence residents do have other recycling options, including several drop-off points around town and a private company that offers curbside pick-up for a fee. But too many people become apathetic because of inconvenience and do not use them. A large-scale, city-sponsored program reaching all residents would encourage more households to participate and would cost less than a private service. In addition, more recycling means less trash, and less trash means less money spent on landfill space. Opponents to curbside recycling in Lawrence argue that the program is not profitable because, once collected, recyclables must be shipped out of town to be processed. Investing in a local processing plant would save both money and time. Though curbside recycling may not turn a profit for Lawrence, we must consider its more fundamental payoffs: a healthy environment and a more promising future. These are things we cannot put a price on. Lawrence should not ask whether we can afford to adopt a more effective recycling program but whether we can afford not to. KRISTIN BRUMM FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD The pain of fading friendships disappears with new adventures I watched my brother, Brian, unpack his suitcase. His socks looked like wadded up baseballs as he hurled them back into their drawer. He was not happy. This was two weeks ago, and while I was packing to leave the comforts of home (free food) to go back to KU, he was unpacking to stay for another week. We had just gotten back from a skiing trip. His sock-hurling confused me. Shouldn't I be the one depressed about the prospect of little sleep? He is a freshman at Colorado State University, and he did not start classes until Tuesday. "What's wrong?" I asked, while he shot the socks and missed the drawer by 3 feet. The socks were now basketballs. "You aren't going to miss me, are you?" "Of course not, you idiot," he said. "However, I am going to miss my friends. You know, there is no one I can really talk to in Colorado, except sometimes Kendra (the girl he is dating.)" But you have another week with them, I reminded him. COLUMNIST DAN ENGLAND "Which will only make me miss them more," he said. I didn't have an answer for him. I gave him a lame "Hang in there" and climbed in the car. On the ride back, Brian's troubles bounced around in my brain. And then it dawned on me: It was about one year ago today that I really spent some time with my high-school friends. High school is a time when your emotions go from one extreme to another. A breakup is a significant tragedy, usually in three acts. A trip to Everyone had their "gang" they hung out with in high school. Mine was a group of seven girls and two guys. the mall is paradise. And your friends carry you through all of it. I know mine did. But now, in my last semester, our special bonds seem to have broken. After promising with all our hearts that we would never forget each other, we have done exactly that. Our all-night parties every weekend have changed into a few hours at a coffee shop every three months. And our deep, meaningful conversations, like the ones that Brian misses so much, are now quick snatches of awkward small talk. I've been told that a few hours' distance should make no difference to the bond that holds true friendships together. But that just isn't true. I couldn't have found better friends. They were my shadows. They were a shoulder to cry on and a hand to high-five. In some ways, they have never left me. When I'm depressed, I can think back to New Year's Eve together, the secret parties at our parents' houses, the all-night movie festivals, playing tag through the hallways and barbecue picnics at the park. It drives my depression away. In an instant. But I only have 24 hours in a day. And many of those hours are spent at this newspaper or studying. And when I'm not working, I am out with my Jayhawk friends. Those friends mean just as much to me as my high-school friends did. And I know that after graduation, promises will be made to keep in touch. Maybe those promises will be kept. But I know from experience that they probably won't. Friendships don't fade because of a lack of caring. They fade because our lives are suddenly jam-packed with other things. And our lives are without people we thought we could never live without. And then, suddenly, we discover that we didn't even notice those people were gone. It took me four years and a sock-throwing brother for my discovery. Maybe soon you'll reach yours. . Dan England is a Lenexa senior in Journalism. BUT WE DO HAVE A SPOT ON OUR SPECIAL OLYMPIC HOCKEY TEAM... NATO OLYMPIC COMMITT Public affection should be private COLUMNIST It never fails. I'll be out walking on campus, at a movie, at a restaurant — basically just about anywhere and everywhere I go. I am talking about a problem that seems to have epidemic proportions on college campuses: public displays of affection, or PDAs. Whatever you want to call them, they must be stopped. We've all witnessed PDAs at one time or another. You'll be out somewhere, and there they'll be. Those two people who can't keep their hands off each other and never seem to notice that 100 people are watching. I am pleading with all of you who do this sort of thing: STOP! The innocent bystanders of the world can't take it anymore! PDAs have varying degrees of offensiveness in my book. These are as follows: COLUMNIST DANIELLE RAYMOND A first-degree PDA would include the little things, such as holding hands, quickhugs, pecks on the cheek and things of that sort. This sort of PDA usually occurs when two people have just started dating. The first-degree DPA is tolerable only because of the "young-love-in-bloom" aspects that appeal to the romantic in me. But, if the two are not careful, they can easily overstep the first-degree boundaries and move right into a second-degree PDA. the second-degree PDA is not tolerable at any time. It includes such things as French kissing in public, hanging all over each other and fawning over your partner with a disregard for anyone else. The second-degree PDA is most often seen at restaurants, amusement parks and movies The third-degree PDA, also known as the Queen Mother of PDAs, includes full-blown mashing in the presence of others. I'm talking a hands-all-over-each other, "if we pretend they're not there, they won't be able to see us" PDA. It is most frequently witnessed at parties and bars when both offenders are in a mental state far from sobriety. I don't want to sound like I am against being affectionate, it's just that I don't want to have to see it. I mean, what do you do when you are witness to a PDA? You could ask them to stop. But if their PDA is to the point that you feel compelled to say something about it, chances are that they are totally oblivious to your presence and won't hear you if you do say something. Unlike the first-degree PDA, it won't be excused. Whenever I see two people commit tung some sort of PDA, I get embate rassed — not for myself, but for them. Do they have any idea how stupid they look? The day after the offense, their friends are going to give them hell for the previous night's display. That is the only time a PDA becomes enjoyable for a witness. The looks of embarrassment and shame on their faces are priceless. And you know what? They deserve every minute of hell they are put through. Their suffering should at least equal that of those who wilt nessed the display the night before. I realize that there will always be that one couple who just can't resist climbing all over each other in the presence of others. To them I have but one thing to say: Get a room. Danielle Raymond is a Wilmette, Illinois Junior in Journalism. BEN GROVE, Editor LISA COSMILLO, Managing editor TOM EBLEN, General manager, news adviser HILL SKETE Technology coordinator BILL SKEET, Technology coordinator KANSAN STAFF Assistant Managing Editor ...Dan England Assistant to the editor ...J.R. Claribone News ...Kristi Fogler, Katie Greemould, Ted Sheikh Media Manager ...Colleen McCain, Jess Delavern Campus ...Jess Delavern Sports ...David Dorsey Photo ...Doug Hesse Features ...Sara Bennett Wife ...Allison Lippert Freelance ..Christina Laue Editors Assistant Editors Reporters Associate campus Carlos Tejada Assistant campus/planning Brian James Chairman/CEO Charles Tolman Copy Editors Cheryl Cadue ... Liz Chadwick Gerry Fay ... Andrew Gliman Kevin Hoffman ... Roberta Johnson Angelina Lopez ... Stephen Martino Frank McCleary ... Heather Moore Jamie Dunne ... Denise Rall Abbey Schultz ... Matt Siegel Cathleen Slechta ... David Stewart Gennifer Traill ... Susan White Jacob Arnold Sara Bennett Courtney Bloomquist Jerry Breaux Angie Cunningham Jack Fisher Christoph Pulmura Matt Gowen Kenton Hirschle Brian James Tiffany Hurt Brian James Liz Klinger Jay Koester Denise Morris Kathy Patron Amy Patterson Conniella Rovelli Kim Kang Sanjima Shan Schwartz Katie Greenwald...Matt Hydeman, ...Sarah Nagl Graphica Artist Dave Campbell...Joe Harder ...Micah Lanker William Alix ... Martin Afteasten Valerie Bontrager ... Richard Devkin1 John Gamble ... Mellissa Lacey Tom Lailinger ... Heather Loftin Amy Sott ... Brian Vanderviet James Wilcox ... Jenny Zeiler Photografera Kip Chin...Kristi Fogler Todd Sellier JUSTIN GARBERG Business manager Business manager JENNIFER BLOWEY Retail sales manager Sales and marketing adviser Retail sales manager BILL THOMAS Production Business Staff Campus sales manager...Jason Eberly Regional sales manager...Troy Yawater National & Co-op sales manager...Robin King Production managers...Lara Smith Gretchen Koettermelinch Marketing director...Shannon Reilly Creative director...John Carlton Classified manager...Kelly Connexy Special sections manager...Shelly McConnell Travel manager...Wing Chan Retail assistant...Marcel Blotnick Creative assistant (photographer)...Andrew Anone Zone Managers Chris Butler Jennifer Carr Cameron Death Dean Wexel Jason Kort Retail Account Executives Brigg Bloomquat ... Holly Boren Lora Cornell ... Jason Culbertson John Edwards ... Justin Frosolone Emily Gibson ... Meredith Hennling Elaine Joseph ... Kristin Kavoulak Amy Matheson ... Carrie Meeks Melissa Muttack ... Dan Oades Regan Overy ... Martin Ropp Andrew Shriver ... Alan Stiglic Todd Winters ... Janel Zellers Campus Account Executives Shelly Falevits ...Michelle Jacoba Ame Looper ...Mark Mastro ...Erin Wiggs Regional Account Executive Arron Kirby ... Alex Kolb Jackie Nigro ... Brian Platt Ed Connealy ... Jamie Kasher Jacquelyn Pang ... Michael Robinson Anno Marie Sandertin 2. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Friday, January 21, 1994 5 0 2 4 6 Jennie Zeiner/KANSAN 1 2 3 Josh Grimm, Lawrence High School student, holds his head in disbelief after a car accident at 11th and Maine streets near Memorial Stadium. Grimm and Sam Bartels, the driver, were driving down the 11th Street hill when they lost control after striking a curb, overturned and slid into Julie Campbell, Lawrence graduate student's car, which was sitting at the intersection. No one was transported to the hospital according to KU police. Car accident An environmentally conscious toaster landed its KU student inventor a free trip to Chicago and a prize last weekend. Micah Laaker/KANSAN Tran said his objective was an environmentally conscious toaster that was easy to use and store. By Trine Andersen Special to the Kansan At the annual International Housewares Show in Chicago, Hien Tran, Wichita senior, presented his sketch of the toaster model. The toaster won third place in this year's National Housewares Manufacturers Association's National Student Competition. First place went to an expandable microwave designed to accommodate all sizes of food containers. A picnic cart and a thermometer tied for second place. Tran's toaster shared third place with a sweeper and three gallon water dipper. In addition to the trip,Tran won $1,000. The toaster, a final project for Tran's Industrial Design III class last semester, is a two-slice cordless toaster that can run an estimated three months on an 8-ounce canister of natural gas. The fact that the toaster runs on natural gas, Tran said, makes it more energy efficient and cheaper to use. Natural gas is a energy source and use. A portable natural gas toaster designed by Hien Tran, Wichita senior, won third place in the 1994 National Housewives Manufacturers Association's National Student Competition. Tran's toaster, which is cordless and portable, is fueled by natural gas. Gas'n'Go, just don't forget the jelly 1. Natural gas canister is stored in the handle. 2. Natural gas enters and exits toasting chamber. 3. Toaster is turned on and off with this switch. takes much less energy than electricity to create a given amount of heat, he said. To renew the energy source, people simply would go to the store and either get a new canister or have the old one refilled. Tran said. "In the future, we will have natural gas outlets in the homes," he said. Kennedy Tran, who is majoring in industrial design, said he saw the housewares show as an opportunity to meet people in the business. "The show was for people who decide what goes on the shelves next year," he said. "It was amazing to meet the people that make such difference in this business." He said he hoped to sell his design to someone who would be willing to pay $6,000 to $7,000 for a patent. A businessman from Hong Kong showed interest in buying the design which means that Tran, for a specific amount of money, would give up his rights to the finished product. Tran has yet to make a decision. Before the show he took the first step toward a patent by having the design notarized. "I felt like a businessman and wanted to go into business right away," Tran said. Security devices may not be safe Sprays, alarms can cause victim harm All automotive glass replacement & insurance claims handled. 730 New Jersey 843-4416 By Angelina Lopez Kansan staffwriter Lawrence police Sgt. Richard Nickell said all these devices had varying degrees of effectiveness, depending on one's training with the device and willingness to use it. The personal alarm looks like a beeper and has a clip which you can attach to your clothes, said George Locke, executive vice president in charge of marketing at DAC Technologies, a firm that sells alarms. A string is connected to a pin within the alarm, and when the string is pulled, he said, a 130-decibel alarm will sound for over two and a half hours or until the pin is reinserted. Since August, the company has sold over 500,000 alarms, he said. "The problem with devices like pepper spray is that many people aren't adequately trained to use them when the time comes," he said. "Then, the attacker can turn around and use the device on the victim." Editor's Note: This is the second in a series of articles in The University Daily Kansan that address the effects of violence in our community. pepper spray is made from oleoresin capsicum, an extract of food-grade chili peppers, said Jean Chin, office manager of Qualco Products Co., a firm that sells pepper spray. It is an alternative to mace because it is safer, she said. When sprayed, it causes crying, itching and sneezing, but no permanent damage. Many sprays also contain a dye which will show up on the attacker under ultraviolet light, she said. Christy Morris, Englewood, Colo., senior, takes her "Pal" wherever she goes. Fighting Back A Look at Violence in Lawrence In this era of violence, many people are arming themselves with devices they hope will deter an attacker. Uncomfortable with a gun, they are turning to personal safety devices — pepper sprays, mace, stun guns and personal safety alarms. "The Pal" is a personal safety alarm that is about the size of a beeper and releases a ear-piercing sound when a pin is pulled out. KU Police Sgt. Rose Rozmiarek saw an obvious problem with personal "It makes me feel safer," Morris said. "I know it's a false sense of safety, but I'd rather have that than nothing." For All Your Glass Needs Pocket Protection "Pocket protectors," or security devices that can be carried in a pocket, are selling out in department stores and mail-order catalogs across the nation. These are some of the most popular devices. The Pal - this device has a belt clip and can be worn on pants. When the Pal cord is pulled, a 130-decibel alarm sounds. Stun Gun – this can release volts of electricity to stun an attacker when pressed against their body. Tear Gas – this can be on a key chain. When a button is depressed, a cloud of vapor temporarily blind an attacker is released. Micah Laaker/KANSAN "If a person being attacked triggers their alarm, will there be anyone in the area to hear it? And if there is, will they recognize what it is and go through the appropriate means of calling for help?" she said. In St. Louis, a 10-year-old girl was abducted though she carried a personal alarm and had triggered it. The neighbors, however, had no idea what it was. Annoyed by the sound, they buried the alarm when they found it. By this time, the little girl was nowhere to be seen. "The problem with these things is that they put the burden of responsibility on the survivor," said Connie Burk, Lawrence resident and member of Students Against Violence Against Womyn. "People will say, You had mace? Why didn't you use it?" or "You should have used pepper gas, not mace." The best means of protecting yourself is to be aware of what's going on around you, Nickell said. "If you're at the point of using the device, then you're already a victim," Nickell said. TRAVEL CENTER TORNADO Break ForThe Beach Daytona Beach $119 Panama City $138 Padre $148 includes 7 night's lodging SKI Includes und trip transportation from Lawrence by motorcoach. 2 night's hotel accommodations $298 3-day lift tickets per person 3-day skirts rentals roi Cancun Includes roundtrip airfare from KC. 7 night's beachfront hotel airport/hotel transfers March20-27 $640 per person Other packages available letone of our agents help design a package custom tailored Restrictions apply to all rates based on maximum unit occupancy per person Subject to availability & change. call for details 841-7117 call for details 841-7117 TRAVEL CENTER TRAVEL CENTER Southern Hills Center 1601 West 23rd m-w9:5-30 * sat9:30-2 Free Afghan Whigs Paraphernalia Clip this ad and send it with your name and address to: Elektra Entertainment ATTN:A Whigs 500 Wall St. Glendale Hts., IL 60139 to receive Afghan Whigs promotional merchandise! The AFGHAN WHIGS GENTLEMEN Available at: Kief's GO CHIEFS! Records Expires:2/11/94 Watch the Chiefs wrap up the AFC Championship on our new BIG SCREEN and enjoy a - NEW60" BIG SCREEN TV Cheeseburger,Fries, & Drink only $2.50. Sun. Jan 23 Opens at 11AM 401 N.2nd 842-0377 JOHNNY'S TAVERN LAWRENCE / KANSAS CITY WE HONOR KANSAK Join us for a new program that is aimed at first-year students who are interested in reporting, editing or photojournalism. Call or write Christine Laue, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4810 •Organizational Meeting 4:30 p.m. January 27, 1994 Rm. 204 Stauffer-Flint Hall CASH IN A FLASH $15 Today $30 This Week Hours: M-F 9-6 Sat 10-3 Plus a $3 Bonus By donating your blood plasma Walk-ins welcome See our ad in the classified section Lawrence Donor Center NABI 816 W. 24th Behind Laird Noller Ford 749-5750 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN You don't have to be a staff member on one of the top college newspapers to receive its rewards. $ 816 W.24th LOOK LOOKING FOR THE BEST PLACE TO GET IN SHAPE? TOTAL FITNESS ATHLETIC CENTER - Cardiovascular Training Area: Stairmasters, Freadmills, and Life Cycles - The most advanced machine and free weight area - 1508 sq. ft. Robit Floor - Boxing Area and Classes *Boxing Area and Classes *Youth Activity Center *Tanning Beds, Jacuzzi, Saunas Pro Shop - Self Defense Classes - AND MORE!!! TOTAL FITNESS ATHLETIC CENTER WE'RE EVERYBODY'S CHOICE FOR TOTAL FITNESS! 2108 West 27th, Suite C Park Plaza Shopping Center (913) 832-0818 6 Friday, January 21, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN BUDGET UNION ACTIVITIES SUA FILMS STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA FILMS FRI...JAN. 21 - SUN...JAN. 23 DAZED AND CONFUSED FRI. & SAT. 7:00PM FRI. & SAT. 9:30PM SUN. 2:00PM HIGHLANDER FRI. & SAT. MIDNIGHT ALL Shows in KANSAS Union. Tickets $2.50. Midnight $3.00 FREE WITH SUA Movie Card. CALL 864-3804 FOR MORE INFO. BRAID PITT JULIE TEE LEWIS KALIFORNIA Fear never travels alone. R.O. GRAMEREY COPYRIGHT 1987 WINNER OF MUSIC DESIGNER'S GRANT OF USE BRAD PITT JUDIETTE LEWIS KALIFORNIA Fear never travels alone R GRAMERIC COPRIGHT INFORMATION AND PRODUCTIONS BY BILL MEYER KALIFORNIA(R) Today (4:30), 7:15 NO SHOW SAT! the Piano a Jane campion film MARKMAN THE, PIANO(R) Today (4:15), 7:00, 9:30 "SIZZLER!" An event presented by a friend of the century for the benefit of the arts HOT! An event presented by a friend of suburban sex and emotional non-pubic humor Susan A. Stinson SEX & ZEN(NC-17) 9:35 Only NO SHOW SAT! LIBERTY HALL 642 Mass. 749- 1912 Theatre 1 is accessible to all persons the Piano a jane campion film THE. PIANO(R) Today (4:15) 7:00 9:30 "SIZZLER" An experience in not a class of 11th century experiences by the composer HOHTI An excerpension oure une exposition sur équation adulte simulant humour Susan Zin Crown Cinema BEFORE & PM - ADULTS $3.00 (INHERited DOSING) SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00 VARSITY 9175 MAYA HURTLE 641-5191 Polican Brief PG-13 2:00, 8:00, 8:00 HILLCREST 9125 IOWA 641-5191 Mrs. Doubtfire PG-13 2:00, 4:44, 7:15, 9:40 Intersection R 2:15, 8:15, 7:15, 9:40 Air Up There PG 2:15, 8:15, 7:15, 9:40 Tombstone R 2:15, 8:45, 7:15, 9:40 Philadelphia PG-13 2:00, 4:46, 7:20, 9:50 CINEMA TWIN 11700 IOWA 641-5191 MyLife PG-13 2:30, 5:00, 7:30, 8:45 Rudy PG 2:30, 5:00, 8:45 Malice R 8:45 Sunday 50¢ bowling Not just for bowling any more! Jaybowl 864-3545 Crown Cinema BEFORE 4 PM, ADULTS $3.10 (SMALL TO SEATING) SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00 VARSITY (810) MASSACHUSETTS 842-5191 Polican Brief PG-13 2:00 5:00, 8:00 HILLCREST 926 IOWA 842-5191 Mrs. Doubtfire PG-13 2:00, 4:45 7:15, 8:40 7:15, 8:40 7:20, 8:40 Intersection R 2:00, 5:15 7:15, 8:40 7:20, 8:40 Air Up There PG 2:00, 2:35 7:15, 8:40 7:15, 8:40 Tombstone R 7:15, 9:45 7:15, 9:45 7:20, 9:45 Philadelphia PG-13 7:20, 8:50 CINEMA TWIN (1110 IOWA 842-5191) $1.25 MyLife PG-13 2:30, 5:00 7:30, 2:45 7:30, 2:45 Rudy PG 2:30 5:00, 7:20 Malice R 9:45 SHOW TIMES FOR TODAY ONLY Sunday 50¢ bowling Not justor bowing any more! 864-3545 DICKINSON THEATRE Dickinson 6 2339 South Iowa St. Shadowlands PG *4:05, 7:00, 9:45 Iron Will PG *4:30, 7:00, 9:35 Grumpy Old Man PG-13 *4:20, 7:20, 9:50 Beethoven's 2nd PG *4:15, 7:15, 9:35 Sister Act II PG *4:25, 7:10, 9:45 House Party III R *4:40, 7:25, 9:40 $3 PrimeTime Show (1). Hearing Dolby Senior Citizen Anytime Impaired Stereo Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday--January 20, 21, 22, 23 4 DAY FEEDING FRENZY 3 Hard Shell Tacos for 99¢ TACO JOHNS TACO JOHN'S. 1626 w. 23rd 2309 Haskell 1101 w. 6th Jaybowl Not last for bowling any more! 864-3545 DICKINSON THEATRE Dickinson 841 BAI 8000 2339 South Iowa St. Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday--January 20, 21, 22, 23 4 DAY FEEDING FRENZY 3 Hard Shell Tacos for 99¢ TACO JOHN'S. TACO JOHN'S. 1626 w. 23rd 2309 Haskell 1101 w. 6th Looking for Real World exPerience? THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN is an experience that will test your skills and abilities to the limit, an experience from which you will gain knowledge and friendship,and the experience of a lifetime. GAIN: - Valuable Communication Skills • Time Management Skills • Professionalism • Sales and Service Knowledge • Real World Experience POSITIONS NOW AVAILABLE: • Assistant Account Executives • Research Assistants • Management Assistants Applications due: Applications due: FRIDAYJANUARY 28 BY 5:00p.m. in 119 Stauffer Flint Hall. A limited number of positions are available. ALL MAJORS ENCOURAGED TO APPLY. SPECIAL PRICES FOR STUDENTS, STAFF AND FACULTY Come Back to School with the latest in computer technology! MTech V433S-D33 VESA Local Bus Bundle MECH - Intel 486DX-38 Processor * 8MB RAM, 286K Cache * 1.44MB 3.5" Floppy Disk Drive * 1.2MB 5.25" Floppy Disk Drive * 248MB IDE Hard Disk Drive * 1MB VESA Local Bus SVGA Windows Accelerator * Pentium P24T Upgradeable ZIF Socket * 14" SVGA Color Monitor Non-Inter融ed * Desktop/Midtower Convertible Case * 6 16-Bit ISA Slots, 2 32-bit VLB/16-Bit ISA Slots - 101 Key Enhanced Keyboard * Mistake #2 Move #1 - MS-DOS 6.2, Windows 3.1 Your Price: $1794 Same system available through state contract for University purchase - Novell NetWare Certified * IBM QOS Certified - Microsoft Windows Certified Heather Lofflin / KANSAN - Microsoft Works for Windows 3.0 MICROTECH COMPUTERS 2550 Iowa St. Tower Plaza next to Applebees (913)842-2667 Artist creates underwater atmosphere for students Mural symbolizes college experience By Anne Sutherland Special to the Kansan What was once a billboard ad for a plant store now hangs on the east wall of Wescoe Terrace in the form of a colorful mural. The mural, painted by Trey Parker, Lawrence graduate student, is the result of a project begun in Fall 1992 by the KU Student Art League. The league held a competition to find an artist to take on the project which was sponsored by Student Senate. Parker's idea was chosen by a panel of three judges: Charles Eldredge, professor of art history, Roger Shimomura, professor of art, and Stan Herd, a local artist. I am here. I am here. I am here. Parker said the original criteria for the competition had asked for the mural's subject to be about food. After talking with the judges, he decided to submit a different idea, which he drew from his graduate studies. With the help of seven assistants from the league, Parker took four months to complete the project. He painted blue water designs over the original design of flowers and trees on the billboard to convey a feeling of being underwater. Trey Parker, Lawrence graduate student, sits beside his mural which hangs on the wall of Wescoe Terrace. The new mural has attracted a lot of attention from people eating and working in the cafeteria. "The whole mural looks as if you're underwater," Parker said. "The design represents the submersion you feel in college. You either breathe or you drown." The feedback from students about Parker's mural has all been positive said Karen Haas, Wescoe Terrace cashier. "We get a lot of comments on the mural, and I see students just stop and stare at it during lunch." Haas said. "It definitely catches your attention," Ye Chen, Derby senior said. Chen's friend, Lai Wong, Malaysia, senior, who was taking a break at Wesco Terrace between classes, also found the mural interesting. "It's very eye catching." Wong said. "I like the way they've redone the whole cafeteria." Parker said that the painting was completed late last summer but that it had taken a while to actually get it hung in Wescoe. "It been just sitting over at the fourth floor of the art and design building since I got it done" he said. Student Senate, which approved $950 for expenses related to the painting of the mural, lost track of the mural's whereabouts last October. was more a case of bureaucratic panicking" "That really had nothing to do with me or the art league," Parker said. "It Parker's future, like his mural, is bright. His work was recently seen in Kiosk, a student magazine, and one of his works was featured on Cable Channel 6's program "Silhouettes." Parker will officially sign the painting at 3 p.m. on Feb. 3 at Wescoe Terrace. Don't leave home without it... Exclusive offers for the KU Community... Valid through July 31,1994! GOING OUT OF BUSINESS SALE Inventory Liquidation! Everything on Sale! Entire Inventory Included! WOMEN'S: CAMBRIDGE... UP TO 50% OFF SPORTSWEAR IN SOUTHWEST LOOKS WOOLRICH & BOULEVARD ... FROM $6999 OUTERWEAR & JACKETS CAMBRIDGE SPORTSWEAR... FROM $3499 DENIM TOPS & SKIRTS EAGLE'S EYE & C.J. COTTON... 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Kizer Cummings jewelers 749-4333 833 Mass • Lawrence, KS 0 Ice Beer is Here We support Jayhawk basketball!! Graham's Retail Liquor The mom & pop liquor store of Lawrence 1906 MASS 843-8166 Weights We Buy, Sell Trade & Consign USED & New Sports Equipment B used weights—.25cents per lb. PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 1029 Massachusetts phone 841-PLAY 4TH It's Our Anniversary And You're Invited To A Surf-n-Drag Party!!! *Food &Drink *Hot Rod & Surf Music All Day! Live Music From The Eudoras @5 pm *Door Prizes- Grand Prize-Passes For Two to Topeka's Capitol Fun Park Go Cart Track! LOVE SEA & SKY INSTITUTE FOR SOME BYVENAL FARM STUDIES GARDEN 936½ Mass (upstairs) 843-1551 "in the heart of downtown" The biggest savings of the heating season are here now! SAVE $100-$400! Every Vermont Castings stove, fireplace or fireplace insert is on sale now, with savings up to $400. Wood, gas and pellet burning models available, and they install almost anywhere in the home! But hurry, sale ends February 5! ORA SPA, POOL & FIRESIDE 1033 VERMONT, LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 913-841-7787 "90 Days Same As Cash" Vermont Castings More Than Heat. Warmth. NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Counsel appointed for Whitewater The Associated Press WASHINGTON — President Clinton and his wife should be questioned under oath as part of a "thorough and impartial investigation" of their Arkansas land deals, Robert B. Fiske Jr. said yesterday as he was named special counsel to examine the case. ration. The former Republican U.S. attorney said he was prepared to "go flat out" in the investigation. "It's important for the country to get this done and get it done as quickly and as thoroughly and as fairly as possible," Fiske said. His appointment by Attorney General Janet Reno, after pressure from congressional Republicans and other Clinton critics, fell on the first anniversary of the president's inaugr Senate Republican leader Bob Dole, who had asked for such an appointment, said it should not stop congressional committees from their own investigations. White House officials said the Clintons would cooperate with Fiske. When asked about the counsel's plan to seek their statements under oath, White House Press Secretary Dee Dee Myers said, "He hasn't done it yet. We'll deal with that when it comes." The selection of Fiske, now a Wall Street lawyer, fits suggestions that the special counsel be a veteran attorney and, to demonstrate independence, a Republican. Fiske was appointed as a U.S. attorney by Republican President Gerald Ford, but he served mainly under Democratic President Jimmy Carter, from 1976 to 1980. Fiske's review aims to find "whether any individuals or entities have committed a violation of any criminal law" relating to the Clinton's involvement with Whitewater, Madison Guaranty and a company called Capital Management Services. Also to be investigated is if the July suicide of White House deputy counsel Vincent Foster was related to the Clinton's, Madison Guaranty or Whitewater. A file on Whitewater was found in Foster's office after his death. Fiske could send back to the department any allegations of wrongdoing that are unrelated to the Clinton's, said department spokesman John Russell. Cabinet shake-up deals blow to Russian reformers The Associated Press MOSCOW — Turning away from drastic economic reforms that have made life harder for many Russians, the prime minister announced a Cabinet shake-up yesterday that demoted or dumped most of the country's bold young reformers. "The period of market romanticism has ended," said Viktor Chernomyrdin, who advocates a go-slow approach to reforms but insists that efforts to move toward a free market economy will continue. One of President Boris Yeltsin's key reformers, 35-year-old Boris Fyodorov, rejected an offer to keep his post as finance minister. "This is a turn back," he told reporters. and Defense Minister Pavel Grachev, were not affected by the shake-up. Yeltsin made the changes reluctantly, at Chernomyrdin's prudding, after the strong showing by Communists and extreme nationalists in last month's parliamentary elections showed a dangerous level of public discontent, aides to Yeltsin said. Yeltsin signed a decree appointing the new, conservative-dominated Cabinet but did not comment on it. Ministers in non-economic posts, including Foreign Minister Andrei Kozrev Russian newspapers predicted the new Cabinet would take such crowd-pleasing but inflationary measures as raising salaries, propping up inefficient industries and subsidizing collective farms. "From now on, the government of reforms is dead," Izvestia declared. Western leaders, including President Clinton, have urged Yeltsin to reduce the suffering of the Russian people. But the departure of key reformers will undermine Western confidence in Russia's economy and could endanger $1.5 billion in long-awaited loans from the International Monetary Fund. Female student attends Citadel The Associated Press CHARLESTON, S.C. — Shannon Faulkner walked into a biology class at The Citadel yesterday and made history. She became the first woman in the school's 151-year history to take a class with the corps of cadets. "It wasn't like walking into any other class, when there are 30 guys in the class and you're the only woman," said Faulkner, who also celebrated her 19th birthday yesterday. "My first day of class went well," she said. "The cadets have spoken to me. I don't think I'll be having any problems." Faukner, who had all gender references removed from her high school transcript, first was accepted by the college, then rejected when Citadel officials found out her gender. So she sued the state-supported military college last year, saying its all-male policy was unconstitutional. A federal judge ruled she could attend day classes, although not as a cadet, while her lawsuit proceeded. The Citadell went to the Supreme Court to try to keep her out, but Chief Justice William Rehnquist on Tuesday said she could attend classes. "NEW STAGEPLAY DELIVERS A STRONG MESSAGE... ...A PLAY THAT SHOULDN'T GO UNNOTICED. EVERYONE SHOULD SEE IT." ANDREA STEWART, KANSAS CITY KANSAN THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS BLACK STUDENT UNION PRESENTS A MUST SEE STAGEPLAY COLOR DOESN'T MATTER THE LIED CENTER At the Lied Center University of Kansas FRIDAY JANUARY 28th 8:00 PM TICKETS: $8 GENERAL ADMISSION $5 STUDENTS TICKETS AT: TICKET MASTER including Hy-Vee, Sound Warehouses, Gomers all and Ticket Centers. CHARGE-BY-PHONE: (818) 931-3300 Tickets subject to convention charge. To charge tickets by phone using MasterCard or Visa call toll free 1-800-454-7019; in Lawrence 864-ARTS; or call any Ticketmaster outlet including Hy-Vee and Sound Warehouse (816) 931-3330 or (913)234-4545. What's a BLIMPIE? It's simple! BLIMPIE fresh slices all our meats and cheeses to give you the tastiest sub sandwich. We use only top quality meats and cheeses on fresh baked white or wheat bread with II sliced tomatoes, shredded lettuce and onions, all complemented with a special oil and vinegar dressing and oregano seasoning. 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Planned Parenthood Quality reproductive health care for men and women Now Open in Lawrence 1420CKasold Drive (Orchards Corners) 832-0281 AVIATION AMHIGH AM HIGH $2000.00 SCHOLARSHIP If you have a GPA of 2.5 or higher and are a full time student, you can qualify for an Air Force ROTC scholarship. In addition, you will receive $100.00 each academic month for our last two years of college. This scholarship is available to ANY ACADEMIC MAJOR. The deadline to apply for the fall 1994 semester is rapidly approaching. For more information on this exciting opportunity talk to Captain Brad Gentry or Captain Bob Wicks at 864-4676. AIR FORCE ROTC NATURAL WAY Natural Fiber Clothing : Natural Body Care HUGE CLEARANCE SALE THIS THURSDAY ONLY! 20% OFF EVERY REGULAR PRICED ITEM PLUS SAVE 20% TO 60% On Selected items This Friday and Saturday Only! This Friday and Saturday Only. SUNDAY PALM TREE The United Nations has largely failed in its relief effort in war-torn Bosnia and should either get tough by bringing in more troops or get out, a senior aid official said yesterday. Bosnian leader calls for air strikes as U.N. relief efforts fall apart BEACH RESORT Soon to be Sun Spree Resort Holiday Inn: "How much of the population are we keeping alive if we are only bringing 20 percent of the minimum" amount of food needed each month per person, said Larry Hollingworth, head of mission for the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees in Zenica, central Bosnia. PARTY PADRE STYLE SPRING BREAK '94 However, NATO officials said U.N. Secretary General Boutros Boutros-Ghali must authorize the first strike. After meeting yesterday with NATO officials, Izebegovich, the leader of Bosnia's Muslims, said he believed the best way to end the war was "the combination of negotiations and some military action against Serbian positions." Apparently frustrated by delays and harassment of relief convoys by the warring parties in Bosnia, Hollingworth suggested the United Nations should either "get more troops and get tough one day or get out." At a summit last week, President Clinton and the leaders of the 15 other NATO countries warned the Serbs of a new determination to order air strikes if needed to relieve embattled Muslim enclaves in Bosnia-Herzegovina. 100 Padre Blvd. South Padre Island, TX Call now for reservations BEST END OF THE ISLAND...WHERE ALL THE "ACTION" IS! 1-800-292-7506 TX 1-800-531-7405 US 1-210-761-5401 THE NEWS in brief Party Time In Brussels, Bosnian President Alija Izegobevic called on NATO to follow through on its threat to launch air strikes against Bosnian Serbs and said the alliance did not need U.N. approval to do so. MN at SOUTH PADRE ISLAND, TX SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina ALL Workout Apparel 20% OFF Shorts, Tops, andPants FromJogbra,Nike and Champion JOCK'S NITCH SPORTING GOODS The Sports Look of Today! TIMETOWORKOUT? LADIES! U. N. aid officials have repeatedly accused all three warring factions — Serbs, Croats and Muslims — of blocking air convoy for an estimated 2.7 million Bosnians dependent on outside help to survive this winter. --ngs may present a problem. "But we have accepted the principle of territorial concessions, and we have also indicated these are not going to be minor concessions." WASHINGTON --- NEW Aerobic Shoes $4999-$7999 Avia, Reebok, Nike, and K-Swiss (Step, Hi-Low Impact, Slide and Stairmaster) - Don'tforgetaboutourcoupons· Hours M-TH 9:30-7 F&S 9:30-6 Sun 12-5 Israel could trade land for peace Peace with Syria will require territorial concessions, Israel's chief negotiator said yesterday, setting the stage for a resumption of talks on Monday. "We are not trying to give up the Golan Heights; we are trying to make peace with Syria." Itamar Rabinovich said. 842-2442 Rabinovich said that it had been counterproductive for negotiators to respond to the questions of reporters staking out the talks and that it had increased tensions in the negotiations. The talks resuming here Monday will be different from the 11 previous rounds: The negotiators will meet at secret locations instead of at the State Department. He called Syria the key to a Middle East settlement and said that the other Arab delegations — Lebanese, Jordanian and Palestinian — would hold off reaching an agreement with Israel for now. The last round ended in deadlock in September. Syria was demanding an Israeli commitment to relinquish all of the Golan Heights, and Israel was insisting on a promise of peace with diplomatic recognition and free trade. "The Syrians say from their point of view total withdrawal from the Golan is a prerequisite," Rabinovich said. "We have not accented that." At the same time, the Israeli diplomat said President Hafaz Assad had taken some positive steps in his meeting Sunday with President Clinton in Geneva. TOKYO Parliament considers self reform TOKYO — After more than five years of debate over cleaning up Japanese politics, it all comes down to one vote today in Parliament. If Prime Minister Morihiro Hosokawa wins, the corruption-plagued political system will undergo its greatest transformation in 45 years. If he loses, it's back to square one on reform — and Hosokawa could be out of a job. The vote, in Parliament's upper house, is over Hosokawa's package of reform bills, which would ban corporate contributions to individual politicians and change the system for electing the lower house of Parliament. 840 Massachusetts The bills are designed to end repeated bribery and influence-peddling scandals that have led to the demise of several Japanese governments during the 38-year reign of the Liberal Democratic Party. The bills passed the lower house in November and were cleared by the upper house committee yesterday. But the outcome of the final vote, scheduled for this afternoon, was far from certain. Several Socialists, the largest party in Hosokawa's ruling coalition, have said they will vote against the bills, and about a dozen other legislators have not announced their votes. MANASSAS, Va. — An emotionally battered Lorenza Bobbitt lashed back at her sexually abusive husband by cutting his penis off, her lawyer was in closing arguments yesterday. MANASSAS, Va Bobbitt awaits jury deliberation the prosecutor conceded Bobbitt was abused during her four-year marriage, but said she attacked her husband in "a calculated and malicious act of revenge." Bobbitt, 24, faces up to 20 years in prison and deportation to her native South America if convicted of malicious wounding. Judge Herman A. Whisenant Jr. told jurors they also could consider a lesser charge of unlawful wounding, which has a maximum penalty of five years in prison, or find her not guilty. The jury of seven women and five men began deliberating yesterday afternoon after seven days of testimony. It had to decide whether Bobbitt acted in willful, malicious anger when she mutilated her husband, or whether she snapped under the pressure of years of abuse. Defense attorney Blair Howard maintained that John Bobbitt raped Bobbitt June 23 shortly before she severed his penis. Prosecutor Mary Grace O'Brien countered that Bobbitt suffered violence in her marriage but there was no "reign of terror," as her lawyers claimed. Compiled from The Associated Press. BASKETBALL NET No.1 Sale FREE '93 HAWKS DOMAIN T-SHIRT With the purchase of any one basketball design sweatshirt. FREE Champion U.S.A. LOGO T-SHIRT With the purchase of any one Champion product. Check our large stock of Champion shirts and sweatshirts priced 20-40% below the regular price! Sale ends Friday, January 21 Not valid in conjunction with coupons or discount cards. Save your cash and check receipts for a rebate next semester! KU KU BOOKSTORES Kansas Union 864-4644 KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store offering rebates to KU students Burge Union 864-5697 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Friday, January 21, 1994 9 Kansas looks for elusive success at Iowa State By Gerry Fey Kansan sportswriter Road games are always tough in the Big Eight Conference, but the burial ground for conference foes may be in Ames, Iowa. The Jayhawks travel to those grounds and will face Iowa State at 3:10 p.m. on Saturday. The No. 1 Kansas men's basketball team enters the game, which will be televised by the Raycom network, at 16-2 overall and 1-1 in the conference, while Iowa State is 9-4 overall. Since the 1991-92 season, the Cyclones are 12-4 in the conference at home. But the Cyclones have lost two home games this season and quickly have fallen to 0-3 in the conference. In its first conference game Jan. 3, Iowa State lost to Nebraska 78-72, which ended a 22-game winning streak at home. The Cyclones apparently enjoy playing the Jayhawks at home. In the past 12 meetings at Ames, Iowa State has a 9-3 record against Kansas. Despite the impressive record, Kansas coach Roy Williams said playing at Iowa State's Hilton Coliseum did not bother him. "To me, it's just another arena," he said. "It's the other team. They really enjoy playing at home. I've never tried to put too big of an emphasis on how much more difficult it is to play on the road for us." initely a difficult place to play, but I think that we are capable of winning there." Kansas senior forward Patrick Richey, who started his only game last season against Iowa State in Ames, said every game in the conference was difficult. "We did win there my freshman year and we've lost a couple close games to them." Richey said. "I think it's def- Williams said Iowa State's junior frontline of forward Julius Michalik, forward Fred Hoiberg and center Loren Meyer was tough. But Meyer broke his collarbone earlier this week when he was in a truck that collided with a freight train. "You hate to see that happen," Williams said of the accident. "We're in for a tough game regardless. Hoiberg, it isn't possible for him to have a bigger fan than I am. He does so many big things and little things to help them win. Michalik gives you the 6-10, 6-11 size as a perimeter player. Those three can score." An injury also has affected the Jayhawks. Senior forward Richard Scott is listed as probable for the game after suffering a mild concussion against Kansas State Monday. Williams was not sure of Scott's status, but said he would hate to have a situation similar to Iowa State's with Meyer. "Over a short term, you can make up for the loss of one player sometimes," he said. "Over a longer term, it's going to be a problem. The other night in the K-State game, I think the kids played very hard with the absence of Richard Scott. But I don't want to be without Richard for three or four or five games." Richey said the key to winning on the road was to answer a scoring run from the home team. "We've got to stay together as a team," he said. "They're going to have their runs. The crowd's really going to get into it and get behind them. We just have to maintain our poise." Victory against Sooners is a tall order OU's height and ailing Hawks present challenge for women By Matt Siegel Kansan sportswriter The biggest challenge that the No. 8 Kansas women's basketball team faces tonight hails not from Oklahoma but from within. Two Kansas players, senior center Lisa Tate and freshmen guard Tamecka Dixon, may not play in tonight's game at Allen Field House. "I'm really concerned right now," Kansas coach Marian Washington said. "I'm not really sure what their status will be for the game." Tate was admitted to Watkins Health Center yesterday for flu-like symptoms. Dixon has been out all week with what Washington said she thought was a ruptured cyst. "We can't be getting down on ourselves or think what are we going to do," junior forward Alana Slatter said. "We're sad that anybody is injured, but we just have to ignore it." The timing of Tate's illness and Dixon's injury couldn't have been worse. Oklahoma is second in the Big Eight Conference, and they are the only team besides Kansas that is undefeated in conference play. The Sooners are 3-0 in the conference. "It's hurts us thoroughly," Washington said. "With either one of them possibly not being able to play, it hurts our depth. Even if Tamecka and Lisa play, they are certainly not going to be at full speed." Speed may be the key to the game because both teams like an up-tempo style of play. Oklahoma leads the conference in scoring, averaging 84.9 points a game. Kansas is second in the conference, averaging 81.3. Washington said that in order for Kansas to be effective they need to keep turnovers to a minimum and contain Oklahoma's 6-foot-2 junior forward Angi Guffy and 6-3 junior center Mandy Wade. Washington said that she was worried about Oklahoma's height advantage. "They have a front line of 6-5, 6-4, 6-2 and 6-4," Washington said. "They have tremendous size. They're probably one of, if not the tallest team in the 23 conference." Oklahoma has used their height advantage to post the highest field goal percentage in the conference. Their confidence has been helped by the play of sophomore forward Etta Maytuby, who is leading the conference in field goal percentage and averaging 22.3 points a game. She was named Sports Illustrated's player-of-the week last week. Junior guard Sharee Mitchum is leading the conference in assists and Guffy is fifth on the Big Eight Active career scoring list. Wade is one of the top 10 rebounders in the conference, averaging 7.1 rebounds a game. These contributions have keyed a Sooner six-game winning streak. "They're one of the top scoring teams in the conference, so we know that they obviously know how to take the ball to the hole or shoot it outside," Slatter said. "Wherever they are attacking from, they can do. We just have to buckle down and play tough." Even though the team may not be at full strength there are some positives Kansas can focus on. The Jayhawks are on an eight-game winning streak, and lead the conference in field goal percentage defense. Also, three players are averaging double figures in scoring. Kansas is undefeated at home and has a 13-1 overall record, which is the best 14-game start in school history. Despite the fact that Oklahoma is 10-3, all of its losses have come on the road. Kansas' last game against Colorado drew a record crowd of* 13,500. Last season the team averaged 1,042 fans at home. Apparently the Jayhawks' accomplishments don't impress fellow Division I coaches. Although they have won eight consecutive games and won twice last weekend, they dropped from No 8. to No.9 in the nation according to the USA Today's Coaches' Poll. Valerie Bontrager / KANSAN major forward Alana Slatter shoots a basket against freshman forward Jennifer Trapp yesterday during practice. The Jayhawks will battle Oklahoma for No. 1 in Big Fight Conference tonight in Allen Field House. "I learned a long time ago that you can't depend on polls because they're very political," Washington said. "I think the fact that we won two ball games and dropped in the polls is a prime example." Men's tennis opens tonight TOUCHDOWN Heather Lofflin / KANSAK Seth Korey, Scottsdale, Ariz., junior, returns the ball during the men's tennis team practice at the Alvamar RacquetClub. The Jayhawks play Tusla at 6:30 p.m. today and face Illinois tomorrow at Alvamar. Kansas is led by Reid Slattery, a sophomore who is ranked No. 22 in the nation in singles. By Matt Siegel Kansan sportswriter Kansan sportswriter On most teams, starting three sophomores, two freshmen and a junior might lead one to think the team is in a rebuilding phase. But that is not the case with the Kansas men's tennis team. The team will be trying to build off what was considered a surprisingly successful fall season. Kansas finished with a 16-8 dual match record and placed third at the Big Eight Conference championships. The Jayhawks won the Intercollegiate Tennis Association Rolex Invitational and the Region V Championships. The Jayhawks' impressive fall season earned them a No. 33 ranking. "It's hard to beat us at any spot," Kansas coach Michael Center said. "We don't give anything away." All this on a team void of any senior leadership. "In a way we have a handful of leaders," said sophomore Reid Slattery. "A lot of us played last season against top players. We may be young, but we're not inexperienced." Slattery, who is ranked No. 22 in the nation, is one of five returning sophomores who compiled winning singles records as freshmen. One of those sophomores, J.P. Vissepo, said that this season may be a breakthrough year for the team. "There will be times that we will be down," said Vissepo, who competed at the No. 4 spot in singles for the jayhawks. "The key thing is that we're always going forward, always moving ahead toward that next step. We know that all of the hard work we've done is going to show up down the line." "Our final goal is to compete in the NCAA Tournament in South Bend, Indiana this May," Center said. "If we progress I think we're capable of making a dent at the NCAA Tournament. I think this team is capable of competing with any team in the country." Center said that because of the team's work ethic he wasn't that concerned about its inexperience. He said he hoped its competitive nature would make up for whatever mistakes might occur. "It's a different sport in a lot of ways," Center said. "You're kind of a lone ranger out there with no one to pass the ball to. Mentally you always have to be prepared to not have any letdowns." Center said that he tried to help the team stay prepared mentally by stressing intensity, focusing and visualizing successful situations. as for conference play, Center said that he expected the team to finish as one of the top four teams when conference play begins in April. The men's tennis team opens match play at 6:30 p.m. today against Tulsa and tomorrow against Illinois at the Alvamar Racquet Club.Kansas will be tested by a non-conference schedule that includes highly touted teams such as Arkansas and Pepperdine. Fornow, the team hopes this season will be as successful as last fall. "I had a good feeling about the fall season," Vissepo said. "Actually, I was expecting the team to do well. Everybody just stepped it up a notch. Now we're excited about the spring season." Back-up quarterback leaves Kansas football By Andrew Gilman Kansan sportswriter Kansas back-up quarterback Fred Thomas, who lost his starting job to Asheli Preston after four games this season, has decided not to return to the Kansas football team next season. Thomas, a fourth-year junior, would have been a senior with one year of eligibility remaining. "Fred's a great young man," offensive coordinator Golden Ruel said. "Things didn't quite work out. He's set his priorities towards his education and that's fine. We wish him the best." Thomas appeared in eight games, passed for 427 yards and a touchdown, and completed 42.7 percent of his 89 attempts, including a 75-yard pass to Dwayne Chandler against Western Carolina on Sept. 4, 1993. He also rushed for 55 yards and a touchdown. Thomas, who plans to graduate in December 1996 with a business degree, said he had no difficulties with the team or the coaches. " (My decision ) was stricly based on grades," he said. "I had no problems at all with the team, no problems." Thomas would have been competing with Preston for the starting quarterback position next fall. "I expected him to challenge for the position," Ruel said. "The QB is a vital position and you'd like to see as many people as possible be there for the team. Anytime someone chooses to not come back, he feels that he's not in a position to challenge." Ruel said he was not surprised by Thomas's decision. "It was not shocking," he said. "But we always hate to see anybody leave." Ruel had only good things to say about Thomas. "He's a great representative for our University," Ruel said. Kansas coach Glen Mason was out of town recruiting and unavailable for comment. Pippen arrested for gun possession The Associated Press CHICAGO — After a lackluster performance on the basketball court, Chicago Bulls forward Scottie Pippen's night got worse. He was arrested shortly after midnight when a police officer checking out his illegally parked car noticed a gun in plain sight. Pippen had been in a restaurant and had come outside while police were around his car. Although he had a license for the loaded semi-automatic weapon, police said it did not entitle him to carry it in public. Pippen was charged with unlawful possession of a weapon, a misdemeanor, according to watch commander Walter Logan. That meant fingerprinting and 45 minutes behind bars before his release on a $100 cash bond. 10 Fridav. January 21, 1994 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Chiefs hope new offense will bring title The Associated Press ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. — The Buffalo Bills changed offenses and changed their fortunes. The Kansas City Chiefs have tried a similar tactic. When the Bills went to the no-huddle attack, engineered by Jim Kelly, and utilized the all-around skills of Thurman Thomas, they became the American Football Conference's dominant team. On Sunday, the Chiefs will try to stop the Bills from winning their fourth consecutive conference title. It is Kansas City's first AFC championship game since, well, the Chiefs never have been in this game. They made the Super Bowl after the 1966 and 1969 seasons, but represented the AFL, before the merger took effect. The Chiefs have been good enough to make the playoffs the past four years. But while the Bills were unbeaten in the AFC playoffs during that span, the Chiefs won only once. "I thought that this particular offense was the type of offense that I was looking to get involved with," coach Marty Schottenheimer said Wednesday. "I was looking to be able to catch more balls vertically and not necessarily 40 yards downfield. But, rather vertically, with a shorter area than the other offense afforded us. "Once again, the acquisition of Joe was related to the fact that this guy could give us a chance to accelerate the process of transition." That has impressed the Bills, who envy Montana's 4-0 record in Super Bowls and realize he could prevent them from a fourth trip to the NFL title game. Although Montana had several assorted injuries that cost him about half the season, he has been his old self in the playoffs. He led the Chiefs back to victories against Pittsburgh and Houston with strong finishes. "I look at Joe in the same light I look at Michael Jordan," said All-Pro defensive end Bruce Smith. "He has ability far beyond most quarterbacks and other athletes. No other quarterback other than Terry Bradshaw has won four Super Bowls, and Joe's 37 and on his way to trying to do it again. Without him, they probably would not be in the position they are in." It's a position Montana loves. He hasn't been to the Super Bowl since the 1989 season, matching the longest non-title drought of his illustrious career. He heard the opinions he was washed up after elbow surgery sidelined him for more than a season and he could not take back his starting job with the 49ers from Steve Young. Now, he is one victory from proving again just how great he is, and two wins from becoming the first player with five Super Bowl rings. Dallas receiver psyched for big game The Associated Press IRVING, Texas — Michael Irvin remembers how depressed the defending Super Bowl champion Dallas Cowboys were after an 0-2 start. Now he believes it was the best thing that could have happened. "It woke us up when we started getting slapped in the face," he said. "It was a blessing. We got poked in the mouth. We got kicked in the butt. It helped us get back on track." No team that has started the regular season 0-2 has ever won the Super Bowl. But if Irvin keeps lifting his play in big games, the Cowboys might make it to the Georgia Dome Jan. 30. "The best thing about Irwin is that he's a competitor," said Dallas quarterback Troy Aikman. "He's not the rastest nor the most athletic, but he has a tremendous will when the ball is in the air. "He uses his size well and is very aggressive at the point of the catch. He always makes the tough play. And he never shies from contact." In October, Irvin had 12 catches for 168 yards against the San Francisco 49ers. That same day, Jerry Rice caught seven passes for 82 yards for the 49ers. A week earlier, Irvin caught seven passes for 155 yards in a game against Green Bay, where Sterling Sharpe caught four for 34 yards. In the NFC divisional playoffs, Irvin caught nine passes for 126 yards, while Sharpe had six receptions for 128 yards. "I get compared to those guys a lot. so it's natural to get up for those games," Irvin said. "It feels good to get recognized by your peers. That's why making the Pro Bowl is so important, with your peers voting on it." from stthree-yeartotal of 4,249yards is the second highest in NFL history over a similar period of time, trailing only Rice's 4,291 yards from 1988-1990. However, Irvin said the NFC title game in Texas Stadium Sunday won't be Rice vs. Irvin. "I have all the motivation I need," Irvin said. "Jerry Rice is the best receiver ever to play the game, but it's not me and Jerry on Sunday. It's the Cowboys and the 49ers." Jimmy Johnson coached Irvin at the University of Miami and agreed with Aikman that Irvin is a big-game type of player. "He's a tremendous competitor and loves to play in the big game," Johnson said. "He has tremendous confidence in his abilities. "He's a guy who in the 10 years that I've been with him has improved every single year. I thought the first year that I saw him that he was outstanding." Irvin said he goes into every big game "scared." "I tell myself it's the biggest game of my career," he said. "I'm scared by the feeling of losing, how it hurts. Who knows the next time you'll be this close again?" 843-0900 • 843-0900 • 843-0900 • 843-0900 • 843-0900 • 843-0900 • 843-0900 Mountain climbing? Nightlife? Spring Break? Check Us Out! --presents A SOLUTION FOR 3300 W, 15th St., Ste 3, Orchards Corners 914-828-6000 | 914-828-6000 TRAVEL CO. CHINESE Buffet Lunch/Dinner $4.95-$6.75 All-You-Can-Eat 北京 饭店 国家博物馆 北京饭店 Peking Restaurant Free Delivery 749-0003 23rd and Iowa (Behind Hastings) Take advantage of low rates at KU Credit Union. Don't miss your opportunity for 100% financing of a new auto at the low fixed rate of 5.9% for 36 or 48 months and 60 month financing at the fixed rate of 6.75%. 5. 9% Apr Fixed Rate KU CREDIT UNION An Affiliate of 66 Federal Credit Union 100% Financing Auto Loans SIDEWINDERS SALOON GREAT DRINK SPECIALS EVERY DAY OF THE WEEK! 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Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are open. All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise, by prey on customers for its services. The race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or dis- X 100s Announcements 110 Bus. Personals Cap'n Cine Ossipresso Bistro in Port at Alvin a 'Bakery 9th and Iowa. Bice Price in Great Ossipresso Drinks, Mochas, Cakes, Cappucinis & Espresso. Open Nightly t10 pm. 305 For Sale 304 Auto Sales 366 Miscellaneous 370 Want to Buy WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO Really Listen Call or drop by Headquarters We're here because we care. 841-2345 1419 Mass. 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WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500 SCHOLARSHIP OPPORTUNITIES! INTERNSHIP OPPORTUNITIES! GRANTS AND LOANS! CASHE-PLUS SCHOLARSHIP SEARCH Regular Clinic Mours Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm Saturday 8am-11:30am UNIVERSITY SCHOLARSHIP CENTER 33 STRONG HALL 864-5439 story idea? 864-4810 CALL OR DROP BY FOR DETAILS FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY SKILLS WORKSHOP Improve reading, writing, listening, comprehension & conversation skills FREE! Monday, January 24, 7-9 pm 4035 Wescoe Sponsored by the Student Assistance Center SPRING BREAK 94 Stitht! 13th YEAR! SOUTH PADRE ISLAND NORTH PADRE/MUSTANG ISLAND F-L-O-R-I-D-R DAYTONA BEACH PANAMA CITY BEACH ORLANDO/WALT DISNEY WORLD C-O-L-O-R-A-D-O STEAMBOAT VAIL/BEAVER CREek BRECKENRIDGE/KEYSTONE N·E·V·A·D·A· LAS VEGAS -S-O-U-T-H C-C-A-R-O-L-I-N-A HILTON MEAD ISLAND RESERVATIONS AVAILABLE NOW CALL TOLL FREE FOR FULL 1 • 800 • SUNCHASE PUP'S Grill benchwarmers) open late night midnight-3 a.m. come in for some late night munchies BENCHWARMERS friday january21st mountain clyde with motherwell $2.00 longisland ice teas longbeachteas saturday january 22nd they came in droves 2 for 1 wells UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Friday, January 21, 1994 11 $AVEwith your Kansan Card TODAY! SELL IT FAST IN THE KANSAN CLASSIFIED 140 Lost & Found Brown leather jacket left in D20e Dole Jan. 13. If found please contact Mark at 749-8956 Cash reward for return of Apple New Message pad in black leather case. Lost at Food 4 Lestail call. 男 女 FOUND: Wallet at Carson Place Apts. Call 832-909-0019. Unfairly. LOSST Gold ring with black mossy settings in 19rd floor room. Note that it is not mounted. If found please contact LOSST. Reward $150. 200s Employment 205 Help Wanted 1994 EXPANSION Part-time temporary and permanent openings. Flexible schedules around class. $9-$18 to start. Positions need to be filled by 2/1/94. Please call 8-831 for more info. AEROBICS INSTRUCTORS NEEDED. Students are needed now to teach various aerobics classes. Prior experience necessary. $10/hour. Fill up application with Reception Services, 382 Rubin Street. BabySitter needed Monday-Friday, a noon in the morning and transportation required $2/hour. 842-422-6900 CAMP SEQUOIA in New York's Catskill Mines, (mts NC) nyc has WCS job available. Job cabin counselors, specialty instructors for sports, swim lessons, English tutor, English Horsesback Riding, Outdoor Education Adventure Programs and more! Competitive Swimming. English Horsesback Riding. Dry. See us at The Summer Employment Fair in the Kansas Union Bathroom on Ground Hog Day, or call 804-765-3291 for information call SEQUOIA AT (914) 679-3291. Counselors/Support Staff-Careers' Campus/ Northeast-Port salary, RM/BD/Laundry, travel activities, archery, arts & crafts, baseball, basketball, bance, jazz (jazz, ball, batelle), drama, drama, field hoeying, football, golf, guitar, gymnastics, ice lacrosse, nature, photography, piano, pioneering, rocketry, rollerblading, ropes, sailing, scuba, swim, team, tennis, theater, technicians, nurses, water video, water games, kitchen hackers, school books, book bus, mainline, nurses, secretaries, Men call or write: Camp WinDa for 225 Glades Kd. Suite 40E, 60ME, Boca Raton, FL 35417 (467) 954-5500 Women in the workforce, Duxbury, MA 02332 (617) 804-5536 We will be on campus in the student union from 1am-4pm on Saturday. Cruise line, entry level, on-board positions avail- able, great benefits. Summer or year round (813) (814) 605-7920 Snack Bar Attendant-KU Concessions-Murphy-Mon-Fri-Jun-14pm-2pm. Previous cashiering hours vary. Oustidian, Burge Union, Tuesday 4pm-midnight and Saturday 6am-11am. Please join juniorial experience preferred. Able to lift 50 pounds. Work with minimal supervision. All job pays $2.35 per hour apply Kansas and Missouri Personnel Office, Level 5, Union Buffalo FOE Maita, Kansas Union, Saturday and Sunday 6:30pm, must be female, prefer previous housekeeping experience, of average or above physical strength. Clerk, Office Assistant, KU Bookstore, Monday thru Friday 11am-4pm, 40ppm, valid driver's license, Macintosh experience preferred. Knowledge of basic office procedures. Evening and weekend CNA's need to work with clients in their homes. Reliable transportation necessary. Call Sharon at Douglas County Visiting Nirmas 843-3738. Do you use preschool children to 3 or 5 years old? Do you want to make a difference in a child's life? Do you have a little free time? Volunteer at Head Start on an afternoon a day week. For information call 828-4250. Greenspace is now hiring intelligent energetic people to fill staff. Full and part-time positions are available and include guaranteed wage and benefits. Call 813-531-9049 today, for more information. Every year the Greenspace Foundation I CAN'T BELIEVE IT'S YOGURT Now hiring! ASSISTANT MANAGER for the Office of Orchards Cormorans, 15th and Kaslow-Lawrence PART TIME HELP Louisiana Purchase 23rd and Louisiana-Lawrence Reply in person Johnny's Tavern Waitress positions available: 18pm to 2m shifts M W F. Call Doug at 842-0377 morning. EARN CASH ON THE SPOT $15 Today $30 This week By donating your life saving blood plasma WALK-INS WELCOME! NABI Biomedical Center 816 W 24th 749-5750 Nemesis position 15 hrs/brw includes weekend & holiday. No phone calls please apply in person. Lawrence Veterinary Hospital 1104 W 23rd St. Looking for individual to watch my school-age children before and after school. Call 865-2795 at 8:30 p.m. Please leave message. NANNIES/CHILDCARE The premier agency- 9 yrs experience. Families goto! Over 2,000 placements in NY, NJ, CT, PA, & SunNYFL. Call today to pickup! EARTH TIME EVENING DELIVERY PERSON Must have own car. Apply in person Peking Restaurant (23rd and Iowa behind Haistings). 749- 0003 time-hike and party pic photographers need experience experience. Apply to Color-Couns 101 Mee FARTH TIME. Students needed for Intramural basketball Officials and Scorekeepers. No experience necessary. Training provided. Flexible. Please call 212-646-3946 or send students should call 212-646-3946 for more information. Reporter/Assistant Editor needed now. J-Degree or 2 years print experience. Salary, benefits, bonus package. Send resume with reference to Nichola. P.O. Box 399 Baxter Spring, KS 67137. Pre-school Subsidiary Work around school facilities with children. Sunshine Outline School 149-2233. SCHOOL CROSSING GUARD GIVEN ON AIRWAY NOT Responsible part-time work directing children on foot & motor traffic at school crossings. Approx. 17:30 a.m. a week. $4.25 per hour. Must be in good physical condition with no loss of sight or hearing. Complete application at Admin. Services, 2nd Floor, 987 Fifth Avenue, Lawrence, KS 60044. EOE/M/F D JOB INTERVIEWS FOR Graduating Seniors Hallmark, Sears, K-Mart, E&J Gallo, Enterprise Leasing, Applied Communications, Cerner, and many more! SIGN UP AT: University Placement Ctr. 110 Burge Union. SHIPPING ASSISTANT Lawrence-based, growing, international, technical publishing company has a part-time (18 hours per week) position available. Duties include help with computer disk preparation, copying computer disks for inventory; taking the mail to the post office daily; and providing backup support to the fulfiler leader assigned. Prevailing wage is $35 per hour, working as a team required. Ability to maneuver up to 50 pounds and 50 wpm preferred. This position is part of our internal软硬件 support team (7), and helps other areas of the company as needed. R & D Publications, is an equal opportunity employer. We accept the most diverse atmosphere. If you are looking for an enjoyable work environment with a reliable company, please come and fill out an application at 1601 West 23rd Street, New York, NY 10017. STUDENT ASSISTANT IN ENGINEERING/ MAINtenance. Date: 02/19/94; Salary: $43.58 per hour. Duties include pickup and delivery of orders; check inventory levels; data entry; assist technicians in light mechanical and electronic repair; and other duties as assigned. Required experience in computer information systems at the University of Kansas, demonstrated ability to work with customers, good oral and written communication skills, 6 months previous hardware training, weekly in a 3, 10 hr. blocks, valid driver license. To apply, complete a job application which is available @ 822 the Computer Center. EO/AA EMPLOYER Explore Career Options While Serving Jewish Community. Chicago area undergrads: serve the Jewish community while gaining valuable career insight! Apply before March 1, 1994 for an eight-week summer internship in the fields of Health Care, Social Service, Psychology/Education, Management, Fundraising, Communications, or Human Resources. $1300 stipend. Contact immediately Judy Teller, Hillel-CAYS, Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Chicago, 1 S. Franklin St., Chicago IL60066 312-444-2868. STUDENT CLERICAL ASSISTANT: Deadline: 01/28/$94. 12%/45 hour. Duties include assist- ing customers with accounting for account- billings; maintaining Accounts Receivable ledgers; assisting in Repair Shop orders; making daily deposits; recording microcomputer work on a computer; performing maintenance on a fill-in basis; and miscellaneous Business office duties. To apply, complete job application to OA/AA Employer EO/AA EMPLOYER Tennis JJ-Summer Children's Camps-North-East men and women with good tennis background who can teach children to play tennis. Good salary, room & board, travel allowance. Women call or write at (617) 934-5438; 202332 (617) 934-5438. Men call or write: Cmp Waindoa 2255, Wilds RIdes 51L, Aotee R60, Fauce RM, LA3431 (407) 994-5500. We will on campus in the student union from 1am-4pm in 618 or the Glead Wanted: male companion, age 25-34, for semi-rural property. Will pay $5 per month. For more information call 863-7230. Wanted: Sculpture models, 1 male and 1 female. Good proportions. Low body fat. B34-848-841. www.sculptures.com 225 Professional Services Christian Day offers the best care at low rates Transportation, Transportation Bayard, West location. 982-574-3010 English tutter. All English classes, proofreading. English tutter. All English classes, BS Education Arthur 841-0133 education INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS DV-1. green card Program Sponsored by the U.S. resident resident status. Citizens of almost all coun- tries are allowed to take part. Students, touris- ers, anyone may apply. For info & forms. New Era Legal Services. 2021 Stag $1, Canoga Park, CA Tel; (818) 996-4425; Fax; (818) 882-9681 DUI/MIP/Fake ID's Office located right next to campus Elizabeth Leach Attorney at Law-Former Pro Access KU and the Internet SEMESTER SPECIAL Internet Made Easy VIDEO EDITING AND PRODUCTION SERVICES A/B roll video tape editing suite with EDL. Hardcopy of the DVD. His field production package. Award winning screen writer. PRIMAL SCREEN COMMUNICATIONS Attorney at Law-Former Prosecutor 414 W 14th 749-0087 TRAFFIC-DU'I'S Fake I.D.'s & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters DONALD G. STROLE DONALD G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey 18 East 13th 842-1133 235 Typing Services BRAXTONB.COPLEY Your Key to the Internet Voice 842-6699 Data 842-7744 SLIP is Available DATABANK General Practice TrafficTickets, Misdemeanors, Landlord/Tenant 1-der Women Word Processing. Former editor transforms scripts into accurate pages of letters. Lamborghini Porsche 719 Maasachusetts 749-5333 DESKTOP DOCUMENTS For all of your word processing needs. 842-2722 X - Looking for a good type: * Paper, A4, A5, A6, Charts, * Laser printing to WOW; your profits * Grammar and spelling free * 18 years experience call Jack at Marker the Grade 985-2855 Almost new twin mattress and box springs, $50 o.b.o. Call 841-5945. 305 For Sale Words by Chris Worsley Processing. High Quality included in spell check, spell check included. 985-1000 300s Merchandise Beds, desks, bookcases, chest of drawers. Everything But Ice. 938 Mass. Fisher AL - Mountain bike, overrated aluminum bicycle. Available on hangout: $115 new, Asking 600; Call B4 841-9171. For sale: Queen-sized futon mattress, well used. $30. Call 832-1699. Boss's $125, Bail Python - $45. Other lizards also. Call Gareg at 749-196 and leave message. IBM computer monitor disk drive, and software for sale. $200 call 481-3731 ask for Alyson. Queen size classic futon bed, solid maple w/ natural oil finish. $400-1888-7144 for Sherri STUDENT DISTRIBUTION TECHNICIAN. Date: 03/11/19. Salary: $4.35 per hr. duties include performing bursting and decoiling function using a printer; using the delivery van; paper shredding functions; on occasion will assist in receiving shipments; stocking and maintaining inventory figures; using a computer to maintain functions; on occasion will operate forklift and assist in maintenance; assists in Open Landscape Furniture maintenance; performs duties in construction; uses personal computer or mainframe software as part of record keeping function. To apply, complete and application available online. Computer Employee talk trash, walk trash: DEJA RECYCLED SHOES. Snakers, kachatas, tksrap, more Simple Goods, 753 Mass, M-Sat, 10-3: 30. Thr U11 T81 Graphing Calculator, almost new $50 or best offer, contact Christe for more info at (913)843-4582 Tyker Carbon Fiber Roadbike w/stl-$699 Kristen Dollars' stand $899 Krieter w/stand $200 7-pad Durace/Campi Tubulars-unused $200 Super Nintendo w/ games $150 Sony ion Handyman w/case $400 Yamaha Acoustic Guitar. Pewty electric bass and Acoustic guitar. Tailpiece. 12" give you a great deal. Guitar Matt at 881-349-0526. 340 Auto Sales Available at West Hills Apartment. Spacious bed不适 apt, $29 per month. Waterpd. Great location near campus. 1012 Emery Rd. No pets. 841-380-5438, 843-3848 830 Caprice Classic, power locks & brakes $750 BDO Call Brian 843-9435 85 Punitia Fire, New red paint. Runs perfectly. A/C, Stereo, Five speed. Cokgat 69.429. Call 798-7610. 360 Miscellaneous rappty hours every day from 3-4 pm. All noftsk drinks are available at 7 p.m. at 79 by the Hamm's burgers at 10th and 9th floors. H 2 bedroom townhouse, $160/month. Fireplace, valued cellings, available immediately. 842-1805. 2 and 3 bedroom apartments now available. On bus route. Call 749-1556. 1 bedroom for sublease 1 block from campus 1050-8625 fax 1050-m, free Jafell-Pill August 10-6th 400s Real Estate Looking for two roommates for a three bedroom house, please call 841-902-7535, water paid, dryer watered. Call 841-902-7535. 1 furnished rooms in nice spaces house close to campus and 20 rooms Wander/Dryer/A/C $250-$350 3 BDRM townhouse w/ AC and basic cable paid. washers/dryer and appliances. $50/mo. Pets paid. willing to have an extra 24hrs available. 405 For Rent Call or go to: Sundance • 841-5255 Regents Court • 749-0445 We now have SUBLEASES available for January Available Now. Newly renovated studio ap. 1360 hick Vernier, private entrance, AC window, ap. 1360 MASTERCRAFT fitted apartment now available close to campus milfires paid; $100 + 6 month lease available. Call (342) 279-5800. Completely furnished 4 bedroom apts. $900/no, wrt pd, call 947-8571, leave message Nice NII rtp, available ASAP for sub-learning until time. Newer 1, 2 and 3 bedroom dryer available August '94. Washer/dryer, dishwasher, microwave, private bath/balconies. Avoid Rush! Reserve your place now! !Call 749-1586 for details. One bedroom apt, sublease next to campus, off the campus, within reach of month-end of Januari move in, leave mats, desk, toilet, bed Leasing for June and August. New 4 bedroom, 3-bathroom apartment in West Village with gas fireplace, ceiling fans, cable-paid, 1500 feet, and covered parking avail. Early sign-up special offers. For more information call Dawn at 867-252-9500. Female roommate needed. 1328 Abb. I block off campus. Leave naive and number on unwilling visitor to room. Great location. 1801 Mills 3 bedroom apartment surf, hardwood, beach房. CA No. P698. $400 call (212) 755-8366. www.davisresort.com Nice, clean, BDR appm1, EXCELLENT LOCATION-WALK TO CAMPUS AND SHOPPING $390/mo, wr pt, call 842-7571, leave message. New Appm1. Sublease 2 bedroom apt. Available February 1st. On KU bus route. 845-8097 Park25 We are now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature studio1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. We also have 3 bedroom, 2 1/2 bath townhomes. FU We presently have available a select few 1 & 2 bedroom apartments for immediate occupancy. Campus Locations *2 Pools - Volleyball Court * On KU Bus Route with 4 Stones on Property Some Washer/Dryer Hookups Call or stop by today. 2401 W. 25th, 9A3 842-1455 (sorry no pets) Sublease $13,99 new, bld new in spex. Centralair, dep .dem 105 Montyway 84-200-798/798-696 Montery Way 84-200-798/798-696 Sublease: 1 bdmpr awt. w/ study. Boardwalk Apts. $300 mo. 843-0145. Sublease: 2 bedroom apartment. February- August, 14th and Mass. Hanover Place, 841-1212 Also Leasing For Spring & Fall! South Pointe AFFILIATES --- LUXURY 2 & 3 BEDROOMS AVAILABLE NOW!! New appliances New bath fixtures Mini & vertical blinds Walk-in-closets Water, heating of water & trash paid! Patio balconies available Swimming pool and Sand volleyball court Small pets OK with deposit Ample off-street parking LOCATION Walk to shopping, banking, Restaurants & six theaters Next to new Holcom Recreational Center - Basketball, baseball, indoor Track, racquetball and Aerobics. GREATLOCATION!!! New appliances - Convenience West of Iowa on 26th Street K U U bus route May 11 March 3, 2018. Georgetown Apartments. W/D free space. Free queen water bed. 844 mba year. 862-598. meadowbrook COMPARE Would you like your own bedroom, bathroom, and for under $200 a month? 1-460-347-8147 As for bill. - Location - ApartmentSize 843-6446 Surroundings CostPerMonth - Lifestyle (Sorry, No Pets) Now leasing for Spring! M-F8-5:30 Sat 10-4 Sun1-4 EQUINOX HOMES OPERATION 842-4200 15th & Crestline we're making life easier! 430 Roommate Wanted - Weekly Maid Service •Front Door Bus Service •"Dine Anytime" with Unlimited Seconds •Laundry and Vending Facilities •Free Utilities or 12 x roommates needed ASAP to share 4bm eat. $20.00 + $28.00 per m. DW, available utilities, paid on bus route. Call Shawna at 842-7196. or 2 roommates needed for new 3 bedroom apt. $20/00 + / utilities. Near campus. WD in apt. Available now. Call for details. 914-848-6780. or 5 roommates needed for spacious apt. gamely 4 bm eat, on bus route, dishwasher. WE HAVE TO MOVE! 842-7647. 1 male roommate wanted for 3 bdm and 2 bath roommates. Please call Mr. Kushner $2/month + utilities. Call Paul @ 865-709-4221. NAISMITH Naismith Drive 1800 1 s/male roommates for a 4 house. W/D, DW, all utilities paid. 821/50. month Call Ivail. N41-6090 3 males looking for a N/8 male or female KU student in live with them. Available only, 4 bedroom College-aged roommate needed now for 3 BR AVA- ge room. Please water pn. Jan renter free. phone call 841-752-9100 Firm. roommate needed for nice left-style dress. Very close to campus on bus rt. Great deal $900 more on room. Female, non-smoking, roommate needed; immediate to share spaces house, own bedroom, shared bathroom. Female needles to need 3 bac api. $600 mo. free, w/ d, wkd. Richmond 839, Missaukee 841-6487. Female roommate, beautiful 3 bedroom town- house. Available Jan 1 7:29am-9pm 839-5888. Available Jan 1 7:29am-9pm 839-5888. Female roommate needs for 3 bedroom very close to campus. Rm15-80+/19 facilities. Call Julia at (212) 647-1111. Female remote wanted to share 2 bimr. I bainh empire w/microwave, WD, CA. On KU run the computer. Male roommate for a b3rm 2 bath furnished apt. $70/mo. + 1/4 tilt. 1bil to KU. Roommate needed for 4bdm house near campus. Roommate needed for 3 bdm furnished apt. Rent $160/month. Available W/ AND/DW. Call 888-2549 for the juice duty THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN One roommate for 3 Dkm. apL. Close to campground, free cable, pets allowed, DW call, 888-722-1212. How to schedule an ad: Ad phone may in be mailed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made. In person 118 Stuart Fletch Fillet Male roommate needed through end of semester. Room location: near campus $14/mo. + 1/vul Call MI-8310 W/D, appliances, furnished except for Dead. Willing to help with part of pet's pots. Call 865-213-9057. Need if female immed. for 2nd sem. 2 bkks from KU, bus rtl, wc $300 + /100; Call 748-3983 or 814-4365. Needed by Feb. 1. NS RM to share 3 DBp Dkw p m grad student A, W/D, WD, pat 3 min. 5 min. from Wanted to 1 or 2 roommates to share new brand condo for $690. Calgary t. 7-824-3124 or Melia t. 7-828-3180. - or you may * . You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas offices. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or VISA account. Ade that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before your expiration date. Stop by the Kansas office between 8 a. m. and 5 p. m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or Visa. Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of agate lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run. nature live every day 3 lines 4 lines 5-7 lines 8+ lines Num. of insertions: The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00. When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's will be credited for the unused days. Rows on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check with cash are not available. Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to Cost per line per day 1.0x 1.0x 4-7x 8-14x 15-23x 30+x 2.05 1.55 1.95 .65 .75 .50 1.99 1.15 .85 .78 .45 1.95 1.85 .75 .65 .95 .40 1.75 .80 .80 .80 .80 .35 Classifications 140 lost & landed 265 helped want 265 for sale 340 auto sales 225 professional services 280 telecommunications 295 jails services 105 personal 110 business personals 129 announcements 130 entertainment 370 want to buy 465 for rent 438 roommate wanted Date ad begins: Total days in paper: Total ad cost: Classification: Name: ADS MUST FOLLOW KAHSAN POLICY Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print: 1 | | | | | | | 2 | | | | | | | 3 | | | | | | | 4 | | | | | | | 5 | | | | | | | Phone: Address: VISA Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □ Visa (Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansan) Furnish the following if you are charging your ad: Account number: Exoiation Date: Print exact name appearing on credit card: MasterCard Signature: The University Daily Kansan. 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045 THE FAR SIDE By GARY LARSON HANG 'EM NOT SO HIGH Midget westerns 12 Friday, January 21, 1994 Mon.-Sun. Buffet Hours $2.99 lunch buffet 2630 Iowa 11:00-1:30 (add .70 for salad) 843-1474 SOREL SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE'S FOREMOST NAME IN OUTDOOR CLOTHING SUNFLOWER 804 MASS 843-5000 Sorel boots are simply the best cold weather boots money can buy. Sorels give a combination of warmth and durability that no other cold weather boot can match. *Shell Island Party Cruise* 650' Gulf Beach Frontage 2 Outdoor Swimming Pools 1 Indoor Heated Pool Restaurant, 2 & 3 Room Suites Sandpiper-Beacon 17403 Front Beach Road Pamica City Beach, FL 32413\1 Spring Break Panama City Beach, Florida A Reservations 1-800-488-8828 *Beach Bonfire Parties Tiki Beach Bar/Volleyball Sailboats, Jetski & Parasails Karaoke Beach Party Area Discount Coupons From $104 Per Week Person Per Person 4 Person Occupancy From $104 Per Week Good things come to those who wait, and the Jayhawks won't have to wait long, as they jump right into the busiest part of their schedule in preparation for the Big Eight Conference. Kansan sportswriter The Kansas men, ranked No. 16, and the Kansas women, ranked No. 18, will swim against Southern Illinois, at 1 p.m., Saturday, in Carbondale, Ill. Swimmers see Southern Illinois as no threat This is the second consecutive week that the Jayhawks will be swimming, but the schedule doesn't let up from here. They also will be swimming for the next three weeks before they get ready for Nebraska and the Big Eight Conference championships. "We're favored to win both," said Kansas coach Gary Kempf. "But we can't assume anything." "It's so hard to wait for conference," said Marsha Trachi, a senior who swims the 200 breaststroke. "I just want to get in there and go." The Jayhawks will have a chance to gain some confidence when they travel this weekend to Illinois. Bv Andrew Gilman Senior sorinter Curtis Taylor agreed. "They're rebuilding this year," Taylor said. "Everyone is going out there and swimming different events and trying new things." Overall, the Jayhawks look to gain a lot from this weekend. Richard Devinki / KANSAN "This meet will be good," Taylor said. "From here on we'll get faster and faster until we peak, and hopefully that will be at conference." SAMMEL BROWN Black Student Union meeting Monday,January 24,7:00 pm Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union The men's swim team takes a break while preparing for this weekend's meet in Carbondale, Ill. 1601 W.23rd Southern Hills Center BIG8 CONFERENCE Information 842-1212 "NO COUPON" SPECIALS EVERYDAY "One of the things we hope to do is break out of the consistent mode," he said. "I'm looking for us to swim with a little more emotion." PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS Kempf also is looking for some improvement. Trachi said the Jayhawks would have little trouble winning. "I think we're looking real good," Taylor said. "Everyone's in an upbeat, positive mood and just trying to go faster. We're expecting great things. We all need to come together." For now waiting may be the hardest part for the Jawhaws. The atmosphere on the men's side is just as posi tive. Trachi also is confident in the team's attitude and ability. "For now I'm pleased," Trachi said. "Coach Kemp wants us to take a step forward and drop our times He said it's time for us to see what we can do." "We know this weekend's meet won't be that close." Trachsel said. "We must want to race." PRIMETIME 3-PIZZAS 1-TOPPING 4-COKES $1150 TWO-FERS 2-PIZZAS 2-TOPPINGS 2-COKES $900 "Everyone is so antyss," Trachi said. "But these meets are good for us. We can get up for them." CARRY OUT 1-PIZZA 1-TOPPING 1-COKE $350 PARTY "10" 10-PIZZAS 1-TOPPING $30 00 DELIVERY HOURS MON-THURS 11 AM-2 AM 11 AM-3 AM 11 AM-1 AM Juicers Showgirls The Midwest's Most Elite Juice Bar Opens at 7:00 pm 913 N Second (I-70 West to 204 Exit, turn left, just past new factory outlet Lawrence, KS 913-841-4122 Valid Through July 31, 1994 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN C A R D AT&T Spend $1...Save hundreds Membership has its privileges... SC THESE DISCOUNTS AND OFFERS ARE GOOD THROUGH JULY 31, 1994 JUST SHOW YOUR CARD... USE AS OFTEN AS YOU LIKE! Britches Corner • 843 Massachusetts • 843-0434. Buy free, price off Yankee lingerie, get the third or quarter sweater. Cleopatra's Closet • 743 Massachusetts • 749-4664. 15% off everything in store (excluding sale items) The Etc Shop • 928 Massachusetts • 843-0611. 20% off Etc Shop brand sunglasses Harper's Fashions • 835 Massachusetts • 749-0626. Additional 20% off all regular price merchandise KU Bookstore • Kansas and Burge Unions • 864-4640. $5 off any gift or clothing purchase of $25 or more Natural Way Natural Fiber Clothing • 820 Massachusetts • 841-0100. 15% off all regular priced clothing Outfitters Clothing Co. • 740 Massachusetts • 843-3933. 15% off the regular price of guy's and gal's jeans Outfitters Clothing Co. • 740 Massachusetts • 843-3933. 10% off tuxedo rental University Bookshop • 1116 W 23rd St • 749-5206. 20% off all clothing (except sale items) Weavers Department Store • 901 Massachusetts • 843-6360. 20% off all lingerie, hosiery, or intimate areas LOTHIERS Britches Corner • 843 Massachusetts • 843-0454: Buy 1reg, price Hillfiger, get the 2nd of equal or lesser value at 20% off Cleopatra's Closet • 743 Massachusetts • 749-4664: 15% off everything in store (excluding sale items) American Bistro • 701 Massachusetts • 841-8349: 10% off any entree (limit one) American Bistro • 701 Massachusetts • 841-6349: 10% of any entree (limit one) Restaurant 2000 All you can eat: Freshsteaks Food & Desert Bar for $2.99 Bonanza* 3232 Iowa* 642-1200 *Airline: Airbusa* 7008-1200 Dos Hombres Vi· 815 New Hampshire* 841-7286 *Buy 1 menu item, get the 2nd for 1/2 price RESTAURANT BURR Imperial Garden : 2907 W 6th St * 841-1688: 10% off any dinner entree (limit one) Fifi's Restaurant· 925 Iowa · 841-7226: 10% off any entree (limit one) Imperial Cafe Johnny's Tavern • 401 N 2nd St • 842-0377: Buy a cheeseburger w/fries at reg, get the 2nd for $1 (Good Mon - Fri, 4pm to 9pm) Little Caesars Pizza-Pizza • 1410 Kasold, 865-5400/520 W 23rd, 842-8000: FREE Crazy Bread w/ any pizza/pizzail purchase Perkins Family Restaurant • 1711 W 23rd • 842-9040: $1.00 off any entree, anytime, 24 hours a day Pizza Shuttle *1601 W 23rd* - 842-1212; *1 carry out, 1opping pizza w/ a coke for $4.95* Plum Tree *2620 Iowa* - 841-6222; *FREE appetizer (2 crab rongons or 1 egg roll) w/purchase of any entree* Pizza Shuttle • 1601 W 23rd • 842-1212: 1 carryout, 1 topping pizza w/a lg. coke for $4.00 Plum Tree • 2620 Iowa • B1 Pymidium Pyramid • 507 W 14th St (under The Wheel) • 842-3232 • $4 srm $6 med $8lg ea ad topping 75¢ (Void w/ other offers) Shoney's Restaurant • 2412 Iowa • 843-3519: FREE salad bar w/ any purchase of a sandwich and fries Vista Drive l/b • 1527 W 6th St • 842-3412: FREE reg, French Fry w/purchase of a Vistaburger & drink MERCHANDISE & PRODUCTS The Athlete's Foot • 914 Massachusetts • 841-6966: $10 off a shoe purchase of $65 or more Cycle Works • 1601 W 23rd • 842-6363: FREE lock set w/ new bike purchase Englewood Florist • 939 Massachusetts • 841-2999: 3 FREE latex balloons with any purchase of $20 or more Englewood Florist • 939 Massachusetts • 841-2999 • SPREE rate Railcars with any prize Francis Sporting Goods • 731 Massachusetts • 843-4191 • 15% off all Champion Sportswear It's Your Party • 1601 W 23rd • 749-3455: Buy any 3 greeting cards and get FREE Jebswy Level 1 - Kansas Union • 864-3454: FREE shoe rental during open bowling *Hawk Bookstore* • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826 Jawhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826 • 20% off Blank Computer Diskettes Jayhawk Bookstore Jayhawk Spirit • 935 Massachusetts • 749-5194; $1.00 off all adjustable hats, $2.00 off all fitted hats Junior's Farm • 924 1/2 Massachusetts • 842-3344; Buy 2 CD's at reg, price, get the 3rd (equal or lesser value) at 50% of the price. Click HERE to buy. 90% off KU ebookshids Laser Logic • 865-0505: 20% Off Recycled Laser Printer Toner Cartridges (FREE pick-up and delivery) Miracle Video • 1910 Haskell, 841-7504/910 N 2nd St, 841-8903: Rent 1 tape, get 2nd FREE (Sun thru Thurs) Miracle Video • 1910 Haskell, 841-7504/910 N 2nd St, 841-8903: Rent 1 video, get 2nd FREE (Sun thru Thurs) Rentco USA • 1741 Massachusetts • 749-1605: 25% off all rentals Rentco USA 1741 Massachusetts 142-106.20% international Sports Fan-Attics 942 Massachusetts 842-2323: 15% off everything in store (excluding sale items & leather jackets) SERVICES Stereo Lane • 2024 W 23rd • 865-2677: $10 off any purchase of $50 or more Union Technology Center • Level 3-Burge Union • 865-5690: 10% off any accessory (disks, diskholders, cables, paper, surge protectors, etc.) Video Biz • 832 Iowa • 749-3507: 2 For Tuesday! Rent 2 Videos for the Price of 1 (Tuesday only) Via Zoom • 832 Iowa • 749-3507: 749-DAAA: 15% off framed prints of KL and sororites Vormehr Studio & Gallery • Riverfront Plaza, Ste 321 • 749-0744: 15% off of framed prints of KU and sororities The Auto Medic • 3631 W 10th St • 842-0384: 20% off any service call B.C. Automotive • 510 N 6th St • 841-6955: 20% off tune ups and brake repair Copy Co • 1401 W 23rd • 832-2679: 10% off all merchandise or services Enterprise Rent-A-Car • 3030 Iowa • 842-8040: 10% off car rental Fantastic Sam's • 2223 Louisiana • 749-1976: 15% off any regular price service or product NailTique • 2449 Iowa, Ste N • 832-2900: $3.00 off any service Planned Parenthood • 1420 Kasold-Orchards Corners • 832-0281: 25% off initial or annual visit plus 12 free condoms RC'S Stadium Barbery • 1033 Massachusetts • 749-5363: $5.50 haircut Sonny Hill Chevrolet-Geo-Oldmobile • 3400 S Iowa • 843-7300: 10% off all parts and service Ultimate Tan • 2449 Iowa, Ste O • 842-4949: 1 FREE session with the purchase of a 9-session package ($5 value) The University Daily Kansan • 119 Stuffer-Flint Hall • 864-4358: 10% off any private party classified advertisement Terms and conditions. The following terms and condition relate to candidate for use at the University Daily Karen Card (DRC) in Participating MEMS (PM). If the DRC must be signed to be valid, it is non-transferable, and PM may request identification, certificat- ing or DRF based if any other than the candidate. Candidate's signature on one of the DRC shall constitute a boundary to be bound by those terms and the directories of the Director(s). If two DRCs special Offer Discounts are not valid with other offers or special promotions of PM kits to not apply to tax position of purchase, CP applies only to candidate's reasonable personal purchase to the total purchase价 for each DRC. If no DRC purchases are made to the total purchase price for each DRC, PM kits will not be issued. PM kits will not be issued on special days except once per year. Special days every year include April 28th, May 5th, May 14th, June 7th, July 13th, August 6th, September 1st, October 4th, November 1st, December 9th, January 2nd, February 7th, March 4th, April 11th, May 19th, June 17th, July 25th, August 12 W Jayhawk Bookstore Kansas and Burge Unions·864-4640 1420 Crescent Road 843-3826 1116 W. 23rd St * 749-5206 UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP KU KU BOOKSTORES THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358 N CAMPUS/AREA: Growth at Haskell brings up new issues for the school's Board of Regents. Page 3. THE UNIVERSITY DAIL KANSAN THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL, SOCIETY TOPEKA KS 66612 VOL.103.NO.85 ADVERTISING: 864-4358 MONDAY JANUARY 24,1994 (USPS 650-640) NEWS:8644810 BUSCH LIGHT Wendy Gustafson, Austin Tex., sophomore, Trac Dalrymple, Overland Park junior, and Greg Windholz, Lawrence resident, gesture in frustration at the City Chiefs' performance in their defeat to the Buffalo Bills. The Yacht Club, 530 Wisconsin, was host to many Chiefs fans Sunday. Chiefs fans hurt by Bills' stampede Thrill of Super Bowl is gone without Kansas City in game By Cheryl Cadue Kansan staff writer The Kansas City Chiefs' 30-13 defeat to the Buffalo Bills left many fans who watched the game at local bars crying in their beer. "They should fire Marty Schottenheimer," Jason Stafford, Overland Park senior, said. "He will never take us to the Super Bowl. I was not at all happy. The defense did not show up. For many fans, the Chiefs' defense was to blame for the loss. "I was very disappointed after a long, hard season, but in lieu of it all, I was pleased with the overall season," he said. "Defense is what wins football games," Tucker Trotter, Overland Park junior, said. "The momentum wasn't there for the Chiefs and neither was the defense." Chad Stafford, Overland Park junior, said that the Chiefs' defense had been inconsistent all year and that it was off for Sunday's game. Bryan Butell, Baldwin City senior, said he only had been a Kansas City fan for about three weeks but was still upset about the defeat. "I had a lot of fun watching the Chiefs, but to lose the last game of the year is a sign of a bad team," Butell said. Burt Hailu, Racine, Wis., senior, said he was not upset at the Chief's defeat because he had never been a fan of the team. "I'm not a Chiefs fan, but all my friends are," Haigh said. "I feel bad for my friends, but there are more important things to be upset about." KC CHIEFS Joe Montana, despite playing in four Super Bills, was no match for the Buffalo Bills' defense. Page 6. While many people spent yesterday afternoon in front of the television, some Lawrence residents were unaffected by Chief's mania. Page 7. Many fans that crowded bars and restaurants said it was the success of the home team that caused them to watch the game. Page 7. Game coverage Page 7. Mike Hansen, Lenexa junior, said he was not looking forward to another Super Bowl that involved the Buffalo Bills. "The Bills are going to get destroyed in the Super Bowl. It's too bad the Chiefs lost, but it's also too bad the Bills are going to be denied for the fourth straight year," Hansen said. "I remember the bad years," Slade Dillon, Baldwin City senior, said. "This has been the best year for the Chiefs in my lifetime. This is excellent compared to how it used to be." Some fans said they enjoyed the season even though the Chiefs did not reach the Super Bowl. Count Wallace, Lawrence resident, said he would not watch the Super Bowl because the Chiefs would not be playing. Bobbitt's insanity makes sense to some KU students react differently to jury's verdict of not guilty By Jamie Munn Kansan staff writer KU students and faculty reacted with mixed opinions to a jury's accretion of Lorena Robbitts. Bobbitt was charged with malicious wounding after she cut off her husband's penis. She was found not guilty by reason of insanity. Barbara Ballard, director of the Emily Taylor Resource Center and associate dean of student life, said she was not surprised by the decision because the defense worked so hard to show that Bobbitt was temporarily insane. However, Ballard said she thought the acquaintance was not exactly a victory for Bobbitt. "She's not free," Ballard said, citing Bobbitt's immediate committal to Central State Hospital in Petersburg, Va. "She'd have to be under an emotional trauma to perform that act." Ballard said. Ballard said she was upset that this trial, with its sensational coverage and endless supply for comic material, had eclipsed the basic issue of women who live in abusive situations. "Because of continued abuse or violence, people can be driven to this point," she said. Ballard said she thought this case would not prompt a significant increase in trials that use the battered women's defense. At the least, she said, this trial would help awaken society to the kinds of conditions under which abused women, and sometimes men, live. "It is unfortunate for society that it takes this kind of case to bring this out." Ballard said. KU students, even those who had not followed the two-week trial closely, were divided about the case's outcome. Brian Christian, Detroit senior, said he disagreed with the verdict because he thought Bobbitt should have left her husband. John Bobbitt "Two wrongs don't make a right," Christian said. "In ruling in favor of her, it lets the public know that just because you have an excuse, you can break the law." Catlin O'Keefe, Chicago freshman, said she thought that John Bobbitt was innocent and that his wife's actions should have been punished. "You can't take that away from anybody," O'Keefe said of John Bobbitt's injury. "That's worse than killing them." Other students were surprised by the verdict for different reasons. Robert Dipaling, Topeka senior, said he had thought Bobbitt would be found guilty because John Bobbitt had been acquitted of rape charges. Bobbitt claimed her husband had raped her on the evening she attacked him. "I was impressed with her defense," Dipaling said. "It had looked pretty grim for her." Dipaling said Bobbitt's attack could have been seen as an overreaction since the rape charges had been dropped. Jury's still out on the effect of Bobbitt verdicts Rebecca Hughey, Wichita sophomore, said she was not especially surroused by the verdict. "In a marriage like that, any kind of counseling would have been needed," she said. Hughey said she thought Bobbitt had been repressed and that counseling would help her. "If it's going to help her deal with it, it's a good thing." she said. By Anne Gearan The Associated Press MANASSAS, Va. — Eleven days of testimony. More than 40 witnesses. Hundreds of reporters. Two trials. Two juries. Two acquittals. So what was accomplished in the cases of John and Lorena Bobbitt? "The Bobbitts broke the pen barrier," said Paul Rothstein, a law professor at Georgetown University and a close observer of the Bobbitt trials. "In many ways it has brought the ANALYSIS penis out in the open to be talked about, and maybe that's good that sexual taboos are broken down," he said, but warned, "There is the threat this may be considered license to evade personal responsibility." To many, though, the crimes and punishments in the Bobbitt bedroom constituted a sort of rough justice. Prosecutor Paul Ebert acknowledged as much in closing arguments Thursday, while cautioning against it. "The easy thing to do in this case is to say these people deserve each other," he said. "He rapes her, she cuts him." John Bobbitt may have committed the litany of batterings and cruelties Lorena Bobbitt detailed, but he couldn't be charged with them, Ebert said. Bobbitt was charged with assaulting her in the early hours of June 23, the night she cut off his penis. In Lorena Bobbitt's case, she admitted her crime but said the years of sexual and physical abuse drove her to it. She pleaded not guilty. Most of her trial focused not on the crime but on the details of a bad marriage. The cases were strange enough to draw massive public attention, but legal experts disagree on whether they broke new ground or simply provided an excuse for voyeurism. "I don't think that this is going to be a major precedent-setting case," said Virginia Hench, law professor at the University of Hawaii. "I think the two respective juries thought this was a case where both parties had suffered a lot of abuse." Marching, marking the anniversary Francie Costello, of Lawrence, holds the hand of her son, Jacob, who is carried by his father Tom. Lawrence Kansan For Life organized a march Saturday down Massachusetts Street to voice their opposition to the Roe v. Wade verdict. Saturday marked the verdict's 21st anniversary. See story Page 3. INSIDE No.1 in the Big Eight The No.8 Kansas women's basketball team defeated Oklahoma State 79-68 yesterday in Allen Field House. The Jayhawks are first in the Big Eight Conference. County AIDS Project to get student money By Heather Moore Kansan staff writer Student Senate votes to support organization Until the Douglas County AIDS Project was started six years ago, people infected with HIV often were left in financial and emotional turmoil without any help. Money, however, is a problem for the organization. It received $10,000 from the United Way of Douglas County this year, which was less than needed. United Way did not meet its own funding goal this fall, so it was unable to appropriate the amount the Douglas County AIDS Project requested. The Student Senate came to the rescue for the organization and allocated $3,260 from its coffers for the project. The money will be used for the production of anewletter for educational presentations. The Douglas County AIDS Project hasn't received state funding because Kansas has little money, and most of that goes to the larger communities. Federal funding is not available because to receive it, an organization must release the names of the people who are infected with HIV. Rose Rousseau, director of the organization, said half of the group's mission statement was to provide educational programs. "We provide slides, lectures and speakers who offer personal perspectives." she said. Some conflict surrounded the bill, however. A few senators said they felt the Douglas County AIDS Project duplicated the work of Center for Sexual Health at Watkins Memorial Health Center. Rousseau said that Watkins and Douglas County AIDS project each had different areas of concentration. Shanda Vangas, holdover senator, a representative to the university council, said she thought the Douglas County AIDS Project did not imitate the services of the Center for Sexual Health. "Our area is understanding and compassion," she said. "We try to analyze why people fear being around people with AIDS." "The main focus of Douglas County AIDS Project is to help those that are HIV positive, and to do this you have to end discrimination," she said. Michael Moyer, off-campus senator, said he was concerned because the Douglas Vangas, who sponsored the bill, said the Center for Sexual Health and Douglas County AIDS project complemented each other. "The Center for Sexual Health is primarily for education and prevention," she said. "They do not assist those with HIV. Douglas County AIDS Project provides life-sustaining services and education to KU students." County AIDS Project did not qualify as a student organization. "In order to be a student organization, all of your officers have to be students, and 75 percent of your members have to be students or university-related," he said. "They can receive money from Student Senate, but not this way." Patrick Eagleman, All-Scholarship Hall Council senator, said senators should remember whose money would be spent. Eagleman said giving money to Douglas County AIDS Project would affect 50,000 other people in the Lawrence area, not students. "The issue is not whether Douglas County AIDS Project is a worthy project," he said. "The issue is whether this is in the scope of Student Senate. I would like to remind you that it's not our money personally. It's for all the 28,000 students who contribute to KU, and we need to keep that into perspective and keep in mind what they would wish us to do with this." Monday, January 24, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN BRAND NAME CAR STEREOS University udio 841-3775 2319 Louisiana The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-840) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan 66045. Limited Time Offer Limited Time Offer Lowest Prices of the Season on college rings selected Women's Rings $239 regularly priced up to $350 selected Men's Rings $299 regularly priced up to $135 JOSTENS Date: January 24-26 Time: 10am - 4pm JOSTENS Date: January 24-26 Time: 10am - 4pm KU Bookstore, Kansas Union Prices are for 10K gold rings. For 14K gold rings, add $100. 83-403(CP-735) ON CAMPUS Narcotics Anonymous will meet at 11:30 a.m. today at Alcove l in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Andy B. at 843-9461. St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a Catholic law student discussion group at 12:30 p.m. today in 109 Green Hall. For more information, call 843-0557. Clan na daagha ValFather (Clans of the Good God and AllFather) will meet at 6 p.m. today at Alcove F in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Debra or Michael Terry at 841-2696. St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today at Dandorf Chapel. Harambe will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at American Baptist Center, 1629 W. 19th St. For more information, call Anthony Case at 865-1682. St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a class, "Fundaments of Catholicism," at 7 tonight in the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call 843-0357. Public Relations Student Society of America will meet at 7 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Shaunda Wenberg at 864-7318. Students Tutoring for Literacy will sponsor an informational meeting at 7 tonight at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call 864-3660. St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a program, "Exploring the Faith," at 8 tonight in the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call 843-0357. ON THE RECORD A Lawrence man was arrested on a charge of operating a motor vehicle under the influence Friday in the 1100 block of Mississippi Street, KU police reported. A Lawrence woman reported the theft of a KU parking permit valued at $85. The permit was taken from her car located in the lot east of Watkins Memorial Health Center, KU police reported. WEATHER Omaha: 54°/30° Kansas City: 63°/42° LAWRENCE: 64°/41° St. Louis: 55°/39° Wichita: 63°/40° Minneapolis: 30°/14° Phoenix: 56°/31° Salt Lake City: 47°/27° Seattle: 48°/35° TODAY Tomorrow Wednesday Partly cloudy with patchy morning fog. High: 64° Low: 41° Partly cloudy, 40% chance for rain High: 51° Low: 36° Mostly cloudy, 50% chance for rain or snow High: 39° Low: 17° WEATHER Sunny Source: Bruce Reeves, KU Weather Service: 864-3300 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN KANSAN HOW TO REACH US Call 864-4810 for the newsroom: ■ News tips — Campus Desk ■ Comments/Complaints/Corrections Lisa Cosmillo, Managing Editor - Ben Grove, Editor or Call 864-4358 for advertising: ■ Classified Department Comments/Complaints — Kelly Connealy, Classified Manager ■ Display Advertising Comments/Complaints — Justin Garbery, Business Manager University Daily Kansan fax number 913-864-5261. SEE THE CLASSIFIEDS Buy your Kansan Card TODAY for only a dollar! 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Call 913-842-5442 KAPLAN The answer to the test question. 1 CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Monday, January 24, 1994 3 Haskell's expansion presents difficult issues Harassment, housing head list of concerns By Denise Nell Kansan staff writer Haskell Indian Nations University is experiencing its share of growing pains. With the addition of a four-year elementary education degree program in August and plans for more to come, Haskell is evolving from a junior college into a university. Issues such as student-staff relationships and sexual harassment are being examined now, said Hannes Combest, educational assistant to Haskell president Bob Martin. Haskell's Board of Regents will meet tomorrow through Thursday to make decisions on some of these issues. The 15-member board will hear recommendations from Haskell's Quality Improvement Teams, groups composed of Haskell students, staff and administrators. The teams will tell the Regents what they think should be done about certain issues at Haskell. None of the recommendations will be implemented as policy unless the Regents approve them, Combest said. One recommendation that will be made is that Haskell adopt a student-staff relationships policy. Combest said. The proposed policy says that any sexual or romantic relationship between an employee and a student is not condoned by the university. A sexual harassment policy also will be proposed to the board. Combest said regulations on sexual harassment always had existed at Haskell, although not officially. The proposed policy would formalize the process people should follow concerning complaints of sexual harassment. Another team will recommend specific changes dealing with housing and admissions. Combest said many of the proposed changes were aimed at trying to keep up with the needs of a growing campus. "Last semester we had 987 students on campus and 770 living in housing designed for 700," she said. "When an institution has that type of growing pains, we have to assure that students who are here are serious students." Adrian Brown, Haskell's student senate vice president, said some of the proposed changes, such as the admissions standards, were necessary because students from around the nation were showing increased interest in the school. The student-staff relationship proposal, how- ever, was another example of the administration going too far in restricting students' lives, Brown said. "People here feel like the policy is way too harsh," he said. "It complements the boarding school mentality. Basically, we feel like our legal system doesn't work. Instead of protecting students, sometimes it rids the school of students." Sleepy Eye LaFromboise, Haskell's student senate president, said the senate planned to go before the board and present requests for changes in Haskell's stand on students' rights. “One of the things I'm going to be working on is trying to get us the respect we deserve.” he said. LaFoamboise said the senate planned to ask the board to consider providing students with a 24-hour study area. He said that in many residence halls now, students could not have visitors of the opposite sex past midnight. A common study area would allow students to study together after hours if necessary. LaFromboise said the senate also would ask the board to extend visiting hours, eliminate weekly room checks in the residence halls and eliminate contribution hours. He said students now are required to "contribute" 40 hours each semester working for the school. Combesat said that whatever the outcome of the meetings, the discussion of these issues had Proposed changes Esther Geary, director of admissions at Haskell, said some recommendations relating to admissions and housing would be made at this week's meetings: Students must have a 2.0 grade point average on a 4.0 point scale to be admitted to Haskell. Students with GPAs below 2.0 would still be admitted, but on academic probation. Now, students may be admitted regardless of their GPAs without being on probation. Students would pay fees each semester instead of once a year. Gaery said that now, students pay $25 for books, $25 for housing and $20 in activity fees in their first semester. Each semester following, they are required to pay only the $20 activity fee. The proposal would have students pay the entire $70 at the beginning of each semester. The university should find some alternative, off-campus housing for the overflow of students in the residence halls. Source: Kansan staff report been healthy for Haskell. "One of the things I have seen happening out of all this is that we've really had some good, active debate on these issues," she said. "It shows we're making the transition from a junior college to a university-level organization." KANSAN Haskell history 1984 Haskell officially opened as trade school for children called United States Indian Industrial Training School Haskell expands academic training to students beyond the eighth grade Haskell begins offering post-high school curriculum 035 Haskell evolves into post-high school and vocational-technical institution Haskell becomes Haskell Indian Junior College Anti-abortionists protest on anniversary of decision Haskell develops a four-year degree in elementary education Source: Kansan staff research Dave Campbell / KANSAN BENNETT MAYER By Denise Nell Kansan staff writer Melissa Folds, Lawrence resident was pregnant and unmarried at age 16. Jennie Zeiner/ KANSAN "One of the first questions I was asked was, 'Would you consider abortion?' " she said. "I said 'no' immediately, and now I have a beautiful 17-year-old daughter. I look at her every day and think, If I'd had an abortion, I wouldn't have her." Taking a moment to pray, Tracy Morris, of Lawrence, holds her 3-year-old daughter, Kelly, at the anti-abortion protest held Saturday in downtown Lawrence. Folds was one of 150 people who marched Saturday down Massachusetts Street in protest of the Supreme Court's Jan. 22, 1973, Roe vs. Wade decision, which gave women the legal right to choose abortion. . . Lawrence police led the march that began at City Hall and ended in South Park. Many of the marchers carried protest signs and pushed empty baby strollers, which they said signified the absence of a child who was aborted. Some passengers in the cars shouted obscenities at the protesters, but Susan Smith, president of the Lawrence Kansans for Life chapter and organizer of the march, said what she noticed most was the onlookers' lack of attention. "Most of what you're finding here is apathy, indifference," she said, pointing to a woman in a car who was staring straight ahead and ignoring the protest. "They're so numb to it, they don't care." Lawrence Smith, another protester, said he hoped the march would have helped change the minds of some of those people. "It's always kind of nice to think someone will see a sign, and it will make them think a little deeper about it," he said. Teresa Weide, Lawrence graduate student and president of KU Students for Life, attended the march with one other member of the group, Tina jinkens, Seneca graduate student. At least two other members were unable to be at the Lawrence march because they were marching in a protest at the Supreme Court in Washington, D.C. Stephanie Gabriel, Orland, Calif, sophomore and head of KU Pro- Choice Coalition, said she would be attending an event today in Topeka that would celebrate the Roe vs. Wade decision. "One thing I've heard talked about in my classes is that people are uncomfortable with both sides," because both have been extreme, she said. "But I don't feel being pro-choice is being extreme. We're not necessarily pro-abortion, but we accept the fact that people can't make decisions for someone else." Survey: Patients satisfied with Watkins By Ashley Schultz Kansan staff writer An overwhelming majority of patients who have used Watkins Memorial Health Center are satisfied with the services they received, according to a student satisfaction survey released by administrators last week. "Both of these types of surveys tend to be very random patient samples either in the lobby downstairs or throughout the building." Jim Boyle, Associate Director of Student Health Services said. "We hand them questionnaires and have them fill them out, and we have collection boxes at all the exits." Boyle said that one problem with those kinds of surveys was that there was no way to be certain that the administration received responses covering all doctors and departments. The fall semester survey attempted to remedy that problem. The administration of Watkins and the Student Health Advisory Board each conduct a survey to gauge student satisfaction with the center. Almost 97 percent of those surveyed said they were satisfied with services at Watkins. "This survey, we specifically pulled from our computer patients' names who had seen specific doctors, and sent questionnaires to those patients for an evaluation of their satisfaction with the services they received with that specific doctor and the health center in general," Boyle said. The center hopes to receive at least 100 respondents with each survey. It sent out 225 questionnaires in the fall survey. So far for the fall survey, 114 questionnaires have been returned. The administration usually conducts one survey each for the fall and spring semesters, Boyle said. It also conducts surveys to evaluate new staff members or programs as they arise. The surveys were mailed early in December so that students could return them before semester break. It didn't quite work that way—one response didn't find its way to Boyle's desk until Friday. Another problem with the mailed surveys was that the response rate was significantly lower than for its in-house predecessors, Boyle said. Boyle said that negative responses were sporadic and that no negative trends or problem areas were identified. Respondents who had questions or problems were called back. "I if handed out 200 surveys in the building, I'd probably get 180, 190 of them back," Boyle said. "Patient wait is an unfortunate phenomena of people walking in," Boyle said. "The students tend to walk in right in the middle of the day." The negative responses usually had to do with patient wait, Boyle said. Questions concerning patient wait were absent from the fall survey. Boyle estimated that 70 percent of the center's patients are walk-in patients. He said the limitations of the building and an increasing volume of patients were partially responsible for the lower rate of patients with appointments. "If we had, for instance, two patient examining rooms per doctor instead of one, with the same staffing level, we could probably see 13,000 more patients a year than we are doing now," Boyle said. From 1983 to 1993, the volume of patient visits to the center have more than tripled, but satisfaction rates have remained above 95 percent. For the last five years, the center has set records in patient volume, Boyle said. Another record is expected this year, with more than 50,000 physician visits anticipated. Volunteer counselors help juveniles in court system Study tries to gauge success of program By Roberta Johnson Kansan staff writer These people, called CASAs, help children and foster families meet the physical and emotional needs of the child, including ending the court processes as quickly and as easily as possible. Children trapped in the court system and bounced between homes need stability in life, and some communities, including Lawrence, are finding that Court Appointed Special Advocates may be the solution. The number of new child-in-need-of-care and juvenile offender cases in Douglas County nearly doubled between 1986 and 1990 but has declined since then. Kids in care and crime Peggy Kitten, assistant district attorney, said that many "children in need of care" have become juvenile offenders. The number of Child In Need of Care and Juvenile Offender cases in Douglas County generally has increased in the past seven years. Although there is no direct correlation, many CINC cases become Juvenile Offender cases in later years, said Peggy Kittel, Asst. D.A. CINC cases are benefitted by the CASA service. Mary Ann Jennings, Lawrence graduate student, is conducting a two-year study with the School of Social Welfare and the United Methodist Health Ministry Fund to evaluate the effectiveness of CASAS. John Poertner, professor of social welfare, and John Pierpont, Topeka doctoral student in social welfare, also are involved in the research. Number of cases 400 300 200 100 0 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 Juvenille Offender cases New CINC cases Source: Berry Kittel, Douglass County Ast. D A Dave Campbell / KANS They are studying how long it takes For the past two years, the Douglas County CASA program has been available to help many children in the court system. a child to be placed in a permanent home, how long a child is in the court system, whether children with CASAs get more of the services they need and if visitations are monitored. Douglas County, Wichita and Hays CASA programs are being used in the study. There is also a comparison group of children without CASAs, but Jennings said that they would not deny any child the opportunity to get a CASA if one is needed during the two years. Previous studies of CASA programs in Kansas City, Kan., San Diego and Louisville, Ky., had shown that children with CASAs benefited from having a personal volunteer and that they would be adopted more often than those children without one. Respondents also said that CASAs represented the children's needs well in court and provided support for children and families. The studies did point out a few potential problems with the programs. Some respondents indicated that CASAs have not received enough training and are, as a whole, from white, middle-class families, which may make the volunteers less sensitive to cultural issues. Elaine Riordan, director of Douglas County's CASA program, said that about 80 percent of volunteers in the United States were middle class but that Douglas County had an extensive training program, which includes cultural sensitivity. Riordan also said that if Jennings' study showed any problems with the program, CASA would use the information to improve the program. "We're not doing this study just to get a pat on the back," she said. Student dedicated to cause CASA volunteer wanted to make difference in one child's life By Roberta Johnson Kansan staff writer Peter Thomas, Lawrence junior, wanted to make a difference in one child's life. The problem, he found, was that it would take longer than he had expected. Thomas became involved with the Douglas County Court Appointed Special Advocate program last February. He originally had applied as part of a sociology class requirement. "I had a misconception going in that I would hook up with a kid, figure out what they needed and make sure they get it." he said. Riordan said that Thomas was one of the few men, and just one of several KU students, who is involved with CASA. During training, Thomas learned that being a CASA would take much more work. He works a minimum of six hours each week contacting lawyers, social workers and any other professionals involved with the case. He is also required to turn in a monthly report to Elaine Riordan, director of Douglas County's CASA program, and give additional reports each time the child is referred to the courts. He said that the first priority of a CASA is to keep the family together unless it is absolutely necessary to separate them. "Removing the child can be more damaging than leaving them in there," he said. "Every effort is made to keep the child in the home and to work out the problems, whether it's abuse, lack of financial means or simply the parent and child not getting along." "Ihada "It's not like being in Big Brothers "I had a misconception going in that I would hook up with a kid,figure out what they needed..." Peter Thomas Lawrencejunior or Big Sisters," he said. "A CASA makes sure the needs are being met and identifies the shortcomings. There's a lot of phone calls and interviews, trying to get needs met." Court appointed lawyers and social workers have between 20 and 30 cases each, Thomas said. A CASA receives one child, and therefore is more aware of specifics about the case. 1 Riordan said that involvement with CASA requires at least a one-year commitment. Some children are locked in the court system for several years, she said. Thomas is planning a career in social work, helping in juvenile offender or children-in-need-of-care cases. He volunteers at Cottonwood, Inc., an organization that works with the mentally ill, and at Independence, Inc., which provides home-based care for the disabled. He also helps Mary Ann Jennings, Lawrence graduate student, collect data for her CASA effectiveness research project. During his free time, he is a guitarist for the band Nudie Voodoo. All potential volunteers undergo an extensive screening process, which includes criminal, reference and child abuse checks in addition to interviews. Despite his schedule, Thomas plans to remain involved with the program. "There's the potential the child could get lost in the shuffle," he said. "And so many kids don't have CASas." The next informational program for potential volunteers is Jan. 31, Riordan said. Those interested should call 841-7700, ext. 172. 4 Monday, January 24, 1994 OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN In support of its action, the college cited a "justified single-gender admissions policy that has defined its institutional mission and persona since its founding." VIEWPOINT Citadel should update rules, accept women The time has come for Student Senate to evaluate its rules and regulations. The rules need to be revised for clarity, or Senate needs to ensure a consistent interpretation of its regulations. The decision to allow Shannon Faulkner to attend day classes at The Citadel was correct. Despite protests from the male-only military college in South Carolina, Chief Justice William Rehnquist lifted a temporary stay. This cleared the way for Faulkner to attend classes while her lawsuit, which charges violation of her equal protection rights, is pending. It is unconstitutional to deny women access to educational opportunities equal to those of men, but The Citadel is attempting to do just that. The college's night classes, which women are permitted to attend, are clearly not the same opportunity. The state-supported college wants a male-only environment for its daytime classes, claiming it is "essential to The Citadel's holistic educational mission." How can a holistic mission exclude women? The Citadel has not been forced to house Faulkner in the barracks or allow her to join the Corps of Cadets, nor should they have to at this time. Admittedly, there are practical problems in incorporating one woman into an all-male living environment. There is no question that Faulkner was denied admission solely on the basis of her gender. Faulkner, who The Citadel initially accepted, was rejected only after the college discovered she was female. The Citadel was founded in 1842. Its archaic policies have not evolved beyond that date. Senators, stop bickering over the finer points of punctuation and the real meaning of rule 7.7.4. MARGARET BECK FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD Student Senate rule is inconsistent and unfair A recent incident of confusion involved Who'sinations. The independent campus publication was denied money it requested from Senate because the paper gives course credit to intern writers. An ad for writers brought the paper's policy to Senate's attention. The Senate Finance Committee would not hear debate on the request, citing rule 7.7.4 of their rules and regulations. That rule states: "No funds shall be allocated to any student organization whose members receive academic credit for being a member of the organization." The paper argued that the writers who get credit for their work on the paper are not members of the staff. That argument, however, did not sway the Finance Committee, which decided that the request did not comply with the rules and therefore could not be heard. Who'sinations has received Senate support in the past, even though the paper always has provided credit internships for students. Senate should stand by that precedent and finance the newspaper. If senators are unwilling to do that, they should come up with a clear and consistent interpretation of the rules and rewrite them to reflect that interpretation. DONELLA HEARNE FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD KANSAN STAFF BEN GROVE, Editor LISA COSMILLO, Managing editor TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator Editors Assistant Managing Editor...Dan England Assistant to the editor...J. R. Clairborne News ... Kristi Fogler, Katie Greenwald, ... Todd Selfort Editorial ...Colleen McCain ... Nathan Olson Campus ...Jess DeHaven Sports ...David Dorsey Photo ...Doug Hesse Features ...Sara Bennett JUSTIN GARBERG Business manager JENNIFER BLOWEY Retail sales manager JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser Business Staff Campus sales mgr ...Jason Eberly Regional sales mgr ...Troy Tarwerster National & Co-op sales mgr ...Robin Kring Special Sections mgr ..Sheliy McConnell Production mgr ...Laura Guth Gretchen Koothelteinch Marketing director ..Shannon Reilly Creative director ..John Carlton Classified mgr ..Kelly Connelys Teareatsheets mgr ..Wing Chan 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 photographed. The Kansas reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can contact Us at 115.854.9111 Fax Hall. 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 Stauffer-Flint Hall. More justice at a lower price should be standard for lawyers A 17-year-old New Jersey high school student will have $7 million to put in his savings account because he recently won a lawsuit against a bicycle manufacturer. The student was disfigured and partially paralyzed when a vehicle struck him while he was riding home at midnight. His bike had no lights. COLUMNIST JACK FISHER The argument that won him the suit stated that his bike should have been sold with either lights or a warning about riding at night without lights. The boy's lawyer will receive a percentage of the award. Such suits are earning some lawyers millions of dollars with the "who can I blame for my mistake?" attitude that pervades society. It has been estimated that it costs Americans $80 billion a year on direct litigation costs and increases in insurance premiums. Dow Chemical Co., for example, spends more than $100 million a year on legal services and liability insurance. If you don't think this affects you, ask an engineering senior how the job search is going. The costs of having a legal system are starting to outweigh the benefits. The threat of expensive legal action is having detrimental effects in all fields. Medical breakthroughs are often stifled because of the fear of litigation. Business contracts are becoming more convoluted and therefore more expensive to prepare. And those with true legal problems find the courts clogged with unnecessary suits and the costs of pursuing a grievance prohibitive. nies, like Motorola Inc., have ordered their legal departments to find other alternatives to court such as hiring independent mediation and arbitration consultants. These consultants often settle disputes in a matter of hours. One such consulting firm in California saw 14,000 cases in 1992. In Motorola's case, its litigation bills have been reduced 75 percent. Fewer legal action means fewer lawyers. The message here is that unless lawyers find a cheaper way to conduct business, we'll find others who can. But it is the responsibility of the system to reform itself if, for nothing else, self-preservation. Some compacolleagues at PollutionCo Inc. can keep pouring benzene into Shady Lake without the government pestering you.Mostly, though, the ad devoted itself to proving that attorneys, as a group, rank somewhere below the sea anemone on the evolutionary ladder. If those reasons don't inspire the lawyers to take a good, hard look at themselves, then consider how some other countries control their legal systems. In England, the loser of a civil suit is required to pay the winner's legal fees. In Japan, the number of students accepted to law school is limited to 2 percent of the applicants. That means Japan will add only 400 new lawyers this year to the 14,336 already practicing. The United States, with twice Japan's population, has 780,000 lawyers — 54 times as many as Japan. A legal system is still a necessary part of our society and we will always need lawyers to settle those disputes, that, having gone through mediation, are still unresolved. We also need lawyers who want to solve their client's problems, not prolong them. We need lawyers who are prepared to refuse cases if they feel ethically compromised, lawyers who would regard the word "loophole" in the same light as "bribe." Society is beginning to show its displeasure with the legal system through jokes, lawyer-bashing and a general disrespect for the profession. That displeasure will only grow unless lawyers are prepared to rein themselves in and review their purpose. A lawyer should be defined as one who solves problems and brings justice to the unjust. But when you hear the word "lawyer", do any of those definitions spring to mind? Jack Flahier is a London, England senior in Journalism. MARLEY Chicago Tribune BILL'S YUP. YOU NEED A COMPLETE TUNE-UP. WE BETTER CALL A LAWYER. HEALTH CARE Lawyer bashers getting out of hand COLUMNIST I want to preface this by saying that I am not a lawyer, nor am I studying to become one. There are no lawyers among my family or friends, and I'm not sure I've ever met one. But I think lawyers are picked on too much in our society. And if you'll stop cursing and ripping up this newspaper for a moment, I'll explain myself. Lawyer jokes have been a part of Western culture at least since Shakespeare's time. Everyone can laugh at the stereotypical portrait of the shyster, the ambulance chaser, the personal injury lawsuit bottom-feeder who advertises on late night cable television. No profession should be so proud that it cannot handle being laughed at a little. But within the last three years or so I've seen a disturbing trend take form as the lawyer bashers have begun to take themselves a little too seriously. COLUMNIST PAUL HENRY About a year ago Miller Lite beer produced a controversial television commercial featuring a bunch of good ol' boys in a lawyer rodeo, roping frightened attorneys who looked kind of like Christians in the Roman Colosseum. Can your beer do this? I saw an ad in the sports section of a recent USA Today for a book called "How to Outfox the Foxes: 263 Secrets the Law and Lawyers Don't Want You to Know." "Plain and simple," the charming advertisement read, "these people have mucked up more time and money than we could possibly have room to describe here." The ad took up an entire half page, so I think the authors probably could have found room if they would have tried. They offer a lot of suggestions that are, at best, unethical, such as the one that tells you how to defeat lawyers for regulatory agencies so you and your This is an extension of the Ross Perot mindset. The people who know what they are doing haven't produced satisfactory results, so why don't we hand over the reins to people who don't know what they're doing? This kind of misguided populism manifests itself in many forms. There are the term-limits people, for example, and there are the people who write poorly constructed letters to the editor of the local paper angrily branding the news media as a pack of incompetent fools. Anti-intellectualism is at the heart of these mean-spirited attacks. There are some people in our society who are dissatisfied with their own cognitive abilities, are jealous of those who can succeed in rigorous academic programs such as law school, and consequently construct ways to make themselfs feel superior to the vex professionals whom they envy. Anti-intellectualism begins in grade school when intelligent children are ostracized because they are different. It is encouraged in the adult world by demagogues like Rush Limbaugh and finds an outlet in the cranky grumblers of the guy down at the tavern who thinks he got screwed in his divorce settlement by that pettifogger his wife hired. I know that a lot of people don't take this kind of thing seriously; those are not the people who worry me. The fact is, we need all of the professions in our society, from the garbage collectors and ditch diggers to the lawyers and the (gas) politicians. It bothers me that there are folks who feel comfortable passing judgment on entire professions, rather than weighing the merits of each individual in turn. Prejudice is never acceptable whether in matters of race or vocation. Pai Henry is a Tacoma, Wash., graduate student in Journalism. NATIONAL PERSPECTIVE Verdict may result in equality for all patients They've got their eyes open now. That's how jury foreman Robbie Bowen sums up the staggering $80 million verdict against California's second-largest health maintenance organization. He speaks for thousands of families facing desperation similar to that of the plaintiff, James Fox, whose young wife was denied a bone-marrow transplant for her advanced breast cancer by the Foxes 'insurer, Health Net. The award — including $77 million in punitive damages and $121,000 on medical costs for the transplant treatment — does deliver a loud message to HMOs everywhere: Treat all patients equally. Critics of managed care have chosen to ignore that message and twist, the California verdict into a grave warning against the national health plan envisioned by the Clinton administration, which supports regional alliances that would shop for HMOs on behalf of a large pool of potential subscribers. While such an approach might keep costs in line, the critics warn, the savings will come at the expense of patient choice. That, in turn, will mean many more cases like Nelene Fox, 38, a mother whose last slim chance for survival was a treatment that Health Net considered too experimental to underwrite. There's a poignancy to Mrs. Fox's case that clearly appealed to the jury. Unable to get their HMO to pay, the family turned to public appeals for cash and drugs, and received enough response to proceed with the treatment. For five months after that, it appeared that Mrs. Fox's cancer would remain in remission. Then, suddenly, she took a turn for the worse and died. Her husband wonders if the stress of battling Health Net didn't contribute to her death. Who wouldn't sympathize with such a struggle? Yet it's wrong to interpret the verdict as vindication for one wronged patient, or a clarion call for unlimited patient choice in treatments. The jury's decision was based as much on Health Net's promises as on anything else. It found the HMO had violated a promise to pay for bone-marrow procedures, and was therefore arbitrarily selective in denying Mrs. Fox's claim. Times Union Albany, NY > UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Monday, January 24, 1994 5 Futons & Frames On Sale! BLUE HERON where comfort and quality is assured.. 937 Mass. 841-9443 EVERYTHING BUTICE Beds Desks Chest of Drawers Bookcases 936 Mass. CORTEAU ARIES THE MUSEUM FINDA Skin Care FINDA Balm FINDA Hydrating Serum CELEBRATE ON US! With A FREE Gift open up in an celebrate our Cold Metal Award for meeting Merriman Norris's goals of being the best in the world. Join us as we a limited time, unveil an exclusive Cold Metal Award. Café grum, free from a $140 costume fee, includes Cold Metal Award. Grum, free from a $140 costume fee, includes Cold Metal Award. Chawing, and take this golden opportunity to celebrate on us! *Note that this competition will have gift free entry for Lunaica Katie Delphino and Katrina Riordan. Each person will receive a Cold Metal Award. Each person will receive a Cold Metal Award. Each person will receive a Cold Metal Award.* ALQUILER ESTADO DE MADRID MERLE NORMAN TRAVEL CENTER W Break For The Beach March 18-22 $298 per person Daytona Beach $119 Panama City $138 Padre $148 includes 7 night's lodging MERLE NORMAN COSMETIC MARKET Marjorie Brammell, owner 9th and New Hampshire market (formerly Lawrence, KS 60044) 913-841-5324 Steamboat Includes round trip transportation from Lawrence by motorcoach. 2 night's hotel accommodations 3-day lift tickets 3-days ski rentals Palm tree Cancun Includes roundtrip airfare from KC. 7 night's beachfront hotel airport/hotel transfers March20-27 $640 per person Other packages available let one of our agents help design a package custom tailored for you. Restrictions apply to all rates based on maximum unit occupancy per person Subject to availability & change. call for details 841-7117 TRAVEL CENTER Southern Hills Center TRAVEL CENTER Southern Hills Center 1601 West 23rd rd m-9:30 - atn-9:30 2 "MAKE THE DESERT BLOOM" In honor of a friend celebrate Tu B'Shevat (that Jewish Tree Holiday) by having a tree planted in the new American Students Forest in the Negev desert, Israel. Come by the Israel table in the Union on Friday to plant a tree in honor of a special occasion or friendship. (Call Shelly Falevits or Braal Feinberg at 864-3948 if you have any questions.) Designer adds color to campus Housing director's creations win national recognition Dear Mother, I have been a part of your life for many years and I am deeply grateful to you. You have always been a source of comfort and inspiration. I will always remember the time when you were young and I was very proud of you. You are a true role model and a great influence on my life. I am sure that you will be missed soon. I hope that you remain in our hearts forever. Thank you. By Frank McCleary Kansan staff writer Carol Voterm Tersch did not want trendy colors in the Ekdahl Dining Commons. "Color is important," said Von Tersch, assistant director of student housing. "We wanted the colors to be bright and cheerful, also long-lived. You go through phases where people dislike the colors theyliked as teenagers." Carol Von Tersch, assistant director of student housing, played a crucial role in the designing of the Ekdahl Dinind Commons in Lewis Hall. Israel Amy Solt /KANSAN Aspart of her job, Von Tersch specifies the type of furniture and carpet to buy on major projects, such as the cafeteria and the construction of Amini Scholarship Hall. But when the housing department has smaller projects, such as redesigning lobbies, she becomes more involved with the design process. When considering the colors and furniture for the cafeteria, minor details were important to Von Tersch — so much that she negotiated to have the carpet made with a different fiber because it had a richer look, she said. "Sometimes little details do not appear to be important, but they do make a difference," said Von Tersch. She also considered what students liked and disliked in the design, she said. "After a while you begin to understand what students like and dislike." Von Tersch said. "She has a good sense of what goes together," he said. "She has a good notion of what lasts, what is in style." Ken Stoner, director of student housing, said it was important for the University to have an interior designer like Von Tersch. Von Tersch said one of her favorite projects was the Jayhawker Towers courtyard renovation. A swimming pool was removed last year and replaced by a sun deck that features a 17-ton limestone boulder. The Jayhawker Towers project placed first as an exterior lounge area in the $25,000 to $75,000 renovations category. The cafeteria placed second in the renovations over $75,000 category. "I think I will always have a particular attachment to this project," she said. Both the cafeteria and the courtyard renovations have received national recognition. The Association of University Interior Designers honored the projects last fall. Von Tersch said the Association of University Interior Designers' award was particularly special because it came from other designers. The department also received a positive response from students after the cafeteria opened, Von Tersch said. "Sometimes if you do not hear a lot, it means it is okay," she said. "We did hear a lot of positive comments after it opened." Stoner said Von Tersch always was willing to take on any project. "Everything from patios to a plaza to a dining commons, she gets involved with," he said. Panhellenic, AURH honor former dean As student life dean leader encouraged campus involvement By Frank McCleary Kansan staff writer Students in the greek community and the residence halls are honoring Caryl Smith for the time she gave to them. In December, KU Panhellenic and the Association of University Residence Halls established two awards in Smith's name that will recognize leaders in the greek community and the residence hall system. Smith served as dean of student life from 1978 to December 1993. She recently accepted the position of vice president for student support services at the University of Akron, Ohio. Panhellenic established the Caryl K. Smith Student Leader Award to be presented to a graduating fraternity man or sorority woman. The $500 award will be presented at the end of each spring semester. Jennifer MacDonald, president of Panhellenic, said the organization wanted to recognize Smith's involvement with fraternities and sororites. Smith retired last year after serving several years as chair of the Center for the Study of the College Fraternity. "Caryl was a big supporter of the greek community," she said. "She had an understanding because she was part of the community." The Caryl Kelley Smith Leadership Scholarship, established by AURH, will recognize a returning student within the residence hall system. The $500 scholarship will also be presented at the end of each spring semester. Ken Martin, vice president of AURH, said Smith's commitment to the residence halls also was important to recognize. "She took the time to foster the leadership abilities of students in the residence halls," he said. "She was someone who exemplified a strong leader. She inspired students." Smith said she was excited by the awards and the opportunities they will provide for students. "It is an extremely great honor to have either, let alone both," she said. "It is so important to have opportunities for students in the future." Residence halls and the greek community are important because they are places where students can become involved in campus life, Smith said. "They are terrific places where students can get experience," she said. "They are opportunities for students to participate in activities that supplement their academic studies." Western Civilization to offer chance to study in Europe By Angelina Lopez Kansan staff writer For most students, studying Western Civilization is simply learning about the writings of Galileo and Seneca in a classroom. The department of Western Civilization, with help from the Office of Study Abroad, is making it possible to study Western Civilization where Galileo and Seneca developed their noble ideas. The new program will allow 20-30 students to study Western Civilization, European history and art history for one semester in Paris and Florence, Italy, said Nancy Mitchell, assistant director of the Office of Study Abroad. The program will begin in the spring of 1995, she said. James Woelfel, director of the Western Civilization department, helped develop the program and will be the Western Civilization instructor for the students that go abroad. "It's a very special opportunity to be in the great cities of Europe and be able to study Western Civilization," he said. "Florence is the main city of the Renaissance period," he said. "It's a treasure house for works of art." For the second half of the semester, the students will study Western Civilization II in Paris, Woelfel said. Through this program, Mitchell Classical studies The Office of Study Abroad is offering an informational meeting about the program "Spring Semester Abroad, 1995 in Paris and Florence." 3 p. m. Tuesday in 3 Lippincott Hill. KANSAN said, a student can earn 12 credit hours — six hours for Western Civilization I or Western Civilization II three hours in art history and three hours in European history. The cost of the program for each student is approximately $5500, Mitchell said. That price covers KU tuition, room and board, some meals, weekend excursions and a 10-day Eurorail pass for students to travel during their spring break, she said. To be eligible for this program, a student must have a 3.0 grade point average, sophomore standing by the spring of 1995 and the equivalent of two semesters in a European language, Mitchell said. Turi Grimm, Sabeth freshman, said she would be interested in the program because she wanted to study abroad, but she said she was not interested in studying a foreign language. Michael Maher, a Lawrence resident who graduated from KU in 1993, said he would have loved to have studied Western Civilization through this program rather than through the traditional method. "You can learn a 100 times more through traveling than you can in a classroom," he said. CALL FOR COMMENTS ON CHANGES PROPOSED IN THE KU LIBRARIES' LENDING CODE In response to a charge from SenEx, the University Senate Committee on Libraries has reviewed the KU Libraries' Lending Code. After consultation with the Dean of Libraries and discussion throughout the Fall Semester, the Committee voted to recommend a revised code to University Council and the University administration, pending receipt of comments from faculty, students, and staff. Anschutz Science Library, Art and Architecture Library, Government Documents and Map Library, Music Library, Spahr Engineering Library Regents Center Library, Watson Library Copies of the full text of the current and proposed Code,as revised by the Senate Committee on Libraries, are available at the circulation desks of the following libraries: If you wish to comment on the proposed Code, please: - attend an open meeting on the Code, scheduled for January 27, 1994, at 7:30 pm, Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union and/or - send written comments to Prof. J. P. Davidson, Chair, Senate Committee on Libraries, 502 Watson Library, by January 27th. INTRAMURAL BASKETBALL MANAGERS'MEETING 44 Mandatory Managers' Meeting: Monday, January 24 at 7:00 pm in Robinson, Room 115. Rules will be discussed. All managers attending the meeting will have first opportunity in signing up for league play. NOTE:- Entries are accepted on a 1st come, 1st serve basis beginning at 8:30 am thru 4:00 pm on TUESDAY, JANUARY 25 and WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 26. *All team managers who do not attend the MANAGERS' MEETING will not be allowed to sign up until JANUARY 26 at 2:00 pm. DIVISIONS: MEN'S, WOMEN'S, CO-REC Open, Greek, Residence Hall, Law, Jayna ENTRYDEADLINE: WEDNESDAY, JAN.26@4:00PM ENTRY FEE: $25/TEAM SPONSORED BY KU RECREATION SERVICES 208 ROBINSON 864-3546 6 Monday, January 24, 1994 THE HARBOUR LIGHTS 1031 Massachusetts Decatown Metropolis BBS 832-0041 Liberty State Entertainment Bldg. THE PIANO(R) Today (4:15), 7:00, 9:30 KALIFORNIA(R) Today (4:30), 7:15 Only SEX AND ZEN(NC-17) 9:35 Only/Ends Thurs LIBERTY HALL DICKINSON THEATRE Dickinson 6 841 B600 2239 South Iowa St. Shadowlands P* 4.05; 7.00; 9.45 Iron Will P* 4.05; 7.00; 9.35 Grunpy Old Men P* 13.14; 20.2; 7.50 Beethoven's P* 2.15; 11.5; 9.35 Sact Acti I P* 4.25; 10.9; 4.5 House Party I R* 4.40; 25.2; 9.40 orview The Plan, Thursday at 7 pm TRAVEL CO. The Business Solutions Co 100 W. 15th St. Ste. 3, Orchards Corners $3 Primetime Show (+) Heating Dolly Senior Clue Anime! Imagined Stereo Crown Cinema BEFORE 4 PM, ADULTS $3.00 (SUMMER TO SEATINGS) SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00 VARSITY JET'S MASSAUGUST STUDENTS 541-5191 Pelican Brief PG-13 5:00-8:00 HILLCREST 925 IOWA 541-5191 Mrs. Doubtfire PG-13 4:45 7:15-9:40 Intersection R 7:30-9:40 Air Up There PG 6:15 7:30-9:35 Tombstone R 7:15-9:45 Philadelphia PG-13 4:40 7:20-9:50 CINEMA TWIN AIR STATS TUFFI/OWA K41 5191 $1.25 MyLife PG-13 5.90 7.38, 9.45 Rudy PG 5.90, 7.20 Malice R 9.45 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Check Us Out! Free Worldview Trip Plan, Thursdays 7 p.m. TRAVEL CO. 3300 W. 15th St., Site 3, Orchards Corners Located on the KU bus route! You gotta check us out! Confidential Affordable Free pregnancy tests Birth control Sliding fee scale STD screening Planned Parenthood Quality reproductive health care for men and women Now Open in Lawrence 1420C Kasold Drive (Orchards Corners) 832-0281 POSTER SALE Recycled Sounds from Lawrence & KC U2 · Coltrane · Lemonheads · Rush Bjork · Frank Zappa · Soundgarden Lenny Kravitz · Resevoir Dogs Specials · House of Pain · Hendrix Bob Dylan · Smashing Pumpkins PJ Harvey · Tosh · Metallica · Sting Cure Jane's Addict · Ice · T Rage Against the Machine · Clapton Blind Melon · Billie Holiday · Beatles Madonna · Led Zeppelin Morrissey Red Hots · Bad Brains · Blues Brothers · Depeche Mode Nirvana Pink Floyd · Taxi Driver Mon., Jan. 24 - Sat., Jan. 29 KANSAS UNION GALLERY, Level 4, Kansas Union STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUR THE UNION OF STUDENTS 9 - 5 pm Mon. - FrJ/ 10 - 4 pm Sat. The Associated Press The lights fade away for Montana and his magic ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. — For two magic minutes, he was the old Joe Montana, slick and quick, whipping passes, moving Kansas City methodically down the field. Gone were the miserable first 28 minutes of Sunday's AFC championship game against Buffalo, a 3-for-14 disaster. Gone were the drifting, fluttering passes. Suddenly, he was Joe Cool, crisply completing four straight passes, and five of six, moving the Chiefs to the Bills' 5-ward line. One more pass and the Chiefs would be on the board, down just a touchdown at halftime. One more, Joe. "If we score, maybe everything is a little smile," Montana said, a thin smile on his lips. "We got going. We get the ball back at the start of the second half." He threw for the end zone and the ball was right there, in the hands of Kimble Anders — but then it bounced out and into the hands of Buffalo's Henry Jones. It was the end of the drive. And shortly after that, it was the end of Montana. Just as he threw the ball, Montana was hit from behind by Phil Hansen. And on his way down, Bruce Smith met him from one side and Jeff Wright arrived as well. Sacked for a 5-yard loss by Darryl Talley on the first play of the third quarter, Montana came back throwing on the next down. He scrambled a bit before finding Keith Cash for 17 yards over the middle. As Hansen hit Montana, the 37-year-old quarterback pitched forward, head first, on the frozen turf. The collision was frightening and it was not surprising when Montana stayed down, clutching his helmet, almost as if he was trying to keep his head on his shoulders. "I don't remember much about the olay." Montana said. "There were about three of us that hit him," Smith said. "I think when he came down, his head hit the carpet and he went 'Ohhh?' You knew something was wrong. I asked him if he was all right but he couldn't comprehend what I was saying. He was out of it." "My head hurt and everything went white for a couple of seconds," Montana said. "I had a sharp pain in my head." Montana was helped off the field, listing a little, looking like a broken- down quarterback than the folk hero. On the sidelines, he sat on the bench, hands folded in his lap, a sort of vacant look in those electric eyes that have dissect NFL defenses so thoroughly over the years. The word from the Kansas City bench was that Montana was dazed and being re-evaluated. No re-evaluation was necessary. Joe Cool was done for the day, finished after 9-for-23 and 125 yards, the last 17 of which he never got to see. "I don't remember much of it," Montana said. "I remember grabbing my head. Everything went white. I couldn't remember most of the third quarter." It was an hour after the game, and Montana had showered. He spoke clearly and yet he wasn't all there. That was the case for most of Sunday. In drizzly overcast weather, Montana never seemed to get untracked. "I'm not me." "It still hurts," he said. "If I move my head quickly, I get dizzy. He missed his first five passes and they were not close. When he started the two-minute drill with the Chiefs Chiefs and Bills By the Numbers First Quarter Buf—Thomas 12 run (Christie kick) P-11 Second Quarter KC—FG Lowery 31,12:46. KC—FG Lowery 31, 12.40. KC—FG Lowery 31, 14.21. Buf——Thomas 3 run (Christie kick), 2:58 Buf——FG Christie 23, 7:56. FG Christie 18,3:05. Buf—FG Christie 25,12:59. Third Quarter INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS KC—Allen 1 run (Lowery kick), 11:54. Fourth Quarter Buf—Thomas 3 run (Christie kick), 9:30 A—76,642 RUSHING-Kansas City, Allen 18-50. Anders 2-1, Montana 1-1. Buffalo, Thomas 33-186, K.Davis 10-32, Reed 1-8, Kelly 2-13 PASSING—Kansas City, Montana 9-23 1-125, Kleg 16-29 1-198. Buffalo, Kelly 17-27-0-160. 2-36, McNair 2-33, Hayes 2-14 Passed A00 2-14 Added RECEIVING—Kansas City, Cash 6-87 Davis 5-17, Birden 4-60, Allen 2-3-6, McNair 1-2, Hayes 2-1-4, E. Thompson 1-1-2, Hughes 1-1-1, Anders 1-7, Szott 1-6, Buffalo, Reed 4-4-9 Darwin 4-1-1, McNair 4-1-1 Thomas 2-22, Beebe 2-19, McKellan 1-7 MISSED FIELD GOALS—None. Brooks 4-34, Metelzaar 4-29, Thomson 4-29, Bears 4-30, Metellera 4-7 Source: The Associated Press KANSAN down 20-6 and the Bills in a prevent defense, he had passed for just 33 yards. "I couldn't get a grip on the ball," he said. That was the key thing, my inability to throw the ball. And after that third quarter collision, there would be no more opportunity to throw it. I Can't Believe It's Yogurt! vs. Premium Ice Cream Half the Calories! 80% Less Fat! 33% More Protein! Plus, I Can't Believe It's Yogurt offers Nonfat and Sugar Free flavors that have No Fat or Cholesterol! Louisiana Purchase 23rd & Louisiana 843-5500 Louisiana Purchase 23rd & Louisiana 843-5500 Orchards Corners 15th Kascald 749-0440 50¢ OFF 15th Kasold 749-0440 I Cant Believe It's Yogurt! We Put A Smile On Your Taste a medium or large serving! Busy schedule? Watkins Pharmacy Is Conveniently Open TII 9 p.m. Monday-Thursday. EXPIRES 2/10/94 Pharmacy Hours "W >re For KU" 1907 Also available, special selection CDs $3.95! Pharmacy Hours Monday-Thursday 8 a.m.-9 p.m. Friday 8 a.m.-6 p.m. Saturday 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Sunday 11 a.m.-3 p.m. For the Best Values in Town Visit Lawrence Pawn STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES 864-9500 843-4344 718 New Hampshire Since WATKINS 1907 Serving Only Laurence Campus Students The Lowest CD Prices In Town! Buy 100 more books for the Best Values in Training Current, Popular CDs for $5.95! Buy 5 or more CDs for $4.95! Buy 5 or more CDs for $4.95! Buy 10 or more CDs for $2.50 each! 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With the card, you get a listing of 60 busi- nesses and their exclusive offers to Kansan Membership has its privileges... - Incredible discounts - Buy one get one free - 20% Off any regular priced item - Free medium beverage or fries - Free appetizer w/purchase of entree Card will be available through February 25, 1994. Cards can be purchased for only $1 apiece at the Kansan Business office; KU Bookstores, Kansas and Burge Unions; University Book Shop and Jayhawk Bookstore. But we warn you...you're in for a HUGE return on your investment! 841-6918 8th Street TAPROOM MON.1.50 WELL DRINKS - Tues. 1.50 ALMOST ANYThiNg PeN 3pm-2Am WED.4.00KILLIanRED PitchErs - thurs. PETE's WIcked ale BoTTLES 1.75 - ○ fri. $ONe doLLAR KAMIS - SAT. 3.75220Z.BlackDOGALE O SUN.1.75 BL0ODY Mary's 50¢ POOL - DArts - PINBALL SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Monday, January 24, 1994 7 214 90 62 90 70 81 90 Bills head to fourth Super Bowl John Cottose, Lake Quivira junior, and Daron Sinkler, Shawnee senior, cheer as the Kansas City Chiefs score during the play-off game against Buffalo. Cottose and Sinkler and about eight friends, all employees of Free State Brewery, gathered on their front porch at 818 Kentucky to watch the Chicks yesterday. Doug Hesse / KANSAN JAMES SMITH Buffalo wins AFC,beats Chiefs 30-13 The Associated Press ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. — Sorry, America, the Bills are back and Joe's not. The Buffalo Bills advanced to an unprecedented fourth consecutive Super Bowl on Sunday, beating Joe Montana and the Kansas City Chiefs 30-13. What much of the nation outside of western New York feared — the only team to lose three consecutive Super Bowls, heading to Atlanta to try again — came true because running back Thurman Thomas was unstoppable "All you can ask in life is to have an opportunity," All-Pro defensive end Bruce Smith said. "We have an opportunity, and we're going to take advantage of it." Added quarterback Jim Kelly, "I think nearing the end of the week, more people were turning toward us and saying, 'You guys have accomplished a lot and if you guys get there, we'll be pulling for you.' We don't have to prove anything to anybody. We're champions in our own mind." The Chiefs, who lost in their first championship game since the 1969 season, and Montana, 4-0 in Super Bowls, were kept off-balance by Buffalo's aggressive defense, led by Smith and linebacker Darryl Talley. The Bills knocked Montana from the game early in the third quarter, while Kansas City's defense kept groping at Thomas, who rushed for 186 yards — 131 by halftime — and three touchdowns. "We believed in ourselves and the organization," Thomas said. "We hung together as a team. "Going into the Super Bowl, we know what it takes. We know the mistakes we can eliminate. You have to rank this right up there with when we beat the Raiders in 1990. For this one, a lot of people didn't want us back. But our job is not done yet." This was the same Thomas who rushed for only 44 yards on Nov. 28, when the Chiefs battered the Bills 23-17. 7. The NFL's combined yardage leader when the Bills won the AFC title in 1990, '91 and '92, Thomas went over 1,000 yards rushing in playoff competition with his biggest playoff output and second most of his career. Buffalo, which lost the last three Super Bowls by a combined score of 109-60, has won its four AFC titles by an aggregate 120-33. The Bills will face Dallas, which won the 1993 Super Bowl 52-17. "We might have fallen to defeat the last three," Kelly said, "but that doesn't mean a thing. To the people who didn't want us, sorry." Montana struggled throughout the first half, at one point hitting just three of 14 passes. He was sidelined when hit by three Bills on the third "My head hurt, everything went white for a couple of seconds," Montana said. "Joe suffered a mild concussion and really wasn't functional to come back and play," Chiefs coach Marty Schottenheimer added. The 37-year-old veteran left the game dazed, the same feeling the Chiefs defense must have had attempting to deal with Thomas. Montana finished 9-for-23 for 125 yards. Dave Krieg, Montana's replacement, took the Chiefs 90 yards in 14 plays, including a fourth-down, 19- yard pass to Keith Cash. Marcus Allen scored from the 1, making it 20-13. The Bills, showing their championship form — no other team has won four consecutive AFC, NFC or NFL crowns — answered immediately. Thomas had an 11-yard run and a 15-yard reception in a 79-yard drive that stalled inside the 1. Steve Christie kicked an 18-yard field goal with 11:55 to go. Thomas got his third touchdown with a 3-yard run with 5:30 remaining, then was mobbed by his teammates as he carried the ball with him to the bench. Although Thomas and the Bills dominated the first half, the Chiefs should have been within 20-13 at halftime. Montana, finally finding his receivers, Instead of being within seven points, the Chiefs headed into the locker room wondering if anything would go right. Not enough did. took them 75 yards in six plays, including a 31-yard completion to Todd McNair, who broke three tackles in getting to the 5. Montana then hit Kimble Anders at the goal line, but the ball deflected off Anders' hands to Bills safety Henry Jones. With temperatures in the low 30s and a light rain falling, the weather was not a factor. No Ice Bowl, as in Buffalo's victory over the Los Angeles "You know that football team has taken a lot of heat from a lot of people," Schottenheimer said. "They're a hell of a football team ... my hat is off to them." Raiders last week, when a wind-chill of minus-32 made it the coldest game in Bills history. There also was no sign of the Kansas City defense that ravaged Houston for nine sacks in a 28-20 win last Sunday. Instead, the Chiefs' weak performance gave Schottenheimer his third loss in as many AFC championship games; the other two came while coaching Cleveland. Allen, who joined the Chiefs as a free agent and gained 1,002 yards overall, had just 50 yards rushing and 36 yards receiving and scored Kansas City's only touchdown. Krieg was 16-for-29 for 198 yards and one interception. Buffalo got moving on its third possession, covering 47 yards in six plays, including a perfect pass from Kelly to Andre Reed down the left sideline for 28 yards. Thomas scored on a 12-yard run up the middle behind center Kent Hull's crushing block. Inspired by their defense, the Bills offense kept pounding away. Thomas broke a 33-yard run to the Kansas City 26 and his understudy, Ken Davis, went for 15 on the next play. On third- and 2 from the 3, Thomas romped into the end zone untouched after a great block by Pete Metzelaars. The Chiefs, AFC West champions for the first time in 22 years, responded with two 31-yard field goals by Nick Lowery, the NFL's career kicking percentage leader. The first climaxed a 51-yard drive on which Allen had a 24-yard run. The second came five plays after Russell Copeland fumbled the ensuing kickoff at the Buffalo 24. Fred Jones recovered, but the Chiefs got only to the 13. Thomas, who joined Franco Harris, Tony Dorsett and Allen as the only players with more than 1,000 yards rushing in postseason games, continued to dominate on the next drive. He accounted for 28 of the 41 yards on the series, and Christie made a 23-yard field goal for a 17-6 edge. Christie added a 25-yard moments later after the Bills again stopped the Chiefs. Montana misfired with Keith Cash wide open on third down, then Thomas carried for 31 yards in a 56-yard drive. "There's one more river to cross," Kelly said. "There's no pressure on us, nobody expected us to be here, and we're back." Students rally around the Chiefs Kansan staff writer By Cheryl Cadue 闽旅级 Andrew Wiksten, Topeka junior, said he had been a Kansas City Chiefs fan for five years but did not mind fairweather fans who joined him in rooting for his favorite team. "They watch the games and cheer just like everyone else, and they know they're not real Chiefs fans," Wiksten said. "Besides, nobody wants to see the Bills go to the Super Bowl again." Tom Leininger/ KANSAN While many people said they watched the game because of the Chiefs, others watched because they wanted to see a football game. Jaime Chow, Taipei, Taiwan freshman, hangs his head back in despair while in Templin Hall after seeing the Clients loss to 10 points late in the game. "I'm a big football fan, not a Chiefs fan," said Carl Goldsmith, Glencow, ill., senior. "I'm just here to watch the game and have a good time." Madio Lee, Kansas City, Kan, freshman, said he watched the Chiefs game because he liked football, and he thought the publicity would be good for Kansas City. bandwagon," Lee said. "If the Chiefs don't get there next year, those people won't care." "A lot of people are just riding the Sunti Wathanacharoen, Leawood junior, said he had wanted Kansas City to show San Francisco what they lost when they traded Montana to the Chiefs. "I've been a Kansas City Chiefs fan all my life." Wathanacharoen said. "I'm from Kansas City, and it's our team." Zoltan Dobolyi, Vasteras, Sweden, freshman, said he watched every Chiefs game even though he did not know all the rules for football. "Montana is a legend. I heard about him last year in Sweden and was very excited when I learned he played just down the road," Dobolyi said. Nick Jacobson, Wichita sophomore, said he woke up for the 11:30 a.m. kickoff just to watch the Chiefs play, while his roommates slent. "I want the Chiefs to win, but I'll be for the Dallas Cowboys if they lose," Jacobson said. Eric Myers, Boulder, Colo., senior said he had been waiting for the Dallas and San Francisco game. "I'm not much of a Chiefs fan," he said. "Everyone is cheering for the Chiefs, and it's getting on my nerves." By Liz Chadwick Kansan staff writer It was a beautiful, sunny afternoon for the first time in weeks after an unrelenting cold spell in Lawrence, but the mood was dark in Kaspar's bar, 3115 W. Sixth St., where the remaining disappointed Chiefs fans gathered to watch their team lose. However, all was not bleak yesterday. Unbelievable as it may have seemed to the fans in the sports bar, many Lawrence residents were having a wonderful day shopping and seeing movies. Things were jumping at Community Mercantile. 901 Mississippi St. Yesterday was the first day of a week-long celebration of the anniversary of Kansas statehood at the store. Nancy O'Connor, nutrition educator for Community Mercantile, stood behind a table handing out samples of locally made food. She laughed when asked about the timing of the kick-off the festivities at the Mercantile with the Chief's game. "We weren't thinking about the Chief's game when we were planning this," she said. "The actual birthday of Kansas statehood is January 29, 1861, and we wanted to start a week early. But, when we realized the game was happening, we decided to go ahead, sacrilegious as that may sound. We've had a fair number of people here today." Women, it seemed, were especially immune to Chiefs fever. Outside Hillcrest Theaters at 1:30 p.m., 25-30 people cued up to buy tickets to the first matinee. All but three of them were women. Neal Ballard, a teacher at Hillcrest School, was waiting to purchase tickets for the film "Philadelphia" with three women friends. "I'm a Chiefs fan, but it's not the most important thing in my life," he said. "Besides, they're getting their tails beat." Pancho's MEXICAN RESTAURANT Celebrating 5 years of making delicious homestyle Mexican Food Come join the fiesta! 711 W 23rd in the Malls Shopping Center 843-4044 Pancho's MEXICAN RESTAURANT Looking for Real World exPerience? THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN is an experience that will test your skills and abilities to the limit, an experience from which you will gain knowledge and friendship,and the experience of a lifetime. GAIN: - Valuable Communication Skills * Time Management Skills - Time Management Skills * Professionalism - Sales and Service Knowledge * Real World Experience POSITIONS NOW AVAILABLE: • Assistant Account Executives • Research Assistants • Management Assistants Applications due: FRIDAYJANUARY 28BY 5:00p.m. in 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall. A limited number of positions are available ALL MAJORS ENCOURAGED TO APPLY. 8 Monday, January 24, 1994 Rentco USA 749-1605 Student Discount low Carrying Computers 1741 Massachusetts Kennedy Glass For All Your Glass Needs All automotive glass replacement & insurance claims handled. 730 New Jersey 843-4416 TODAY BIG 8 CONFERENCE INFORMATION presented by the Black Student Union 7:00 in the Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union SUNFLOWER 843-5000 804 MASSACHUSETTS You can never have too many Khakis WOOLRICH NOT ONLY OFFERS CLASSIC STYLING, BUT LASTING QUALITY. WITH OVER 160 YEARS OF HISTORY BEHIND IT, WOOLRICH OUTDOOR WEAR IS TRULY AUTHENTIC. the perfect fit at the perfect price at the perfect location UNDERCOVER The pink building 21 W.9th Street SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN You don't have to be a staff member on one of the top college newspapers to receive its rewards. Join us for a new program that is aimed at first-year students who are interested in reporting, editing or photojournalism. Call or write Christine Laue, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4810 Organizational Meeting 4:30 p.m. January 27, 1994 Rm. 204 Stauffer-Flint Hall FREE PIZZA From Your Friends at Pyramid Pizza (of course) Happy Fast & Friendly Delivery (limited area) 842-3232 14th & OHIO (UNDER THE WHEEL) SPECIAL COUPON PYRAMID PIZZA MONDAY MANIA Buy any PYRAMID PIZZA & get the Second Pizza (of equal value) PYRAMID NEW YORK FREE! FREE! Kansan Card offer good carry out only. WE HONOR KANNAN Aikman completed 14 of 18 passes for 177 yards and two touchdowns by half time, carrying the Cowboys to a 28-7 lead Sunday that became a 38-21 victory over San Francisco and a second straight Super Bowl berth. Cowboys roll past 49ers "Unbelievable," offensive coordinator Norv Turner said. "He was just phenomenal." The Associated Press But on his second snap of the third quarter, Aikman was knocked dizzy when he caught a knee from 49ers defensive end Dennis Brown in the helmet. By the end of the NFC championship game, Dallas Cowboys quarterback Troy Aikman was in a hospital trying to regain his senses from a head injury that cut short an unforgettable performance. Alkman took one more snap, then spent about 15 minutes trying to regain consciousness on the sidelines by inhaling smelling salts and oxygen. It didn't work, and he headed to the locker room. With about 4 minutes left in the game, he rode an ambulance to Baylor Medical Center, where he was expected to spend the night, team officials said. "He probably has a first-degree concussion, maybe more than that," Cowboys trainer Kevin O'Neill said. "He still wasn't aware of what the day was." O'Neill said it was too early to determine the severity of the injury. "Let's see how the tests come out, and we'll go from there," he said. Cowbys coach Jimmy Johnson was hoping for the best. "I'm concerned about Troy," he said. "Hopefully, everything will be fine and he'll be ready to go in a day or two." "He can make all the throws up the field, but he's so patient and willing to take what's undermeath," Turner said. "He was accurate hitting the guys on the run so they could run with it after the catch. In the two quarters he played, Alkman was about as sharp as he'd been all season, looking worthy of every penny of his record $50 million contract. Alkman was just as efficient in the second quarter, sparking three scoring drives with both precision passing on both short and long routes. Once Aikman left, the Cowboys were in the trusty hands of Bernie Kosar, Dallas' $1 million midseason insurance policy. completed all three pass attempts for 46 yards and even ran twice for 16 yards. The first scramble was for a first down and the second set up the touchdown. "It was just a great first half of football. I hated to see him have to leave the game," he said. Kosar, no stranger to league championship games from his days with Cleveland, responded by completing five of nine passes for 83 yards. of nine plates for 60 buys. His biggest highlight was a 42-yard touchdown pass to Alvin Harper that put the Cowboys ahead 35-14. But Kosar's biggest play was one earlier on the drive that ended with Harper's touchdown. With Dallas third-and-nine from its 19, the 49ers were building momentum. They were down only 28-14 and Kosar's first four passing attempts resulted in a sack, two incompletions and a one-yard completion. Kosar responded with a dart to Michael Irvin on the left side that went for 12 yards, keeping the Cowboys in control. Three snaps later, Harper caught a quick slant and bolted past the defense for the game-breaking score. "We blitzed on third down and they made the play." San Francisco coach George Selfert said. "Had we made that play, I suspect it may have been a different ball game." The defending Super Bowl champions will meet the Buffalo Bills — whom they beat last year 52-17 — next Sunday in Atlanta. Jayhawks win swim meet at Southern Illinois Kansan staff report The Kansas swim teams surprised no one on Saturday when both the men and the women defeated Southern Illinois University in Carbon-dale, Ill. The No. 16 men improved their dual record to 3-1, with a 142-94 victory. The No. 18 women won 146-87, and improved their dual record to 4-1. The Kansas men were led by seniors Scott Townsend and Tim Davidson. Davidson, the only Kansas diver to qualify for NCAA Zone Meet, captured victories in both the 1- and 3-meter diving events. townsend placed first in both the 50- and 100-yard freestyle, as well as swimming on the winning 400-yard individual medley relay. The women were led by junior Kirsten Carlson, who placed first in both the 100- and 200-meter backstrokes. SPORTS in brief The Kansas women have defeated Southern Illinois 10 consecutive times. Both the men and the women teams hope to improve their 1-0 conference records when they travel Saturday to Ames, Iowa, to take on the Cyclones. Jayhawks net two victories Kansan staff report The No. 33 Kansas men's tennis team opened its home season on a positive note as it defeated Tulaa and Illinois over the weekend at Alvamar Racquet Club in Lawrence. Kansas defeated Tulsa 5-1 late Friday night and followed that with a 5-0 shutout against Illinois on Saturday. The Javhawks improved their record to 5-0. The Jayhawks improved their record to 76. The No. 1 singles team of sophomores Michael Isroff and Reid Slattery won both of their matches. Slattery, ranked No. 22 in singles, split his matches during the weekend. He lost Friday, 6-3, 4-6, 6-3 to Chris Milliron of Tulsa but rebounded with a 1-6, 7-6, 6-1 victory against Jerry Turek, of Illinois. Slattery's record stands at 11-3. The Jayhawks will travel Feb. 11-12 to Minneapolis to compete in the Ice Vollies Tournament. The Kansas men's next home match will be Mar. 6 in Merriam when it takes on Drake. Kansas men's track wins meet Kansan staff report The men placed first in eight events on their way to the meet victory. The Kansas track team had a strong showing during the weekend as the men placed first and the women took second at the Kansas State/Coors Invitational at Ahearn Field House in Manhattan. They were led by senior pole vaulter John Bazzoni, who not only set a meet record but qualified for the NCAA meet. Junior distance runner Melissa Swartz took first in both the mile run and the 1000-meter run. The women won five separate events on their way to a second place finish. The Jayhawk men placed second in the pentathlon, while the women took fourth in the same event. The Jayhawks will resume action when they compete Jan. 29, in Oklahoma City, at the Sooner Invitational. KUSPRING BREAK ALTERNATIVES VOLUNTARYSERVICES-RELAXATION-COMMUNITY-EDUCATIONAL-TRAVEL Northern New Mexico "Are We Different Are We Alike?" (Cross-Cultural) Cost: $200 Fayetteville (4 days) "Music and Mission" Cost:$75 Mexico-Pedras Negras Between Two Views Building on the Border (Project Amistad Cost:$100 SPONSORS: Ecumenical Christian Ministries (Presbyterian, United Church of Christ, Church of the Brethren-Canterbury (Episcopal)-United Methodist Campus Ministry-Lutheran (ELCA) Campus MInistry New Mexico "Navaho Checkerboard Hand" (Filled) Cost: $200 INFORMATION MEETING: Thursday, Jan. 27, 7:30 pm, ECM Center (block north of Kansas Union) APPALACHIA Cost: $230 Woodland Community Lendtrust, Tennessee Cost: $150 "Urban Life for the Poor" CHICAGO CHICAGO “Understanding Underclass” Cost: $250 DENVER MEXICO-SALTILLO Cost: $150 "Support for Homeless and Hungry" "Worship and Service" Cost: $120 CHICAGO Hispanic and Native American Urban Life APPALACHIA Dungannon Development Commission, Virginia Cost: $150 Cost:$230 MEXICO-TIJUANA "BorderAwareness" (Filled) Cost: $350 INFORMATION MEETING: Tuesday, Jan. 25, 7:30 pm, St. Lawrence Center, 1631 Crescent Road All of these alternatives include voluntary service and an opportunity to be in a community of persons concerned about care and justice for society and the natural environment. Cost of trips includes all expenses (i.e. travel, room and board). Other expenses are additional. Space is limited! Attend information meeting to answer your questions. FORMOREDETAILS,CALLECM(843-4933)ORST.LAWRENCE(843-0357) SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Monday, January 24, 1996 9 SPORTS EDITOR DAVID DORSEY KANSAS KU guard prevails after tough year Kansas freshman guard Tamecka Dixon moves the ball past Oklahoma State's Amy Scales and Cheri Westervelt. Dixon scored four points in yesterday's 79-68 victory. Everyone faces adversity. And sometimes, only the strong-minded can overcome it. One year ago today, fate piled up a ton of that adversity and threw it upon the back of Jarod Haase. Like most players in that situation, Haase blamed himself for the loss. He ignored the statistics next to his name that listed his 19 points, five steals, four assists and two three-pointers. Hase, a sophomore shooting guard on the Kansas basketball team, played last season for California. Under NCAA transfer rules, he can practice but not play this season, and he will begin his final three years of playing eligibility next fall. Since the Golden Bears played USC on Friday and UCLA Sunday, they decided to stay in Los Angeles rather than fly back to Berkeley for just one day off. The morning following the USC game, an assistant coach talked to Haase in his hotel room. "That was quite a weekend," Haase said. "We played at USC, and I was playing the game of my life. Down the stretch, I hit a bunch of shots. Then I went up for a rebound and was called for a foul. USC hit the two free throws and won the game." During a three-day span one year ago, situations both within and beyond Haase's control brought him frustration, heartbreak and ultimately victory. Hase learned then his father, Gary, had died the night before. Gary Haase had been hospitalized with an infection in his foot. The infection spread throughout his body, attacked the spleen, and rapidly — and surprisingly — killed him. "That night, my mom and my sister went by the hospital and saw my dad, and the people there said that my dad would be fine," Haase said. "They went down to watch my brother's game. When they called back the hospital, they said that they'd better get back there. There was nothing they could do." Haase's brother, Steven, was a senior basketball player for the Air Force Academy last season. While Jarod played against USC, Steven played a game at Fresno State. Kansas downs Oklahoma State The news of his father's death shocked Haase. While the loss to USC must have seemed like a distant memory, the Golden Bears still had a game to play the following night. "I decided to stay one extra day down in LA. I play against UCLA, mainly because I think my dad would have wanted me to play in that game," Haase said. "And I was just fortunate enough to play well in that game." Haase scored 16 points and had five assists in that game. He made three of three-pointers in 30 minutes of play. USA Today called it the "Most Courageous Performance of the Season." Gary Haase never pressured his children into athletics. He did, however, encourage and cheer them on. Two of his sons became basketball players. Two of his daughters and another son became All-American cross country skiers. "He wasn't a high school coach or anything, and he didn't know a whole lot about the game," Jerod Haase said of his father's basketball interest. "But he was probably the biggest fan ever. He never, ever said, 'I want you to score a lot of points.' He never put any pressure on me." In the last year's NCAA Tournament, Haase learned first-hand about big-time college basketball. Against Duke, Haase scored 13 points and made three of four three-pointers. Ironically, Haase's last game as a Golden Bear came the following week against Kansas. Haase finished with 10 points in the loss to the Jayhawks. And Haase, who finished his freshman season averaging 7.2 points a gam, will fit in well with the Jayhawks. With guard Steve Woodberry a senior, Haase could find himself starting alongside Jacque Vaughn. Instead of being part of the best freshman backcourt, as he was with Kidd, he'll be part of the best sophomore backcourt with Vaughn. "It was a different feeling playing against them," Haase said of Duke and Kansas. "The level of intensity was much higher." "I try not to be arrogant or anything on the court," Haase said, "but I feel like I can play against anybody and with anybody." As he proved last year, Haase has the work ethic and desire to fight through adversity. In a sense, he's already won the most important game of his life. By Matt Siegel Kansan sportswriter While most sports fans watched the Kansas City Chiefs lose to the Buffalo Bills, the No. 8 Kansas women's basketball team continued to take care of business and improved its winning streak to 10 games. A crowd of 300 watched Kansas dismantle Oklahoma State 79-68. Kansas held Oklahoma State to 37.5 percent shooting from the field and forced 18 turnovers. Oklahoma State didn't pass the 30-point mark until 15:40 remained in the second half. "I think that we work hard to try to keep pressure where we can," Kansas coach Marian Washington said. "I told them yesterday that it had been a long time since anyone had shot better than 40 percent against us. We take a lot of pride in that." The Jayhawks were down 8-7 early, but the Kansas defense sparked a 12-0 run and propelled the Hawks to a 38-21 halftime lead. In the second half it was more of the same. The defense held off a late run by Oklahoma State. Kansas led 62-49 with 5:52 left. Several times Oklahoma State was able to creep within six points but never got any closer. ing 24 points. Kansas sophomore guard Charisse Sampson added 20. Oklahoma was led by sophomore forward Etta Maytuby's 28 points. The Jayhawks received an unexpected boost from senior center Lisa Tate. Tate, who is averaging 8.6 rebounds a Kansas junior forward Angela Aycock's performance was one of the Aeycocks Oklahoma State was not able to close the gap any further. She led all scorers with 23 points and grabbed 11 rebounds. It was the fifth time this season she finished with double figures in scoring and rebounding. "Angie stepped up like she needed to and took charge," Washington said. "She is just a tremendous player." game, played despite feeling flu-like symptoms, and managed to log 25 minutes of playing time. She scored 12 points and had five rebounds. "Itried to stay away from it," Aycock said. "A lot of the physical play was down low, and I figured that if I didn't go down there, I wouldn't get bumped around as much. I really tried to keep the offense spread out so if anything were to happen, it would be obvious." "I was basically just going to come in and play a couple of minutes and sit down." Tate said. "I knew that my Aycock stepped up late in the game, scoring 10 points in the final 3 minutes and 17 of her 23 points in the second half. In what the players and the coaches said was a physical game, Kansas' pressure defense came up with 13 steals. In addition, the Jayhawks had three players finish with double figure scores, while outbounding Oklahoma State 30-22. Both teams combined for 45 fouls. What is becoming increasingly obvious is that Kansas is difficult to beat anywhere. The Jayhawks improved their conference record to 6-0 and now stand 15-1 overall. They are 6-1 on the road, 7-0 at home and 2-0 at a neutral sight. On Friday night, Kansas defeated Oklahoma 85-78. The Kansas defense wreaked havoc for the Oklahoma Sooners by forcing 30 turnovers. Once again Aycock led the way, scor- The Jayhawks don't play again until Sunday at home against Kansas State. The game has been moved from 5:30 p.m. to 2 p.m. to accommodate the Super Bowl, which starts at 5 p.m. teammates needed me, and I figured I could rest after the game." Kansas 79 Oklahoma State 68 OVI ANOMA STATE (10-4.2-3) OKLAHOMA STATE (10-4, 2-3) Wensler 4-6 0-1 8 Coffey 6-12 6-9 19 Westervelt 6-17 5-8 17 York 3-11 2-4 8 Scales 4-11 0-0 8 Lee 0-2 5-6 5 Smith 1-4 0-0 3 Day 0-1 0-0 0 Totals 24-64 18-28 68 KANSAS (15-1.6-0) Player Aycock 8-15 fgm/fga ftm/taa tp Trapp 2-4 7-10 4 Tate 3-6 3-4 9 Sampson 6-11 5-7 18 Muncy 0-2 0-2 0 Slatter 3-4 2-3 8 Halbleib 5-10 0-0 13 Leathers 0-0 0-0 0 Dixon 1-4 2-4 4 Canada 0-0 0-0 0 Totals 28-55 19-30 79 Haliftei Kansas 38 Oklahoma State 21 9-point goals Kansas 38 Oklahoma State 29 (Coffe) 1-3, York 0-2, Lee 0-2, Smith 1-1, Day 0-1), Kansas 4-9 (Kampion) 1-4, Halibie 3-8) Rebounds OSU 39 (Westenstein 14), Kansas 44 (Sampson 15) ASateus OSU 12 (York), Kansas 19 (Muncy 7) Total fouls OSU 22, Kansas 23 Attendance 300 Kansas 78 Iowa State 71 KANSAS (17-2, 2-1) Player fgm/fga ftm/ta tp Vaughn 3-7 4-5 10 Woodberry 5-9 2-2 13 Richey 2-6 5-6 9 Scott 5-8 5-8 15 Ostertag 6-9 4-4 16 Pollard 1-3 2-2 4 Rayford 0-0 0-0 0 Gurley 1-2 0-0 2 Pearson 1-3 1-2 4 Williams 2-5 1-2 5 Totals 26-52 24-31 78 IOWA STATE (9-5, 0-4) Holloway 1-3 0-0 3 Holberg 4-12 8-10 18 Hamilton 0-2 2-6 2 Michalik 8-17 6-7 22 Carlson 2-2 5-6 9 Kimbrough 2-2 0-0 0 Beechum 4-10 3-4 12 Hayes 0-2 0-0 0 Bivens 0-1 0-0 0 Hill 0-0 0-0 0 Modderman 2-2 0-0 5 Jackson 0-1 0-0 0 **Totals** **21-54** **24-33** **71** Halifine Kansas 43 Iowa state 39-point goal kansas 27 (Vaughn 0, Richey 0, Woodbury 1,2, Pearson 1,2, Gurley 0,1, Iowa state 5-14 (Modernder 1,1, Hayes 0, 1, Holloway 1,1, Hamilton 0,1, Holberg 2,6, Beechum 1-5) *Rebounds* Kansas 40 (Richey 9), Iowa state 27 (Carlson 7) Assists Kansas 19 (Woodberry 6), Iowa State 13 (Holloway 5) *Total fours* Kansas 25, Iowa state 23 *Attendance* 14,373 Jayhawks succeed at Iowa State 21 Woodberry key to 78-71 victory over Cyclones Valerie Bontrager/ KANSAN By Gerry Fey Kansan sportswriter AMES, Iowa — As basketball fans made their way to the Kansas-Iowa State men's game Saturday, a dense fog surrounded Hilton Coliseum, a place where the Jayhawks have not found much success in recent years. Although No. 1 Kansas leads the alternate series at Ames 53-31, Kansas coach Roy Williams was only 2-3 on the coliseum before Saturday's game. Patrick Richey, senior forward, battles against Iowa State's James Hamilton, junior forward, to get the ball to an open man. The fog lifted for the Jayhawks in more ways than one during the afternoon as they escaped Ames with a 78-71 victory, their first there since 1991. "Things don't come easy in the Big Eight, whether you're at home or on the road," Williams said. "It was really a team victory. And I know that sounds corny, but that's exactly what it was." Kansas improved its record to 17-2 and 2-1 in the Big Eight Conference, while the Cyclones dropped to 9-5 and 0-4. In the first half, Kansas went to its strength in the middle with junior center Greg Ostertag scoring eight points and senior forward Richard Scott adding seven. Kansas freshman forward Nick Proud did not suit up because of a strained right knee. He is listed as day-to-day. Scott was playing with a slight headache Saturday from a mild concussion he suffered last Monday against Kansas State. He had 15 points and five rebounds, but Williams said Scott still was not fully recovered. Despite the injuries, Williams said the Jayhawks were stronger than the Cyclones inside. Iowa State was without their starting center, 6-foot-11 junior Loren Meyer, who broke his collarbone last week in an auto accident. "That's been our emphasis all year," Williams said. "We can't be the team we want to be if we don't go inside." I rather go inside every possession." Kansas was strong inside, but Iowa State junior forward Hurl Beechum cut Kansas 's head to 43-39 on a three-point basket just before halftime. Ostertag said the game plan was to get the ball into the middle. Ostertag ended the game with a season-high 16 points, but he only had one rebound. "We did want to go inside all game," Ostertag said. "We knew they were't as strong inside without Meyer." The 7-2 Kansas center led the team in scoring, but it was the play of Kansas guard Steve Woodberry that continually shut down Iowa State rally. Woodbury ended with 13 points and a team-high six assists. "I think Steve was sensational," Williams said. "He doesn't mind the feeling of wanting to hit that big shot. Other guys look for him, and he likes that role." "I don't even look at that," Woodbery said of his role. "I just go out there and play." Woodberry said being the go-to guy on the team did not affect him. Iowa State junior forward Julius Michalik had a game-high 22 points, 14 of which came in the second half. Michaikli scored all of Iowa State's points during an 11-4 run, including hitting two free throws with 12:16 left in the game. Those shots gave the Cyclones a 50-49 lead, their first and only lead of the game. "I thought they were really ready to play," Williams said of Iowa State. "We got them by 10 a couple times in the first half, and those kids wouldn't give in. Michalik was tough for us in the second half. Early in the second half, he was Iowa State." After Iowa State tied the game 55-55 with 7:25 left, Kansas went on a run of its own. The Jayhawks outscored the Cyclones 16-5 and never relinquished the lead after that. Kansas freshman guard Jacque Vaughn's play during the run was a key. He scored five points and two assists in that time, including a one-handed pass to senior forward Patrick Richey as Vaughn was falling for a lay-up. Vaughn ended with 10 points and five assists. "I'm going to enjoy the heck out of this," he said of the victory. "And we'll worry about Oklahoma State starting tomorrow." Kansas' next opponent will be Oklahoma State on Wednesday, but Williams said after the game that he was not even thinking about it. Freshman get chance to learn on the road Kansas' experienced basketball players know how hard it is to win on the road in the Big Eight Conferences, but Saturday's game in Ames, Iowa, was the first conference road game for the Jayhawk freshmen. Kansan staff report A capacity crowd of 14,373 in Hilton Coliseum watched No. 1 Kansas defeat Iowa State 78-71. At times, Kansas coach Roy Williams said the crowd was loud enough to disrupt the Kansas offense. "In the first half we did some awfully dumb words," Williams said. "We were trying to call a set play, and we've got three guys running one play and two guys running another. The crowd was so loud that the kids couldn't hear what was being said." All of the Kansas freshmen played more than 15 minutes of the game, with the exception of forward Nick Proud who did not suit up because of a strained knee. Freshman guard Jacque Vaughn who had 10 points and five assists Saturday, said the road games were all he thought they would be. "It was everything that my seniors have been telling me about." Vaughn said. "That it's hard, that the crowd goes wild." Williams said he was happy to see Vaughn performing so well in the conference. "I thought Jacque was sensational down the stretch," Williams said. "The reason you recruit kids like that is that you hope you can get them and that they can transfer that from the high school level to the college level." 10 Monday, January 24, 1994 JD's Baseball Cards & Sports Nostalgia Shop 711 W. 23rd 842-1002 we buy used baseball cards Rings Fixed Fast! Klager Cummings jewelers 749-4333 833 Mass • Lawrence, KS Camera America ONE HOUR PHOTO Lawrence's Largest Supplier of Darkroom Materials 1610 West 23rd Street 841-7205 Jayhawk Bookstore "Your Book Professionals!" At the top of Mamita Hitt Him: 8-30 S-10M, 8-Fri, 9-Sat, 6-14, 7-24 Sun. Pancho's Pancho's MEXICAN RESTAURANT Homestyle Mexican Food 23rd & Louisiana 843-4044 NATION/WORLD Heaven for Lounge Lizards Futon Couches Starting at $119 BLUE HERON Futons & Home Furnishings 937 Mass., 841-9443 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Kansas students take their time 4 years not enough for university grads The Associated Press WICHTIA — More Kansas college students spend five or six years getting a four-year degree than graduate on time, university officials say. "Four years? No one I know is going to graduate in four years," said Adam Schoonover, 24, a transfer student from Dodge City Community College who's in his fifth year at Kansas State University. Nationally, about half of college students take five years or less to get a traditional, four-year undergraduate degree. The remainder take six years or more—if they graduate at all. In Kansas, about 39 percent of incoming freshman at the six state-supported universities complete degrees in five years. The low average is due in part to nontraditional campuses, including Emporia State, Fort Hays State and Wichita State, where fewer students attend classes fulltime. About 44 percent of Kansas students graduate after six years, and the number is higher when transfer students are counted. Only a quarter of first-time freshman who enrolled in the University of Kansas in 1987 had graduated by 1992. Numbers were lower at other state schools. Such statistics have been tracked only recently, making comparisons with previous classes nearly impossible, but academic officials agree the number of four-year graduates seems to be decreasing. "The straight, traditional four-year undergraduate degree is the exception rather than the rule anymore, and there are a number of reasons for that," said Mike Lynch, assistant vice president for institutional advancement at Kansas State. The primary one is economic. The more college costs rise, the more students have to work. The more they work, the fewer courses they can take, and that means more time to graduate. Schoonover said his parents paid his tuition and fees, but he still worked 25 to 30 hours a week to earn money for rent, books and other expenses. Because of that, he takes no more than 12 credit hours a semester. "My friends, they're all kind of in the same boat," said Schoonover, a business major. "You either work or go way into debt with student loans. It's not easy." Jeff Weinberg, assistant vice chancellor for student affairs at KU, says delaying graduation is nothing new, although the recent trend may seem pronounced. Students today, he said, are more likely to take additional courses or to participate in yearlong study-abroad programs to make themselves more attractive to employers after graduation. That may mean learning Japanese, working one summer for an engineering firm in Puerto Rico, or leaving school for a "time of reflection" before finishing an undergraduate degree or starting graduate school Weinberg said. NGG Valid Through July 31, 1994 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN C A R D AT&T Mon.-Sun. MAZZIOS PIZZA Spend $1...Save hundreds 2630lowa 843-1474 Membership has its privileges... THESE DISCOUNTS AND OFFERS ARE GOOD THROUGH JULY 31, 1994! JUST SHOW YOUR CARD...USE AS OFTEN AS YOU LIKE! $2.99 lunch buffet Britches Corner • 843 Massachusetts • 843-0454; Buy 1reg. price Tommy Hilfiger, get the 2nd of equal or lesser value at 20% off Cleopatra's Closet • 743 Massachusetts • 749-4664; 15% off everything in store (excluding sale items) The Etc Shop • 928 Massachusetts • 843-0611; 20% off Etc Shop brand sunglasses Harper's Fashions • 835 Massachusetts • 749-0626; Additional 20% off all regular price merchandise KU Bookstore • Kansas and Burge Unions • 864-4640; $5 off any gift or clothing purchase of $25 or more Natural Way Natural Fiber Clothing • 820 Massachusetts • 841-0100; 15% off all regular priced clothing Outfitters Clothing Co. • 740 Massachusetts • 843-3933; 15% off the regular price of guy's and gal's jeans Outfilters Clothing Co. • 740 Massachusetts • 843-3933; 10% off of tuxedo rental University Bookshop • 1116 W 23rd St • 749-5206; 20% off all clothing (except sale items) Weavers Department Store • 901 Stressburg • 843-6360; 20% off all lingerie, hosiery, or intimate apparel CLOTHIERS American Bistro • 701 Massachusetts • 841-8349: 10% off any entree (limit one) Bonanza • 2329 Iowa • 842-1200: All-you-can-eat-Freshtasticks Food & Desert Bar for $2.99 Dos Hombres VI • 815 New Hampshire • 841-7286: Buy 1 menu item, get the 2nd for 1/2 price Dunkin Donuts • 521 W 23rd • 749-5015: 15% off any purchase Fifi's Restaurant • 925 Iowa • 841-7226: 10% off any entree (limit one) Imperial Garden • 2907 W 6th St • 841-1688: 10% off any dinner entree (limit one) Johnny's Tavern • 401 N 2nd St • 842-0377: Buy a cheeseburger w/fries at reg. price, get the 2nd for $1 (Good Mon - Fri, 4pm to 9pm) Little Caesars Pizza-Pizza • 1410 Kasold, 865-5400/520 W 23rd, 842-8000: FREE Crazy Bread w/ any pizza/pizza purchase Perkins Family Restaurant • 1711 W 23rd • 842-9040: $1.00 off any entree, anytime, 24 hours a day Pizza Shuttle • 1601 W 23rd • 842-1212: 1 carryout, 1 topping pizza w/ a lg. coke for $4.00 Plum Tree • 2620 Iowa • 841-6222: FREE appetizer (2 crab orons or 1 egg roll) w/purchase of any entree Pyramid Pizza • 507 W 14th St (under The Wheel) • 842-3232: $4 am*$m*$med*$8 lg*ea add topping 75c (Void w/ other offers) Shoney's Restaurant • 2412 Iowa • 843-3519: FREE salad bar w/ any purchase of a sandwich and fries Vista Drive In • 1527 W 6th St • 842-4311: FREE reg. French Fry w/purchase of a Vistaburger & drink RESTAURANTS & BARS MERCHANDISE & PRODUCTIONS The Athlete's Foot • 914 Massachusetts • 841-6966: $10 off a shoe purchase of $65 or more Community Mercantile • 901 Mississippi • 843-8544: 15% off any coffee purchase Cycle Works • 1601 W 23rd • 842-6363: FREE lock set w/ new bike purchase Englewood Florist • 939 Massachusetts • 841-2999: 3 FREE latex balloons with any purchase of $20 or more Francis Sporting Goods • 731 Massachusetts • 843-4191: 15% off all Champion Sportswear It's Your Party • 1601 W 23rd • 749-3455: Buy any 3 greeting cards and get 1 FREE Jaybowl • Level 1-Kansas Union • 864-3545: FREE shoe rental during open bowling Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826: Get an extra 5% CASH back during Semester Buyback Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826: Save 10% on Computer Softwear EVERYDAY! Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826: Blue Books for 10e Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826: 20% off Blank Computer Diskettes Jayhawk Spirit • 935 Massachusetts • 749-5194: $1.00 off all adjustable hats, $2.00 off all fitted hats Jock's Nitch • 840 Massachusetts • 842-2442: 15% off all shoes Junior's Farm • 924 1/2 Massachusetts • 842-3344: Buy 2 CD's at reg, price, get the 3rd (equal or lesser value) at 50% of Kansas Sports Club • 837 Massachusetts • 842-2992: 10% off KU sweatshirts Laser Logic • 865-0505: 20% Off Recycled Laser Printer Toner Cartridges (FREE pick-up and delivery) Miracle Video • 1910 Haskell, 841-7504/910 N 2nd St, 841-8903: Rent 1 video, get 2nd FREE (Sun thru Thurs) Rentco USA • 1741 Massachusetts • 749-1605: 25% off all rentals Sports Fan-Attics • 942 Massachusetts • 842-2323: 15% off everything in store (excluding sale items & leather jackets) Stereo Lane • 2024 W 23rd • 865-2677: $10 off any purchase of $50 or more Union Technology Center • Level 3-Burge Union • 864-5690: 10% off any accessory (disks, diskholders, cables, paper, surge protect) Video Blz • 832 Iowa • 749-3507: 2 For Tuesday! Rent 2 Videos for the Price of 1 (Tuesday only) Vorme Studio & Gallery • I Riverfront Plaza, Ste 321 • 749-0744: 10% off of framed prints of KU and sororities The Auto Medic • 3631 W 10th St • 842-0384: 20% off any service call B.C. Automotive • 510 N 6th St • 841-6955: 20% off tune ups and brake repair Copy Co • 1401 W 23rd • 832-2679: 10% off all merchandise or services Enterprise Rent-A-Car • 3030 Iowa • 842-8040: 10% off car rental Fantastic Sam's • 2223 Louisiana • 749-1976: 15% off any regular price service or product NailTique • 2449 Iowa, Ste N • 832-2900: $3.00 off any service Planned Parenthood • 1420 Kaisoid-Orchards Corners • 832-0281: 25% off initial or annual visit plus 12 free condoms RC's Stadium Barbery • 1033 Massachusetts • 749-5363: $5.50 haircut Sonny Hill Chevrolet-Geo-Oldsmobile • 3400 S Iowa • 843-7700: 10% off all parts and service Ultimate Tan • 2449 Iowa, Ste O • 842-4949: 1 FREE session with the purchase of a 9-session package ($5 value) The University Daily Kansan • 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall • 864-4358: 10% off any private party classified advertisement SERVICES Terms and conditions. The following terms and conditions regard to a controller for use of the *Internity Daykan Kaisa Card* (DRC) at Participating Merchants (PM). The DRC must be issued to be valid, is non-transferable, and PM may require identification, confiscation of other fees or special promotions (P.M.) by not applying to purchase of: 1) apply only to controllers resale personal purchase to the total purchaser; 2) permit non-DRC painters are part of the total purchaser; or 3) allow non-DRC painters to participate in the total purchaser. P.M. does not permit Mon.-Sun. Buffet Hours 11:00-1:30 AVAILABLE AT THESE LOCATIONS: Jayhawk Bookstore Kansas and Burge Unions •864-4640 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 1420 Crescent Road 843-3826 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358 UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP KU KU BOOKSTORES 1116 W. 23rd St * 749-5206 Exercise Equipment We Buy, Sell Trade & Consign USED & New Sports Equipment CYCLE PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 1029 Massachusetts phone 841-PLAY CHINESE Buffet Lunch/Dinner $4.95-$6.75 All-You-Can-Eat 北京 Peking Restaurant Free Delivery 749-0003 23rd and Iowa (Behind Hastings) 飯店 Classified Directory 100s Announcements 105 Personal 110 Business Annual 120 Announcements 130 Entertainment 140 Lost and Found 200s Employme 2005 Employment 2025 Help Wanted 2025 Professional Services 235 Typing Services Classified Policy 300s Merchandise All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, facial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or dis- X The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on nationality, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or 305 For Sale 340 Auto Sales 380 Miscellaneous 370 Want to Buy Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are closed. I 100s Announcements Looking for significant health Break cash? Start up preventive health company out of KC looking for highly motivated individuals to market our products. Please call 1-800-792-2800 for more information. 110 Bus. Personals ADVERTISING WORKS! WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO Really Listen Call or drop by Headquarters We're here because we care. 841-2345 1419 Mass. We're always open - Kansan Classified: 864-4358 - Real Estate 405 Real Estate 430 Roommate Wanted Unique Sterling Silver Jewelry Hoops, Pendants & More! For Guys & Gals 928 Mass, Downtown 928 Mass, Downtown SpringBreak1994 CANCUN from #439 SOUTH PADRE from #159 Other destinations available Lowest price guaranteed Call 865-1352 WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500 Regular Clinic Hours Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm Saturday 8am-11:30am Urgent Care (Additional Charge) Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm Saturday 11:30pm-4:30pm Sunday 8am-4:30pm . Pharmacy Hours Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm Saturday 8.30am-12.30pm Sunday 11am-1.30pm KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Monday, January 24, 1994 120 Announcements FOREIGN LANGUAGE Study Skills Program. Help for student of any language you improve. Work with a teacher to improve conversation skills. Mon, Jan 24 - 7:40 pm, 4035 Wescree. Presented by the Student Assistance Team. Wanted St. Patricks Day Parade Queen. If intermed leave name & number with Lawrence St. Patriches Day Parade Service 745-68773*32141. Apps available at Marquee in Parking Lot, Lawrence Lynn, Harpers, headmasters, Cadillac Ranch, or Cleoermans' Closet Dead February 4th. Win a trip to Cancun! Look for details and entry blanks in the coupon section of your new University Telephone Directory. Deadline for entry is October 16. The telephones are available now at the KU Bookstore. 11 FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY SKILLS WORKSHOP Improve reading, writing, listening, comprehension & conversation skills FREE! Monday, January 24, 7-9 pm 4035 Wescoe Sponsored by the Student Assistance Center 13th YEAR! SPRING BREAK 94 It's Hot! SOUTH PADRE ISLAND NORTH PADRE/MUSTANG ISLAND F·L·O·R·I·D·A DAYTONA BEACH PANAMA CITY BEACH ORLANDO/WALT DISNEY WORLD C·O·L·O·R·A·D·O STEAMBOAT VAIL/BEAVER CREek BRECKENRIDGE/KEYSTONE N·E·V·A·D·A LAS VEGAS S·B·U·T·H C·A·R·O·L·I·N·A HUTON NEAD ISLAND RESERVATIONS AVAILABLE NOW CALL TOLL FREE FOR FULL CALL TOLL FREE FOR FULL DETAILS AND COLOR BROCHURE! 1 • 800 • SUNCHASE --- SCHOLARSHIP OPPORTUNITIES! INTERNSHIP OPPORTUNITIES! GRANTS AND LOANS! UNIVERSITY SCHOLARSHIP CENTER CASHE-PLUS SCHOLARSHIP SEARCH CALL OR DROP BY FOR DETAILS 33 STRONG HALL 864-5439 Cash reward for return of Apple New Message back leather case. Lost at Food 4 Lossell 843-3709 140 Lost & Found Brown leather jacket left in 2002 Dole on Jan. 13. If you contact mark contact K47 795-895. JOST Gold ring with black only rings in 3rd floor building. Attendance at Union. If found please contact 610-279-8128. Reward $100. FOUND: Wallet at Carson Place Apts. Call 832-2010 Identify. 男 女 200s Employment 205 Help Wanted 1994 EXPANSION Part-time temporary and permanent openings. Flexible schedules around class. $490 to $100. Positions need to be filled by 2/1/94. Please call 84-831 for more info. 600 CAMPIS IN THE USA, RUSSIA AND EUROPE NEED YOU THIS SUMMER. For the best summer of your life-see your career center or contact: 420 Florence St. Palo Alto, CA 94301 420 Florence St. Palo Alto, CA 94301 AEROBICS INSTRUCTORS NEEDED. Students are needed now to teach various aerospace classes. Prior experience necessary. $10/hour. Fill out application with Reception Services, 206 Robinson. Camp Daisy Hindman Resident Girl Scout Camp has positions available: business mgr, camp director, canoe designer, cooks, craft is nature teacher, swim instructor, and waders. For an application come the Summer Job Fair on Feb. 2 or write to Kaw Valley Girl Scout Council, Attt. Camp Daisy Hindman. Counselors/Support Staff-Children's Camps/Northeast Top salary, RM/BD/Laundry, travel allowance. Must have skill in one of the following activities: archery, arts & crafts, basketball, dance (hang framed), drama, drum, dance, guitar, guitar, golf, ice basketball, horseback ride-hunt seat, karate, lacrosse, mature, photography, piano, pioneering, rocketry, rollerblading, ropes, sailing, soccer, swim team, tennis, theater, technicians, kitchen stewards, cooks, bus drivers, maintenance, nurses, secretaryes. Men call or write: Camp Windu for Boys, 225 Gladiator Rd, Suite 400E, Boca Raton, FL 33431 (407) 984-5000. Women call or write: Camp Veggie (680) 843-4600. We will be on campus in the student union from 11am-pm on 6/4/8 in the Oread and Regional Rooms. Cruise line, entry level, on-board positions availing great benefit, Summer or year round (813) 652-7900 Evening and weekend CNA's needed to work with clients in their homes. Reliable transportation necessary. Call Sharon at Douglas County Visiting Nurses 843-3738. Do you like preschool children 6 to 5 years old? Do you want to make a difference in a child's life? Do you have a little free time? Volunteer at BestStart for a week. For information call 825-2153. EOE. Greenspace is now hiring intelligent energetic individuals. Full and partial time positions are available and include guaranteed wage and benefit. Call them today, for more information. Every day is Greenspace Day. Johnny's Tavern Waltress positions available: 1am to 2pm; 3am to M F W. Call Dong at 844-607-978 Lawrence Veterinary Hospital 1104 W.23rd St. PART-TIME EVENING PERSONAL Must have own car. Apply in person Peking Guardian (23rd and Iowa below) Hiking PART TIME. Students needed for Intramural Basketball Officals and Scorekeepers. No experience necessary. Training provided. Flexible students. Students should call 617-359-2240 for more information. Pizza Hit needs delivery drivers part-time, weekends and weekends. Must have own vehicle and insurance. Good driving record. Contact Downtown Pizza Hit 984 Massachusetts St. School Work around children prior to experience with children. Sunshine Acres School 842-223 EARN CASH ON THE SPOT $15 Today $30 This week By donating your life saving blood plasma WALK-INS WELCOME! NABI Biomedical Center 816 W 24th 749-5750 Reporter/Assistant Editor needed now. J-Degree or 2 years print experience. Salary, benefits, bonus package. Send resume with reference, experi- ience and contact information to Nicholas F. Nicholas, Box 59 Boxster 358 KS 65713. SCHOOL CROSSING GUARD CITY OR AFRICENCE Responsible part-time work directing children on foot & food traffic at school crossings. Approx. 17-20 hrs a week. $4.25 per hour. Must be in good physical condition with no medical conditions or an ADHD. Services, 2nd floor, City Hall, dth & Massachusetts, Lawrence, KS 60424, EOE M/F/D Lawrence-based, growing, international, technical publishing company has a part-time (15 hours per week) position available. Duties include shipping orders; stuffing and packing items in the warehouse; inventory; taking the mail to the post office daily; and providing backup to the fullfillment leader as needed. Previous experience working with IT teams is required up to 50 pounds and 50 wpm preferred. This position is part of our internal critical support team (ASSIST) and help other areas of the company as R & D Publications, Inc. is an equal opportunity employer. Please do not contact us if you are looking for an enjoyable work environment with a reliable company, please come and fill out an application at 1601 West 23rd Avenue, NYC. STUDENT ASSISTANT IN ENGINEERING/ MAINTENANCE. Deadline: 02/14/94. Salary: $43.58 per hour. Duties include pickup and delivery up of checks; check inventory levels; data entry; assist technicians in light mechanical and electronic repair; and other duties as assigned. Required knowledge: computer systems; data management; the University of Kansas, demonstrated ability to work with customers, good oral and written communication skills; 6 hours required to work 16 to 20 hr. per week, in a 3 of 8 block. provides valid driver license. To apply, complete a job application which is available from room 202 of the Computer Center. OE/AA/MAMM STUDENT CLEERICAL ASSISTANT: Deadline: 01/28/94. Salary: $43.34/hour. Duties include assisting customers, mailing and of Computer Center billings; assisting the computer ledgers; assisting in Repair Shop orders; making timely deposits in accounts; performing reception duties on a fill-in basis; and miscellaneous Business office duties. To apply, complete a job application to OWF 922 of the Computer Center EO/AAEMPLOYER. Wanted: male companion, aged 25-45, for semi-invalid. Afternoons only; day care: 85 per week. Wanted: Sculpture models, i man and i female. Good proportions. Low body fat. Call 843-5481. 225 Professional Services Christian Daycare offers the best care at low rates. Children in need openings. Transportation avail. Went location. INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS DV-1, green card Program Sponsored, by the U.S. Immigration Office, for resident residents. Citizens of almost all countries are allowed to take part. Students, tourists, anyone may apply. For info & forms. New Erie Legal Services, 2031 Stagli St., Canoga Park, CA TRAFFIC-DUI'S Fake ID'& alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters the law offices of DOGDAL G. DOYLE Gain St. GROLE Sally G. Kelsei 16 East 13th 842-1133 X Looking for a good type: *Papers, A4, letter size, Charts *Laser printing to NOW! your profits *Grammar and spelling free *18 years experience *Call back at Makki 'the Grade 865-2853 Words by Chris Words Processing. High quality papers and printing; spell check Tel; (818) 998-4425; Fax; (818) 882-9681 General Practice Traffic Tickets, Misdemeanors, Landlord/Tenant BRAXTON B. COPLEY Attorney at Law DUI/MIP/Fake ID's Office located right next to campus Elizabeth Leach Attorney at Law-Former Prosecutor 414 W 14th 749-0087 VIDEO EDITING AND PRODUCTION SERVICES A/B roll tape editing suite with EDL 3D contour mapping and EDL His field production package. Award winning screen writer. PRIMAL SCREEN COMMUNICATIONS 305 For Sale CD players For Sale: Sherwood 5 die change, top loaded related style; $110. Technics single speaker; $179. 300s Merchandise Almost new twin mattress and box springs. $50 b.o.o. Call 841-5945. FABER AL-1 Mountain bike, oversized aluminum 20 in. frame, Deere DX through; $119 new GK Bass Amp. 200 Watt Cast vc wchorus, com- mon, limiter 15 in. EV, IK av. asking, $695 Bass Amp. 200 Watt Cast vc wchorus, com- mon, limiter 15 in. EV, IK av. asking, $695 Beds, desks, bookcases, chest of drawers. Everything But Ice. 938 Mass. 340 Auto Sales 1-der Women Word Processing. Former editor also in for accurate pages of letter types. #846-005 Rick Frydman, Attorney 823 Missouri 843-4023 235 Typing Services STUDENT DISTRIBUTION TECHNICIAN Deadline: 01/31/94. Salary: $4.35 per hr. Hours include performing building and exclosing function using the output terminal; output mailing using the delivery van; paper shredding functions; on occasion will assist in receiving shipment, stocking and inventory of supplies, and other warehousing functions; on occasion will operate forklift and assist in maintenance; assists in Open Landscape construction; works with the campus wide recycle program; uses personal computer or mainframe software as part of record keeping function. To apply, complete a job description form and email it to the center room in 202. EO/AE MPAUER OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense Queen size classic fusion bed, solid map w/ nautilus fill, upholstery #014, 898-718-6941 for Sherrt For free consultation call Tak trash, walk trash; DEJA RECYCLED SHOES. Snakers, chukas, tkats, more. Simple Goods, 735 Mass, M-Sat, 10-30, Thr t18 Ayamaru Gacchic Audio. Pewless electric bass and Penny 50 watt amp. All in great condition. I give you a great deal. Call Mat a84-1894. 38 Chevy Caprice Classic, power locks & brakes $750 OKO Call Brian 843-943-95. DESKTOP DOCUMENTS For all of your word processing needs. 842-2722 $5 Puntite Fire, New red paint. Runs perfectly A/C, Stereo, 5 speed. Coke袋. $649. Call 749-2100. J 360 Miscellaneous Happy hours everyday from 3-4pm. All soft drinks are $8, and all $7.89 for 8 & 7.89 for Bakey's Hamburgers at 9am and 10am only. H 400s Real Estate 405 For Rent 1 bedroom for sublease 1 block from campus $80/month facilities, first free. ma-Jeb-Fayt will cover $35/month. Bedroom townhouse, $80/month. Fireplace, valued ceilings, available immediately. 842-1050. 2 and 3 bedroom apartments now available. On bus route. Call 749-1556. $ DBRM towhouse w/ AC and a cable paired with the BTR-100. $80/m. Pets possible. Contact 926-5956. 3 furnished rooms in nice spacious house close to each phone #81-9299 Washer/Dryer / A/C $25 each phone #81-9299 Washer/Dryer / A/C $25 4 bedroom apartment for rent. fully furnished, very nice! Interested? Call 814-5235, 904-045 or 612-7420. meadowbrook 5 bedroom房 now available close to campus. $700/month, 6 month lease. Call 841-8468. Available at West Hill Apts. Spacious 1 bed unfurnished apt. $29 per month. Water pad. Great location near campus, 1012 Emery Rd. No pets. 841-3800, 543-3884. --- Apartments Available Now Available Now! Newly renovated studio ad 1500 square feet. Located in the heart of the city. a bdrm b240 $240, no pets b1-1074 www.aavail.com Female roommate needed. 1828 Ohio. I block on campus. Leave name and number on answering machine for Wendy Thomas - 841-4694. Great location. 101 Miss. 3 bedroom apartment Newer 1, 2 and 3 bedroom apartments available for August '14. '93 Washer/dryer, dishwasher, microwave, private patio/balconies. Avoid the Rush Reservoir! Call 817-1656 for help. Available Now • 1-3 bdrm, 2 bath • Furnished studios • Water and Cable paid M-F8-5:30 Sat 10-4 Sun 1-4 15th & Crestline 842-4200 Sorry no pets Great location. 1801 Min. 3 bedroom appartment Great location, hardwood floors, CA, no pets. $449 Call (612) 547-4411 for details. Campus Locations Leasing for June and August. New 4 bedroom, new bath, fireplace, ceiling fans, fireplace, fireplace, cable台面, 180 feet, feet and covered parking available. Early sign-up specials offered. For more information call Davie at 641-732-2910. - 1,2,3 or 4 Bedrooms •On KU Bus route •Newly Constructed •Quiet Location NOWLEASING FORFALL'94 Looking for two roommates for a three bedroom Rent free until the end of the month, water paid, washer dryer included. Call 841-9052. 211 Mount Hope Ct. ApartmentA3 Nice, clean, 3 DBM apt. EXCELLENT LOCATION- WALK - TALK TO CAMPUS AND SHOPPING- message Nice 28kpt apt. available ASAP for lasting-until A$25/month + utilities 985-3925 Rooms, apartments, and well kept, older baths and whirlwinds. $6 STAR / 4/2020 One bedroom apartment, sublease nest to campus, off street parking, free rent for the January 1st. lease. 843-6500 or 843-0011 studio apartment now available close to campus. paid $200, 6 month lease available. Call 819-1556. 819-1556. 阳光山林 SUNRISE VILLAGE 660 Gateway Ct. Now Leasing for Fall Mon.-Fri. 1-5 - Luxurious 2,3,&4 Bedroom Town Homes •Garages; 2 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Baths •Microwave Ovens •Some with Fireplaces •On KU Bus Route •Swimming Pool and Tennis Courts 841-8400 or 841-1287 Sulcause 2 bedroom room. Available February 1st. On KU bus route. 843-8097 On KU bus route 843-8097 Sublease till July, 2019 b2m in 4plex, Central air, heat dishwasher & more. $425 per m² +. dep. 950 Monterey Way 843-3030/749-0266 Also Leasing For Spring & Fall! South Point ACADEMIC 2 & 3 BEDROOMS AVAILABLENOW!! LUXURY New appliances New bath fixtures Mini & vertical blinds Walk-in closets Water, heating of water & trash paid!! Patio balconies available Swimming pool and sand volleyball court Small pets OK with deposit Ample off-street parking LOCATION West of Iowa on 26th Street K.U. bus route Walk to shopping, banking, Restaurants & six theaters Next to new Holcom Recreational Center - Basketball, baseball, indoor Track, racquetball and Aerobics. GREATLOCATION!!! 843-6446 Sublease: 3 bedroom apartment. February- August, 14th and Mass. Hangover Place. 841-1123. Would you like your own bedroom, bathroom, and walk in closet for under $800 a month? 1-642-8472 www.blissclub.com Slabasele. 1 bdmr apt. w/ study. Boardwalk Apts. $300 mo. 843-045-12 Now leasing for Spring! we're making life easier! - Weekly Maid Service •Front Door Bus Service •"Dine Anytime" with Unlimited Seconds •Laundry and Vending Facilities •Free Utilities We presently have available a select few 1 & 2 bedroom apartments for immediate occupancy. - Some Washer/Dryer Hookups We are now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature studio1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. We also have 3 bedroom, 2 1/2 bath townhomes. 4 Stops on Property *2 Laundry Rooms *2 Nailers / Hardware Park25 - Volleyball Court * On KU Bus Route with 4 Stones on Property Call or stop by today. 2401 W. 25th, 9A3 842-1455 (sorry no pets) 1800 NAISMITH 430 Roommate Wanted Naismith Drive 1 male roommate wanted for 3 bdmr and 2 bathrooms with w/d, brand new fully furnished. $22/month + utilities Call Paat @ 852-2414 1 e/m roommates needed ASAP to share 6 bdmr $300-$260 per mo. W/D available, utilities paid on bus route. Call Shawn at 842-7196 I or 2 Roommnt needed for new 3 bedroom apt. I or 2 Bedroom needed for new 4 bedroom apt. I or 3 Bedroom needed for new 5 bedroom apt. Available Call for details. 814-694-7920. If I for some reason needed immediate to share 3 story apartment I block from campus. Very THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Female roommates desperately needed for space. WHEN WE HAVE TO ROOMMATES, Call 842-7847. WE WANT TO STAY IN THE HOUSE WITH YOU. College-aged roommate needed now for $BR Air- born home, water pdr. Jaw rest from back brace. 5 n/s a roommates for 41 house. W/D, D/W, DAU. offpaid paid $115.00/month. Call Inv. 941-8469 3 males looking for a N/S male or female KU student to live with. Available now. 4 bedrooms. Fem commons needed for nice style duplex. Fem commons needed for nice style duplex. Breat! Great deal $1000 max, dem, sur 26/7/1973 $4500 max, dem, sur 26/7/1973 - Bv nhome: 854-4358 Male rostrate for a 4brm 2 bath furnished apt. $270/mo + /u.牲品 1k to KU. Female roommate wanted to share 3 bdrm, 1 bath Roommate needed to provide: $200/mo. + 1/4 utilities. Move in now - 748-485- 6429. Female needle to 3 burs apc lbf, ako fibo ttl, utw, d/ darkroom . 439 Minissippi, 614-8497. Female roommate, beautiful 3 bedroom townhome on bus route. 725 West 6th Street, amok-oktowne, KS 66045. Female, non-smoking, roommate needed, immediate date of birth + / - utilized 820-588-6280, bedroom + / - utilized 820-588-6280 Male roommate needed through end of semester. Fully furnished, near campus $148/mo + 1/2 unit How to schedule an ad: Roommate wanted to share 3 br, house in quiet neighborhood. 815 hrs. mo 843-4338. Female roommate needed for a huge 2 bedroom apartment, 10 minutes from the airport & 8% utili- ty (95% domestic) 723-283-3167 Wanted *a 1 or roommate to share new brand new* *boxed for $600. Call Greg at 712-431-4241 or 712-381-5810.* One roommate required for 3 bdm. apt. Close to the school, pets allowed. pets allow D, call 865- 191, ask for Steve. Roommate needed for 4 bdm house near campus. W/D, appliances, furnished except for bdm. Willing to help with part of rent, pets possible. Bcm 865- 2461. Ads phoned may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made. Make sure you have a 512MB Ethernet link. Classified Information and order form or more. I will call you when I get back. You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kassan offices. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or VISA account. Ads that are billed to Vise or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when children before their expiration date. Calculating Rates: Stop by the Kansas office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or Visa. Conducting metrics: Classified rates are based on the number of connectivity day instructions and the size of the ad (the number of apenas times the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of times the ad is in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run. 3 lines 4 lines 5-7 lines 8+ lines Dear Brother and Sister, The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00. Purpose for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. When canceling a classified account that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds on cancelled ads were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available. Classifications 205 for sale 340 auto sales 300 miscellaneous Cost per litre per day 1.9X 2X 4-7X 9-14X 18-23X 20+X 2.65 1.55 1.85 .95 .75 .65 1.99 1.15 .85 .70 .65 .45 1.65 1.85 .75 .85 .65 .45 1.75 .60 .65 .80 .65 .35 148 lost & found 285 help wanted 225 professional services 225 typing services 105 personnel 110 business personals 120 announcements 130 entertainment ADS MUST FOLLOW KAMSAN POLICY Classified Mail Order Form · Please Print: Please print your ad one word per box: 378 want to buy 405 for rent 439 recommend wanted 1 2 3 4 5 Name: Date ad begins: Total days in paper: Total ad cost: Classification: Name: Address: VISA Method of Payment (Check one) Check enclosed MasterCard Visa (Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansan) Furnish the following if you are charging your ad: Account number: Expiration Date: Print exact name appearing on credit card: MasterCard Signature: The University Dalvik Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS, 60645 By THE FAR SIDE By GARY LARSON © 1994 FarWorks, Inc./Dist. by Universal Press Syndicate Xuan "Crack the whip!" 12 Monday, January 24, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NATURALWAY DON'S AUTO CENTER "For All Your Repair Needs" *Complete Auto Repair *Machine Shop Service *Parts Department 841-4833 920 E. 11th Street EARN CASH $15 Today $30 This Week Plus a $3 Bonus By donating your blood plasma Walk-ins welcome Lawrence Donor Center 816 W.24th Behind Laird Noller Ford Hours: M-F9-6 749-5750 $ natural fiber clothing 820-822 Mass St. 841-0100 NABI The Quality Source NABI The Quality Source V AIM HIGH $2000.00 SCHOLARSHIP If you have a GPA of 2.5 or higher and are a full time student, you can qualify for an Air Force ROTC scholarship. In addition, you will receive $100.00 each academic month for our last two years of college. This scholarship is available to ANY ACADEMIC MAJOR. The deadline to apply for the fall 1994 semester is rapidly approaching. For more information on this exciting opportunity talk to Captain Brad Gentry or Captain Bob Wicks at 864-4676. AIR FORCE ROTC Thinking of running for Student Senate? Need to know the rules, policies, and procedures for the election? The Student Senate Election Code has been revised by the Elections Commission. For information on proposed change, join us for the... ELECTIONS CODE FORUM Tuesday, January 25 4:00 pm - 5:00 pm Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union DROP IT! The proposed code will be available beginning January 25 in the Student Senate Office, 410 Kansas Union and Elections Commission Headquarters in the Office of Student Life, 300 Strong Hall. Complaints against the 1994 Elections Code must be filed in writing by 5:00 on January 31 to Elections Commission Headquarters, 300 Strong Hall. Complaints will be discussed at the Code Complaint Hearings scheduled for Tuesday, February 1 at 4:00 pm in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. Your payments for KPL ELECTRIC can be made at the drop box in the Kansas Union, Information Counter, Level 4 Save time,save a stamp Drop it at the Kansas Union Your payments for DROP IT! KANSAS PUBLIC SERVICE - GAS SERVICE can be made at the drop box in the Kansas Union, Information Counter, Level 4 Save time, save a stamp Drop it at the Kansas Union DROP IT! Your payments for SUNFLOWER CABLEVISION can be made at the drop box in the Kansas Union, Information Counter, Level 4 Save time, save a stamp Drop it at the Kansas Union STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE is NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR LIBERAL ARTS and SCIENCES NUNEMAKER, OFF CAMPUS, and LAW REPLACEMENTSENATORS APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE IN THE STUDENT SENATE OFFICE 410 KANSAS UNION,CALL 864-3710 FOR QUESTIONS. *APPLICATIONS MUST BE TURNED IN BY WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 26TH. Clintons: Whitewater investments mostly loan interest payments THE NEWS in brief LITTLE ROCK, Ark. Most of the $68,900 that President and Mrs. Clinton say they put into the Whitewater real estate venture involved interest on loans they took out for the company and were subsequently able to deduct from their personal income taxes. According to tax records and interviews with Clinton advisers, the Clintons deducted at least $41,000 on tax returns from 1978 to 1988 for interest on loans for Whitewater Development Co. Inc. The Clintons' prime financial role at Whitewater appears to have been paying this interest for a money-losing company they co-owned with James and Susan McDougal. And like most U.S. citizens who make loan or mortgage payments, the Clintons took the interest deductions. This may explain why the Clintons never declared a $68,900 capital loss on their income taxes, as some critics have questioned. Now federal authorities are investigating whether funds of the Madison Guaranty Savings and Loan that James McDougal owned in Arkansas were improperly diverted to other entities, or used to pay political or personal debts of prominent Arkansans, including then-Gov. Clinton. The Clintons and McDougal have denied wrongdoing. JERUSALEM Israelis, Palestinians pursue talks Israel is seeing progress in its talks with Palestinians, Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin said yesterday. He also called on Syrian President Hafez Assad to meet him "anyplace on earth" to pursue a peace treaty. Rabin said a Saturday meeting between Foreign Minister Shimon Peres and PLO chairman Yasser Arafat in Norway would yield some progress in implementing the delayed plan for Palestinian self-rule in the Gaza Strip and an area of the West Bank including Jericho. He would not detail what progress was made. But Environment Minister Yossi Sariid said that among the steps forward was a joint Palestinian-Israeli venture for a Dead Sea resort. Giving the Palestinians access to the Dead Sea apparently would expand Israel's offer on the size of the Jericho autonomous area, one of the sticking points that have bogged down the talks for months. A dispute over control of border crossings is the main bone of contention. The Israelis are demanding a veto on Palestinians entering the autonomous zones as a security measure, while the PLO does not want a visible Israeli presence that would infringe on Palestinian sovereignty. MOSCOW New Cabinet contains familiar faces Finance Minister Boris Fyodorov, the government's leading reformer, said he would negotiate his future with President Boris Yeltsin today, leaving open the possibility of staving in Russia's new Cabinet. Fyodorov resigned last week just before Yeltsin, responding to popular discontent over the painful impact of market reforms, named a new government dominated by Soviet-era managers who favor a go-slow approach to transforming Russia's economy. Deputy Prime Minister Yegor Galdar, the architect of economic reforms. Fyodorov, a proponent of tough budget and money emission policies, is credited with bringing the country's soaring inflation down to 12 percent in December. The new Cabinet is seen widely as representing the interests of powerful industrial, military-industrial and agrarian lobbies. It is expected to give huge subsidies to alling state industries, attempting to boost production but risking a high inflation. LOS ANGELES Telly Savalas dies of cancer at 70 LOS ANGELES Telly Svalas, the gruff, burd-headed actor who became a television favorite as the lollipop-loving New York detective in the 1970s series "Kojak," died Saturday of prostate cancer. He was 70. "Who loves ya, baby?" which Kojak muttered to fellow cops and assorted hoodlums, grew into the detective's signature and a national catch-phrase. Savalas, surrounded by his family, died in his sleep one day after his birthday at his suite in the Sheraton-Universal Hotel in Universal City, Calif., said Mike Mamakos, his spokesman and longtime friend. Savalas left Huntington Memorial Hospital in Pasadena, Calif., almost three weeks ago to live out his last days at the hotel, where he had kept a suite since the 1970s, Mamakos said. “Kojak” broke into the top 10 rated shows in its first season, 1973-74, and Savalas won an Emmy as best actor in a dramatic series that season. The series lasted until 1978. BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. 'Schindler's List' wins 2 Golden Globes Steven Spielberg, long overlooked for prestigious honors in Hollywood, won two top awards Saturday night at the Golden Globes. His film "Schindler's List" was chosen best dramatic picture and he was named best director. "Schindler's List" was the experience of my motion picture life," he told the star-studded audience, which gave him a standing ovation for the searing film about a German profiteer's rescue of Jews during the Holocaust. Spielberg said he planned to take the film to Germany in a few weeks. The Golden Globes are carefully watched by the film community because they often indicate who will win the Oscars. The Hollywood Foreign Press Association, which presents the Golden Globes, honors television achievements as well as motion pictures. Tom Hanks, who plays a lawyer with AIDS who sues his firm for firing him in "Philadelphia," and Holly Hunter, the mute wife who has an illicit affair in colonial New Zealand in "The Piano," won Golden Globes for the best dramatic performances. Hanks accepted his award humbly with thanks to his co-workers and for a number of advisers now dead from AIDS. The honors for best performance by stars in a musical or comedy were awarded to Angela Bassett for her portrayal of rock star Tina Turner in "What's Love Got to Do With It," and to Robin Williams, who masquerades as a British nanny in "Mrs. Doubtfire," which was named best musical or comedy film. In television, "NYPD Blue" won for best dramatic series. "Seinfeld" was the top winner of the evening with Golden Globes for best comedy series, comedy star Jerry Seinfeld and comedy supporting actress Julia Louis-Dreyfus. Kathy Baker of "Picket Fences" picked up a Golden Globe for best actress in a drama series. David Caruso of "NYPD Blue" won for best actor in a drama series. DROP IT! The Associated Press contributed Information to this story. Your payments for CITY OF LAWRENCE-WATER can be made at the drop box in the Kansas Union, Information Counter, Level 4 Save time,save a stamp Drop it at the Kansas Union January 29 10 AM to 6 PM Kansas Union Jaybowl Level One Open to KU STUDENTS ONLY Winners advance to Regional ACU-I Tournament at K-State on February 25-26 January 29 10 AM to 6 PM Kansas Union Jaybowl Level One Open to KU STUDENTS ONLY Winners advance to Regional ACU-Tournament at K-State on February 25-26 Entrant Fees $3.00-Billiards $5.00-Bowling ku bowling & billiards tournament ku bowling &billiards tournament Be Your Best in '94 Begin at Body Boutique 10 Tans for only $20 exp. 2-2-94 No joining fee! $139.00 off avg. $20/month exp. 2-2-94 Special rates for graduating seniors 749-2424 925 Iowa BODY OUTIQUE The Women's Fitness Facility A FEATURES: Latin inspired rhythms are heating up Lawrence's music scene. Page 9. 0 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOL.103.NO.86 THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA KS 66612 ADVERTISING: 864-4358 (USPS 650-640) NEWS: 864-4810 Pro-choice activists may sue Supreme Court ruling threatens abortion foes The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Abortion-rights activists may use a federal racketeering law to sue protesters who block women's access to abortion clinics, the Supreme Court ruled unanimously yesterday. The ruling threatens Operation Rescue and other anti-abortion groups with financial ruin. The decision focused only on interpreting a federal law, but nevertheless is a big victory for the National Organization for Women Celebration: Pro-choice activists gather in Topeka to celebrate the ruling. Page 5 which took the case to the high court, and for the Clinton administration. Lower courts had thrown out NOW's nationwide class-action lawsuit that invoked the anti-rateeering law against Operation Rescue and other groups. Yesterday's decision reinstated that lawsuit. The ruling also allows federal judges to invoke the anti-racketeering law in ordering a halt to some anti-abortion activities. Just last Friday, the high court agreed to clarify — sometime by July — how far courts and local governments may go in restricting protesters outside abortion clinics. That case pits the free-speech rights of anti-abortion protesters against the rights of women seeking abortions and of abortion clinic employees to be free from harassment, intimidation and other illegal conduct. The ruling falls far short of resolving all legal issues surrounding anti-abortion activities. The court in 1992 reaffirmed the core holding of its landmark Roe vs. Wade decision of 1973—that women have a constitutional right to abortion. The focus of yesterday's ruling was more on illegal conduct than on peaceful protest outside abortion clinics, and whether such conduct can lead to lawsuits under the federal Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, called RICO. Wendy Wright, a spokeswoman for Operation Rescue, called the decision "a complete travesty of justice. The Supreme Court justices obviously do not understand how far-reaching this case is. "This opens the floodgates for RICO to be used against anybody who uses free speech in a way that offends somebody else, or freedom of religion or freedom of assembly," Wright said. Eve Paul of Planned Parenthood said, "We're delighted. NOW has to go back and establish the facts, that there were criminal acts. I'm sure NOW will be able to do that." Enacted in 1970, RICO was aimed at organized crime. But increasingly it is used in lawsuits involving just about any business dispute. Writing for the court, Chief Justice William Rehnquist said RICO can be invoked to sue over ideologically motivated crimes, not just economically motivated crimes. NOW and other abortion-rights activists contend that Operation Rescue and others are engaged in a "nationwide campaign of terror" and, like mobsters, are violating RICO's ban on organized crime. The law makes it a crime for "any person employed or associated with any enterprise in interstate or foreign commerce to participate in a pattern of racketeering activity." Under RICO, a pattern of racketeering amounts to two or more "predicate acts" from a long list of underlying crimes, including extortion. NOW's lawsuit alleges that a coalition of anti-abortion groups are engaging in extortion by use of harassment, assault, destruction of property and other illegal acts. In his opinion, Rehquist said, "We granted (review) to determine whether RICO requires proof that either the racketeering enterprise or the predicate acts of racketeering were motivated by an economic purpose. We hold that RICO requires no such economic motive." INSIDE A learning experience A fresh approach is featured in a new school designed by Don Bushell, professor of human development and family life. Page 6. Holidays bring students' children to classes New programs created to provide alternatives By Angelina Lopez Kansan staff writer Kaye Adkins, Lawrence graduate teaching assistant, has a drawer in her office full of crayons, markers and coloring books. These toys occupy her 8-year-old son when she has to bring him to school with her. Like many KU students who are also parents, Adkins has difficulty finding child care on days such as Columbus Day, teacher in-service day and other random days her son has off from elementary school. Elementary school holidays, Angela Gonzales, Burlington, Colo., senior, said she brought her 7-year-old daughter Jessica to class with her. "It's so hard to find a babysitter and tell them, 'OK, I need you two days in January and one day in March,'" she said. Because of the difficulty of finding and affording a temporary baby sitter, many KU students' only option is bringing their children to class. Kate Grover, Topeka senior, said her 6-year-old son regularly attended day care before and after school. On school holidays, she said, it cost her an extra $7 or $8 for him to go all day. On the days when this extra cost is more than she can afford, she has to bring her son to her classes. "One instructor was uncomfortable with it," Grover said. "But after class, he said, 'Your son's really good!' Beth Collins, Lawrence graduate teaching assistant, said that children were welcome in her class. She said her 10-year-old daughter spent some of her days off sitting in the back of her classroom. The emotional and financial hassle of school holidays has not gone unnoticed. Several organizations have developed programs for children whose parents do not want to leave them alone at home. Hilltop, KU's child development center, offers occasional care day care for students who have the day off from school but spaces for this program are limited, said Martha Langley, financial manager for Hilltop. Usually, it only has room for three extra students, she said. child care services to provide before-school, after-school and temporary day care for Lawrence schools. The Lawrence School Board USD 497 has approved a plan that will allow outside The program went into effect at Kennedy Elementary School, 1605 Davis Rd., on Jan.3, said Kathy Jorgensen, director of the Kennedy After-School program. Day care on school holidays is provided, she said. The Lawrence Community Theater focuses half-day, whole-day and weeklong theater programs on children who will be out of school because of holidays, said Mary Doveton, managing artistic director of the theater. The one-day programs cost $18, she said. "We wanted to offer an alternative to parents who work whose schedules didn't coincide with their children's," Doveton said. Disc Jockey Laura Koenpnick, Palm Beach Gardens, Fla., graduate student, prepares for an on-air announcement during her afternoon shift at KJHK. The station recently has made some changes in format that have cut the number of CDs played on the air to 150. KJHK format change bears criticism Some have doubts about programming By Jamie Munn Kansan staff writer KJHK 90.7 FM has been Lawrence's sound alternative for years, but the station has revamped its format to focus on its strengths — special programing and local musicians. The change comes at a time when Lawrence's KLZR 105.9 FM, which has been an alternative station for almost a year, was voted best FM radio station for Kansas City by the Pitch Weekly. "We have to pay attention to the LAZER, but we don't let them tell us how to program," said Jay Berberick, JKH program director and Lee's Summit, Mo. But listeners and DJs of the station say the changes may not be for the better. iunior. Nikole Hendricks, KJIK rock DJ and Lawrence senior, said the station's DJs weren't given much say in the recent decisions. She said that although she still enjoyed her job at the station, she was concerned by some of the changes there. However, KJHK has opted to cut its list of compact discs available for air play rotation. That change should spotlight what sets the station apart, Berberick said. But this cutback has angered some and annoyed others. From a pool of more than 300 CDs, the station has cut its play rotation to about 150 CDs. he said. "There's a huge musical library that's not going to get played," Hendrick said. "It's such a waste of all that KJ has stood for." "We used to have a huge amount (of CDs)," Berberick said. "But listeners would never hear the same artist." Hendricks said that the station has ranked every song on every CD for tempo or mood and that now, those songs must be played in a certain order. She said she sometimes told the station did not trust her to do her job. "Trained monkeys could do my job," she said. Hendricks also said the station was not taking as many requests as it had in the past because of the new limitations. Instead of being able to play reggae or jazz during her rock show, Hendricks said she must now play what the station defines as "college alternative rock." "It's like it's the LAZER," she said. Sean Meyer, former program director for KJHK and Fairway senior, said he had heard complaints from students about some of the changes. Berberick said that although the CD cuts may sound drastic, the plan is working for the station. "We've cut it in half to emphasize more of the bands we have chosen," he said. Playing new music earlier, especially bands that haven't reached national recognition, has been the goal of the station, he said. "If you listen to KJHK, you're not going to be able to tell a difference," said Jordan Jacobson, KJHK music director and Chicago sophomore. New programing for the station this semester also includes "Wild Women Don't get the Blues," a program featuring female artists Sunday nights; "Slow Jam," a program of rhythm and blues artists late Saturday nights; and "The Classical Show" early Monday mornings. Another change this semester is KJHK's jazz programming. The show has been extended from its 10 a.m. to noon slot. Now the program runs from 6 a.m. to noon Monday through Friday and 6 to 9 a.m. on weekends. By Susan White Kansan staff writer Repairing the damage could cost KU $9,300 During the summer, a lot of time and money were spent to replace the seats in Murphy Hall's Crafton-Preyer Theatre — time and money that may have been a waste for the University. Students who took classes in the theater during the fall semester ripped the seams of the seats and wrote obscenities and other miscellaneous sayings on them, said Jim Carothers, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and sciences. The new seats were used only for a short time before students damaged 186 seats that will cost $50 each to replace, if the University decides to do so. The damages total $9,300. "I think students feel they can destroy the seats because they write on them anonymously." Carothers said. "We don't have the money to fix them right now. I also question if we fix them, if they will be destroyed again." Linda Hope, manager of development and ticketing for the University theater, said the theater department was apprehensive when it found out that some of the classes that were previously taught in Hoch Auditorium would be moved to Murphy. She said she was disappointed that students felt it necessary to destroy the new seats. "It's disheartening, to say the least," she said. "We didn't have problems before the theater was used for a classroom." Hone said the vandalism began a few Hope also said she never noticed any outstanding graffiti before the seats were replaced. weeks after the new seats were installed. Hope said that the way the graffiti was written on the seats led her to think that students wrote on the seats next to them during class. Also, the seats seemed to have been poked by students with their fingers orpens several times. "It is not major damage," Hope said. "But you can tell that intentional damage was done everywhere." "I guess it's just not as fun to deface old seats," she said. She said the theater housekeeping staff removed a lot of the graffiti but that some Rows of destruction 186 seats were damaged in Crafton-Preyer Theatre during the fall semester. Four types of vandalism were reported: ■ Ink damage — 142 ■ Scuffed — 13 ■ Poked and Torn — 28 ■ Obscenities — 3 h I of it will not come off. However, the special cleaning supplies cost the University money too, Carothers said. Hope said the worst part about the vandalism was that patrons who came to watch the shows saw the obscenities. Tuesday, January 25, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN CAUTION: DANGEROUSLY LOW PRICES! COUPON STRIP $5.00 off a Tanning Package 10 tans for $20.00 (reg. $25.00) the total look! 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OPEN DAILY 10:30 a.m.- 11:00 p.m. 10% off any TERRA NOVA CAFÉ Dinner Entree Mon - Thurs 8-9 At the back of Terra Nova Books 920 Massachusetts (913)832-NOVA Classic Music CDs (all green tag items) 25% off w/coupon Not valid with any other offer (expires January 30,1994) KIEF'S CDS/TAPES BRADY OPTICAL 737 Massachusetts 20% off complete pair of prescription glasses(frame & lenses) - Uid with other offers * Present coupon at time of purchase * Limit one coupon per purchase * Attach bank with super vision 842-0880 (Expires 12-31-94) Horn Onion pasta, homemade marinara sauce, garlic toast Pasta Dinner only $2^{49} 12th & Oread (above Yellow Sub) With coupon not. Only w/ valet w/ other offers 1 offer/coupon/customer. Coupon expires 2/8/94 Cartouche, inc. 110 Riverfront Plaza 865-5242 15% off all jewelry including already reduced prices Police nab suspect-but not one they looked for By Liz Chadwick Kansan staff writer Search leads to stolen equipment KU police intended to apprehend one set of suspects on Saturday, but they ended up apprehending a suspect in a different crime. The two officers drove over to assist Lawrence police in searching for the three young men suspected in the hold-up when the Lawrence police dispatcher received an anonymous call. The caller said the suspects had switched cars in a parking lot on the west side of Holcom Sports Complex. A few minutes after midnight, two KU police officers in a cruiser heard a call come over the radio about an armed robbery at the Days Inn, 2309 Iowa St. The KU officers drove west on Clinton Parkway in search of the suspects when they saw a Plymouth and a Camaro turn right and drive east on Clinton from Lawrence Avenue. The officers made a U-turn and followed the two cars. The Camaro continued After making the turn onto Crestline, the Plymouth stopped and four people jumped out of the car. They ran toward the First Presbyterian Church, 2415 Clinton Pkwy. east on Clinton while the Plymouth turned onto Crestline Drive. The KU cruiser followed the Plymouth. The officers continued to follow the Plymouth as it headed south toward 24th Street Terrace. Just before it reached the intersection, the driver stopped. The officers got out of their car and ordered the driver out at gunpoint. The officers found electronic equipment in the car including CD players, radar detectors and two large speaker cabinets. KU police turned over the driver, a 15-year-old juvenile, to the Lawrence police. "It's not unusual for police to investigate a specific crime and find a suspect who has committed another crime altogether," said Sgt. Rose Rozmiarelli, KU police. Sgt. Dick Nickell of the Lawrence police said he thought the stolen property came from a car broken into at 2500 Lawrence Ave. He said there were no suspects in the Days Inn robbery. WEATHER Omaha: 30'/11' LAWRENCE: 47'/34° Kansas City: 43'/25° St. Louis: 51'/33° Wichita: 48'/30° Atlanta: 61'/51° Chicago: 20'/6° Houston: 81'/65° Miami: 78'/57° Minneapolis: 20'/3° Phoenix: 67'/39° Salt Lake City: 40'/25° Seattle: 46'/34° TULSA: 62'/43' TODAY Cloudy High: 47° Low: 34° Tomorrow Rain changing to snow High: 34° Low: 24° Thursday Light snow High: 31° Low: 20° ON THE RECORD ■ Money, credit cards and 14 swimming suits valued at $700 were stolen Wednesday from the women's swimming locker room of Robinson Center, KU police reported. A KU student reported she was battered Sunday in the Burge Union. According to police reports, the victim and the suspect, an African-American female, had a verbal confrontation earlier that day. A Red Polo towel and a black polyester suit were taken Jan. 15 from the women's swimming locker room of Robinson Center, KU police reported. Daily Kansan Classified Ads Get Results! The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119. Staufer-FlintHall, Lawrence, Kan. 68045. TERRIFIC TUESDAY ONLY GOOD WITH THIS COUPON Buy 1 Large PYRAMID PIZZA With two toppings for only $7.99 and get 1 liter of pop for no buck$ no buck$ no buck$ TERRIFIC TUESDAY PYRAMID PIZZA ONLY GOOD WITH THIS COUPON 842-3232 CARRY OUT TO DEFEND AT EAT AT THE WHEEL WE HONOR KAYSON Kansan Card offer good carry-out only. Limited Time Offer Lowest Prices of the Season on college rings selected Women's Rings $239 regularly priced up to $350 selected Men's Rings $299 regularly priced up to $435 JOSTENS January 24 - 26 10am - 4pm KU Bookstore, Kansas Union Prices are for 10K gold rings. For 14K gold rings, add $100. 83-403(CP-795) Prices are for 10K gold rings. For 14K gold rings, add £100. 93-403(CP-735) A fleet through July 31, 1994 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN C A R D We have a wide selection of men's stuff, cabbage, tomatoes, broccoli, cheese, moonah...that rare items our students need so badly. Every item offers you great dis- counts on clothing and services, and we are given a listing of 60 busi- ness-related exclusive offers to Kansas. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN C A R D Membership has its privileges... - 20% Off any regular priced item - Buy one get one free Free medium beverage or fries Free appetizer w/purchase of entree Card holders. This is the savings program you've been waiting for! It's even better than a credit card...No annual fee, no interest payments. Hey! There are no payments at all. The Kansan Card exists for no other reason than to SAVE YOU MONEY!!! You know what? The Kansan Card will be available through February 25, 1994. Cards can be purchased for only $1 apiece at the Kansan Business office; KU Bookstores, Kansas and Burge Unions; University Book Shop and Jayhawk Bookstore. But we warn you...you're in for a HUGE return on your investment! Volunteer and Intern Placement Fair (USA, International, Lawrence) Thurs. Jan.27-Fri.Jan.28,10 am-5 pm ECM Center, One block north of the Kansas Union Information on volunteer placements, internships (215 organizations, many having multiple positions), and over 290 paying positions in environmental concerns, housing, health care, general science, nutrition, energy, communications, women, minorities peace with justice issues, community organizing, day care, and a myriad of other options for short or long term. AND Information on volunteer placement in Lawrence through The Praxis Project (50 organizations) For More Information Call 843-4933 (Sponsored by the Ecumenical Christian Ministries: Presbyterian (USA), Church of the Brethren, United Church of Christ) d CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Tuesday, January 25, 1994 3 Macintosh redefines computers [Image of people working at computer stations] University adapts to 'classroom and office standard' Brian Vandervliet / KANSAN By David Stewart Kansan staff writer From a little mouse, mighty things have come. Introduced 10 years ago yesterday as "the computer for the rest of us," the Apple Macintosh has grown out of its image as a "toy" computer to become a mainstay at the home, in the office and on campus. With the acquisition of 80 Macintoshes in 1985, the computer science department took the first step in building the University's current collection of 2,100 Macintoshes. When looking to add new computers in the mid-1980s, the computer science department formed a committee, which included former student Tim Thurman, current manager of computing resources for the department. Thurman said the Macintosh won the committee over with its ease of use and intuitive operating style. "The Mac allowed people to do more things more easily," Thurman said. "Like the ad said, 'If you can point, you can use a Mac.'" Some computer operators thought the idea of using a mouse to run a computer was only a gimmick, Truman said. But by no longer requiring people to know the specialized language of a disk operating system, or DOS, the Macintosh opened the previously abstract world of computers to the masses, he said. "When entering commands, it's intimidating with words, sometimes cryptic words, on the screen," Thurman said. "The Mac means you can click on an icon. That's much easier." The Macintosh also connects with other computers more easily than DOS-based personal computers, said David Ryan, computer systems specialist for systems development, which services the technology for the admissions, placement and registrar's offices. Last week, staff members at the enrollment center wanted to add four more terminals during the add/drop process Ryan's office could quickly plug in Macin toshes, he said. "It was revolutionary, dealing with a mouse and an icon." lighting for them in our division. We don't really have any requests for PC's." While several professors of computer science and Macintosh users said the computer had developed into the office and classroom standard, the majority of college students coming out of high school remain committed to IBM-based systems, said Jim Roberts, chair of the electrical engineering and computer science department. Jim Roberts chair of the electrical engineering and computer science department Of the freshmen taking Roberts' introductory computer science class, only 10 percent are Macintosh users, he said. In contrast, old stu dents had accepted the Macintosh more readily. "I was stunned by the almost instant acceptance," Roberts said. "It was revolutionary, dealing with a mouse and an icon. It was a really different feel with the Mac. " Roberts said that some of the graphics, such as the smiling computer that welcomes users, and the special sounds made by the Macintosh added to its acceptance. "There's a bit of cultism as well," he said. "People relate to the Macs more easily. It added some whimsical aspects to computer use." Though the Macintosh cost a lot more than the standard personal computer, its intuitive approach and speed of use had made it a clear choice for new computer acquisitions, said Kanishka de Lanolerelle, systems manager and lab supervisor for the computer science department from 1985 to 1992. "It was like having a Ferrari instead of a Ford," de Lanterelle said. "It was a lot more expensive, but it would get everything done a lot better and a lot more quickly." ON CAMPUS Applications for the undergraduate National Security Education Program (NSEP) grants have arrived. For students who want to study abroad, $8,000 per semester is available. Applications are available at the Office of Study Abroad, 203 Lippincott Hall. For more information, call Mary Elizabeth Debicki at 864-3742. LesBiGaySK encourages anyone who is lesbian, gay, bisexual or unsure to call Headquarters at 841-2345 or the University Information Center at 864-3506 about confidential meetings. OAKS—Non-Traditional Students Organization will have a brown-bag lunch from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. today at the Rock Chalk Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Gerry Vernon at 864-7317 The Office of Study Abroad and Western Civilization Program will sponsor an informational meeting for students interested in fulfilling their Western Civilization requirements, or studying history/art history in Italy or France at 3 p.m. today at 3 Lippincott Hall. For more information, call Nancy Mitchell at 844-3742. KU Karate Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Brad Bernet at 822-2157. in Amnesty International will meet at 6 p.m. today at Alcove in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Daneille Myron at 842-5407. ■ Inspirational Gospel Voices will meet at 6 p.m. today in 328 Murphy Hall. For more information, call Kim at 749-3819. KU Pro-Choice Coalition will meet at 6 p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread. For more information, call Stephanie at 842-6894. Public Relations Student Society of America will meet at 7 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Shaunda Wenberg at 864-7318. KU Dr. Seuss Club will meet at 7:30 tonight at Alcove G in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Jessica Pinchinief at 841-2558. KU Fencing Club will meet at 7:30 tonight in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Jen Snvder at 841-6445. "Windblown," the student organization of the Mustard Seed Christian Fellowship, will meet at 7:30 tonight at Alcove F in the Kansas Union for worship, bible study, prayer and fellowship. For more information, call Hugh at 841-2647. St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor an informational meeting about Spring Break Alternatives at 7:30 tonight at the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call Wendy at 843-0357. KU Triathlon and Swim Club will meet at 7:30 tonight in Robinson Center. For more information, call Sean Roland at 865-2731. Christian campus ministries will sponsor Taize Prayer at 8:30 tonight in Danforth Chapel. For more information call Lea Peck at 841-8912. Class provides parenting help for African Americans Course to include history lessons on African Americans By Denise Nell Kansan staff writer Kevin Johnson said he had grown discouraged about the problems that faced African-American youth. Better parenting is the solution, said Johnson, director of the Douglas County probation department. "The only way to alleviate those problems is to make parents aware of what's going on out there," he said. "If we can work with parents and show them their options early on, we can change things." Johnson will team up with Sharon Gooldsby, school nurse at Central Junior High School, to teach a 15-week course called Effective Black Parenting. The first course will be offered at 6:30 p.m. today at the First Missionary Baptist Church, 1646 Vermont St. Johnson and Goolsby received certification to teach the class by taking a 35-hour training course offered through the California-based Center for the Improvement of Child Care. The course, which will meet for three hours every Tuesday for 15 weeks, will teach parenting skills to parents of African-American children. Goolsby said the program took 10 years to research. It began in the inner cities and public housing projects and already was successful in cities such as Wichita, she said. In addition to tips in raising children, each class will include a lesson in African-American history, Goolsby said. "There are a lot of parenting programs that aren't culturally specific," she said. "Black parents don't take them because they can't relate to them." Goolsby said the historical aspect of the course was im course was important because African-American children were not "The largest problem I see personally is teaching my child to be a survivor of racism. Pat Henry Douglas County juvenile probation officer taught their history in public schools. And often, the parents themselves do not know enough about African-American history to teach their children effectively. Goolsby said the program was not limited to African-American parents but was open to all parents of African-American children. "I think, if nothing else, they'll feel even better about being Black parents," Goolsby said. "Black families are bombarded with so many negative feelings from the media." The class will be limited to 10 people, and Gooldsby said about four people already had shown interest. Pat Henry, Douglas County juvenile probation officer, is the only other person in Lawrence certified to teach the course. She taught the first course offered in Lawrence, which was conducted from April to August 1993. Henry will start another course in February to accommodate those parents who might not fit into Goolsby's and Johnson's class. Henry said the program helped the eight parents who had finished the course she offered. "Several reported a marked improvement in their young people," she said. Effective Black Parenting Class ■ The class will be offered Tuesdays at 6:30 p.m. at the First Regular Missionary Baptist Church, 1646 Vermont. ■ Each session lasts three hours. Free transportation to class and child care during class is available if prearranged. ■ For more information, contact Sharon Goolsby 832-3792 or Kevin Johnson-841-7700 extension 216. Henry said teaching the course helped her in her relationship with her own child. KANSAN "The largest problem I see personally is teaching my child to be a survivor of racism," she said. "But I don't want her to forget where she came from." Where and when Pancho's Pancho's MEXICAN RESTAURANT Celebrating 5 years of making delicious homestyle Mexican Food Come join the fiesta! 711 W 23rd in the Malls Shopping Center 843-4044 NATURALWAY Looking for Real World experience? SUNY STATE UNIVERSITY natural fiber clothing 820-822 Mass St. 841-0100 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN is an experience that will test your skills and abilities to the limit, an experience from which you will gain knowledge and friendship, and the experience of a lifetime. GAIN: - Valuable Communication Skills - Time Management Skills - Professionalism - Sales and Service Knowledge * Real World Experience POSITIONS NOW AVAILABLE: • Assistant Account Executives • Research Assistants • Management Assistants Applications due: FRIDAYJANUARY 28 BY 5:00p.m. in 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall. A limited number of positions are available ALL MAJORS ENCOURAGED TO APPLY. 4 Tuesday, January 25,1994 OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VIEWPOINT Vandalism in theater is senseless and costly What is the purpose of carving "The system doesn't work" and "Brian sucks" on the seats of Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall? None. But the total damage done to seats in the theater could be costly to students. The seats, refurbished only two years ago, have been damaged by those who feel it necessary to gouge personal philosophies into every piece of wood they encounter. The theater is intended to provide a place where students, faculty and members of the community can indulge in a bit of culture. It is not intended to be a place where people read about who rules and who sucks. Because of student misconduct, an estimated 180 seats will need to be refurbished, at a price of $50 apiece. The $9,000 will eventually come out of the pockets of students, some of whom have never written on any University property. If something is so important and so pressing that it must be shared with the next person to sit in that particular seat, there are better ways. Notebook paper is cheap. And if there is a need to get fancy, Post-It notes are a great way to express the sentiments important of those who write on chairs. "Anarchy rules" and "Pearl Jam rocks" will be taken just as seriously read on a scrap of paper as on an expensive piece of furniture. DONELLA HEARNE FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD Partnership program essential for progress Every member of the Kansas Legislature claims to be committed to excellence in higher education. Yet one of the most significant bills before them this spring is in serious jeopardy of failing. The Partnership for Excellence program calls for gradual tuition increases at the Regents schools to put faculty salaries in line with their peer institutions. For years, the Legislature has dragged its heels when it comes to faculty salaries. As a result, KU and the other Regents schools have been losing quality professors to higher-paying jobs and have had a difficult time attracting new professors. Although the plan calls for a gradually implemented 9 percent tuition increase at the state's three research institutions, the faculty salary increases are very much needed. Last year, KU's average faculty salary was $45,872. Conversely, KU's five peer institutions had average salaries of $52,128 last year. However, the Partnership does not call only for faculty pay raises. It also honors student requests to improve education in other ways, such as placing more faculty rather than graduate teaching assistants in classrooms, giving students more say in teacher evaluations and improving student advising. Support for the plan outside the Legislature is widespread. Gov. Joan Finney has said that if Partnership is not passed, she will veto Washburn University's entrance into the Regents system. KU Chancellor Gene Budig has said how important the plan is for KU. The Partnership has been endorsed by the Student Advisory Committee, which is composed of the Regents various student body presidents. Quality professors are the backbone of any school. If the legislators truly are committed to excellence at the state's universities, passage of Partnership for Excellence is essential. RICHARD BOYD FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD KANSAN STAFF BEN GROVE, Editor LISA COSMILLO, Managing editor LISA COSMILLO, Managing edito TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator Editors Assistant Managing Editor ...Den England Assistant to the editor , J. R. Clairbome News ...Kristi Fogler, Katie Greenwald, ...Todd Selfart Editorial ...Colleen McCain ...Nathan Olson Campus ...Jae DeVaven Sports ...David Dorsey Photo ...Doug Hesse Features ...Sara Bennett JUSTIN GARBERG Business manager JENNIFER BLOWEY Retail sales manager JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser Business Staff Campus sales mgr ...Jason Eberly Regional sales mgr ...Troy Tawray National & Co-op mgr ...Robin Kring Special sections mgr ..Shelly McConnell Production mgrs ..Lara Guath Gretchen Koerthanwirth Marketing director ..Shannon Reilly Creative director ..John Carlton Classified mgrs ..Kelly Connays Teamsheets mgr ..Wing Chan The letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and homework, or faculty or staff position. Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be published in the Kansas newsroom the right to reedit or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas newsroom, 111 Shafer-Flint Hall. Kansan editor hopes paper will show readers new faces As a senior, I think a lot about the people I've met as a member of this University and as a journalist. I think a lot, too, about the ones I haven't met. That is one reason newspapers exist — to bring you and me in touch with the personalities behind the faces we see every day. The faces I've already met in this profession are the most compelling reasons I have for wanting to become a journalist. EDITOR BEN GROVE Two of those faces belong to students whose home address is the Rumsey funeral home. For Scott Weiser and Matt Staples, funerals are a part of daily life. Now they are planning to graduate this year, after several years of living and working and learning about life and death at Rumsey. As Weiser makes plans for the future, he says he wouldn't have wanted to live anywhere else. Another reason I have for wanting to become a journalist is the face of a homeless man I met while working for the Des Moines Register. I never knew his name. I met him at a dinner in a Salvation Army soup kitchen last winter. At the time, he wondered how the United States could spend so much money in Somalia when he was starving in America's bread basket. I encountered another face while researching a story about thrill businesses. The face had wild eyes and belonged to a man who strapped himself to my back just before we jumped out of a plane at 10,000 feet. He jumps out of planes strapped to people's backs for a living. As we fell at 180 miles per hour, he yelled, "I'm not this (expletive) great?" over and over while I gasped for air. I remember, too, the weather-beaten face of a biker from Topeka. She offered to hoist me on to the back of her hulking Harley Davidson chopper for the first few miles of a motorcycle ride for muscular dystrophy. I was covering the ride for the Topeka Capital-Journal in a brand new tie. She was in her everyday clothes, a studded leather riding suit. I was aed at how easily she invited me on to her Harley, her lifestyle. Still another face my reporting led me to was that of Fred Dally, who works 12-hour days in his party store in the bowels of Detroit. Dally wants to sell his store, but no one will buy it One of my first reasons for wanting to become a journalist can be found somewhere in the wrinkled face of Louis (pronounced Lou-ee) Bitani, 68. I featured him in a Memorial Day story I wrote for *The Detroit News* last summer. He and 317 of his fellow crewmen survived four days in the ice waters of the Pacific waiting to be rescued after their ship, the USS Indianapolis, sank during the final days of World War II. Today Mr. Bitani is one of the few survivors of the ship left. My story ran with information about where readers could donate money for a memorial to the ship's crew, which is scheduled to be unveiled in Indianapolis next year. Shortly after the story ran, Mr. Bitani called to say that more than $2,000 had been donated from people in the Detroit area. Seldom is it so easy to do our readers such a service. Rarely is a newspaper's impact on someone's life so obvious. But that is one of our most important jobs, to touch the lives of all our readers by introducing them to each other. THE BOBBITT BILL: Ben Grove is a Davenport, Iowa, senior in journalism. THE BOBBITT BILL: 5-DAY MANDATORY 5-DAY Mandatory Waiting PERIOD FOR KITCHEN KNIVES Administration closes ears to advice After hours of mind-numbing discussion and tough decisions, KU faculty and student leaders last month came up with a consensual relationships policy they were satisfied with. The University administration's answer last week? Thanks. But no thanks. It rejected the leaders' key revision of the policy. Last month a faculty and student committee recommended saving three of seven degrees proposed for elimination. The administration's response? Thanks for playing. Chop. All seven degrees were cut Unit: Asexver regress were cut. With these actions, the administration is sending a clear message to faculty and student senates: It doesn't matter what solutions you come up with. We make the policies here. KU has several governing bodies made up of faculty and students elected by their peers. These bodies act similar to a state legislature. They review, create and pass policies for Chancellor Gene Budig to consider. Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor, and David Shulenburger, vice chancellor for academic affairs, help Budig make his decisions. COLUMNIST DAN ENGLAND Even up to last year, the administration seemed willing to listen. Budig saved a degree last spring based on the governing bodies' recommendations after that semester's degree elimination hearings. In but this year of sweeping change, with program review and the consensual relationships policy, Budig and the rest refuse to listen to those who will be the most affected by these changes. Program review began in the fall of 1992-as a way for the University, strained by the Kansas Legislature's lack of funding to the University, to cut costs. The University could not afford to keep all of KU's degree programs. But the way it did - by simply cutting the degrees after faculty and students spent so much time coming up with an alternate plan - showed that the hearings were a mere formality. Budig already had made up his mind. That's too bad. The administration could have used some advice. One of the cuts was the M.S. in atmospheric science - the only program of its kind in the state of Kansas. The administration recognized this and asked for input. It practically begged for it. And so the consensual relationships task force, made up of mostly students and faculty, came up with a suggested policy — one that didn't ban relationships. And the way the administration has handled the consensual relationships policy is inexcusable. Don't let last week's news reports of the administration's "compromise" with the faculty fool you. The only Faculty and students were greeted last fall with a new consensual relationships policy that banned student-teacher relationships. This was automatically implemented without any input from faculty, students or their governing bodies. real difference between the task force's proposal and the administration's is the threat of professors being fired if they sleep with students. The task force and faculty didn't want that. The administration did. Guess who won? The policy will be voted on Thursday at University Council, the most powerful governing body of faculty and students. Other faculty and students: Write a letter to Budig. Our voices lie in our senate leaders. If the administration continues to be so autocratic, our senate members may get fed up. They put a lot of time and energy into those senates. They may think it isn't worth it. And our voice may be lost. Speak out, KU. We can't afford this tragic scenario. The administration spends hours of mind-numbing discussion with faculty and student leaders. It asks, demands and practically begs for input on a new policy. The leaders' response? Dan England is a Lenexa senior in Journalism. Safety classes important for first-time gun buyers LETTERS TO THE EDITOR We write to comment upon the issue of gun safety, highlighted tongue-in-cheek in Dave Barry's January 11 column. Recent gun-control legislation has prompted a gun-buying binge nationally, and many purchasers are first-time buyers who are alarmed at this flawed approach to "crime control." In our gun safety classes, we see many who want to "buy something now." We're glad these persons seek instruction, but are concerned about the numbers who may not do so. Shooting sports are safely enjoyed by millions of U.S. citizens annually. But guns require knowledgeable use. Selection of a firearm also requires knowledge and thought. Although fatal firearm accidents have declined in the past 15 years, all injury accidents are preventable. There are several certified instructors in Lawrence, and a local club offers a safety course through the Lawrence Parks and Recreation program. Cost is minimal and generally covers only actual expenses. If you are interested in attending a course, feel free to contact one of us. George R. Blondel Director of Laboratories, Biological Sciences Bruce Cutler Director, Electron Microscopy Lab Humans, not weapons responsible for violence But the sleepy nature of Lawrence isn't the reason not to worry about guns. We've had a drive-by shooting and an attempted car-jacking (resulting in a fatality). "Citizens not worried about guns" headlined the front page on the first issue of the new year. Naturally, citizens don't. A person sufficiently irrational to There is no such thing as a dangerous gun: Calibur, action and magazine capacity are irrelevant. In fact, there are no dangerous objects at all. There are only dangerous people. kill over a jacket will do so whether the instrument is a gun, a knife, a car, a handy fifth-story window or even a body part. Statistics show that one quarter or more of all homicides in this country are committed with hands and feet. Need we license, tax or ban any of these? We need to stop blaming inanimate objects for human actions and address the mind set that holds life so cheaply that some are willing to snuff it out for ficks, and others are trying to prevent those of us who value it from being able to defend ourselves from them. Steven P. Allen Lawrence graduate student 4 STATE/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Tuesday, January 25, 1994 5 Pro-choice supporters celebrate Court victory The Associated Press TOPEKA — Abortion-rights activists celebrated a 21-yearFold Supreme Court decision and a new ruling the court handed down Monday as they presented small jingling bells and edible bells to lawmakers at the Kansas Capitol. The abortion-rights activists had just heard about the new decision, which said that activists may use a federal racketeering law to sue protesters who block women's access to abortion clinics. They distributed the bells as part of all-day celebration of the anniversary of Roe vs. Wade, the landmark 1973 Supreme Court decision that gave women the constitutional right to abortion. More than 100 people listened to a lunchtime program sponsored by the Kansas Choice Alliance, a coalition of 45 groups that supports a woman's right to an abortion. Before and after the lunch, participants handed out bells to legislators. "We want the bells to be a reminder of the continuing struggle to guarantee women access to reproductive choices," said Sue Ledbetter, a lobbyist for the National Organization for Women. Ledbetter said the Court's latest ruling "kind of feels like the tides are turning." Lower courts had thrown out a NOW lawsuit that invoked the anti-racketeering law against Operation Rescue and other groups. Monday's decision reinstated the lawsuit. "This is a biggie," said Ellen Estes, president-elect of the Wichita League of Women Voters. Anti-abortion activists were shocked at the decision. "I just can't believe they're putting Operation Rescue people in the same category as the mafia," said Cleta Renyer, a lobbyist for Kansas Right to Life. "It's just unbelievable. I don't know how we're going to reverse this snowballing trend." Renyer and other anti-abortion activists on Friday presented roses to lawmakers to mark both the anniversary of Roe vs. Wade and the passage of a similar state law. The group rallied at the Statehouse on Saturday. The ruling falls far short of resolving all the legal issues surrounding anti-abortion activities. Lawmakers who spoke to the group said some of those questions are bound to come before the legislature during the 1994 session. One of those issues is state funding of abortions. "If we're going to make it legal, it's not much of a right if you can't afford it," said Rep. Jo Wagnon, D-Topeka, who is a candidate for governor. The high court Friday agreed to clarify how far courts and local governments may go in restricting protesters by creating "buffer zones" outside abortion clinics. "If you can't get into a clinic, that's not much of a right either." Wagnon said. A Wichita lawyer who represents an abortion clinic was surprised at the high court's decision. John Cowles is involved in a case stemming from the summer of 1991 Operation Rescue protests in Wichita, during which there were about 2,700 arrests of approximately 1,700 people. The case is pending in the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. "I thought it would be a difficult case to win in the Supreme Court because there have been several decisions that have discussed this economic motivation factor for RICO lawsuits," Cowles said. The ruling threatens Operation Rescue and other anti-abortion groups with financial ruin since those successfully sued under the anti-racketeering law pay triple damages. Regents say plan has 50-50 chance The Associated Press "This is by no means a done deal," said Washburn President Hugh Thompson. TOPEKA — Gov. Joan Finney may want it, and some lawmakers may be open to the idea. But getting Washburn University into the Kansas Board of Regents system is far from a sure thing. A bill that would make Washburn a state university has not been drawn up yet, and officials of both Washburn and the Regents say the plan has a 50-50 chance of passing. Thompson and Stephen Jordan, executive director of the Regents, said legislators they have talked with are open to the proposal, which includes the new plan, Partnership for Excellence. The three-year Partnership for Excellence plan would increase faculty salaries and budgets at the six Regents universities. For the 1994-95 year, the plan calls for a 3 percent increase in the six universities' base budgets, which would come from a 3 percent increase in state general fund financing and other funds, including $5.7 million in tuition increases. Another $9.3 million in new tuition money would go toward faculty salaries. It is called a "partnership" because it calls for contributions from students, in the form of higher tuition, as well as from the state. The Washbum proposal, as outlined by Finney, would make Washburn the seventh Regents university by July 1, 1997. DISCOVER ARIZONA Trailrides, Horsepack, or Backpack Spring Break March 19-23 Starting at $525 - airfare included. Adventure Travel International 1-800-537-3865 PACK SOME PUNCH! Nature's Nutrition FORMULA ONE A highly sought-after dietary supplement • LOOK BETTER • FEEL BETTER • HAVE MORE ENERGY LIMITED AUDIT BOUNDARY SEASONAL PACKS SPECIAL OFFER ONLY WHEN AVAILABLE FREE FORMULA ONE MADE IN THE USA Alliance USA Gluten Free Vegan Dairy Free S&S Distribution 749 3337 Includes the breakthrough mineral nutrient CHROMium PICOLINATE Henry T's Bar&Grill 2 for 1 burgers (after 6:00 pm) $2.00 GustoMugs of Domestic Beer Tuesday Only 6th & Kasold 749-2999 Cadillace RANCH Country Western Bar WED: Ladies Night/ladies no cover 50¢ Jello Shots $1.00 Draws Best buns contest and prize give aways THURS: No cover THURS: NO COVER $2.00 Amaretto Sours and prizes give away and prize give aways "We Care For KU" AIR FORCE ROTC 2515 W.6th 842-9845 AIM HIGH $2000.00 SCHOLARSHIP AIM HIGH $2000.00 SCHOLARSHIP If you have a GPA of 2.5 or higher and are a full time student, you can qualify for an Air Force ROTC scholarship. In addition, you will receive $100.00 each academic month for your last two years of college. This scholarship is available to ANY ACADEMIC MAJOR. The deadline to apply for the fall 1994 semester is rapidly approaching. For more information on this exciting opportunity talk to Captain Brad Gentry or Captain Bob Wicks at 864-04676. AIR FORCE BOTTOM Since WATKINS --- CPR Training 864-9570 Date Day(s) Time Jan. 26 & 27 WR 6-9 p.m. Jan. 31 & Feb. 2 MW 6-9 p.m. Feb. 7 & 9 MW 6-9 p.m. Feb. 16 & 18 WF 6-9 p.m. Feb. 22 & 24 TR 6-9 p.m. Mar. 5 Sa 9 a.m.-2:30 p.m. Mar. 12 Sa 9 a.m.-2:30 p.m. Saturday class (includes break) and 2-session class train you in adult/child/infant CPR through the American Heart Association. There is a $5 charge for training. STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES 864-9500 CAUTION: DANGEROUSLY LOW PRICES! COUPON STRIP Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students $1.00 OFF ANY PURCHASE OFF ANY PURCHASE • Albums • CD's • Tapes • Posters ALLEY CAT RECORDS 717 Massachusetts coupon valid Lawrence, KS 865-0122 through 2/7/94 --- THE BUM STEER THE BUM STEER 841-SMOK(E) 23rd & Louisiana Malls Shopping Center 1/2Price FREE DELIVERY $6 Minimum Good with coupon only. Not valid with other offers. Coupon expires 02/7/94 Sandwich Basket Includes Fries & Beans Buy a Sandwich Basket, get the 2nd for 1/2 price! Want to make a bold statement? 110 Riverfront Plaza Try this 15% off already reduced prices on purses. Cartouche, inc. 865-5242 --- VIDEO BIZ 9th & Iowa 749-3507 2 Video Tapes and VCR one night rental 5.99 Expires 2-7-94 2 Movies for the price of one! WE HONOR ANNIES VIDEO BIZ VIDEO BIZ 9th & Iowa 749-3507 2 Movies for the price of one! HONOR KANSAUS WE HONOR KANSAS FREE Valentino's Restaurant Dessert Bar with the purchase of buffet! Lunch 11am - 2pm Dinner 5pm - 9pm 7 days a week Limit 5 people per coupon Good only at Lawrence location • Cannot be used with any other offer Expires 2-8-94 544 W. 23rd 749-4244 Valentino'S Ristorante Expires 2-8-94 544 W.23rd 749-4244 Yello Sub 1814 W. 23rd 12th and Indiana Yello Sub for Lunch? Monday-Friday Lunch Special! Any6" sub only $2.49 with purchase of drink (Up to 96% value) With this coupon. 1 am to 2 pm only. Not valid with other offers. 1 offer/coupon/person. Coupon expires on 3/14 1814 W. 33rd 18th and Indiana COUPON BUY ONE VISTABURGER GET ONE FREE Limit one order per coupon. One coupon per customer. Not valid in combination with any other offer. Extra charges for cheese and bacon. Valid after 11:00 a.m. Auth. UDK Expires 2-25-94 1991 Tuttle Creek Blvd. & 2074 Anderson Ave. Manhattan 1050 Wanamaker in Topeka 1527 W. 6th in Lawrence Vista DRIVE IN 1527 W. 6th JUNIOR'S FARM RECORDS factory fresh compact discs, cassettes, &c. $2.00 OFF $2.00 OFF our already great prices! any single in-stock item not already on sale. downtown 924½ MASS. expires Feb. 7,'94 842-3344 6 Tuesday, January 25, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Jayhawk Bookstore "Your Book Professionals" "At the top of Naismith Hill!" Hr: 8:50-30 M-Th., 8-5 Ft., 9-5 Sat., 12-4 Sun. 843-3826 Camera America ONE HOUR PHOTO Lawrence's Largest Supplier of Darkroom Materials 1610 West 23rd Street 841-7205 Futons & Frames On Sale! BLUE HERON where comfort and quality is assured.. 937 Mass. 841-9443 Ifyou received unsolicited goods in the mail... During recess, Andrew Grover, 5, plays on a slide. Students in the Century School work at their own pace and are not classified into grades do not pay for it, contact our offices for help! Legal Services for Students 148 Burge • 864-5665 STUDENT SENATE School emphasizes different approach Nontraditional classes stress independence By Roberta Johnson Kansan staff writer 1000 "She cut the carrot on my nose!" shouted Alison Lee, 5, as a piece of carrot landed on her face. "We're helping cook lettuce, tomatoes and bread," she explained. In another room, children excitedly were putting together a puzzle of the United States and announcing the states' names and capitals. "They can look at the maps, and they know where they're going on vacation," said Pam Paden, Lawrence graduate student and instructor at Lawrence's newest school. om Leininger / KANSAN Learning to prepare spaghetti and salad and putting together puzzles are some of the nontraditional ways that the children of the Century School learn about life and academics. The children also learn reading and math skills. "The kids move in and out of instruction and play," said Don Bushell, professor of human development and family life, who helped initiate the school. "A lot of games are instructional. Most of the kids enjoy reading and think math's a game." Children between the ages of 3 and 8 attend the school daily from 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. There are no grade levels, but at the age of 11 the teachers will help the children make the transition to junior high, he said. The Century School, temporarily based at Second Street and Mount Hope Court, opened Jan. 3. Bushell said the school would move to its permanent location on Kentucky Street near the Lawrence Public Library in a few weeks. Bushell said the school was designed as an extension of the campus-based EduCare day care program, which emphasizes individualized learning. "The ways best suited to them may not necessarily be what is best suited to a child some other age," he said. "We're unusually overstaffed so that we can maintain this individualized attention." The school, which now has 24 students enrolled, eventually would like to have 100 students. Bushell said. The high teacher-student ratio allows some children who might otherwise be in special programs for the handicapped to be in a classroom that does not focus on what is wrong with the child. Whitney Van dyke, 5, had been in a special education program. She has cerebral palsy. needs," said her mother, Lisa Van dyke, who also works at the school. "It helps her a lot that she doesn't get pulled out of a regular classroom." "All her needs are met here without giving attention that she has special a s important to get the kids into stuff that's normal every day," she said. that skills other than textbook academics were taught. Van dyke said she liked that the children learned at their own pace and Right photo Don Bushell, professor of human development and family life, watches his Century School students play. The school opened Jan. 3. Left photo Eilad Yarom, 8, shows off a book he is reading while Eirick Shields, 5, looks on. The boys are students at the Century School, a new private school opened by Don Bushell, professor of human development and family life. The bell rings... The Century School is a private school for children ages 3 to 11. The Century School is a private school for children ages 3 to 11. It is not affiliated with any religion. Classes are from 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. five days a week. School is open year round. Tuition is $375 each month. For more information, call 832-0101. Source: Don Bushell KANSAN Daily Kansan Classified Ads Get Results! ATTENTION SCHOLARS! COLLEGE BOWL 1994 THE "VARSITY SPORT February 12, 1994 February 12, 1994 Kansas Union 8 a.m. until 4 p.m. $20.00 per Team Call 864-3477 for more info THE "VARSITY SPORT OF THE MIND" presented by: NEWARK UNION ACTIVITIES ULTIMATE TAN Get that sunny beach feelin' How to rid the Winter Whites WE HONOR KANSAN The Ultimate Tan solution: - 8 New 36 Bulb Double Facial Beds Free Facial Beds Largest Salon in Lawrence with 16 Wolff System Beds Professionally serving Lawrence for 6 years 2449 Iowa Suite O Lawrence, KS • 842-4949 (Just south of Molly McGee) MEN'S BASKETBALL TICKETS ATTN: STUDENTS REDEMPTION PERIOD GROUP#6 JANUARY26 - JANUARY28 8:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M. GAMES: Feb. 6 - Nebraska Cornhuskers Feb. 20 - Missouri Tigers Athletic Ticket Office East Lobby - Allen Fieldhouse 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. ** YOUMAY ONLY REDEEM ONE COUPON PERPERSON. **YOUMUSTHAVEAREDSPRING1994FEESTICKERON ** YOU MUST HAVE READ THIS BOOK. YOUR KUID TORECEIVE YOUR TICKETS. ** WE ARE NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR LOST OR STOLEN COUPONS. 1 NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Tuesday. January 25, 1994 7 Ethics Committee to get Sen. Packwood's diaries The Associated Press PROCEDURES WASHINGTON — Sen. Bob Packwood's personal diaries are "unquestionably relevant" to the Senate Ethics Committee and must be provided to the panel, a federal judge ruled Monday. U. S. District Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson said he had to "balance Sen. Packwood's expectations of privacy... against the Ethics Committee's interest in examining them for evidence of misconduct ..." The panel is investigating the Oregon Republican for alleged sexual misconduct, witness intimidation and obstruction of the probe by Packwood's alleged alteration of the diaries. Jackson ruled the subpoena did not violate Packwood's Fourth Amendment rights against over-broad searches. The committee met standards of reasonableness, he found. Nor, Jackson concluded, did the committee violate the Oregon Republican's Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination. Packwood lost that claim when the diaries were "voluntarily committed to paper" before the committee sought them. The Senate demanded the diaries in a lawsuit after Packwood disobeyed the subpoena — arguing it violated his constitutional rights, by allowing the committee to "ruminate" through his most private thoughts. The subpoena was issued after the panel found entries that investigators said raised questions about whether Packwood used his office to aid lobbyists and businessmen who offered his wife a job. The committee wants diaries from 1989 to the present to decide whether to make the job offers part of the investigation. The Justice Department has started a criminal investigation on the job offers and also has subpoenaed the diaries. Justice filed papers in secret that joined the Senate lawsuit for the diaries. The judge's ruling did not mention the department's demand. Jackson set a hearing for Thursday to set procedures for the diaries to be provided. The court took custody of the recorded and transcribed materials last month after Senate lawyers contended the senator altered them while expecting a subpoena. The committee is investigating allegations that Packwood made unwanted sexual advances to more than two dozen women, including Senate employees. Jackson said it "would be presumpuous" of him to find the Ethics Committee's action unreasonable, when the Supreme Court "sustained a more extensive and intrusive examination" into Richard Nixon's private papers and recordings in Watergate. WASHINGTON — Filling an embarrassing gap in his national security team, President Clinton promoted the Pentagon's No. 2 man to defense secretary Monday. Clinton called William J. Perry "a real pro," a man "you can depend on." The quick reaction from Congress was enthusiastic, with predictions Perry would easily win confirmation. Seemingly a reluctant warrior, Perry said he told White House representatives Saturday he could not accept at that point because "I did not want to drive my family into a decision — my decision — without their support." After a talk with Vice President Al Gore and then a meeting with family members, Perry telephoned White House representatives Sunday to say he would accept an offer if one were forthcoming. Perry, 66, is to replace outgoing Defense Secretary Les Aspin, who announced his resignation under pressure from the White House last month. Clinton's first choice to take Aspin's place, Bobby Inman, withdrew last week in a news conference filled with complaints about attacks from columnists and lawmakers. The Associated Press Perry, who also served in President Carter's Pentagon, is a former engineering professor and mathematician, and a key early supporter of stealth technology. He also is an Army veteran, perhaps positioned to help his commander-inchief improve relations with military leaders and wrestle with a shrinking Pentagon budget. Clinton said he chose Perry "based on his lifetime of accomplishments and his solid leadership at the Pentagon." "He has the right skills and management experience for the job. He has the right vision for the job," said Clinton, who credited Perry with being on the "cutting edge of defense issues." Clinton predicted Perry would reform Pentagon spending procedures, keep a tight rein on the shrinking defense budget and maintain the nation's strong military force. In contrast to Inman, who said he needed to reach a "comfort level" with Clinton, Perry quickly endorsed his commander-in-chief. "I have a great respect for the way you have been guiding national security," he told the president. Aspin, who was eased out by Clinton, has agreed to remain aboard until his successor is confirmed. Besides Perry's concern about his family, he also said over the weekend that he wanted to make sure he would have adequate access to the president, said an administration official, speaking on condition of anonymity. Poor communication with the Oval Office hurt Aspin. Perry is highly regarded in the military, with a reputation for managing unwieldy bureaucracies. He is credited with pushing the successful stealth aviation technology on Air Force officials who resisted it in the 1970s. As deputy defense secretary, Perry has overseen the daily business of the Pentagon, and traveled to Russia to promote the conversion of Russian weapons factories to non-military production. Perry was easily confirmed last February as deputy secretary, with the only problem being a report that he participated in Pentagon budget discussions while still on the boards of defense companies. He denied the claim. The Etc. Shop 928 Mass. Downtown Parking in the rear • 843-0900 • 843-0900 • 843-0900 • 843-0900 • 843-0900 • 843-0900 Mountain Trekking? Studying Abroad? Spring Break? Sight Seeing? Nightlife? Free Worldview Trip Plan, Thursdays till 7 pm Check Us Out! TRAVEL CO. 3300 W. 15th St. St. 3. Orchards Corners Located on the KU bus route I UNDER THE HONORARY TERM IN OUTDOOR OUTSIDE SUNFLOWER Annual Winter Sale Now until the end of February Woolrich Costs... up to 30% off Turtle Neck... $5 Womens Clothing... 20% off Mass Clothing... 20% off Sweaters... 20% off 1993 Bicycle... Closeout Prices Winter Cycling Wear... 20% off Selected Boots... Closeout Prices 843-5000 804 Massachusetts 32 Toppings to choose from!!! Rudy Tuesday 2 Pizzas 2 toppings 2 drinks ONLY $899 plus tax RUDY'S PIZZERY 719-0055 Now located at 704 Mass. Clinton names new defense secretary Although health care remains Clinton's top priority in his second year, polls suggest crime may be outspacing it as the major concern of most Americans. SUNFLOWER Annual Winter Sale Now until the end of February Workrich Cost...up to 30% off Tissue Necklace...$8 Women Clothing...20% off Men Clothing...20% off Swimwear...20% off 1993 Bicycles...Closeout Prices Winter Cycling Wear...20% off Selected Boots...Closeout Prices 843-5000 804 Manchauern "He'll be talking about health care, why that's important; crime, and how that affects us and what we need to do about it; welfare reform, a little further down in his speech, but not because it's less important," said White House press secretary Dee Dee Myers. Address to tackle crime, health care The Associated Press WASHINGTON — President Clinton fine-tuned and practiced his first State of the Union address Monday, a speech aides said would emphasize the need for action this year on health care, anti-crime and worker retraining legislation. Senate Republican Leader Bob Dole of Kansas will deliver a Republican response, his representatives announced. 32 Toppings to choose from!!! Rudy Tuesday 2 Pizzas ONLY $8.99 plus tax 2 toppings 2 drinks RUDY'S PIZZERIA 719-0055 Now located at 704 Mass. In addition to health care, crime and welfare reform, the president is expected to stress "worker retraining and lifetime learning and ... ideas about reemployment." Myers said. in the nationally broadcast speech to a joint House-Senate session Tuesday night, Clinton will reach out to middle-class Americans with a strong pitch for federal action against crime, while trying to rekindle interest in his universal health-care plan. Although presidents rarely announce major policy initiatives in a State of the Union address, Clinton's aides were portraying this as a pivotal one designed to build support for his second-year initiatives. Dole, meanwhile, will get 10 to 12 minutes of air time to respond after the president finishes, spokeswoman Kristin Hyde said. Traditionally, all the networks cover the opposing party's message live as well as the presidential address. Dole probably will focus on health care and crime, two of the biggest issues facing Congress as it reconvenes, Hyde said. In honor of a friend celebrate Tu B'Shevat (that Jewish Tree Holiday) by having a tree planted in the new "MAKE THE DESERT BLOOM" American Students Forest in the Negev desert. Israel. Come by the Israel table in the Union on Friday to plant a tree in honor of a special occasion or friendship. Compete Exercise Travel Meet new people For More Info. Contact Wendy Marshall 749-5645 or Tina Cameli 865-4358 (Call Shelly Falevits or Brad Feinberg at 864-3948 if you have any questions.) Ultimate Frisbee Israel Women: Looking for the Ultimate sport! Betty Ultimate Wants You! SUA Spring Break 94 Destination: Panama City Beach FLORIDA Friday, March 18 to SUA Spring Break 94 FLORIDA SUA Spring Break 94 Destination: Panama City Beach FLORIDA Friday, March 18 to Saturday, March 26 ONLY $190 Trip includes: Beach Front Condos Two Bar-B-Ques Volleyball Tournaments KUB-Ball Postseason Party All Kinds Of Fun! So Hurry! Sign Up Now! 864-3477 PanamaCity The only place to be for Spring Break 94! Brought to you by: STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUА THE UNIVERSITY OF KARAEA R Sign Up Now! 864-3477 PanamaCity The only place to be for Spring Break 94! Brought to you by: STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUAK THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Out on a limb? Enroll today! A boy climbing a tree. Need another course? Stop by Independent Study Student Services, Continuing Education Building, Annex A, Just north of the Student Union for a catalog or call 864-4440 for information. Earn University of Kansas credit through Independent Study. STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE is NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FORLIBERALARTSandSCIENCES NUNEMAKER,OFFCAMPUS,andLAW REPLACEMENT SENATORS APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE IN THE STUDENT SENATE OFFICE 410 KANSAS UNION, CALL 864-3710 FOR QUESTIONS. *APPLICATIONS MUST BE TURNED IN BY WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 26TH. 8 Tuesday, January 25, 1994 LIBERTY HALL DIPPING STYLE 1970 LIBERTY HALL THE PIANO(R) Today (4:15), 7:00, 9:30 KALIFORNIA(R) Today (4:30), 7:15 Only SEX AND ZEN(NC-17) 9:35 Only/Ends Thurs LIBERTY HALL DICKINSON THEATRE Dickinson 6 914-8400 2339 South Ivy St. 3 Primetime Show (1) *Hearing Dalby* Sense City Salute Animation *Impared Tweets* Shadowlands P*4·05, 7:00, 9:45 Iron Will P*4·05, 7:00, 9:35 Grundy Old P*13·42·08, 7:20, 9:50 Beehaven the 2nd P*15·75, 1:5, 9:35 Sister Act P*14·25, 7:10, 9:45 House Party R*14·25, 7:4, 9:40 Crown Cinema BEFORE 6 PM ADULTS $3.00 (IMMED TO STAUNT) SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00 Pelican Brief PG-13 5:00, 6:00 VARSITY HILL CREST 9251 OWA 841-5791 Mrs. Doubtfie PG-13 4545 Intersection R 6195,848 Air Interse PG 5195,848 Tombstone R 7135,848 Philadelphia PG-13 7135,848 CINEMA TWIN $1.25 UNIONWAKE My Life PG-13 5.00, 7.35, 9.45 Rudy PG 5.00, 7.20 Malice R 9.45 SHOW TIMES FOR TODAY ONLY Hair Experts Design Team $5 Off Hair Design Not valid with any other offer EXPIRES 3/31/94 40 Discover Our Difference Holiday Plaza • 25th & Iowa 841-6886 Mon.-Sun. Buffet Hours $2.99 lunch buffet 2630 Iowa 11:00-1:30 (add .70 forsalad) 843-1474 Confidential Affordable Free pregnancy tests Birth control Sliding feescale STD screening gotta check out! Thursday Thick (ex members of The Unconscious) Possum Dixon 18 & over Friday The Urge MU330 Planned Parenthood Quality reproductive health care for men and women Tuesday Season to Risk Barkmarket Cher U.K. 18&over Bottleneck 913 841 live 731 New Hampshire Lawrence, KS 832-0281 Wednesday Chubby Smith & His Orchestra 1420C Kasold Drive (Orchards Corners) The Lowest CD Prices In Town! Current, Popular CDs for $5.95! Buy 5 or more CDs for $4.95! Also available, special selection CDs $3.95! Buy 10 or more CDs for $2.50 each! For the Best Values in Town Visit Lawrence Pawn 843-4344 718 New Hampshire POSTER SALE Recycled Sounds from Lawrence & KC U2 • Coltrane • Lemonheads • Rush Bjork • Frank Zappa • Soundgarden Lenny Kravitz • Resevoir Dogs Specials • House of Pain • Hendrix Bob Dylan • Smashing Pumpkins PJ Harvey • Tosh • Metallica • Sting Cure Jane's Addiction • Ice T Rage Against the Machine • Clapton Blind Melon • Billie Holiday Beatles Madonna • Led Zeppelin Morrissey Red Hots • Bad Brains Blues Brothers • Depeche Mode Nirvana Pink Floyd • Taxi Driver Mon., Jan. 24 - Sat., Jan. 29 KANSAS UNION GALLERY, Level 4, Kansas Union 9 - 5 pm Mon.- Fri/ 10 - 4 pm Sat. STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUR Implementation of Canada Auto Loans 5. 9% Apr Fixed Rate Take advantage of low rates at KU Credit Union. Don't miss your opportunity for 100% financing of a new auto at the low fixed rate of 5.9% for 36 or 48 months and 60 month financing at the fixed rate of 6.75%. 100% Financing KU CREDIT UNION An Affiliate of 66 Federal Credit Union January29 10 AM to 6 PM Kansas Union Jaybowl Level One Open to KU STUDENTS ONLY Winners advance to Regional ACU-I Tournament at K-State on February 25-26 Entrant Fees $3.00-Billiards $5.00-Bowling ku bowling & billiards tournament ku bowling &billiards tournament NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN both finance and economics ministers. As finance minister, Fyodorov has handled monetary issues such as budget deficits, inflation and taxation. Shoklin, as economics minister, will deal more directly with economic policy, such as industry subsidies. January 29 10 AM to 6 PM Kansas Union Jaybowl Level One Open to KU STUDENTS ONLY Winnere advance to Regional ACU-I Tournament at K-State on February 25-26 Entrant Fees $3.00-Billiards $5.00-Bowling JAYBOWL Fyodorov submitted his resignation last week when Yeltsin and Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin named a new government dominated by Soviet-era managers. Presidential spokesman Anatoly Krasikov said that Yeltsin had not accepted Fyodorod's resignation and that Fyodorod continued to work in his position. Russian economic minister blasts reformers for refusal The Associated Press The 38-year-old Fyodorov has made staying in the government conditional on the removal of conservative Central Bank chairman Viktor Gerashchenko. MOSCOW — Russia's new economics minister lashed out yesterday at reformers for refusing to join the government and predicted high inflation in January. The key post of finance minister remained in question. A spokesman for Boris Yeltsin said the president had not accepted the resignation of Finance Minister Boris Fyodorov. Fyodorov, a top reformer whose fate has come to represent Russia's commitment to market reforms, quit after a Cabinet shakeup favoring conservatives who advocate a slower pace of reform. Fyodorov's resignation followed that of Gaidar, the architect of Yeltsin's free-market reforms. New Economics Minister Alexander Shokhin, Russia's top debt negotiator, had harsh words for reformers, including his predecessor Yegor Gaidar and Fyodorov. "It is bad that several key figures in the Cabinet, including Yegor Gaidar, have decided to relieve themselves of responsibility for the course they pursued over the last four months," said Shokhin. "They are doing everything to blame the reorganized government for all the consequences, including negative consequences, of reforms," said Shokhin, who began his career with the Soviet state planning organization, Gosplan, but has at times sided with the reformers. Fyodorov is largely credited with bringing runaway inflation down to 12 percent for December. He has warned that the new government will increase spending and send inflation soaring. But Shokhin told reporters that Fyodorov and Gaidar were to blame for an inflation rate that will be "much higher" this month for postponing payment of some government debts until the first quarter of 1994. THE NEWS in brief SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina U.N. leaders assert differing viewpoints on Bosnian air strikes The future of Europe is at stake in Bosnia and only swift, retaliatory air strikes will end aggression by the warring factions, the U.N. commander in former Yugoslavia said Monday. By contrast, the U.N. secretary-general, Boutros Boutros-Ghali, questioned NATO's willingness to use force despite the recent renewal of its threat to stage air attacks to protect U.N. areas. He warned that the conflict could spread with outside intervention and urged more diplomacy to solve it. The differing views came during what the departing U.N. commander for Bosnia, Lt. Gen. Francis Briquemont of Belgium, has called a crisis for the U.N. peacekeeping mission in Bosnia. They illustrated the lack of consensus on how to end Europe's worst bloodshed since 1945. Gen. Jean Cot of France, commander of all U.N. troops in the former Yugoslav federation, used the transfer of Briquemont's command to Lt. Gen. Sir Michael Rose of Britain as a platform to reiterate his view that only military action by other nations can stop the war. Fighting has escalated since peace talks failed again last week. U.N. peacekeepers themselves and the six U.N.-designated "safe zones" in Bosnia are under threat. Critics say all the Bosnia factions — Muslims, Serbs and Croats — frequently interfere with aid convoyes. Indeed, Secretary of State Warren Christopher told his French counterpart yesterday that Washington opposed trying to force a political solution on Bosnia's Muslims, Croats and Serbs. CHINA CHINA China to discuss political prisoners Secretary of State Warren Christopher characterized his meeting with Chinese Foreign Minister Qian Qichen as positive. However, he added, "We have not made enough progress to justify my saying there has been significant overall progress." PARIS — China pledged Monday to discuss U.S. concerns about 235 political prisoners, a step toward meeting human rights conditions set by President Clinton, U.S. officials said. + The meeting was the latest in a series of human rights discussions that are a precursor to U.S. renewal of China's favorable trade access to U.S. markets. Christopher and Qian agreed to intensify their talks as a June 3 deadline approaches for Clinton's decision on renewing most-favored-nation, or MFN, status for China. --- China agreed for the first time to discuss in detail 235 specific detainee cases cited by the Clinton administration, many relating to the 1989 pro-democracy demonstrations in Tiananmen Square, said Assistant Secretary of State Christopher also pressed China to use its influence with North Korea to further progress on inspections of North Korea's nuclear facilities. The U.S. officials said China had been cooperative in that area. John Shattuck. But in an executive order last May, the president linked MFN renewal to human rights progress, including releasing all political prisoners, allowing freedom of emigration, permitting international broadcasts, and ending cultural and religious repression in Tibet. PARIS U.S. official rejects Bosnian borders France proposed resolving the civil war in Bosnia by imposing borders on the Croats, Serbs and Muslims, but the idea was rejected by Secretary of State Warren Christopher. U.S. officials said yesterday. Christopher told French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe that the idea of imposing borders "logically could lead to the suggestion of using troops" to enforce the solution, according to one U.S. official, who briefed reporters on the condition his name not be used. Christopher arrived in Europe to find the NATO resolve on Bosnia splintering just two weeks after a NATO summit reaffirmed a limited but unified policy. There were threats from France and Britain to pull their troops out of the U.N. force there and the French's desire to force a political solution and confusion over the U.N.'s potential use of air power. Christopher said the United States was not willing to commit troops to such an effort, and Juppe acknowledged that, the official said. U.S. officials said that the French sought U.S. reaction to their idea, but it was not clear what countries they thought should participate in. QANA, Lebanon Lebanese town may be miracle site QANA, Lebanon With six stone wine pots and other evidence, archaeologists contend that a Lebanese village was the site of Jesus Christ's first miracle — turning water into wine. Tradition it has that Kfar Kanna, a small Arab village near the Sea of Galilee in Israel, was where Jesus turned six pots of water into wine at a wedding party. Kfar Kanna is about 41/2 miles northeast of Nazareth, Jesus' hometown. According to the Gospel of St. John in the Bible, the wedding took place in "Cana of Gallilee." Lebanese archaeologist Youssef Hourani, a specialist on Canaanite culture, is convinced the real Cana is Qana, a mostly Muslim town 15 miles west of the Israeli border. In 1969, Hourani discovered rock carvings in Qana depicting Jesus and his 12 disciples. Smaller engravings, including one resembling a bride, are on rocks nearby. He says his theory is supported by the discovery of six large stone water pots by a Qana peasant two decades ago. Sheik Badreddine Saygeh, the local religious leader, takes particular attention to the nature of the miracle. "Anyone who turns water into wine is an infidel," the 90-year-old patriarch huffed. Briefs compiled from the Associated Press Be Your Best in '94 Begin at Body Boutique 10 Tans for only $20 exp. 2-2-94 No joining fee! $139.00 off avg. $20/month exp. 2-2-94 Special rates for graduating seniors 749-2424 925 Iowa BODY BOUTIQUE The Women's Fitness Facility personalities A student's best friend Pets may offer companionship, but they also need care and consideration. Amv.Solt / KANSAN By Cathleen Siechta Kansan staff writer But they weren't for him. They were for his pet python, Nakita. It's the cold and flu season, and Doug Day, Paula senior, has already had to get two pneumonia shots. 1 "Now I know how to tell when a snake is sick," Day said, "I sneezes. The first time I heard Nakita sneeze, it really surprised me. It sounded like a real loud, hard hiss." Day said he had to watch Nakita carefully for signs of illness. When she is sick, he said, she loses her appetite and will often submerge herself in her water dish. These are just a few of the responsibilities that come with having a pet. Whether students choose a traditional pet or an exotic pet, they must make time to care for their companions. Tom Liebl, a veterinarian at Clinton Parkway Animal Hospital, said some pets were easier to take care of than others. "Probably the ideal pet for a college student is a cat," he said. "They aren't dependent on people, which makes them much easier to care for. A student can leave out food and water, and the cat can go for 18 to 20 hours taking care of itself." Lieb also said cats would be more welcome in apartment buildings because they were quiet and relatively clean. Christine Heggestad, Wichita junior, lives in an apartment building that doesn't allow pets. But she said that her cat, Sam, was so well-behaved that no one knew she was there. "She's very neat and tidy," Heggestad said. "And she's independent. She catches the mice in my apartment, which is also a plus." Mike Collins, Overland Park junior, plays with his Green giraffe named Bull. Bull is a female giraffe that is 1 and 1/2 years old. She lives in a 50-gallon tank and eats chopped vegetables. Heggestad, who lives alone, said her cat was always good company. Good company or not, Richard Koleber, manager of Animal House pet store, said that cats were not the ideal pets for students. "I think that fish are the best pets that a college student can have," Koleber said. "They don't make any noise, they can't do any damage, and feeding and caring for them is low maintenance." Koleber said almost all of his customers were college students. "It's funny to watch students come in with their girlfriends," Kolebear said. "Girls see the rabbits and hamsters, and they go crazy, and next the thing the boyfriend know, they're buying a rabbit." Sherry Emerson, owner of Pet World, said the hottest items in the store were reptiles. "Repetites are very big in Lawrence for some reason," Emerson said. "They're cool. They're different. They can be kept in a cage indoors and are basically easy to care for." Reptiles can have their drawbacks, though. Chad Ingram, Lawrence senior, had to sell his monitor lizard because it had an uncontrollable appetite. "It would eat. two to three mice a day, and it was still growing," Ingram said. "Reptiles never stop growing. It got to where it was costing me $10 a week to feed it, and it was about 14 inches long. If I would have kept it, it would have grown to 4 feet long and 150 pounds. By ngram now has a smaller reptile, a water dragon named Willie. then it could have easily eaten a whole pig. That's just too expensive." Willie needs to eat a mouse about every two weeks. Ingram said that Willie, who is kept uncaged, hid in his bedroom. she only comes out when she's hungry," Ingram said. "I worried at first about her not getting enough to eat because she was so independent and hid all the time. But then she laid eggs even though she hadn't been around other lizards for a long time. The pet store said that meant she was very healthy." The health of pets is a concern, especially in the winter season. A common sight on campus is a dog tied up while the owner is in class. Liebli said in the colder weather, this could be hard on animals. "If the temperatures are comfortable, some dogs are very acclimated to being tied to a tree," Laebi said. "But with the weather we've had lately, that's kind of cruel." Situations like these raise questions about whether students have the time or resources to properly care for pets. "It's unfair to people who live here because the dog barks a lot," Liston said. "And it's unfair to the dog because she doesn't get out enough. My roommate and I have busy college schedules, and we don't have time to play with her. I love dogs, but if you can't bring them up in a better environment than an apartment, you shouldn't have one." Amy Listen, Kansas City, Mo, sophomore, thought it was cruel to keep dogs cooped up in apartments. Listen's roommate received a dog as a gift from his girlfriend. Anyone who wants a dog should get one from their local pound or humane society, Liston added. She said those dogs needed a home the most. Heggestad bought her cat from Pet World, which is sometimes a last stop for animals before they go to the pound. "We give the dogs and cats their shots and worm them and try to locate them as best we can." Emerson said. "We don't want them to have to go to an animal shelter." Hegestad is taking Sam to the Lawrence Humane Society next week to get her spayed. "Everyone should get their dogs and cats spayed or neutered," Heggestad said. "There are so many dogs and cats that nobody wants. The cruelest thing you can do is not prevent more animals from being put to sleep." music Latino bands offer a large variety of music Kansan staff writer By Angelina Lopez Strumming the cuatro, a four-string instrument indigenous to Venezuela, Kelfel Aqui smiled as he and the band, Folkore Venezuela, performed a song celebrating their homeland. Outside, freezing temperatures, foreign to Venezuela, pushed in on the small restaurant where the band played. Inside was like a heat wave as Latinos, Caucasians, Asians, African Americans and people from other races danced and sweated together. They moved to the beat of Latino music. Some songs played by Folklore Venezuela that night had an infectious rhythm, making everyone move their feet and swing their hips. But Latino music is more than just one rhythm. Latin music is as varied as the people who gathered that night to hear Follore Venezuela. Like those people, the 1,001 various sounds of Latin music have different origins, different backgrounds and different focuses. Even here in Lawrence, the three bands that perform "Every time we play, we try to show everybody a different region of Venezuela," said Max Perez, percussionist for the eight-man Folklore Venezuela. "Each region has its own music and its own roots." Latino music, Folklore Venezuela, Las Cuitro and Caribe, sound entirely different from each other. The bands' music is based on who their members are, what they believe in and what they want to present to the world about a culture they love. Folklore Venezuela came together in 1988. Made up almost entirely of Venezuelans, the band has focused on bringing the diversity and beauty of Venezuela's music to the Lawrence area. The joroppo is fast Spanish-influenced folk music. The many percussion sounds of calypso were brought by people from the West Indies, when they came to work "Our roots are there," said Ernesto Perez, mandolin player. "Our musical influence is all Venezuela." The diversity of Venezuela's music comes from three cultures — Indian, African and Spaniard. These cultures came together to influence Venezuela's music, Aqui said. CUNCH "The music is about peoples' strengths and overcoming oppressive systems," she said. "Really radical stuff!" she added with grin. Brian Vandervliet / KANBAI Though the attitude of newues troca might seem somber, the actual message of the music is hopeful. Las Cuatro performs their songs in full, four-part harmonies, which give uplifting sounds to the music. Nueva troca is the music of down-trodden people looking for hope, Tait said. It was a wave of protest music that came out of the late '60s and '70s, a very repressive period in Latin America. Nueva troca is very poetic and political at the same time," said Issy Tait, a member of Las Cratos. Not every Latino band focuses on so many types of music. Las Cuatro, a four-female band, concentrates on the one type of Latino music that moves them the most: nueva troca. The band Folklore Venezuela brings the unique sounds of Latino music to the Low Rider Cafe, 943 Massachusetts St. The eight-member band has been playing in the area for five years. venezuela's gold rush. Andean music uses wind instruments and pan flutes and is more subtle, like its people, Aqui said. "Many of the songs we perform are very inspiring," said Rachel Miller of Las Cuatro. "We like to be a party band," said Bunny Rodina, vocalist and percussionist. "We like to see people have fun and dance." The music of Caribe is inspiring in another manner. Their music often inspires people to get out on the dance floor. The seven-piece Caribe, formed 13 years ago, focuses on salsa, merengue and calypso, rhythms that make it hard for people to stay in their seats. in people to come up with their own rhythm," said Bob Augeli, vocalist and percussionist. "We have an infectious rhythm that's easy and fun to dance to." "For lots of people, our shows are a cultural event. It's an opportunity for Latinos to take part in their culture far away from home, and for others to take part in the Latino culture." "Then, people who weren't Latin-American would come in and listen and like the music," he said. "They would come the next time we played." The diversity of those who enjoy Latino music is equivalent to the diversity of those who play Latino music. Only one member of Las Cuateto is Latino, and in Caribe, only two members are Latino. Iani Moreno, who is from El Salvador and is the only Latina member of Las Cratto, said she had learned a lot from the non-Latino members of the group. "I thought I knew about Latino music," she said. "But they have taught me so much. Even though they weren't born there, they have it in their blood." Rodina, one of the members of Caribe who is not Latino, also felt a special identification with Latino music. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN "When I play this music, it feels like something I'm supposed to be doing," she said. "It feels right. The music is enlightening and lifting." JANUARY 25,1994 PAGE 9 KU Life Your guide to Entertainment in the Lawrence Area. WEIRD LEAD STORY - In November, officials of the Commonwealth Games (featuring athletes from 66 nations competing in Olympic-style events) announced that Ortho McNeil Co. condoms will be the official condoms of the 1994 Games in Victoria, British Columbia. - -In March, in response to a citizen complaint, a San Diego police vice squad officer persuaded the owner of DeRay's, a sexy-costume shop, to remove some of the stuffing in the crotch of the male swim-suited mannequins in its window. - in July, the Cook Islands, which gained independence from New Zealand in 1965 and is home to 18,000 people, reported its very first armed robbery. A local man took about $24,000 from a hotel but was quickly captured. -In separate incidents in March, police in Washington, D.C., and South San Francisco arrested men they encountered running down the street who aroused suspicion because they happened to be carrying cash registers. One was charged with robbing a convenience store and the other with burglaring a bakery. In July, New York City police arrested a 16-year-old boy named Eddie and charged him with the sexual assault and attempted murder of his stepmother, but then released him two days later when an investigation revealed that it was his twin brother, Jesus, who should have been charged. The stepmother said she could not tell the boys apart and therefore was not sure which one assaulted her, and DNA testing of accused rapists was useless since both Eddie and Jesus have the same DNA. -November, Andre Guay, 34, was arrested in Dickson, Tenn., and charged with various traffic violations. Guay has black wavy hair and was dressed in black, with black chrome-tipped boots, and a black jacket with the words "Elvis Lives" on it. Guay, who is from Quebec, told police he was distraught over marital problems and decided to visit Graceland, but that made him even more depressed. POLICE BLOTTER - in November, a white woman in Shawnee told police she was robbed at gunpoint in her home by a Black man in his 20's. After rifling through her purse and finding only about $20, he gave back the money, apologized, offered to shake the women's hand, and said, "I don't want you to think all Black people are bad." See WEIRD, Page 10. 1 10 Tuesday, January 25, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN JD's Baseball Cards & Sports Nostalgia Shop 711 W. 23rd 842-1002 We buy back used baseball cards Metropolis BBS 832-0041 Heaven for Lounge Lizards Futon Couches Starting at $119 BLUE HERON Futons & Home Furnishings 937 Mass., 841-9443 DON'S AUTO CENTER "For All Your Repair Needs" - Complete Auto Repair * Machine Shop Service * Parts Department 841-4833 920 E. 11th Street EVERYTHING BUT ICE - Beds ·Desks ·Chest of Drawers ·Bookcases Penguin 936 Mass. WEIRD: Love can cause serious injury, even death Continued from Page 9. —In July, thieves with a blow torch broke into an unmarked tractor-trailer parked at an Orlando, Fla., motel and stole bags containing 400,000 quarters while a guard slept in the truck's cab. Authorities said the loot was so heavy that it would be difficult even for two full-sized cars to carry it off. -Damon Washington, 25, was arrested in November in San Francisco and charged with shoplifting cassette tape at a record store. After an investigation, police said that Washington had just escaped from a medical prison facility and that he needed some tapes to play in the car while riding to his home near Los Angeles. -In August, Darby Johnson, 24, was arrested in Chippewa Falls, Wis., while sitting nude in a Laundromat with a newspaper over his helm. He told police he owned only two sets of clothes and that to wash them separately would require two trips to the Laundromat. "The Salt Lake Tribune reported in December that police officer N.S. Hall recently had arrested two men for engaging in sex in a car in Ogden, Utah, and had taken them to the police station. Due to a miscommunication at the station, the men were locked up in the same cell, and immediately began having sex again." -On Jan. 1, the government of Pakistan, under the direction of the prime minister, Benazir Bhutto, opened a police station in Islamabad funded entirely by women, to deal only with crimes committed against females. In July, a 17-year-old boy, sitting alone on some steps in Manchester, N.H., was approached by a police officer on patrol who stopped to chat. According to the officer, the boy evaded several questions and then began coughing violently. As the officer rubbed his back to ease the cough, the boy finally spit out about $200 worth of cocaine that he had swallowed when he saw the officer approaching. THE WEIRDO-AMERICAN COMMUNITY -In October, a Los Angeles jury convicted James Ambrose McGrath of 18 armed robberies and weapons violations for a string of nine area bank robberies totaling almost $1 million. McGrath said his primary motive was "to warn the United States that Japan is planning a sneak thermonuclear attack against us." In January, McGrath was sentenced to 30 years in prison. LEAST JUSTIFIABLE HOMICIDE -In November, Carmen Friedwald-Hill, 26, was sentenced to 20 years in prison in Frederick, Md., for shooting her boyfriend, Ryan Gesner, to death. She shot him in the stomach during an argument over who loved the other more. Kerrigan-Harding saga draws in TV movie offers By Frazier Moore The Associated Press Who could ever forget that vision from 1992—the devoted mother, legally blind, her nose pressed against the TV screen to catch even a blurry glimpse of her daughter on the ice just yards away. Like Brenda Kerrigan rinkside in Albertville, France, viewers have been glued to the tube since the brutal attack on Olympic figure skater Nancy Kerrigan two weeks ago. You don't have to know a triple axel from Axl Rose to be following this saga. It's the perfect TV story. Beauty in motion, plus sportsmanship turned squailid. Violence. Tragedy. Intrigue. Even comic relief. It's going to make a heckuva TV movie. Especially when you fold in the genre's favorite ingredient: woman as victim. For in this tale you have not one, but two — namely, Kerrigan, the victim of a thug with a billyclub, and her archrival, Tonya Harding, arguably a victim of life. A week ago, 20 Kerrigan scripts had piled up at one network. Kerrigan's agent reportedly was sifting through at least three dozen offers for the rights to her life. But whatever comes of it all will be just an encore. Already, "Nancy and Tonya — Live!" is TV's most compelling series. It will continue at least until next month's Winter Olympics, where Kerrigan may get to wage her ultimate showdown with Harding. And unlike the Nancy- and Tonya adaptations to come, no viewer knows how this original will turn out. TV wasted no time claiming the story. A tape of Kerrigan moments after her Jan. 6 attack was scooped up by ABC News. The images of a face wrenched in pain and the wails of "Why? Why?" instantly became video mythology. "You don't have to know a triple axel from Axl Rose to be following this saga. It's the perfect TV story." In the days since, TV has stayed on the story, both watching it and helping it unfold. During an interview on "Dateline NBC" last week, anchor Jane Pauley asked Kerrigan if she thought the attack had been meant for her, or if she had been a random target. No kidding. "Anything's possible," Kerrigan said. The next night, NBC's "Now" broke details of a Kerrigan hit allegedly cooked up by associates of Harding, notably her elephantine bodyguard (casting tip: John Candy). "If it's true, you couldn't make up a story." Luckow, now a New York-based filmmaker who heres teaches skating at Man this," said correspondent Bill Lagattuta on CBS "Eye to Eye" the night after that. Then on January 16, "60 Minutes" aired excerpts from an eight-year-old film portrait of Harding. It was made as a Yale senior project by Sandra Luckow, a native of Portland, Ore., who as a youngster, like Harding, took skating lessons from Diane Rawlinson, now Harding's coach. hattan's Central Park rink, said she had never before sought an audience for this early work "But with all the negative publicity about Tonya Harding, I wanted people to see the human being behind the story," she said. Surely no one who saw that footage on "60 Minutes" could have failed to ache for the plucky young skater, then 15 and already troubled. Perhaps the most revealing moments were spent with Harding's mother, a picture of addled rage who chose to be interviewed with a parrot on her shoulder (casting tip: Ann-Margret, with an Emmy guaranteed). Then on Wednesday, the day Harding's exhusband was arrested, "Now" aired an update. "Even though she hasn't been charged in the Kerrigan plot," said correspondent Chris Hansen, "she's been tainted." Kerrigan, by contrast, seems purer by the day. She's America's Sweetheart (even as she knocks a hockey player out of her path in a Campbell's soup commercial that, in the aftermath of the assault against her, no longer seems funny). And with her price tag for product endorsements soaring — by one estimate, fivefold since the attack — a gold medal might be, financially, only gliding the lily. Meanwhile, Harding, who has been brash enough to speak longingly of "dollar signs" and her own dreams of endorsements, will get zilch, experts agree. On "Dateline NBC" this week, Olympic skater JoJo Starbuck spoke in Harding's behalf, reminding viewers that she is innocent until proven guilty. Save your breath. It's TV, where perception is all. Tonya Harding already has been cast as the loser in this real-life miniseries. Suspense, and plenty of it, lies in how much she loses, and how much Nancy Kerrigan wins. Stay tuned. The show must go on. Study Abroad With The University of Kansas 1994 Summer Abroad Visit a Study Abroad table Advanced German In Holzkirchen/Munich, Germany Advanced German In holland May 31-July 26 Visitsto Koln, Würzburg, Nürnberg, Rothenburg, and Salzburg. Nine hours of credit in German including literature, conversation, political, cultural and social perspectives, while living with a German family. $2,575. Visit a Study Abroad table at the Kansas Union for information and applications. January 26,27 and 31 9:00 am-3:00 pm French Language and Culture In Paris, France June 17-July 30 Visits to Normandy, Brittany, and Touraine, then four weeks in Paris. Six hour credit for intermediate or advancedlevel French grammar, reading, composition, conversation, culture, and phonetics. $3,200. Intermediate German In Eutin, Germany *May 31;July 26* Lawrence's Sister City. Visits to Hamburg, Lübeck, Kiel, Berlin, Mainz, and München. Receive up to nine undergraduate hours in German language, culture, conversation, and grammar while living with a German family. $2,575. Italian Language and Culture in Florence, Italy *June 6-July 1 and/or July 4-July 29 Sixten credit hours in Italian language and culture, including cooking. $2,200 (for a one month session) and $3,480 (for a two month session). Spanish Language June 10-August 5 Begin with a two weektour of Madrid and other cities in central, western, and southern Spain Settle in the heart of Barcelona for four weeks of intensive study while living with a Spanish family. Seven hours credit in Spanish grammar, conversation, composition, poetry, and culture. $3,100. Europe In Transition" In Copenhagen, Denmark *June 4-July 28* Six hours of credit from the following courses: The European Community, European Conflict and Security Issues, East-West Business Relations, Modern Danish Culture, and Danish language instruction. Three-day study/tour of Denmark. Optional study/tour to Moscow, St. Petersburg, and one of the Baltic states. $3,950 Humanities In Great Britain *June 24 July 31* *Stay in London, Edinburgh, York, Exeter, Bath, Oxford, and Stratford-on-Avon Six to nine hours of junior-senior credit in British literature, history, and arthistory. $3,200. Intermediate Spanish In Guadalajara, Mexico June 6 July 29* Seven undergraduate credits in Spanish language, grammar, and composition, and Mexican culture and literature. Six graduate credits in Mexican history. $875(undergraduate)and$500(graduates)for each workshop. Alfare, lodging, and books are estimated at $1,600. the Lord ne 27 ht eetos *0(f) Architecture in Paris, France for Architects "June 17-July 30" Includes building tours, lectures, and seminars by prominent French and U.S. architects. Lodging at the Gite Université, Paris, travel to such cities as Lille, Bordesley, Lyon, and Marseilles. Approximately $3,500 plus some meals and personal expenses. The London School of Economics, England June27 July15 and on July 18-August 5. Thies to six credit hourseconomics,business,and politics. $2,050 (for one term)and $3,450 (for bothterms). Broaden Your Horizons! Social Welfare in Asunción, Paraguay "May 20-June 19" Field experience with Paraguayan social agencies, Spanish language and Paraguayan history and culture are the topics of study. Students live with families while in Asunción. Excursions throughout Paraguay and Brazil. Two hours Spanish credit and two hours Social Welfare credit. $1,525 "The program costs do not include airfare, personal travel and expenses, books, or passports. Room and Board vary according to the program. All fees are estimated and subject to change. Students are accepted on a rolling basis. Early application is encouraged." formore information: KU Study Abroad 203 Lippincott Hall 864-3742 1 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ! Tuesday, January 25, 1994 11 Richard Scott injures shoulder at practice By Matt Siegel Kansas sportswriter The Kansas men's basketball team suffered an unexpected setback yesterday. Senior forward Richard Scott injured his shoulder in practice when he went up for a shot and another player slapped down against the ball, said Kansas assistant trainer Mark Cairns. The force caused Scott's shoulder to briefly come out of place. Cairns said the ball joint detached from the socket but then naturally went back into place. Players temporarily stopped practicing as Scott lay写痛 in pain. Kansas coach Roy Williams looked on as trainers rushed out to check Scott's condition. After Scott got up, Williams moved his team to the opposite end of the court and resumed practice. that he would be reevaluated today. The Jayhawks received more bad news when they learned that freshmen forward Nick Proud, who did not suit up against Iowa State Saturday, probably would be out for at least another week. Proud, one of Scott's backups, was evaluated by an orthopedic surgeon yesterday and is going to be evaluated today by another orthopedic surgeon. "Chances are that Nick is out for the week," Cairns said. "As for the rest of the season, I don't have any idea." Proud is averaging 3.2 points a game, but has received limited playing time due to various injuries. Proud injured himself running the past week when his right knee locked up. Cairns said Proud had damaged his knee cap and injured tissue in the knee. If Scott does not play tomorrow against Oklahoma State, his other backups include freshman forward B.J. Williams and freshman forward/center Scot Pollard, although Williams also could move sophomore forward Sean Pearson into the starting frontcourt. Williams will hold his weekly new conference today. 35 WADI 33 ASU Kansas senior center Lisa Tate takes a rebound away from Oklahoma State's Cheri Westervelt during Sunday's 79-68 win. Tate leads the Big Eight Conference in blocked shots. Lisa Tate: an inside force Senior center blocking shots winning games Kansas sportswrite By Matt Siegel She led the Big Eight Conference in blocked shots last season and is eighth in the nation this season. Her 6-foot-3 inch frame looms over most opponents, and she never changes her stoic expression on the court. In a word, Kansas senior center Lisa Tate can be described as an intimidator. "People probably see me as an intimidator but I don't always see myself as an intimidator." Tate said. "People think I'm a quiet person, but I'm not. On the court, I don't show a lot of emotion." She said that off the court she liked to smile, have fun and make other people laugh, which is a sharp contrast from her on-court personality. Tate, known affectionately as "Tater" to her teammates, didn't start playing basketball until her freshmen year at Kansas City Southwest High School. Although the sport was new to her, she still suited up for the varsity squad her freshmen year. Tate said she was not very good as a freshman, but with her high school coaches' help, she was able to develop skills that made her a top recruiting prospect. She visited Arkansas, Louisiana State, Iowa State and Southwest Missouri State before deciding on Kansas. "I had a lot of fun on my recruiting trip," Tate said. "I didn't say much, but they made me feel like I could fit in. I was comfortable with the players and the coaches." Fitting in was something that Tate had no problems doing. During her freshmen season she finished third on the team in rebounding and led the conference in blocked shots, averaging 2.5 a game. During the summer before her sophomore season, she played on the North squad at the U.S. Olympic Festival. The experience helped Tate immensely because it allowed her to play against different players and show her talents. She now is hoping to showcase her basketball talents in other places. "I'm hoping to play overseas after I graduate," Tate said, who is majoring in recreation management. "I need to get an agent and send tapes of myself to different agents, all that stuff. Coach has a lot of contacts and will help me to try to play overseas." Right now, Tate is enjoying her last season as a Jayhawk. She is third on the all-time conference blocked shots list. She is the eight all-time leading rebounder at Kansas, and has averaged 8.9 rebounds a game this season. She has helped the Jayhawks lead the conference in field goal percentage defense and has blocked 50 shots after 16 games. She also averages 9.9 points a game. Her rebounding, scoring and shot blocking abilities have helped the Jayhawks to a 10-game winning streak, a No.7 national ranking, and No.1 ranking in the conference. homa and Oklahoma State, Tate played despite being sick with the flu. She scored 12 and 9 points respectively and had four blocks in each game. They were performances that Kansas coach Marian Washington called attention to after the game. This past weekend against Okla "She was terribly sick," Washington said. "We didn't expect her to play so many minutes, but she reached deep down." Tate said that because she was sick, she didn't expect to play that many minutes (she played 25- and 32 minutes) but felt like the team needed her and that she could rest after the game. On the court, Tate is anything but flashy. She said she just wanted to help the team win and would do whatever it took to accomplish this, even if it meant being branded an intimidator. "Her presence in the lane intimidates the other offensive player," junior forward Alana Slatter said. "She might not even necessarily try to block it, but just because they know she can block shots they tend to alter their shots. Her presence puts fear into them." Indiana's Knight says he kicked a chair, not son Coach says suspension justified BLOOMINGTON, Ind. — Indiana basketball coach Bobby Knight says he deserved to be suspended by the university for his actions in a game against Notre Dame University. The Associated Press anapons star. "How many times have you seen Indiana play basketball? It's a lot. All right, how many times have you seen me kick a chair? A lot," he said. "How many times have you ever seen me kick a player?" Knight, speaking out for the first time since the Dec. 7 incident, said he never kicked his son, Pat. He admitted kicking a chair, but he said the suspension stemmed from his shouts at fans who booed his earlier actions. day in an interview with the Indianapolis Star. Knight's version was reported Sunplayed on the Hoosiers' home court. What happened next is the debate; videos of the game show Knight kicking at something. Knight says it was a chair, but many fans thought it was his son's leg. The incident began with a bad pass by Knight's son. The elder Knight called a timeout after the Irish scored off the turnover and pushed his son into a seat. Fans reacted by booing the coach, even though the game was being "So I rest my case on that part of it." Knight turned, glared at the offending fans and responded with four-letter obscenities. Indiana cited Knight's "unspor- smanlike conduct" when it suspended him for the Dec. 10 Indiana-Tenn- essee Tech game. It was the first time the university suspended Knight, though the Big Ten Conference suspended him for one game in 1985 for throwing a chair during a home game against Purdue. "Never! So that's a different thing," he said. The Big Ten declined to take action against Knight this time, saying the university's suspension was appropriate. "I've seen coaches in this league since grab kids by the shirt," Knight said. "I've seen coaches in this league since yell at kids. I've seen coaches in this league since kick the floor, kick towels, take their coats off, throw them down, kick chairs. I've seen everything. "What I haven't seen is a coach yell at the crowd, which is something I admittedly did, and I think that separates the issue from anything else." "In view of what happened, the exchange I initiated with the crowd, I don't think it was either unusual or unnecessary when one reads the rule," he said. Knight said he had no quarrel with the suspension. Teams in Big Eight improve road record By Gerry Fey Kansan sportswriter Past seasons have shown playing on the road to be unkind for Big Eight Conference basketball teams, but this season has seen a change so far. The road team is 9-6 in the conference this season. Nebraska coach Danny Nee said that just because winning has been tough in the past didn't mean it would be that way in the present. "It's going to happen because of the percentages," Nee said of road victories during yesterday's conference calls. "Just because you play at home doesn't mean, boom, you're going to win. If you play someone long enough, you're going to beat them." The Cornhuskers lost to Missouri 89-73 at last night in a game televised by ESPN. Before last night's loss, Nee said that the Bob Devaney Sports Center, Nebraska's home court, had emerged as a difficult place to play. "It is a good, healthy, college atmosphere," he said. "Not many people have been holding their own court this year." Despite the success for some conference teams away from home, Nebraska lost at Colorado on Wednesday 86-81. The defeat broke the Cornhuskers' 11-game winning streak. To Colorado coach Joe Harrington, it was a huge victory for the Buffaloes. Two weeks ago the Cornhuskers defeated Colorado 106-67. "We had a long meeting after that game," Harrington said of the defeat. "It was about keeping our heads into it the whole season. That game was like a wake up call for us. The victory was a good comeback for us after losing by 39 points." Kansas will play at Colorado on Saturday after playing Oklahoma State at home on tomorrow. Speaking of playing on the road, Oklahoma coach Billy Tubbs said he's sick of traveling. The Sooners will play their first home game in more than two weeks against Kansas State on Wednesday. Oklahoma lost to Virginia Commonwealth 98-82 on Thursday. "We're in a brutal part of our schedule," Tubbs said. "After K-State, we play at Nebraska. We have 11 days with one conference game. It's like we forgot about the Big Eight. Basically what I'm saying is our conference schedule is ridiculous." Missouri maintained its conference lead against Nebraska last night. The Tigers are 5-0 in the conference and claimed the No.24 spot in the Associated Press poll, released yesterday. When Oklahoma meets K-State, it will have to deal with K-State senior guard Askia Jones, who leads the conference in three-point shooting. Jones was the conference player of the week for the second time this season after averaging 29 points in victories against Kansas and Colorado. Kansas is the only nationally-ranked team in the conference. But Missouri coach Norm Stewart said some teams should be ranked. "Kansas has done very well, and Oklahoma State has too," Stewart said. "I think when we start winning, we'll get some recognition." Kansas coach Roy Williams said that regional newspapers knew the conference was strong, but it's not known nationally. "I don't think we've had the respect this year that we've had in the past." Williams said. "Maybe it's been our performance in the NCAA tournament. That's the only reason that I can think of." league overall Kansas 6 0 15 1 Colorado 4 1 15 2 Oklahoma 3 1 10 4 Oklahoma St. 2 2 10 4 Kansas St. 2 3 7 7 Missouri 1 3 7 9 Nebraska 1 4 9 9 Iowa St. 1 4 6 11 Weekend victories against Oklahoma and Oklahoma State helped move the women's team up one notch to No. 7. Big Eight Conference standings Women Men 1. Penn St. (61) 13-0 1,735 3 2. Tennessee (9) 16-1 1,693 1 3. Colorado 15-2 1,500 6 4. Iowa 11-1 1,496 2 5. North Carolina 14-1 1,430 7 6. Texas Tech 15-2 1,367 4 **7 Kansas** **15-1** 1,334 8 8. Southern Cal 13-1 1,277 9 9. Vanderbilt 14-3 1,203 5 10. Stanford 11-3 1,115 10 11. Connecticut 13-2 1,030 11 12. Virginia 12-2 974 12 13. Purdue 13-3 900 13 14. Louisiana Tech 13-3 836 14 15. Alabama 13-3 740 15 16. Florida Int. 13-1 643 17 17. Ohio State 11-4 529 18 18. Washington 12-3 452 16 19. Northwestern 9-3 428 19 20. Montana 14-2 358 21 21. Boise State 14-2 299 22 22. Seton Hall 14-2 238 24 23. Auburn 11-5 171 23 24. W. Kentucky 11-5 163 20 25. Rutgers 10-3 143 — AP Top 25 Others receiving votes: Southern Miss. 134, Texas 114, Toledo 87, Florida 57, Creighton 55, Mississippi 53, Indiana 18, George Washington 17, Hawaii 16, Pittsburgh 14, UNLV 13, Notre Dame 12, Texas A&M 12, New Mexico St. 11, Georgia 10, N. Illinois 9, San Diego St. 9, Stephen F. Austin 9, Marquette 7, Juliane 7, Duke 6, Minnesota 4, Oregon 4 Source: The Associated Press KANSAN league overall Missouri 5 0 14 2 Kansas 2 1 17 2 Oklahoma St. 2 1 13 5 Nebraska 2 2 12 4 Kansas St. 2 2 13 3 Oklahoma 2 2 9 5 Colorado 1 3 8 7 Iowa St. 0 4 9 5 AP Top 25 A loss at home to Kansas State knocked the men's team from No. 1 to No. 3, but Kansas is the only ranked team in the Big Eight 1. UCLA (59) 13-0 1,619 2 2. Duke (6) 13-1 1,542 5 3. Kansas 13-7 1,388 1 4. North Carolina 14-3 1,319 4 5. Arkansas 13-2 1,312 3 6. Connecticut 16-1 1,244 10 7. Purdue 16-1 1,231 12 8. Massachusetts 15-2 1,162 6 9. Kentucky 14-3 1,115 7 10. Temple 11-2 1,052 11 11. Indiana 11-3 1,014 8 12. Louisville 14-2 964 13 13. Arizona 14-3 915 9 14. Syracuse 12-2 725 16 15. Michigan 12-4 674 15 16. Wisconsin 12-4 602 14 17. Minnesota 13-4 567 20 18. Maryland 11-3 383 25 19. West Virginia 12-2 381 24 20. Ala.-Birmingham 14-2 363 18 21. Georgia Tech 11-5 338 17 22. Marquette 11-4 188 13 23. Saint Louis 11-4 153 23 24. Missouri 13-2 130 14 25. New Mexico St. 14-1 114 1 Other receiving votes): Florida 100, California 94, Xavier, Ohio 87, Cincinnati 62, DePaul 65, Mississippi St. 41, Boston College 34, Virginia 33, Illinois 21, Kansas St. 14, Michigan St. 11, Nebraska 7, Oklahoma St. 7, Providence 6, Alabama 5, Texas 5, Pennnall, Virginia Tech 4, New Orleans , Browning Green 1, Stanford 1. Source: The Associated Press KANSAH* 12 Tuesday, January 25, 1994 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Chiefs have off-season decisions to make CHEVROLET Key players could be lost By Doug Tucker The Associated Press KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Two concussions in one year are serious business for a man of any age. When the Kansas City Cliffs open camp this summer, Joe Montana, who can't remember much about the third quarter of Buffalo's 30-13 victory Sunday, will turn 38. Wise men will brace for a rumor-fold off-session, even though two years remain on the contract that sparked this town's most exciting NFL season in 24 years. Will Joe be back? Nobody's saying he won't. Will he decide enough's enough? Will he risk a repeat of that frightful moment when his head crashed against the cold, hard turf of Rich Stadium and "everything went white?" There likely will be friends and loved ones who urge Montana to make his first season in Kansas City his last, abandon his dream of a fifth Super Bowl and call it a career, a brilliant career. The smart money will bet on No. 19's return. Despite adjusting to a new defense and an entirely new offensive scheme, philosophy and style, the Chiefs fell just one game short of their goal this season. Competitor that he is, Montana also will be encouraged by optimistic signs on the team itself. The 1994 Chiefs could be even better equipped than the 1993 Chiefs to make him the only quarterback ever to take two different teams to the Super Bowl. Even in the moments immediately following their loss to the Bills in the AFC championship game, the players were in no mind to apologize for their season. "I don't think we have anything to be ashamed of, really," said tight end Jonathan Hayes. "I'm very proud of this team for what we accomplished," said Dave Krieg, who replaced the dazed Montana in the third quartet and led the Chiefs' only touchdown drive. "I think we made a lot of progress. Players did a good job of learning and going about our business." Montana, whose head still was hurting after the game, said, "I think on the whole we had a pretty good year. We had some pretty tight games down near the end, and we felt that we had played well enough to advance, but they came out and played better than we did." "We have a lot of good things to take from this season into next season," guard Dave Scott said. "But it's just hard to appreciate them right now." General manager Carl Petersen, who rolled the dice and brought in Montana and Marcus Allen last spring, cannot afford to be idle this off-season. Several key players are coming up for free agency, including defensive backs Kevin Ross and Albert Lewis, as well as Krieg. Allen, whose first year in Kansas City probably solidified his Hall of Fame credentials, will celebrate another birthday this summer, too — his 34th. Asking him to be the featured back once again would be asking a lot, although nobody will say he can't. Petersen and coach Marty Schottenheimer also may have a very unhappy Derrick Thomas to deal with. Thomas kept his peace and made no public outcry, even though moving him from linebacker to defensive end cut down on his sack total. But the sight of a five-time All-Pro on the sideline during much of the second half of the AFC title game wasn't a pretty one. Yet many of Thurman Thomas' 186 rushing yards were made right at Derrick Thomas' side. The only towns in the U.S. that don't feel the Chiefs let everybody down by letting Buffalo back in the Super Bowl are probably Buffalo and Kansas City. Still, if Chiefs fans have learned any thing while waiting 24 years between AFC title games, they've learned patience. They've learned to appreciate winning 13 games in a season, coming from behind to capture two playoff contests and getting within one win of every team's ultimate goal. "It's over. But it was a helluva ride," noseguard Dan Saleaumua said. "I feel sad that it's over. But I'm not really sad. It's like, 'Man, it's over. What am I going to do now?' Valid Through July 31, 2024 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN C A R D AT&T Spend $1...Save hundreds Membership has its privileges... THESE DISCOUNTS AND OFFERS ARE GOOD THROUGH JULY 31, 1994! JUST SHOW YOUR CARD...USE AS OFTEN AS YOU LIKE! Britches Corner • 843 Massachusetts • 843-0454: Buy 1reg, price Tommy Hilfiger, get the 2nd of equal or lesser value Cleopatra's Closet • 743 Massachusetts • 749-4664: 15% off everything in store (excluding sale items) The Etc Shop • 928 Massachusetts • 843-0611: 20% off Etc Shop brand sunglasses Harper's Fashions • 835 Massachusetts • 749-0626: Additional 20% off all regular price merchandise KU Bookstore • Kansas and Burge Unions • 844-6460: $5 off any gift or clothing purchase of $25 or more Natural Way Natural Fiber Clothing • 820 Massachusetts • 841-0100: 15% off all regular priced clothing Outfitters Clothing Co. • 740 Massachusetts • 843-3933: 15% off the regular price of guy's and gal's jeans Outfitters Clothing Co. • 740 Massachusetts • 843-3933: 10% off of txedo rental University Bookshop • 1116 W 23rd St • 749-5206: 20% off all clothing (except sale items) Weavers Department Store • 901 Massachusetts • 843-6360: 20% off all lingerie, hosiery, or intimate apparel GLOTHIERS RESTAURANTS & BARS American Bistro • 701 Massachusetts • 841-8349 10% off any entree (limit one) Bonanza • 2329 Iowa • 842-1200: All you-can-eat: Frestastishes Food & Desert Bar for $2.99 Dos Homabres Vi • 815 New Hampshire • 841-7286: Buy 1 menu item, get the 2nd for 1/2 price Dunkin Donuts • 521 W 23rd • 749-5015: 15% off any purchase Fifi's Restaurant • 925 Iowa • 841-7226: 10% off any entree (limit one) Imperial Garden • 2907 W 6th St • 841-1688: 10% off any dinner entree (limit one) Johnny's Tavern • 41 N 2nd St • 842-0377: Buy a cheese burger w/fries at reg. price, get the 2nd for $1 (Good Mon - Fri, 4pm to 9pm) Little Caesars Pizza-Pizza • 1410 Kasold, 865-5400/520 W 23rd, 842-8000: FREE Crazy Bread w/y pizza/pizza purchase Perkins Family Restaurant • 1711 W 23rd • 842-9040: $1.00 off any entree, anytime, 24 hours a day Pizza Shuttle • 1601 W 23rd • 842-1212: 1 carryout, 1 topping pizza w/a lg. coke for $4.00 Plum Tree • 2620 Iowa • 841-6222: FREE appetizer (2 crab rangoons or 1 egg roll) w/purchase of any entree Pyramid Pizza • 507 W 11th St (under The Wheel) • 842-3232: $4 sm-$6 med-$8 lg-ea add topping 75c (Void w/other offers) Shoney's Restaurant • 2412 Iowa • 843-3519: FREE salad bar w/y purchase of a sandwich and fries Vista Drive In • 1527 W 6th St • 842-4311: FREE reg. French Fry w/purchase of a Vistaburger & drink MERCHANTISE & PRODUCTS The Athlete's Foot • 914 Massachusetts • 841-6966; $10 off a shoe purchase of $6 or more Community Mercantile • 901 Mississippi • 843-5844; 15% off any coffee purchase Cycle Works • 1601 W 23rd • 842-6363; FREE look set w/ new bike purchase Englewood Florist • 939 Massachusetts • 841-2999; 3 FREE latex balloons with any purchase of $20 or more Francis Sporting Goods • 731 Massachusetts • 843-4191; 15% off all Champion Sportswear It's Your Party • 1601 W 23rd • 749-3455; Buy any 3 greeting cards and get 1 FREE Jaybowl • Level 1-Kansas Union • 864-3545; FREE shoe rental during open bowling Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826; Get an extra 5% CASH back during Semester Buyback Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826; Save 10% on Computer Softwear EVERYDAY! Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826; Blue Books for 10¢ Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826; 20% off Blank Computer Diskettes Jayhawk Spirit • 935 Massachusetts • 749-5194; $1.00 off all adjustable hats, $2.00 off all fitted hats Jock's Nitch • 840 Massachusetts • 842-2442; 15% off all shoes Junior's Farm • 924/12 Massachusetts • 842-3344; Buy 2 CD's at reg. price, get the 3rd (equal or lesser value) at 50% of Kansas Sports Club • 837 Massachusetts • 842-2992; 20% off KU sweatshirts Laser Logic • 865-0505; 20% Off Recycled Laser Printer Toner Cartridges (FREE pick-up and delivery) Miracle Video • 1910 Haskell, 841-7504/910 N 2nd St, 841-8903; Rent 1 video, get 2nd FREE (Sun thru Thurs) Rentco USA • 1741 Massachusetts • 749-1605; 25% off all rentals Sports Fan-Attics • 942 Massachusetts • 842-2323; 15% off everything in store (excluding sale items & leather jackets) Stereo Lane • 2024 W 23rd • 865-2677; $10 off any purchase of $50 or more Union Technology Center • Level 3-Burge Union • 864-5690; 10% off any accessory (disks, diskholders, cables, paper, surge protector) Video Biz • 832 Iowa • 749-3507; 2 For Tuesday! Rent 2 Videos for the Price of 1 (Tuesday only) Vormer Studio & Gallery • 1 Riverfront Plaza, Ste 321 • 749-0744; 15% off framed prints of KU and sororities SERVICES Kennedy CLASS The Auto Medic • 3631 W 10th St • 842-0384: 20% off any service call B.C. Automotive • 510 N 6th St • 841-6955: 20% off tune ups and brake repair Copy Co • 1401 W 23rd • 832-2679: 10% off all merchandise or services Enterprise Rent-A-Car • 3030 Iowa • 842-8040: 10% off car rental Fantastic Sam's • 2223 Louisiana • 749-1976: 15% off any regular price service or product NailTique • 2449 Iowa, Ste N • 832-2900: $3.00 off any service Planned Parenthood • 1420 Kasold-Orchards Corners • 832-0281: 25% off initial or annual visit plus 12 free condoms RC'S Stadium Barbery • 1033 Massachusetts • 749-5363: $5.50 haircut Sonny Hill Chevrolet-Geo-Oldmobile • 3400 Slowa • 843-7700: 10% off all parts and service Ultimate Tan • 2449 Iowa, Ste O • 842-4949: 1 FREE session with the purchase of a 9-session package ($5 value) The University Daily Kansan • 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall • 864-4358: 10% off any private party classified advertisement Terms and conditions. The following terms and condition relate to candidate for use in *The University Daily Ranunculus Card* (DRC) at participating Merchants (PM). 1) This DRC must be requested to be valid, and PM may request identification, conflating the DRC used if any other than the candidate. The candidate's signature on a DRC shall constitute agreement to be bound by these terms and conditions of the Direction of DRC. 2) Special Discounts Offer is not valid with other offers or special promotions on this DRC. 3) PM must not apply to tax payment or purchase; 4)apply only to candidate for recruited personal purchase to the total purchase amount; 5)None of the candidates must purchase merchandise or gift cards; 6)None of the candidates must purchase alcoholic beverages; 7)None of the candidates must purchase alcoholic beverages in and some PM may deny entry to 21 years of age; 8)PM may adjudicate a comparable value offer on legal or advertising coden require PM to change the original offer 0) Candidate must not be held in *The University Daily Ranunculus Card*. Independent, independent agents, any student organization or DMC selling locations. Regions or employees of the University Daily Ranunculus Card, Group or any other entity representing an individual or group of students or employees of the University Daily Ranunculus Card, agrees to be involved in any of the DRC programs, all parties agree to binding arbitration by a member of the American Arbitration Association. Jayhawk Bookstore 1420 Crescent Road 843-3826 Kansas and Burge Unions • 864-4640 For All Your Glass Needs B AVAILABLE AT THESE LOCATIONS; UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP All automotive glass replacement & insurance claims handled. 730 New Jersav 843-4416 1116 W. 23rd St *749-5206* KU KU BOOKSTORES THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358 N 749-1805 Student Discount ow Carrying Computers 1741 Massachusetts 730 New Jersey 843-4416 WEL HONOR PANXIS BRAND NAME CAR STEREOS 841-3775 Universityudio 2319 Louisi • NATURALWAY natural fiber clothing 820-822 Mass St. 841-0100 2319 Louisiana THE HARBOURLIGHTS Now a full service bar after 57 years of downtown tradition 1031 Massachusetts TREE OF LIFE Downtown Membership has its privileges... C A AT&T THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Employment 205 Help Wanted 100s Announcements Classified Directory 200s Employment 110 Business Personal 120 Announcements 120 Entertainment 140 Lost and Found 205 Help Wanted 225 Professional Services 235 Typing Services 300s Merchandise All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it possible for someone or organization discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or dis- Classified Policy The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or gender, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available. WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO 卫 100s Announcements Unique Sterling Silver Jewelry Hoops, Pendants & More! For Guys & Gals For Girls 928 Mass. Downown 305 For Sale 340 Auto Sales 360 Miscellaneous 307 Want to Buy 110 Bus. Personals WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO Really Listen Call or drop by Headquarters We're here because we care. 841-2345 1419 Mass. We're always open We're always open Looking for significant Spring break chank? Startup preventative health company out of KC looking for highly motivated individuals to mark our product locally on your own time. Please call 1-800-259-4600. Regular Clinic Hours Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm Saturday 8am-11:30am WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500 Urgent Care (Additional Charge) Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm Sunday 8:40pm-4:30pm 400s Real Estate 405 Real Estate 430 Roommate Wanted Pharmacy Hour Monday-Thursday 9am-8pm Saturday 8:30am-12:30pm Sunday 11am-3pm KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services - Kansan Classified: 864-4358 - ADVERTISING WORKS! SpringBreak1994 CANCUNfrom$439 CANCUN from #439 SOUTH PADRE from #159 Other destinations available Lowest price guaranteed Call 865-1352 120 Announcements NOTETAKING WORKSHOP Listen more effectively & take more useful notes using the Cornell method FREE! Thursday, January 27, 7-9 pm 4034 Wescoe Sponsored by the Student Assistance Center SCHOLARSHIP OPPORTUNITIES! INTERNSHIP OPPORTUNITIES! GRANTS AND LOANS! CASHE-PLUS SCHOLARSHIP SEARCH CALL OR DROP BY FOR DETAILS UNIVERSITY SCHOLARSHIP CENTER 33 STRONG HALL 864-5439 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Tuesday, January 25, 1994 13 NOTETAKING Workshop. Learn how to listen more effectively and take more useful notes using the Cornell method. FREE! FREE! J7, 29-FM www.cornell.edu. Presented by the Student Assistant Center. Wanted St. Patrick's Day Parade Queen. If interested leave name & number with Lawrence St. Patrick's Day Parade Service 76-68713*2214. Apps available at Marks Bridal, Guesto's KLW, KLRJH, Lakyrhaw, Red Lyon, Duffin & Clayton, Lakeside, Kanch, Kanch, or Cleaver's Deep Dandelion Fb. 4th Win a trip to Canunc Look for details and entry blanks in the coupon section of your new University Telephone Director's Deadline for entry in the program. The Directions are available now at KU BUDGETS. 13th YEAR! SPRING BREAK94 SOUTM PADRE ISLAND NORTH PADRE/MUSTANG ISLAND T-L-O-R-I-D-A DAYTONA BEACH PANAMA CITY BEACH ORLANDO/WALT DISNEY WORLD C-O-L-O-R-I-D-A STEAMBOAT VAIL/BEAVER CREEK BRECKENRIDGE/KEYSTONE N-E-V-A-D-A LAS VEGAS S-O-U-T-N C-A-R-O-L-I-N-A HILTON MED ISLAND RESERVATIONS AVAILABLE NOW CALL TOLL FREE FOR FULL DETAILS AND COLOR BROCHURE! 1 200 500 SUNSHINE --der Women Word Processi...ormer edition scribbles transforms into accurate pages of letter quality type. 845-3063 DESKTOP DOCUMENTS For all of your word processing needs, 845-227 Looking for a 4 good type? *Papers, Applications, Spreadsheets, Charts *Laser printing to WOW! your profits *Grammar and spelling free *18 years experience call Jack it Make the Grade 865-285 Words by Chris Word Processing. High quality paper and printing; spell check Student Travel Experts *Student Airfares *International Railpasses *International Identity Cards *Worldwide Adventure Tours *Travel Gear and Guidebooks *Expert Travel Advice Council Travel 1634Orrington Ave Evanston, Il 60201 1-800-475-5070 130 Entertainment Cruise for two to the Bahamas, $350. Contact Rob A (913) 855-1566. 140 Lost & Found Brown leather jacket left in 209 Dole on Jan 13. If you contact present Mark at 749-855-95 Cash reward for return of Apple Newton Message leather cover case. At Looted 4 Less, call 843-7300 LOSY Gold ring with black myosys rings in 3rd floor Room 694-1526. Union. If found please contact 804-1526. Reward 200s Employment 男 女 205 Help Wanted 1994 EXPANSION Part-time temporary and permanent openings. Flexible schedules around class. $910 to $10. Positions need to be filled by 2/1/94. Please call 842-831 for more info. 600 CAMPS IN THE USA, RUSSIA AND EUROPE NEEDER FOR MUMMER. For the career center or your career center or contact: Camp Counsel USA and/or Careers Manager. Camp Counselors USA 420 Florence St. Palo Alto, CA 94301 800-699-2267 AEROBICS INSTRUCTORS NEEDED. Students are needed now to teach various aerobic classes. Prior experience necessary. $10/hour. Fill out application with Reception Services, 263-845-9700. Camp Daisy Hindman available: business ngr, camp director, canoer director, cooks, craft & nature specialist, warden and wrangers. For an application come to the Summer Job Fair on Feb. 2. Or write to Kaw Valley Girl Scrub Council, Attn: Camp Daisy Hindman CAMP SEQUIAU in New York's Catshall Mines, (96 nyc) has NYC summer jobs available. Job candidates include instruction for sports, swimwear (WLBT/ALT), art, Art, Horseback Riding, Guddy Education Adventure Programs and more! Competitive Camp Sequiau offers a variety of activities. See us at The Summer Employment Fair in the Kansas Union Ballroom on Ground Hog Day, February 2nd. For more information call Cruise line, entry level, on-board positions available, great benefit, Summer or year round (813) Do you like preschool so it is 5 years old? Do you want to make a difference in a child's life? Do you have a little free time? Volunteer at Head Start hours one day a week. For information call 827-491-7060. Evening and weekend CNAS needs to work with clients in their homes. Reliable transportation necessary. Call Sharon at Douglas County Visiting Nurses 843-3738. Greenspace is now hiring intelligent energetic people for its grant housingJobbing and lobbying work. To apply, visit www.greenspaces.org or are available and include guaranteed wage and benefits. Call 813-588-4000 for more information. Every year Greenspace adds new information. Johnny's Tavern Wulfs place position available: Tavern 5 Teenager M W F Call Doug @ 843-767-9100 Kunnel position 18 frw/rh is included weekdays & hol- day. It includes a day off. January Hospital 1106 W 23rd St. Jersey University Hospital 1104 W 23rd St. New taking pressers. Sullivan Higdon & Sink is sentencing six advertisement hotlines to five weeklong terms of advertising on the hardneck edge it takes to survive in the cuttlefish world of advertising. Contact your adviser call Krizel Froder at Sullivan Higdon & Sink, 415-872-3917. Find out how you can lend in the big house. PART-TIME EVENING DELIVERY PERSON Must have own car. Apply in person Peking Restaurant (23rd and Iowa behind Hastings). 748- 0003 PART-TIME. Students needed for Intramural Basketball Officials and Scorekeepers. No experience necessary. Training provided. Flexible scheduling. Interested students should call 800-349-2610. Pizza Hut needs delivery drivers part-time, weekends and weekdays. Must have own vehicle and insurance. Good driving record. Contact Downtown Pizza Hut Pizza Massachusetts St. EARN CASH ON THE SPOT ON THE SPOT $15 Today $30 This week By donating your life saving blood plasma WALK-INS WELCOME! NABI Biomedical Center 816 W 24th 749-5750 Preschool Substitute Work around classes, prefer experience with children. Sunshine Acres School 842-2233. SCHOOL CROSSING GUARD CITY OF LAWRENCE Reporter/Assistant Editor needed, now J.Degree or 2 years print experience. Salary, benefits, bonus package. Send resume with references, experience, and writing samples to Jeff Nichols, P.O. Box 1043, New York, NY 10020. Responsible part-time work directing children on foot & motor traffic at school crossings. Approx. 17-20 hrs a week. $4.25 per hour. Must be in good physical condition with no loss of sight or hearing. Complete application at admin. Services, Inc. 9600 W. 32nd St., Jacksonville, Lawrence, KS 86044 M/F/M/D Lawrence-based, growing, international, technical publishing company has a part-time (15 hours per week) position available. Duties include shipment of paper and documents, copying computer disks for inventory; taking the mail to the office daily; and providing backup support to the fulfillment leader as needed. Preference will be given to those working as a team required. Ability to maneuver up to 50 pounds and 50 wpm preferred. This position is part of our internal clerical support team (ASSIST) and helps other areas of the company as R & D Publications, Inc. is an equal opportunity employer concerned with creating a pleasant work environment and providing a good work environment at a reliable company, please come and fill out an application at 1601 West 23rd St, New York, NY 10019. STUDENT ASSISTANT IN ENGINEERING/ MAINTENANCE. Deadline: 02/14/94. Salary: $43.50/hr. Duties include pickup and delivery of equipment on campus, receiving and answering calls, performing repairs, assist technicians in light mechanical and electronic repair; and other duties as assigned. Required education: Bachelor's degree in Engineering or the University of Kansas, demonstrated ability to work with customers, good oral and written communication skills, 6 months previous hardware experience, and a demonstrated track record, in week of 3, 10 hours, valid driver license. To complete a job application which is available in Room 202 of the Computer Center. EO/AA STUDENT CLERICAL ASSISTANT: Deadline: 01/28/19, $84.35/hour. Duties include assisting in invoicing, maintaining accounts, maintaining Accounts Receivable ledgers; assisting in Repair Shop orders; making daily deposits; recording microcomputer workshop registries; and miscellaneous Business office duties. To apply, complete a job application available in the Office of the Computer Center. Telemarketing. Monday-Thursday, 6-9 pm. 841- 1290 Salary and commission Tennis Joum-Summer Children's Campus-North-East Men and women with good tennis background can teach children to play tennis. Good salary, room & board, travel allowance. Women call or email: (817) 643-2900; (817) 643-2932; (617) 934-6536. Men call or call: Wimpinana, 225 Glades Rd, Suite 406, Boca Raton, FL 38311 (407) 964-5500. Will be on campus in the Orlando and Regional offices. UMPIRE-IN-CHIEF The Wyndham County Sports Association, Inc. ("WYCO") has an opening for an Uniprep-Inch ("UIC") for the 1984 Baseball/Somali Season (May through July).) Of the duties and the responsibilities Someone ihn tm ARA Responsible for this Certified ampire training (if needed) - Distribution of pay checks to umpires. - BMI measurements with umpires. The ideal UIC candidate must have good communication skills, a working knowledge of baseball and softball rules and regulations, and the ability to schedule and work with umpires. Please forward resumes not later than February 16, 1994 to: Wyndotte County Sports Association, Inc. P.O. Box 12231 The Wyandotte Sports Association, Inc. ("WYCO") has openings for baseball and or softball umpires for the 1944 season (May through July). Some of the duties and responsibilities of an - Become ASA Certified (training provided at WYCO). - Report to the Umpire-In-Chief ("UIC") The ideal umpire candidate communicate skill, a working knowledge of baseball and or softball and computer science. Complete a finished schedule as assigned by the UIC. Please forward resume not later than Fabri- vur. Wanted: Sculptures models, 1 male and 1 female. Applications: Low body fat. Call 843-848-854 evenings. Attend bi-monthly umpire's meetings. Wyandotte County Sports Association, Inc. B.O. Box 12331 Please forward resumes not later than February 23, 1994to: Christian Daycare offers the best care at low rates. Preeschool work and gift card savings. Transport. Free parking. 225 Professional Services English tutor. All English classes, proediting, ESL, and writing. Ma English, BS Education or foreign language. DV-1 green card Program Sponsored by the U.S. Immigration Dept. Green Sponsors provide permanent resident status, Citizens of almost all countries are allowed to take part. Students, tourists, anyone may apply. For info and forms New Era Academy, Rialto Stag 31, Canoga Park, CA服务。 TRAFIC-DUI'S Fake DUE's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal and civil matron The law offices of TRAEFIC-DUH'S Kansas City, KS 66112 VIDEO EDITING AND PRODUCTION SERVICES A/B roll video tape editing with edu. ILCD 3D computer animation BRIDGE WORKSHOP Award winning screen writer. PRIMAL SCREEN COMMUNICATIONS Donald G. Strobe Sally G. Kelsey 16 East 13th 842-1139 BRAXTONB.COPLEY BRAXTON B.COPLEY Attorney at Law GeneralPractice Traffic Tickets, Misdemeanors, Landlord/Tenant For free consultation call Rick Frydman, Attorney 823 Missouri 843-4023 OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense Tel; (818) 996-4425; Fax; (818) 882-9681 LARRALD FORMAN 719 Massachusetts 749-5333 235 Typing Services DUI/MIP/ Fake ID's Office located right next to campus Elizabeth Leach Attorney at Law-Former Prosecutor 414 W 14th 749-0087 Resumes •cover letters •writing •consultation Linda Morton, CPRW TRANSCRIPTIONS 1012 MASS B42-6419 SUITE 201-UPSTAIRS A Member of PA Professional X PA RW Professional Association of Résumé Writers 300s Merchandise 305 For Sale 2 CD Players for Sale: Sherwood 5 disc changer, 8 disc changer, $8.00 or call 843-756-9611. Almost new twin mattress and box springs. $50 o.b.a C B 841-3945. Beds, desks, bookcases, chest of drawers. Everything But Ice. 938 Mass. GR Bass Amp. 300 Watl Comb w/corbus, compression, limp Amp. 250 Volt IEV 1K, asking $450 Queen size custom futon bed, solid map w/ matre oil finish, $400-8887-114k for Sherri Diamond Back Mountain Bike, 17 in frame, $850 or bof.offee.OCI.DigitalA12.84290 **STUDENT DISTRIBUTION TECHNICIAN.** Day 01/31; 09:11. Salary: $4.35 per hr. Durates include performing boxer training, paper shredding and interface mail using the delivery van; paper shredting functions; on occasion will assist in receiving shipment forms; on occasion will assist with tape library, tape library duties, and other warehousing functions; on occasion will operate forklift and assist in maintenance; assists in Open Landscape junction; performs junction with the campus wide recycle program; uses personal computer or mainframe software as part of recordkeeping to Apply. com. center in room 202. EO/AEEMPLOYER Talk trash, walk trash: DEJA RECVLED Talk trash, walk trash: DEJA RECVLED Goods: 735 Mass, Matur-10: 5:30, Trol th. 8! Goods: 735 Mass, Matur-10: 5:30, Trol th. 8! Yamaha Acoustic Guitar. Peavy electric bass and guitar. Call Mat at 811-267-5900. I'll give you a great deal. Call Matt at 811-267-5900. 340 Auto Sales 83 Chevy Caprice Classic, power locks & brakes 720 OBO. Call Brian K84-945. Great location. 1801 Mim 3 bedroom apartment. Sun patio, hardwood floors. CA, no pets. 4609 Call 518-227-5000. 85 Pontiac Fireo, New red paint. Runns perfectly. Stereo, 5 speed. Cockatel. Gok48. Call 79-8420. Leasing for June and August. New 4 bedroom, includes weather, dryer, dishwasher, carpet, stainless steel bath, 1900 sq ft, and covered parking avail. Early sign-up specials offered. For more information call Dave at 861-258-3900. 2/4 bedroom townhouse, $810/month. Fireplace, valued ceilings, available immediately. 842-1605. 2 and 3 bedroom apartments now available. On bus route. Call 794-1556. 400s Real Estate BDMR townhouse w/ AC and basic cable paid. BDMR townhouse $80/mo. Pet. Possible. Contact 928-675-1380 405 For Rent 4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished, 842-6557? Interested? Call 841-3555, 790-4458 or 841-6555. - furnished rooms in nice spacious house close to school. Wash/Dryer/A/C $225 each Phone 411-629-8300 or www.rentals.com/warehouse Newer 1, 2, and 3 bedroom apartments available for August '94. Washers/dryer, dishwasher, microwave, private patios/balconies. Avoid the place you place now! Call 818-756-156 for details. Available at West Hill Spas. Spacious 1 bed unfurnished apt. $295 per month. Water pad. Great location near campus. 1012 Ermery Ed. No pets. 841-380-542-3884. 5 bedroom house now available close to campus $700/month. 6 month lease. Call 841-8468. Lizking for two roommates for a three bedroom suite for a month, water paid, water dried,铝水 included. Call Adrian dresser dryer. --- meadowbrook Available Now. Newly renovated studio apt. 1300 accented berm, 949/mo. per pet. 841/㎡. separation berm, 949/mo. per pet. 841/㎡. Nice, clean, 2 BDRm kit, EXCELLENT LOCATION- WALK TO CAMPUS AND SHOPPING $390/mo, wr pd, wr pr4, #82-757), leave message. Nice 2BIR kit, available ASK for sub-leasing until your request is received. Rooms, apartments, and well kept, older bedrooms with large windows. 41 STAFF/CRC201 Sick for Your Roommate? Try Sub-Leaing 1. bdmr 2. blb. file from Campus $325/nbm.电话 823-2194 Studio apartment now available close to campu paid. $30, 6 month lease available. Call 740-1566. MORNING STAR Apartments Available Now M-F 8:5:30 Sat 10-4 Sun 1-4 15th & Crestline 842-4200 Holiday apartments Sick of Your Romance? Try Sub-Leasing, 1BDrmst. $4.99 for $4.99; Gumtree $199 call-83214389 Sublease 2 Bedroom apt. Available February 1st. On KU bus route. 84-8097 NOWLEASING FOR FALL'94 - Furnished studios - Water and Cable paid Available Now Sorry no pets - 1,2,3 or 4 Bedrooms • On KU Bus route • Newly Constructed • Quiet Location 211 Mount Hope Ct. Apartment A3 843-6500 or 843-0011 Sublease till July, new b2dm in 4 flex Centralair, heat, dishwasher & more, $425 per m² + dep. $90 Monterey Way 845-2030/749-0268. Sublease I b1rm w. apt. study. Boardwalk Apt. Also Leasing For Spring & Fall! South Point AFFILIATE 2 & 3 BEDROOMS AVAILABLE NOW!! New appliances New bath fixtures Mini & vertical blinds Walk-in closets Water, heating of water & trash paid!! Patio balconies available Swimming pool and sand volleyball court Small pets OK with deposit Ample off-street parking LUXURY We are now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature studio1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. We also have 3 bedroom, 2 1/2 bath townhomes. Park25 We presently have available a select few 1 & 2 bedroom apartments for immediate occupancy. LOCATION GREAT LOCATION!!! West of Iowa on 26th Street KL HAVE ROUTE Walk to shopping, banking, Restaurants & six theaters Next to new Holcom Recreational Center - Basketball, baseball, indoor Track, racquetball and Aerobics. 843-6446 *Volleyball Court *On KU Bus Route with - Some Washer/Dryer Hookups Sublease: 2 bedroom apartment. February- August, 14th and Mass. Hanover Place 841-2122 Would you like your own bedroom, bathroom, and kitchen for under $800 a month? 1-648-897 Ask for Bill. *On KU Bus Route with 4 Stops on Property *2 Laundry Rooms *Sponge Washer/Dver Now leasing for Spring! - Weekly Maid Service - Front Door Bus Service - "Dine Anytime" with Unlimited Seconds - Laundry and Vending Facilities Call or stop by today. 2401 W. 25th, 9A3 842-1455 (sorry no pets) we're making life easier! 430 Roommate Wanted Wanted 1 or 2 roommates to share brand new bond for $600. Call Greg at 7-821-4344. Mail 7-821-3810 - Free Utilities 1800 NAISMITH 1 male roommate wanted for 3 berm and 2 bathrooms with w/d. w/ bathroom. Room has double bath. Total Cost at Pascal $695-294. Naismith Drive If I n /s roomsmates needed ASAP to share 4 dBm power, I call the office. Utilities, utility paid, on bus route. Call Saurav 1. 9 roommakers for new 3 bedroom apartment 2. 8 roommakers for new campers 7 D inpt. 3. Available Mail Call for discount 1 two roommates needed immediately to share 3 story apartment 1 block from campus. Very cheap. Call 823-9155. 2 female roommates demanded F female roommates desperately needed for spa room, laundry room, dishwasher. WE HAVE TO MOVE! Call 800-213-9474 5 males looking for a N/M size or female KU student to live with. Available now, 4 bedrooms. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Clege&g roommate need now for BBA home 8157, iron water, pbn. Jas. rent for 24 month. Female needed to 3 bd spt. 1000 mo free. utf.w /d, darktents. mts曼斯蒂pii. 184-847. Fenn, roommate needed for nice flat salary. duplex. Bachelor's deg. or equiv. in Pharmacy or Fluent PL. Request $2000 mo. phone: 792-787-3057 make command for 1 baskin both furnished apt. qm77heo ./+ vutils 1 bit to KU. comma, non-smoking, roommate needed, immature, bedroom, newborn, valet services, visitation - Bvahone: 064-4358 Female roommate, beautiful 3 bedroom townhome 2 bedroom house with smoking smokers and a bar. $450-$600 per month. How to schedule an ad: Female roommate needed for a sleep 2 bedroom Female roommate needed for a sleep 2 bedroom \/uili1738\/1738 Koloniale Residenz 921-253-3000 Male roommate needed through end of semester. Male turned, near campus $18/mo. + /\url mailto:roommate@ucl.edu Roommate needed for 4 bdmr house near campus. W/D, appliances, furnished except for bdmr. Willing to help with part of rent, pets possible. Call 865-2431. Needed by Pb: 1. N5 IR to share 3 BD Drpl X5 2. Call RB. 414.1 WS, DW, DP, wPat 5 min from PB. Call RB. 414.1 WS, DW, DP, wPat 5 min from One roommate for $ 50bm. ap. Close to the school, pets allowed, cats call, DW 686-2311 ask for Steve. Roommate wanted to share 3 br.房 in quiet neighborhood. B/TH no. 853-4328 Calculating Rates: Stay by the Kansas office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or Visa. Classified Information and order form 119 Scaled Print, Lawrence, KS, USA You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas office. Or you may choose to have billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date. When canceling a classified ad that was charged on Maintenance or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. On cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available. Calculating number of classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of again ties the ad occupies). To calculate cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run. 3 lines 4 lines 5-7 lines 8+ lines Drink too many water! The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00. Classifications Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication 105 personal 110 business personals 120 announcements 138 entertained Cost per hour per day 1st 25KM 4-7KM 8-14KM 16-25KM 30+KM 2.58 1.98 1.59 .95 .75 .59 1.98 1.15 .88 .70 .45 1.55 1.25 .75 .60 .45 1.78 .60 .60 .60 .45 148 last & landed 305 for sale 200 help needed 304 auto sales 225 professional services 308 officehours 295 interior salaries Please print your ad one word per box ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print: 379 want to buy 495 for rent 490 roommate wanted 1 2 3 4 5 Total ad cost: ___ Classification: ___ Date ad begins: ___ Total days in paper. Total days ad ___ Classification. Address: **VISA** Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check outlouse □ MasterCard □ Visit (Please make checks payable to the University Dalkan Kansan) Furnish the following if you are charging your ad: Account number: Expiration Date: Print exact name appearing on credit card: MasterCard Signature: The University Daily Kansas, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045 THE FAR SIDE 25 ft. 20 ft. 15 ft. 10 ft. 5 ft. By GARY LARSON © 1994 FarWorks, Inc./Dist. by Universal Press Syndex "That's him. Second from the end — the 12-footer!" 14 Tuesday, January 25, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN story idea? 864-4810 STYTNA MINIMALS MINIMALS MINIMALS CERAMICNI DIALOGIA CELEBRATE ON US! With A FREE Gift Join us in celebrating our Cold War Memorial for meeting you and sharing your passion for breaking you unanticipated personal barrier. For a limited time, you will be invited to a free private cold war memorial event featuring a $1,401-$1,601 costume exhibit, tickets, registration and register to win our Lulva skin care drawing, and take this golden opportunity to celebrate on us! "Being an emperor is not about winning." Local Mayor Leo Lengerman Corporate and Public Affairs Director, Lulu Medical. (Drew for dining at spring toddlers.) MERLE NORMAN MERLE NORMAN Marjorie Norman, owner 919 and New Hampshire (1 block east of Massachusetts) Lawrence, KS 60544 913-841-5324 Pancho's MEXICAN RESTAURANT Homestyle Mexican Food 23rd & Louisiana 843-4044 Rings Fixed Fast! Kitzer Cummings jewelers 749-4333 833 Mass·Lawrence, KS USED BOOK STORE 1908-1925 Volume Set Historians History of the World VAGABOND BOOKMAN 1113 Mass. 842--BOOK Hours: Mon.-Sat. 10-6 we buy and sell hardback books 'Black Avenger' speaks out on 'blame whitey' syndrome The Associated Press Denver — Ken Hamblin refers to Denver's African-American community as "Darktown." On his talk show, he rails against quotas, welfare dependency, illegitimate pregnancies and the "blame white" syndrome. But if this sounds like your typical radio rabble-rouser, think again: Hamblin is African American. And though ostracized by his community and vilified by African-American leaders, he is determined to speak out. "IIf can motivate one Black or Hispanic kid to say, 'I'm going to show him all Hispanics and Blacks aren't that way,' then it's worth it," he said. "We've tried it all — more welfare, lowering standards. I would like, just once, for these kids to sav' ... make it harder." His forums are his talk show on radio station KNUS — his colleagues call him "The Black Avenger" — and a twice-weekly column in the Denver Post. "I want to know why 60 percent of Black babies are born out of wedlock," he said. "Is that the fault of white people? I want to know why so many Black kids can't speak proper English. I want to know why Black people can't pass a civil service examination. The excuse is that it's culturally biased. Well, I'd like to know what could possibly be culturally biased on a test for a firefighter." Both have drawn attention — good and bad. The idea, he told the New York Times, was to say things "that a white person couldn't get away with. Hamblin, 53, has been on the air for 11 years; at first, his was a pleasant, liberal, unaccented voice which gave no clue that he was African-American. In so doing, he earned fans and enemies. Last month, during a meeting in Denver, the National Black Caucus vowed to complain to the Federal Communications Commission about Hamblin's "racial epithets" and threatened a convention boycott of Denver if his remarks are not toned down. It urged the Post to drop Hamblin's column. But gradually, Hamblin — a successful businessman who owns a plane, a boat, a fine home and several sandwich restaurants — became more strident. The caucus criticized Hamblin's references to "Darktown," and to those who live there as "Darktown dwellers," and "promoters of violence." California State Rep. Diane Watson complained that Hamblin's description of caucus members as "spooks" exceeded the bounds of protected free speech. Hamblin retorted that free speech "is something dark little people like you (the caucus) could never understand. Dark, because your hearts are dark." Hamblin said the caucus should listen to his message: "There is no room for the Black parasite or for the Hispanic parasite. We must become competitive. We can't blame white people." The Post, however, responded to the caucus' complaint by announcing his column would be edited more closely. Editorial page editor Chuck Green said Hamblin has become "increasingly acerbic and increasingly strident," and has "accelerated his use of words that infuriate the Black political establishment and many Black citizens." "By eliminating the detracting slurs, his message might well take on greater clarity," Green said. Then this month, Hamblin was suspended from KNUS for three days and his Denver Post column was dropped for two weeks after he was charged with misdemeanor harassment. A KNUS co-worker accused him of pushing her against a desk and simulating sex at a New Year's Eve party. Hamblin denies he did anything improper, and there is no indication that the suspensions will tame his tongue. The son of a New York City police officer, Hamblin grew up in the Bedford-Stuyvesant area of Brooklyn. He attended Brooklyn College for 10 months after a four-year hitch in the Army, then joined a Congress of Racial Equality voter registration group in 1960. "I've been chased by KKK members in Greenboro, N.C., and in Montauk. I was in a car not just with Black brothers but with white guys and white women," he says. "And we were all the enemy." "And when I speak to groups with African brothers who now have foreign names and foreign clothing, I remember those people with names like Schwerner, Chanye, Goodman, and I remember Emmett Till. I lived it. And when I saw 'Eyes on the Prize' on PBS, I cried." He has no time for what he calls "The Soul Patrol," African-American community members who dictate politically correct Black fashion and street talk. And he is unwaveringly critical of Denver Mayor Wellington Webb and other members of the Black establishment leadership. He accuses them of guiding African Americans into government dependency, a morass of broken families and unwed mothers, and a victim-entitlement mentality. As a result, Denver's most outspoken African-American man is shunned, no longer welcome at parties and gatherings. "It's heartbreaking," he says. But he has his supporters. After the National Black Caucus attacked Hamblin, about 500 people called KNUS to express their support for him. The Rocky Mountain News, Denver's other major daily newspaper, defended Hamblin's right to state his opinions: "Clearly Hamblin represents a minority opinion within the minority community, but so what? Cannot the majority of Black lawmakers withstand the occasional rough-edged critique?" 1976 James Wilcox / KANSAN Caught in the act Jason Kumm, Kansas City, Kan., freshman, tickets an illegal parked vehicle in the lot in front of Memorial Stadium. Kumm is a parking officer for the KU Parking Department. Jackson may settle child's lawsuit, pay $10 million minimum The Associated Press SANTA MONICA, Calif. — Michael Jackson will pay at least $10 million to settle a teen-age boy's sexual molestation lawsuit, a source said yesterday. The settlement, expected to be announced today during a hearing before Superior Court Judge David Rothman, includes a eight-figure settlement, the source said. An exact amount wasn't disclosed. Recent media reports have put the amount between $5 million and $50 million. Jackson's attorney Howard Weitzman wouldn't discuss the case. The boy's lawyer, Larry Feldman, also declined comment. February Jackson plied the boy, then 13, with lavish gifts and vacations, then seduce him. Jackson, 35, has denied the allegations. His lawyers say they were the result of a failed $20 million extortion attempt by the boy's father and lawyer. The lawsuit claims that beginning last The Los Angeles County District Attorney announced yesterday that an investigation into the extortion claim was complete and that no charges would be filed against boy's father or his lawyer. There are two ongoing criminal investigations into the boy's allegations. An out-of-court settlement would severely damage any criminal case because under state law, a sexual abuse victim can't be forced to testify. IF YOU'RE PREGNANT AND YOU NEED HELP NOW... CALL BIRTHRIGHT M1-3, & 6-8 T6-8 W1-3 Th6-8 843-4821 1246Kentucky Kaplan gives you 4 reasons to start training now for the April MCAT. At Kaplan, you don't have to wait for our first class to get a head start on the MCAT. Our learning extras help raise your score as soon as you enroll: $ \textcircled{1} $ Kaplan's MCAT Diagnostic Test profiles your scoring strengths and weaknesses, so you can set your training goals. $ \textcircled{2} $ Kaplan's Home Study Notes mean you can take it with you. Indexed, illustrated and reader-friendly -- 1300 pages of science review. $ \textcircled{3} $ Kaplan's Big Picture Videos makes science brush-ups easy and engaging. $ \textcircled{4} $ Kaplan's Audio/Video Learning Lab gives you access to the world's largest collection of MCAT practice materials. All this before you even begin our class sessions! Ready to start? Call 913-842-5442 KAPLAN The answer to the test question. 1 FEATURES: Basketball uniform styles have evolved with the passage of time. Page 9. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOL.103.NO.87 THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA KS 66612 ADVERTISING: 864-4358 WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 26, 1994 (USPS 650-640) NEWS: 864-4810 Crime, welfare health care top Union address The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Standing before Congress for his first State of the Union address, President Clinton promised a forceful effort to enact health and welfare reform and challenged lawmakers to attack the nation's crime crisis with a ban on assault weapons. "Our work has just begun," he declared last night in a speech that lasted more than an hour and was interrupted more than 60 times by applause, mostly from Democrats. Clinton, who has yet to veto a bill, said he would do so if Congress passed a health-reform plan that does not meet his standard of universal coverage. "It is inevitable and imperative" that the health-care system be overhauled, Clinton said, calling it an issue on which "the people are way ahead of the politicians." Turning to crime, Clinton voiced strong support for legislation that would put 100,000 more police officers on the beat, send three-time felons to prison for life and ban assault weapons. "Violent crime and the fear it provokes are crippling our society, limiting personal freedom and fraying the ties that bind us," Clinton said. Clinton tipped his hat to a "brave young" New York police detective, Kevin Jett, who sat near first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton. Mrs. Clinton, who received a standing ovation when the president spoke of her work on healthcare reform, was flanked by AFL-CIO President Lane Kirkland and Jack Smith, the chief executive officer of General Motors Corp. In the formal Republican response, Senate GOP Leader Bob Dole signaled that a fierce battle lies ahead about Clinton's health-care plan, saying Clinton's plan meant "more cost, less choice ... more government control." Displaying a huge, complicated flow chart that he said indicated the bureaucracy needed to operate the Clinton health plan, Dole pointed to the bottom and said: "You and Iare way down here." Dole called instead for a more modest proposal that he said would offer greater access to health care for all. Democrats gave Clinton 17 standing ovations during the speech, while stony-faced Republicans kept their hands in their laps when the president discussed his prime objectives for the next year: health care, welfare reform, the anti-crime legislation and worker-training programs. Clinton took advantage of — and some credit for — the improving economy to call for Congress to "continue our journey of renewal" by enacting the remainder of his domestic program. "We replaced drift and deadlock with renewal and reform." Clinton said. He addressed the nation at a time when both the economy and his own approval ratings are on the upswing. "My fellow Americans, what is the state of the union? It is growing stronger. But it must be stronger still," he said. KU leaves state lobbying group Kaosan staff report Kansanstaffreport The University of Kansas pulled out from the League of Kansas Students yesterday because of a ruling by Attorney General Bob Stephan. The league, which represented the University, Kansas State University, Wichita State University and Washburn University, lobbed in the Kansas Legislature on behalf of students. Stephan ruled that student lobbying groups could not use student fees for lobbying. He said a precedent had been set in a California Supreme Court case, in which a student lobbying group had used student fees to lobby for abortion-rights causes. The court ruling said that student fees could not be used for lobbying because university lobbying groups did not represent all students. Alan Tikwart, co-director of KU Student Lobbying Group, said the ruling would make KU students underrepresented in the Legislature. INSIDE INSIDE KU students read, play cards and video games and occasionally study while they camp in front of Allen Field House for tonight's game against Oklahoma State. Page 11. The image provided is too blurry and low-resolution to accurately recognize any text or content. It appears to be a scene from a video or film, but the details are not clear enough for any meaningful reading or analysis. Passing the time Club raises funds for funeral Bangladesh group helps defray costs By Denise Nell Kansan staff writer Ashueq Rahman's difficult year and a half in the United States ended with a fatal car crash Friday in Independence, Mo. — thousands of miles from home. But a KU group has helped to send his body home to Bangladesh. Rashed Haque, Dhaka, Bangladesh, graduate student and a friend of Rahman's, said the 20-year-old Bangladesh native had lost his job in a Kansas City, Kan., hotel about a month ago and had taken two jobs — one at McDonald's and one delivering newspapers — to make ends meet. But it wasn't enough. Rahman had been forced to give up his apartment and move in with his girlfriend and her mother in Kansas City, Kan., Haque said. Rahman died around 3:30 a.m. Friday morning at the Interstate 70 and Nolan Road overpass in Independence, Mo., police said. Haque said Rahman had fallen asleep at the wheel while delivering newspapers. His girlfriend, who was with him in the car, is recovering in a Kansas City, Mo., hospital. "I think he was having so many personal problems," Haque said. "I think he felt he was all alone. The first couple of months here, he called back home all the time. I think before he died, he was still homesick." Haque said that Rahman's parents did not have the $2,000 needed to send Rahman's body back to his home in Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh. So the Bangladesh Club took up a collection to raise the money. Since the accident. members of the club have been accepting donations of up to $500 from people in Lawrence, the Kansas City area and as far away as New York, Sri Lanka, Turkey and India. Sharif Ahmed, a KU graduate and a friend of Rahman's, said that as of last night the club had raised $4,000. An extra $2,000 will be given to Rahman's family, he said. Haque, who is the president of the club, said he had met Rahman when he first had arrived in the United States a year and a half ago. The club, Haque said, encouraged involvement from Bangladesh natives in areas around Lawrence. Haque said Rahman sometimes would spend up to three or four nights a week at Haque's Lawrence apartment. Haque said Rahman had developed close friendships with many members of the club. "He was very friendly with everybody." he said. "He was very nice, very funny. He used to joke around with everybody." Rashid Malik, Dhaka, Bangladesh, graduate student and former president of the club, said people living abroad often did not have money put aside for situations such as this. "That's the sad part about being abroad," he said. "You don't have enough funds for accidents or emergencies. It's a good feeling to know people care when you're so far away from home. You'd really have to put yourself in the shoes of an international student to know how they feel." Mahk said that the club would be willing to help again if a similar problem arose with international students. He said Rahman's death made him think about his own situation. "I love my family, and it makes me think and ponder seriously what would happen if something happened to me," he said. "It's news like this that hits you deep inside." CENTRAL AMERICA TALKS NO Professors nominated for Pulitzer Prize recognizes history writings By Ashley Schultz Kansan staff writer William Tuttle, professor of history, is hoping for a new first name sometime this spring. "My name is William now," he said. "William Tuttle — Professor William Turtle. And if I win it, my new first name will be Pulitzer Prize winner William Turtle. "I'm sure it will be in my obituary, too. It would be a permanent change." Amy Solt / KANSAN William Tuttle, professor of history, has been nominated for the Pulitzer Prize in American history for his book, "Daddy's Gone to War: The Second World War in the Lives of America's Children." With letters collected from people who had family members in World War II, he tried to present the war from a child's point of view. Tuttle, who has written three books and co-authored two others, has been nominated for the Pulitzer Prize in the American history category for his book "Daddy's Gone to War. The Second World War in the lives of America's Children." Donald Worster, professor of history, also received a Pulitzer nomination for "The Wealth of Nature: Environmental History and the Ecological Imagination." It is his second nomination. He declined to be interviewed and currently is on a lecture series in Italy. The names of award winners should be announced in April, said Sheldon Meyer, Tuttle's editor for "Daddy" at Oxford University Press. Tuttle received an Intra-University Professorship from 1982 to 1983 to study developmental psychology with professors of human development and family life at the University, including Aeltha Huston. Tuttle became interested in the plight of home-front children while working on a World War II chapter for another book. He furthered his research in the National Archives and the Library of Congress. He also did research at the Stanford Humanities Center — with a fellowship from the National Endowment for the Humanities — and at the Institute of Human Development at the University of California, Berkeley. The result was a 600-page manuscript. "I finished that in early 1900, and it was at about that time that I started to realize that I had a real stiff book on my hands, a book that really could be exciting but wasn't," Tuttle said. He needed something to bring the book alive. Aletha Huston read that original draft. Aletha Huston read that original draft. "I think he felt it was a little dry without the letters," Huston said. "They add another dimension, certainly, but I thought it was a very good book before he added them. "I think it's a very creative combination of disciplinary perspectives." Tuttle wrote to the 100 newspapers in the nation that had the largest circulations. He asked them to run his letter to-the-editor requesting first person accounts. About 20 percent of the publications obliged. A syndicated columnist with the Atlanta Constitution also picked up on Tuttle's letter, putting his request in a couple hundred other newspapers, Tuttle said. He eventually received about 2,500 letters and rewrote the book. Tuttle said he had attempted to use developmental psychology to offer a child's point of view of the war. He also tried to deal with lifespan consequences. "It only makes sense to look back on the second World War and to realize that a lot of the veterans who came back, especially combat veterans, came back seriously disturbed emotionally," he said. "The romanticized, idealized image of father's return, of course, is that he just slips right back into the family and everything is terrific." One woman called the letter writing "reminiscence theravn." he said. Tuttle could relate to many of the letters. His father was in the war from 1942 to 1945. "It's tough not being with your father," Tuttle said. "And the war not only took him away from me in war years, it also took him away afterwards, as well." Tuttle now is working on a book about the making of the baby boom. Journey back from the epicenter By Nicole Peltier Special to the Kansan Imagine King Kong picking up your apartment building and shaking it for about 15 seconds. Everything flies across the room, and you scream and hold on to whatever you can, just waiting for something to come crashing down on you. Editor's note: Nicole Peltier is a Tulsa, Okla., senior majoring in community health. This is her second semester at the University. Peltier traveled to Los Angeles on Jan. 14 to spend the weekend with friends who had been taking an extended vacation there. What follows is her account of the earthquake that rocked Los Angeles on Jan. 17. It just was supposed to be a long weekend with a couple of friends. Southern California was beautiful, warm and full of exciting people, places and good food. On my last night, I thought that maybe someday I could live here. I lay there thinking, "I'm going to die here, and some stranger will find my body, and my parents won't believe it because they think I'm safe in Kansas, Oh God, this is it. I'm 24 years old, and it's all over right now." And then came the earthquake. Then it stopped. There was a strange silence before my friends and I began to climb our way out of the dark room into the QUAKE in LOS ANGELES Los Angeles residents attempt to move on with their lives despite the damage the earthquake caused in the city. Page 7. hallway. We ran barefoot and lightly clothed down the shaky staircase to the center of the complex where the pool was. There was so much water, and rocks had fallen everywhere. The whole place was in a state of chaos. People were frantically coming out of their rooms naked and screaming. We stood there shivering, wondering what on earth we should do. I, unfortunately, never had earthquake drills growing up in the Midwest, and most of the people staying in this apartment complex were also from somewhere else. One thing I did know was that we weren't going to get very far through all the rubble and broken glass without shoes. In a daze, we climbed back up the stairs and tried to get our shoes and whatever else we could salvage before the after- Back in the room, I felt around the wreckage for my shoes, a pair of cowboy boots, and I grabbed my already-packed bag. I had packed the night before because my flight was scheduled for early the next morning. shocks destroyed everything. Again, if I had been in a normal state of reasoning I would not have re-entered that rickety building, no matter what I thought I needed. This is the first stage of terror — taking unnecessary risks and making panicked decisions. My friends looked for their things, and we grabbed as much as we could, shoved whatever we found into pillowcases and threw them out the window. Suddenly the building started to shake, and we dropped everything and ran. Because it was only about 4:30 a.m., it was dark and cold. It was difficult making our way to the front of the complex. We followed the limited light offered by the random flashlights that people were using to look for missing people, pets or possessions. I remember my friend yelling "Oh my God!" when we realized that the three-story apartment building next to ours had dropped a whole floor — flattening every car in the parking area below it. I just thought, "Gosh, I hope no one was in their car," and that if the See QUAKE: , Page 6. The day the earth shook KU student Nicole Peltus, Tilma, Oka., senior, went on a weekend trip to Sherman Oak's, Calif. On the day of departure, Jan. 17, she found herself near the center of the earthquake. Northridge (Earthquake epicenter) Sierra Madre 210 Sherman Oaks Hollywood 405 Los Angeles Pacific Ocean Long Beach 7 1 Micah Laeker/KANSAK 2 Wednesday, January 26, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kanman, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, KA 66045. Women of Color Self-Image accept yourself the way you are? How much do you let you learn about your own self-image? This workshop will focus on self-image, self-esteem, and support systems for women of color. Wednesday, February 2, 1994 7:00 p.m.to 9:00 p.m. Pine Room, Kansas Union Sponsored by The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, 115 Strong Hall Associate Dean of Student Life and Director, Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center 火 Formore information, contact Rachel Lee at 864-3552 MEN'S SPRING INFORMAL RUSH The Interfraterntiy Council is now forming a list for those men interested in rushing a fraternity. For more information, call the IFC office today at 864-3559. Since WATKINS 1907 "We Care For KU" Fat, Sugars Milk Meats Vegetables Fruits Grains A Picture of Health Questions about diet, eat patterns, weight loss/gain/maintenance? Contact Ann Chapman, R.D., ©864-9547, Monday-Thursday, 8:30-1:30. ANAD EATING DISORDERS SUPPORT GROUP Wednesday, 7-30 a.m. FCp Conference Room Westview Second Floor PC conference Room Wednesday, 8-29 a.m. or 9-275 or Sarah Kirk 864-4121 STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES 864-9500 Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students GET SENTENCED TO FIVE WEEKS OF HARD LABOR. AND LIKE IT! Sullivan Higdon & Sink is looking for a chain gang of six students who want to learn about advertising the tough way. Do time at SHS, and you'll gain the hardened edge it takes to break into advertising. You'll learn the secrets of survival from advertising and public relations pros, and do real work for real clients. To find out how you can get convicted, contact your advisor or call Kelli Frazier at (316) 263-0124. MAY 31 - JULY 1 SULLIVAN HIGDON & SINK - WICHITA, KS ON CAMPUS SULLIVAN HIGDON & SINK ADVERTISING • MARKETING • PUBLIC RELATIONS ROLL CACTUS DOUGLAS • POST OFFICE BLDG 1100 WITCHBURG • POST OFFICE BLDG 0325 The Department of Communication Studies will sponsor exemption exams for students in Coms 130 or 150. For more information, call 864-3633. The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an information table about summer abroad opportunities from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. today in the Kansas Union lobby. For more information, call Debra Brodsky at 864-3742. Ecumenical Christian Ministries will sponsor a University Forum at 11:30 a.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread. For more information or for luncheon reservations, call Thad Holcombe at 843-4933. OAKS—Non-Traditional Students Organization will sponsor a brown bag lunch at 11:30 a.m. today at Alcove H in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Gerrie Vernon at 864-7317. The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an informational meeting for students interested in studying in French-speaking countries at 4 p.m. today in 4049 Wesco Hall. For more information, call 864-3742. St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today at Danforth Chapel KU Gamers and Roleplayers will meet at 5:30 p.m. today on the third floor of the Burge Union. For more information, call Alex Baker at 864-7316. KU Environers will meet at 6 p.m. today at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Amy Trainer at 841- 4484. KU Kempo Karate Club will sponsor karate and selfdefense classes at 6 p.m. today at 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Mandana Ershadi at 842-4713. KU Tae Kwon Do Club will meet at 6 p.m. today at 207 Robinson Center. For more information, call Jacob Wright at 749-2084 or Jason Anishanslin at 843-3099. KU Sailing club will meet at 6 p.m. today at the International Room in the Kansas Union. Chi Alpha Christian Fellowship will meet at 7 tonight at the Frontier Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Stephen Swanson at 832-1242. KU NORML will meet at 7 tonight at the north end of the Kansas Union, cafeteria level. For more information, call Nick at 864-3002. KU Water Polo Club will meet at 7 tonight at Robinson Center. For more information, call David Reynolds at 841-6475 or Nick Pivonka at 841-6197. - Watkins Memorial Health Center will sponsor an eating-disorders support group at 7:30 tonight at the second floor conference room in Watkins. For more information, call Sarah Kirk at 864-4121 or 749-5725. KU Libertarians will meet at 8 p.m. tonight at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Allen Tiffany at 842-2411. WEATHER Omaha: 16°/15° Weather around the country: Atlanta: 65°/52° Chicago: 20°/18° Houston: 70°/62° Miami: 79°/65° Minneapolis: 9°/-2° Phoenix: 59°/42° Salt Lake City: 39°/32° Seattle: 46°/37° LAWRENCE: 31°/24° Kansas City: 28°/23° St. Louis: 29°/26° Wichita: 31°/30° Tulsa: 47°/42° TODAY Tomorrow Friday Freezing rain with snow flurries later in the day High: 31' Low: 24' Snow flurries in the morning High: 26' Low: 19' Partly cloudy High: 33' Low: 23' Rainy day. Sun KANSAN ON THE RECORD A Green, canvas backpack was stolen from a KU student at 5:45 p.m. Saturday from Ekdahl Dining Commons at 1530 Engel Road, KU police reported. A KU student reported a harassing telephone call at 11 p.m. Jan. 19 in her room on the fifth floor of Ellsworth Hall, KU police reported. Plan to attend the 4th Annual... A 2/4-foot-long ashtray made of concrete and stone, valued at $30, was stolen from Carruth O'Leary Hall on Friday, KU police reported. INTERNSHIP / SUMMER EMPLOYMENT FAIR Wed. Feb. 2, 1994 10:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. Kansas Union Ballroom Companies and organizations from business human services, community services, volunteer experiences, temporary work, and summer camps will be at the fair. camps will be at the fair. A Special Event, Inc. American Red Cross Blockbuster Video British Brith Beber Camp Camps Airy and Louise Camp Birchwood Camp Chi Camp Chef CurravY YMCA- Rockies Camp Lincoln and Lakes Hubert Camp Sequiah Camp Winolu Capital Federal Savings and Loan City of Lawrence Creative Consumer Concepts Delux Check Printers Douglas County Comm. Corrections The Gap Girl Scouts Greene Family Camps Greenpeace Hallmark cards, Inc. Illinois of Loggedeics Johnson County Park and Recreation Kansas City Zoo Kansas Dept. of Wildlife and Parks Kelly Services KFKF Broadcasting Lawrence Convention Bureau Lawrence Parks and Recreation Mimnower Martion Municipal Marion Municipal NK Lawn and Garden Co. NW Mutual Life Insurance Co. Overland Park Municipal PRC Environmental Management Primerica Financial Services Prudential Insurance R & D Publications Ritz-Carton Hotel Rock. Springs 4-H Center Southwestern Company State Farm Insurance Co. Study Abroad Office-KU Sunflower State Games US Upward Bound Program-KU Dept. of Health and Human Services US General Accounting Office Vector Marketing Corp. Worlds of Fun/ Oceanus of Fun YMCA Camp Wood YMCA Child Care Centers Sponsored by the University Placement Center For more information contact: Ann Hartley at 864-7677 PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS "NOCOUPON" SPECIALS EVERYDAY 2-PIZZAS 2-TOPPINGS 2-COKES 1601 W.23rd Southern Hills Center $900 TWO-FERS 842-1212 $11^{50} 3-PIZZAS 1-TOPPING 4-COKES 10-PIZZAS 1-TOPPING $30^{00} PRIMETIME PARTY "10" CARRY OUT 1-PIZZA 1-TOPPING 1-COKE $350 $3^{50} DELIVERY HOURS MON-THURS FRI-SAT SUN 11 AM-2 AM 11 AM-3 AM 11 AM-1 AM Henry T's Bar&Grill 15¢ Wings $1.50 Domestic Longnecks Wednesday Only 6th & Kasold 749-2999 "I'm Carol Wirthman, and I I want to be your student loan officer! 'Service, service, service.' That's the motto Mercantile Bank of Lawrence. We originate and service your loan right here in Lawrence until you graduate. If you want come and see me for Student Loans! service in addition to your PLUS, SLS, or Stafford loans. you want Mercantile! Call now: 865-0278 MERCANTILE BANK 9th and Massachusetts Member FDIC Lender ID # 804609 1 CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, January 26, 1994 3 Red tape limits day care centers Area parents seek services By Angelina Lopez Kansan staff writer The chance to have cheap before- and after-school day care housed in public schools may seem like a golden opportunity for many parents. But the hassle involved in acquiring such care often overshadows the glow. in the spring of 1993, the Lawrence School Board, USD 497, approved a policy that allows commercial day care centers to provide their services in Lawrence public schools. Parent groups are responsible for contracting the day care centers. The schools provide only the space in which the centers operate. But almost a year has passed, and only two elementary schools — Kennedy and Broken Arrow — have opened day care centers, both on Jan. 3. The red tape involved with providing day care services is the problem. "The school administration said they didn't want to be associated with baby-sitting," said Susan Wolfe-Shirk, former president of Lawrence School Area Councils, a group that represented parents who were interested in bringing day care centers to schools. The school board placed the responsibility of finding and contracting the day care providers in the hands of parent groups. But Marla Adkins-Heljson, a research associate at the University of Kansas and a member of the council, said that the people involved were volunteers and changed every year. Broken Arrow, 2704 Louisiana St., ran into this problem when its organized parent group decided that it did not want to take on the responsibility, said Bob Taylor, assistant superintendent. However, another parent group formed and was able to bring child-care services to the school, he said. Where to put the day care centers within the schools also has brought up many difficulties. "For teachers, it's an inconvenience to have strangers in their rooms because things can get rearranged," said Wolfe-Shirk. Willie Amison, principal of Taylor said another impediment was that the space used for child care could not be used for regular afterschool activities. This limited some schools from being able to provide space, he said. Kennedy, 1605 Davis Road, said the school's child-care provider, Children's World Learning Center, was doing an excellent job. "The day care service provides good child care, a structured environment for the children and relief to parents who are concerned about the quality of child care," he said. The service is $25 a week or $7 a day, Amison said. Wolfe-Shirk said everyone should support this program even if they did not have children involved. "Children can't provide for themselves, and they need the community to do it for them," she said. Indian group aids transition By Denise Nell Kansan staff writer When Raku Patel, a native of India from Nairobi, Kenya, came to the University of Kansas, he found himself struggling to adjust to a strange culture. "I came from a place where I was alone here," he said. "There was nobody here like me." UNITING TO BE HEARD But Raku Patel, a sophomore, said things had changed for the better when he had discovered the KU Cultural India Club. "I just kept going to the meetings, and I got engrossed," he said. "I was relieved to see someone else from my culture here." Priyesh Patel, the club's vice president, said the group had been formed about five years ago by a group of graduate students who had wanted to set up a network of support for Indian students. The club now has at least 300 members. Most are undergraduates, said Priyesh Patel, junior and a native of India who also is from Kenya. "When they come from India, they usually have a language barrier," he said. "We try to aid them in getting set, tled down." Priyesh Patel said members of the club helped new students from India find housing, guided them through fee payment and orientation and helped them with their studies. The members also gave money to the Red Cross to help victims of the earthquake in India this fall. The earthquake Oct 12, 1983 struck southern India killing 9,748 people "We are part of the country," Priyesh Patel said. "It's in our blood." The club sponsors events that celebrate Indian culture throughout the year. Diwali, a festival of lights in October, includes traditional dancers and Indian food. During Holi, a festival of colors held in February or March, students paint their faces with powdered colors to celebrate the season. The club will sponsor a movie 7 p.m. Friday at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Priyesh Patel said he hoped that the movie, "Darr," would have English subtitles so all students could attend. He described the movie as India's version of "Fatal Attraction." Priyesh Patel said the club hoped to sponsor more cultural events and shows in cooperation with other clubs such as the Vietnamese, Pakistan and Bangladesh student organizations. However, Priyesh Patel said the club's $1,400 budget from Student Senate for the year was not enough to cover the costs of putting on such events. Other goals of the group include getting an office in the Union with other student groups and involving graduate students in the group. The main goal, however, is to continue to make Indian students feel welcome at the University. "Indian society is much more conservative," Priesh Patel said. "When they come here, they're kind of scared to get involved with other students. They come in contact with American students who speak good English and develop an inferiority complex. We try to show them they don't have to feel inferior." John Gamble / KANSAN I am not sure if she is smiling or not. It looks like a picture of a child playing with a toy. Brushing up Rachel Owens, Lake Lotawana, Mo., senior, paints a lawn mower blue in the Art and Design Building. Owens was working on her untitled found-object sculpture for a class project. Cheating policies questioned Various sanctions create confusion By Jamie Munn Kansan staffwriter From hiding cheat sheets to bribing a professor, increasing academic misconduct has sparked discussion of new penalties. David Shulenburger, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said that he was concerned about the University's academic integrity and that he thought that the current policies needed revision. "What we'd like to do is minimize academic misconduct by all the parts of the University." he said. He said one concern was the variety of sanctions faculty members could take against students accused of academic misconduct. The actions could range from a verbal slap on the hand to the dismissal of a student. "So long as the range is that great, we're not likely to deter any amount of misconduct," Shulenburger said. He said he was considering a policy used by Rutgers University, where faculty members were able to determine their own sanctions according to the level of the violation. Students may be asked only to retake tests or rewrite papers, but first offenses are noted in case of future violations. But inconsistencies among departments and faculty also have contributed to a sense of confusion about the policies, Shelton said. Robert Shelton, University ombudsman, said the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences had one of the clearest policies on campus. Departments in the college notify students of academic misconduct with special forms that are sigmed and returned by the students. conduct punishment, but others are less likely to do so because of their personalities or the dread of long misconduct hearings. Part of the confusion may come from the many different possibilities for academic misconduct. Some faculty members always initiate mis- "Plagiarism is plainly a concern all through the scholarly world," Shelton said. Shelton said that the increased use of computers had allowed more students to copy research papers. In one instance, a student had reprinted a paper but had forgotten to put his name on the work. Students in large classes think that the professor will not recognize a paper twice, he said. However, a revised policy to clarify procedures may not take effect for some time. Shuilenburger said that it was too late this semester for the Academic Procedures and Policies Committee of University Council to study the matter but that he hoped the committee would look into it in the fall. Computer inspires marriage By Susan White Kansan staff writer When searching for a soul mate, most people look to the bars, parties, singles ads and dating services, but not one Lawrence woman — she met hers through electronic mail. Four years ago, Evelyn McPhee, Lawrence resident, said she signed onto a computer discussion list through Bitnet. a computer network The lists were made up of different categories with people who shared similar interests. Several people were on the discussion list McPhee chose — including a man named Garnett, her future husband. "We discovered that we had similar interests that other people on the list wouldn't be interested in," she said. "So we wrote little notes back and forth." After communicating a few times, they exchanged names and hometowns. McPhee said. The relationship moved from messages on the discussion list to private notes to letters by mail and then to the telephone, she said. "It was almost necessary for us to get married because our phone bills were getting too high," McPhee said. Their relationship progressed along well, so the couple decided to meet in person, she said. For their meeting, Garnett had to travel from his home in Texas to McPhee's home in Lawrence. During their visit together, the couple discovered that they had a lot in common and that they matched well with each other, McPhee said. McPhee said that she learned Garnett had reached a point in his job where he was beginning to feel a change would be necessary. He told her they should think about doing something permanent with their relationship. Garnett had decided that the time had come for his job change, McPhee said. He moved to Lawrence, and the couple got married soon after. McPhee said that she wanted the theme of the wedding to continue the idea of her and Garnett's relationship by computer. She had a special cake made for the occasion. "It was a chocolate cake," she said. "Instead of a bride and groom, there were computers on it and our user IDs were written on it." Lynn Nelson, professor of medieval history and coordinator of the history department on-line mail service, said that couples meeting through electronic mail and discussion lists was not an uncommon occurrence. In fact, people can get on lists specifically set up for the type of mate they are looking for. "Some of them met and had long relationships and some got married," he said. Arthur Thomas, associate director of the counseling and psychological services at Watkins Memorial Hospital, said relationships formed over electronic mail could be just as successful as ordinary relationships. "Some people meet in strange ways, and find they can make them work," he said. "Others meet in conventional ways, and it doesn't work. It just depends on the people." SPRING BREAK ALTERNATIVE IN MEXICO "Between two views -building on the border" COST: $100 (room, board) plus incidentals LOCATION: Across border from Eagle Pass Texas in Pedras Negras, Mexico. Informational meeting on Sunday, January 30, 1:30 pm at the ECM Center (1204 Oread, one block north of Kansas Union). Sponsored by First Presbyterian Church and Ecumenical Christian Ministries at KU For.information contact Rev. Thad Holcombe at 843-4933 In response to a charge from SenEx, the University Senate Committee on Libraries has reviewed the KU Libraries' Lending Code. After consultation with the Dean of Libraries and discussion throughout the Fall Semester, the Committee voted to recommend a revised code to University Council and the University administration, pending receipt of comments from faculty, students, and staff. CALL FOR COMMENTS ON CHANGES PROPOSED IN THE KU LIBRARIES' LENDING CODE Copies of the full text of the current and proposed Code,as revised by the Senate Committee on Libraries, are available at the circulation desks of the following libraries: Anschutz Science Library, Art and Architecture Library, Government Documents and Map Library, Music Library, Spahr Engineering Library, Regents Center Library, Watson Library If you wish to comment on the proposed Code, please: - attend an open meeting on the Code, scheduled for January27, 1994, at 7:30 pm, Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union and/or - send written comments to Prof. J. P. Davidson, Chair, Senate Committee on Libraries, 502 Watson Library, by January 27th. 4 Wednesday, January 26, 1994 OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 1 VIEWPOINT Special investigations need to be reformed The Iran-Contra affair exemplifies the need to reform the way we handle impropriety on the government's part. Fortunately, this chapter in history has been closed. It is unfortunate to see that so many resources were used to keep this chapter open. If the procedure had been more professional, it could have been closed much sooner - and at much less cost. The Iran-Contra investigation is finally over. After seven years and nearly $40 million, Lawrence Walsh unveiled his 566-page report last week. The report's length, cost and lack of substantial evidence indicates that changes should be made in how independent investigations are handled. German justice system takes step to improve Theoretically, conclusiveness and efficiency are staples of high-level government investigations. To accomplish this, more stringent guidelines concerning the way investigations are handled should be adopted. The German justice system finally has good news. Last week, the German justice sentenced two men to prison terms ranging from one year to two years and eight months. The men were part of a group of skin-heads who attacked two U.S. athletes last October in Oberhof, Germany. The Iran-Contra investigation took enormous amounts of money and time. The government should attempt to put caps on both. One way this can be achieved is by funding investigations the same way research projects are financed. The prosecutor assigned to the task would be given a predetermined amount of money and time to conduct the investigation. He or she would be required to check in with an impartial board that would evaluate the credibility of the investigation. The board then could decide whether to continue financing the investigation. This would eliminate a circumstance in which prosecutors use their "blank check" to conduct a seven-year investigation, using nearly $40 million in taxpayers' money, to turn in a report that fails to provide conclusive evidence of wrongdoing. CARSON ELROD FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD The sentences are a welcome relief in a country where the man who stabbed tennis star Monica Seles last year was put on probation and then released. Social conditions in Germany are far from ideal. Rampant unemployment, difficulties in integrating the mass of cheap labor from formerly Communist countries and uncertainty about the future of the European Union pose new challenges to Germany. It is not democracy that is at stake in Germany; it is how more mature we as a race have become since the tragedy of the Holocaust. The sentences last week should be examples to be followed, for they are a firm declaration by the German judicial system that discrimination and hostility will not be tolerated. Nazism is racism's bastard son, and while the battle against the latter has not yet been won, the former is likely to remain a recurrent curse. The international community should watch for adventurers who try to seize power in a time of hopelessness and social impasse, like the Russian Vladimir Zhirinovsky, and cry out against groups which consider themselves above the law. If six decades later the ghost of Nazism still haunts Germany, we should remember how the horror began and how little was done to stop it. The German judicial system has at least begun to exorcise the ghost. GERALDO SAMOR FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD KANSAN STAFF BEN GROVE, Editor LISA COSMILLO, Managing editor TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser BILL SKEET. Systems coordinator Editors editors Assistant Managing Editor...Den England Assistant to the editor ...J. R. Clairborne News ...Kristi Fogler, Katie Greenwald, Todd Selfert Editorial ...Colleen McCain Nathan Olson Campus ...Jess DeHaven Sports ...David Dorsey Photo ...Doug Hesse Features ...Sara Bennett JUSTIN GARBERG Business manager JENNIFER BLOWEY Retail sales manager JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser Business Staff Campus sales mgr...Jason Eberly Regional sales mgr...Troy Tarwater National & Co-op sales mgr...Robin King Special sections mgr...Shelly McConnell Production mgr...Laura Guth Gretchen Kootterlehminl Marketing director...Shannon Rolly Creative director...John Carton Classified mgr...Kelly Connelys Teachess mgr...Wang Chan 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 photographed. The Kansas reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can visit www.KansasHall.org. The Kansas reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas school, 111 Stauffer-Fhall Hall. Government should not provide 'no-cost insurance' to citizens On the morning an earthquake rocked LA, a Californian cornered by a reporter said, "I'm really surprised that there was no warning and at how powerful this one was." Prior to that moment, it had never occurred to me that an earthquake would announce its coming or take pity on the faint of heart. COLUMNIST ALLEN TIFFANI To hear this Californian claim that I am all for compassion and helping neighbors when they are in need, but this nonsense of the federal government as no-cost insurance to the fool-hardy is grossly unjust to those of us who do buy insurance. The government's system counts on those of us who do act responsibly to pay not only our share, but to pay for our silly neighbors. I lived in Monterey for several years and felt a few modest shakers myself. Feeling the earth move is something I prefer only in romantic encounters. When I lived there I bought earthquake insurance because it seemed reasonable to me that nature is inclined to act rather naturally. he was "suprised" by the earthquake and that it was powerful, indicates that his motto is not, "self-reliance." It is, the government will take care of me. Many of the farmers of Iowa, Kansas and Missouri who have enjoyed bountiful crops from the rich soil of flood plains but who chose not to buy flood insurance apparently think like our anonymous Californian. There is a more insidious aspect to this situation than just determining who has to pay for another's folly, because we learn from the results of our behavior. This is a simple principle manifestly obvious on college campuses. When we take a test, we not only wish to know what score we earned, we want to know which questions we missed. This is so we can do better next time. Imagine how confusing and complex our world would become if our grades were dependent upon how the guy in the chair at the back of the room does. The only option we would have in such a world would be to try and dictate how this fellow lived his life; we would insist that he study long and hard. Unfortunately, this nearly has become the state of affairs in our country. For instance, last fall I heard it suggested that the government pass laws making it illegal for farmers to farm in flood plains so when rivers flood, the government does not have to bail out the flood victims. In other words, let's tell these fellows how to live their lives. I would rather not tell others how to live. I don't think running another person's life is either my business or job. And I think farmers should be allowed. to farm the fertile, productive soil of flood plains and benefit from the other inherent characteristics of working such unstable ground. Recognizing that necessity is the mother of invention, we should also acknowledge that, left alone to experiment; those most threatened by flood waters will eventually figure out how to better control a river's excesses. Providing such farmers with no-cost insurance obviates the initiative to better their own situation, just as welfare schemes provide recipients with incentives to maintain their status quo. Those who are surprised by nature's characteristic excesses should not be surprised that those of us who pay our insurance as well as theirs resent their shortsighted folly. And they should not be surprised by the government's willingness to manage their lives for them if they continue to disavow responsibility for their behavior. Allen Tiffany is a Lawrence graduate student in English. ROSS PEROT EXPLAINS THE EARTHQUAKE : THANKS TO NAFTA SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA IS MOVING TO MEXICO! HOOD. VDK 94 Lack of late quake coverage wrong As I returned home from the KU-K-State basketball game Jan. 17, my thoughts immediately turned to the earthquake situation in Northridge, California. As a native Southern Californian, I've experienced many of the feared tremors myself. Having many family members and friends who live in California, I immediately turned on the television, hoping to tune in to the latest information about the quake. While flipping through the channels, I found special reports on nearly every major network. However, I was astonished when I turned to CBS and stumbled across "The Late Show with David Letterman." I believe the decision by CBS to continue its regular late-night programming instead of offering coverage of the Northridge earthquake was a bad one. When a disaster of this magnitude occurs – no pun intended – the public deserves access to as much information as possible. I'm certain the CBS affiliate in Los Angeles covered the situation. However, this did not serve the public to its full capacity. What about the people across the COLUMNIST SCOTT TITRINGTON nation who, like me, have relatives and friends in the area? We deserved as much information as possible. And how about those people who are without cable and only can receive the local CBS broadcast? They were completely without a source of quake information. CBS should have followed the lead of its fellow networks, NBC and ABC. NBC left its normal late-night programming, headlined by "The Tonight Show," to bring the nation a live report from Northbridge by news anchorman Tom Brokaw. ABC continued to air its usual late-night news program, "Nightline," but focused the entire program on the quake. That show ran over its half-hour time slot to broadcast a live interview with a survivor of the collapsed Northridge apartment building located near the epicenter of the quake. Both of these networks realized that coverage of the earthquake was more important than late-night entertainment. People will argue that the television world should not stop with each natural disaster. At any given moment, some point on earth is subjected to fire, flood or a variety of other disturbing acts caused by Mother Nature. However, there are times when these events need extensive coverage. For instance, California recently has endured more than its fair share of problems. Since 1987, the state has faced the Loma Prieta earthquake, the Oakland Hills fire, the booting and burning of Los Angeles following the Rodney King verdict, the fires of 1993, and now the Northridge earthquake. All of these disasters have left California in economic turmoil. Perhaps the only way out is through the donations and support of concerned citizens across the United States and throughout the world. Just as a prospective student at this University would not enroll and spend thousands of dollars on tuition without a complete and thorough understanding of the school, nobody is going to offer support to the state of California without a full understanding of the problems that state has faced. By bringing the nation earthquake coverage in its late-night programming, CBS could have helped further this understanding. While I applaud David Letterman and the sincere wish for a speedy recovery he extended to the people of California in his show, it did not alter my view of CBS' actions. It is an inevitable fact of life that, at sometime in the future, a natural disaster will strike again. When it does, I hope CBS will reflect upon this incident and not make the mistake of neglecting important coverage again. Scott Tittlingon is a Poway, California sophomore in exercise science. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Pornographic pictures not protected speech In a Jan. 19, 1994, column, Steve Church defend at length the right of Templin Hall residents to hang pornographic pictures outside their rooms, and he claims that such actions are "symbolic speech," which has been protected under the First Amendment in recent Supreme Court cases. However, Mr. Church fails to note the distinction made by the Supreme Court between speech that contains ideas of intellectual or artistic merit, and speech that has none. Mr. Church decries the fact that some of the residents of Templin Hall have been deprived of their right to free expression in the marketplace of ideas, but exactly what is the idea that they are trying to express? The gist of it seems to be; "I have dirty pictures on my door!" Mr. Church concluded his argument by noting that asking the residents to remove the pornographic pictures is a mistake, for "silencing them will only make their cause that much stronger." Now they have a cause? Do they want a dirty picture on every door? We shall never know. According to Mr. Church, our very own (police) state university has censored the answer to this and all of our other questions by forcing those hapless residents of Templin Hall to remove the pictures of naked ladies from outside their doors. Go KU. Jason McClure Silver Lake graduate student Flight attendants face difficult job disrespect I am not myself a flight attendant, but a member of my immediate family was previously employed as one. I know from her experiences that the job is a demanding and stressful one, no doubt from dealing with unappreciative and crabby people such as yourself. A cheery disposition should certainly be welcomed. I am employed on campus in a position that requires interaction with I am writing in response to an editorial by Danielle Raymond that appeared in the Friday, Jan. 14 Kansan. The piece was entitled, "Flight Attendant Overloads on Cheer." I was personally offended by the unwarranted slam on the "cheery" people of the world. various types of students. Frequently I am praised for my patient and upbeat personality that you seem to loathe. This I should take comfort in, knowing that there are some people who appreciate a kindly offer. I can understand your discomfort in condescendingly being referred to as "sweetheart" by a stranger, but addressing the flight attendant in question as "the psychotically happy flight attendant" and "Happy Man" is no less condescending. As an undeniably cheery person, I eagerly await the day when I may have the pleasure of ringing you up at the store, waiting on your table in a restaurant, or perhaps even serving you as you fly the friendly skies. I'll pour it on extra thick for your enjoyment. Try that one on for size. Heather Parks Lenexa freshman UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesdav. Januarv 26.1994 5 Artist maps out paths for students to follow By Roberta Johnson Kansan staff writer The Bay of Paranola, the Country of Sexual Deprivation, the Gulf of Idealism and the Sea of Exhaustion are all places through which a college student may travel before reaching the land of graduation. 1 So a professor of political science at Baker University created a map to help show graduate students their locations in life. "I think that graduate students will feel a connection to the world my poster represents," said Karl Trautman, the creator of "The World According to Graduate Students." "I hope that they can see themselves and know that the journey, however treacherous, is ultimately worthwhile." he said. 14 The poster is based on Trautman's experiences as a graduate student. He said he had created the work a year and a half ago as a psychological release after the completion of his doctoral degree. "I wanted to express what I went through: the highs and lows, the exhilarations and the disappointments," he said. "I wanted to get people to see it. it's a way for them to know that they're not losing their mind." In May, Trautman had the poster reprinted and traveled across the country, offering it to bookstores serving graduate students. Copies are at the University Book Shop, 1116 W. 23rd St., for $9.95. La Prima Taza, 638 Massachusetts St., shows the poster near the counter. Although the owner, Bart Smith, chose to place the brightly colored poster in the coffee shop that has a muted decor, some thought that the poster did not fit the shop. "We've contemplated having someone steal it," said Jason Anderson, a server at the coffee shop. "I can see how graduate students appreciate it. But it's poorly designed, and I don't think it fits." Despite its opposition by some at the coffee shop, the poster is a popular item at the University Book Shop. Mike Lammers, manager, said that the poster was selling fairly well and that the store was nearly sold out of copies by yesterday afternoon. Trautman said he was at work on similar posters of the environment and political correctness. Valerie Bontrager / KANSAN BACK TO THE PAST A man holds a camera up to his eye as he looks at the sun. The sky is clear and bright, with no clouds visible in the background. Joyce Moore, employee of Landplan Engineering in Lawrence, takes preliminary measurements at Allen Field House for a proposed walkway between the northwest parking lot and the field house. Measuring up New club tailored to engineering professionals By Gennifer Trail Kansan staff writer *Laura Shipman wanted to be the first. And next month, she will form the state's first chapter of the American Society for Engineering Management. Shipman said that she had decided to found the society because she wanted to continue discussing engineering problems with colleagues and those more experienced than herself after she graduated. She works at Howard Needles Tammen & Bergendoff, 7007 College Blvd in Overland Park, Kan., as an electrical engineer. The society will be based at the University of Kansas Regents Center. The center is the only institution in the university system that offers degrees in engineering management. The new society will consist mostly of professional people, many of whom continue to pursue an education at the center. Professionals who are not scholars also will be a part of the society. Shipman, who earned her master's degree in engineering management and her bachelor's degree in electrical engineering at the Lawrence campus, said that she expected most of the 185 engineering management students at the center to join the society. in a classroom," Shipman said. "People in all types of engineering will contribute to discussions, including manufacturers and software technicians. Many will have more experience than I do." "You can speak more openly at these types of societies than you can John Conard, engineering management graduate student at the center, said he had decided to join the society. "The group will be a forum for folks to keep up-to-date on new technology," Conard said. "I feel I will benefit by keeping informed of new tools in the field of engineering management." The University is helping sponsor the society. The center has agreed to let the society meet in the building and has donated an office. --can be made at the drop box in the Kansas Union, Information Counter, Level 4 Dave Kraft, professor of engineering management, has helped Shipman as a faculty adviser for the society. "As an educator, the American Society for Engineering Management is a means to gain further knowledge," Kraft said. "It offers greater flexibility than classroom discussion because the members choose discussion topics rather than a teacher." The society will meet for the first time in the beginning of February. The society will meet only three times a year. Shipman said that she could see herself staying in the society as long as it continued to be interesting and helpful. "Home of the Pocket-Za" .357 Special Wednesday carry out only $3 small 1 topping $5 medium 1 topping $7 large 1 topping tax not included RUDY'S PIZZERIA 749-0055 Now located at 704 Mass. Cadillac RANCH Country Western Bar VED: Ladies Night/ladies no cover 50¢ Jello Shots $1.00 Draws Best buns contest and prize give aways THURS: No cover $2.00 Amaretto Sours and prize give aways 2515 W.6th 842-9845 Natural Fiber Clothing 820-822 Mass. 841-0100 NATURAL WAY SUPERBOWL PARTY TRAYS FROM CHECKER'S DELI & BAKERY AS LOW AS $1.00 PER PERSON ORDER EARLY! ALL NATIONAL BRAND POP & BEER 24 PACK - 12 OZ. CANS CHECKERS INVOICE PRICE + 50¢ EVERYDAY DAILY SPECIAL BANANAS 19¢ BUD LIGHT BUD DRY OR BUDWEISER BEER 10'98 24 PACK. 130 ZOZ. CARGE LIMIT 1 ADDITIONAL PURCHASES 14P, $11'85 BUDWEISER 120 ZOZ. CANS T.V. TOM TURKEYS 16LB. AND LARGER 69¢ LB. LIMIT 1 THREE SUPPLIES LAST FRESH CRISP LARGE HEAD CAULIFLOWER 88¢ EA. HEADLESS SHELL-ON SHRIMP 3'98 LB. 50-60 CT. PER LB. SOLD FROZEN IN A SLR BOX SMALLER QUANTITIES SHRIMP $4'99 COOKS SHANK PORTION HAM 99¢ LB. SMALL BUTT PORTION HAM $1'19 FRESH PORK SPARE RIBS 118 LB. WHOLE SLAB FRESH CRISP LARGE BUNCH BROCCOLI 68¢ EA. T-BONE STEAK 2'99 LB. FAMILY PACK RED OR WHITE SEEDLESS GRAPES 98¢ LB. BONELESS CHICKEN BREASTS 239 LB. FAMILY PACK FRESH SUNKIST LEMONS 10¢ EA. LOUISBURG APPLE CIDER 348 1 GAL. JUG FRESH CRISP JONATHAN APPLES SIL BAG 69¢ FROM THE DELI SUSHI GELLED WILSON'S CORNED BEEF ROASTBEEF OR PASTRAM 2'98 LB. FAMILY PACK IMPORTED FROM AUSTRIA SWISS CHEese $3'98 FROM THE DELI AMISH HERITAGE SWISS CHEese 2'98 LB. WHOLE SLAB FRESH DELI DILL DIP $1'99 FROM THE DELI MACARONI SALAD COLE SAW OR POTATO SALAD 77¢ LB. FAMILY PACK FROM THE BAKERY FRESH BAKED PUMPERNICKEL BREAD 78¢ ROUND LB. DOEHN ASST. VARIETIES FRESH BAKED COOKIES DOWN $1'88 FRESH BAKED BUTTER & EGG PARTY ROLLS 99¢ DOZEN MOOSE BROTHERS PEPPERONI PIZZA 3'88 LARGE 12" SIZE EDY'S GRAND ICE CREAM 2'88 LB. GAL. CTN BLUE BUNNY LIGHT "85" YOGURT 3'53 6 OZ. CTN Checkers LOW FOOD PRICES 23RD & LOUISIANA LAWRENCE AMBASSADOR CARDS EVERYDAY WASHED WITH CLEAN SALADS FRESH KANSAS RAISED BUCCALO DAILY OPEN 24 HOURS ALL NATIONAL BRAND DOG & CAT FOOD 16 LB. OVER INVOICE CONTENT Your payments for DROP IT! CITY OF LAWRENCE-WATER Save time, save a stamp Drop it at the Kansas Union Commerce Bank The Anytime Line of credit from Commerce Bank can help you afford home improvements, college tuition, a dream vacation - even a car. It's a personal revolving line of credit secured by a second mortgage that lets you put your home equity to work whenever you want it. You can borrow from $10,000 to $200,000 or more, depending on your current equity and eligibility. And because it's tied to your home equity, the interest on an Anytime Line of credit is often tax-deductible. That's a real advantage over consumer loans when you're considering the purchase of a big-ticket item. Call or stop by your nearest Commerce Bank and ask for our free worksheet to figure your potential Anytime Line of credit. And learn why so many people count on Commerce's Anytime Line to turn their home equity into cash. It's top performance banking. Consult a tax adviser regarding the deductibility of interest. "The Anytime Line helps you afford the things you've always wanted." John Brennan & Kurtz DEBORAH KURTZ BRANCH MANAGER 955 IOWA Lawrence 865-4700 EQUAL HOUSING LENDER 955 Iowa 23rd Street (in Dillons) 61b Street (in Dillons) --- Count on Commerce Commerce Bank Member FDIC Bank Member FDIC (Formerly The Bank of Kansas) 9145D 6 Wednesday, January 26, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN QUAKE: Trip to California shows there 's no place like home Continued from Page 1. earthquake would have occurred just two or three hours later, there would have been people in those cars, and they would be dead now. There was a huge, iron security gate that kept us enclosed in the complex. The area around the complex was extremely dangerous because of gas leaks. Once outside, people began to gather in the center of the street because of the fear of explosions beneath the sidewalks. There was no safe refuge. Escape Many people were trying to somehow elude danger by driving like lunatics down the street, honking incessantly as though they would stop for nothing. Nichole Peltier FASHION WEEK The drive to the airport was terrible. Store windows were shattered, half-fallen bridges blocked the streets and fire trucks stretched around every corner. As soon as the sun made its way up, a sense of safety seemed to calm our fears. We decided to pack up what we had and head for the airport to wait for it to reopen. Finally, I arrived at the airport still in my pajamas, cowboy boots and my beloved KU cap. My friends hurried to catch their flight to Dallas. Thank God we were already hooked for early flights because many people were trying to schedule flights out of Los Angeles. I was the last to board my departure out of Los Angeles, which stopped in Phoenix before finally landing in Kansas. In the Phoenix airport, every television monitor was covering the earthquake. The news of its destruction buzzed around while people waited for their flights. There I sat, still shocked. I was there. I was in all that devastation, and I got on a plane and left it all. How lucky I was to be able to walk away from something like that and have a home to go home to. By the time I caught my connecting flight to Kansas, I was saturated with talk, news, everything about the earthquake. I sat on the aisle seat across from a seemingly quiet-looking Spanish man just hoping for silence. Moments before the plane took off, a young heavyset man asked if the seat next to mine was taken. "No." I said hesitantly. The plane took off. "Good," I thought. "I'm going home." And I shut my eyes for what seemed like the first time in days. And then it happened — the earthquake — it happened all over again in my mind. The scream, the thought of dying, the water, the cold. I quickly opened my eyes. "What happened to your leg?" the man asked as he pointed to the blood that had dried on the cut I got while trying to get out of the room. When I attempted to answer his innocent question, I felt the tears well up in my eyes. There I was crying to a complete stranger. We decided to talk about a less delicate subject, like school. It turned out that he was from Lawrence, too. A voice inside told me to ask him if he needed a ride home from the airport. I usually wouldn't ask strangers, especially at night. He accepted. It took us about an hour to locate my car, which I had strategically parked in Satellite Parking just three days before. I'll blame it on a memory loss. Not over yet "OK, 435 South, right?" I asked while we waited for the car to warm up. The radio warned of freezing temperatures. We looked like a couple of idiots as we ran into the convenience store to ask for directions. He was dressed in Phoenix-weather shorts, and I was still wearing my pajamas and cowboy boots. I would have had on a coat, but that got left behind in Los Angeles. Finally we were on our way home. It was 9:00 p.m., and I was imagining my warm, Lawrence apartment when suddenly things didn't feel good. The car started wobbling uncontrollably. "Pull over," he yelled. "you have a blow out." The first thing I could think of was, "Thank God this guy is with me." I can say right now that I probably would have just given up. Obviously, I was being tested for my stamina to survive. We scurrier out of the car and desperately everything related to changing a flat tire. Our hands went numb within seconds. He jacked up the car while I examined the spare. "Where's the lug-nut wrench? We have to have it or we won't be able to take this tire off," he yelled, while we rubbed our hands together to keep them from freezing. There wasn't one. I ran out to the side of the highway and jumped up and down, waving my arms and velling. "Stop, please stop." Surprisingly, the first truck we saw pulled over. The driver offered her wrench, but it was too big and couldn't help us. Overwhelmed by the cold, we released the car jack and sat in the car to stay warm. Two hours went by before someone finally stopped. The man who stopped was wearing what looked like a snow suit. He was driving an old, beat-up car, with about four kids in the back seat bundled up in coats and blankets. "People die in this weather," he yelled while he jacked up the car, spun the lugs off and fastened on the spare tire in five minutes. "Thank you." I gasped as he loaded the blown tire in the back of my car "That would be an embarrassing story - 'Girl lives through devastating earthquake and then freezes to death because of a flat tire.' Aftermath We got to Lawrence around 1 a.m. exhausted and relieved. The next morning, I sat through my 8:30 class like a zombie, every word going over my head. No one asked how I was or how I finally made it through a day like I had just been through. No one knew I had even been gone. Later, a close friend of mine asked "How was your trip to LA?" Surprised, I responded, "How do you think it was?" I suppose it's hard for people to make the connection between a national disaster and a friend's weekend trip. Looking back on my experience, I feel a sense of accomplishment. I feel like I'm stronger now than I was before. I know now that nothing is too difficult to get through and that I should always feel thankful for the strength, and the luck, to overcome any obstacle. Does Your Car Have You In A Jam? A-1 Automotive 20 Years Experience •Transmission Specialist •All Car Repairs (Foreign and Domestic) •Quality Work Excellent Prices 842-8065 1501 W. 6th SIDEWINDERS SALOON GREAT DRINK SPECIALS EVERY DAY OF THE WEEK SUN. - $1 Margaritas MON. - $1 Draws TUE. - $1.50 Domestic Longnecks 25c Draws No cover $3 ppm No cover for 8ps No cover for dals LADIES KITS TO ME THUR.. 2 for 1 Wells & Shots FRI. - $1.50 32 oz. Draws SAT. Great $1 Shot Specials DJ Wed.Sat. FREE Dance Lessons Wed.Sat. MO GLOVER, EXCEPT Wed. & Special Drinks One of the LARGEST 2-steppin' dance floors this side of the Rockies PENNY OF ROOM 2 PUFFS SEWNGE BARS GREAT MUSIC DANCING & ATMOSPHERE 729 NEW HAMPSHIRE DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE 913 842 2115 Express yourself! Beginning in January Every Thursday Night Is Student Night At The Ice Terrace From 5-9pm. After a long day of hitting the books, there's nothing like hitting The Ice Terrace at Crown Center with all your friends. Every Thursday night, students can skate for just $2.75. (Skate rental is additional.) Open now through March 27, 10am-9pm, 7 days a week. For more information, call 274-8411. © 1993 Crown Center Grown Center Ice Territory The Ice Terrace at Crown Center Nahel Through July 31, 1994 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN C A R D ATcT CLOTHIERS Spend $1...Save hundreds Membership has its privileges... THESE DISCOUNTS AND OFFERS ARE GOOD THROUGH JULY 31, 1994! JUST SHOW YOUR CARD... USE AS OFTEN AS YOU LIKE! RESTAURANTS BARS Britches Corner • 843 Massachusetts • 843-0454: Buy treg, price Tommy Hilfiger, get the 2nd of equal or lesser value Cleopatra's Closet • 743 Massachusetts • 749-4664: 15% off everything in store (excluding sale items) The Etc Shop • 928 Massachusetts • 843-0611: 20% off Ec Shop brand sunglasses Harper's Fashions • 835 Massachusetts • 749-0626: Additional 20% off all regular price merchandise KU Bookstore • Kansas and Burge Unions • 844-4640: $5 off any gift or clothing purchase of $25 or more Natural Way Natural Fiber Clothing • 820 Massachusetts • 841-0100: 15% off all regular priced clothing Outfitters Clothing Co. • 740 Massachusetts • 843-3933: 15% off the regular price of guy's and gal's jeans Outfitters Clothing Co. • 740 Massachusetts • 843-3933: 10% off of tuxedo rental University Bookshop • 1116 W 23rd St • 749-5206: 20% off all clothing (except sale items) Weavers Department Store • 901 W 23rd St • 749-6360: 20% off all lineree, hosiery, or intimate apparel Bonanza • 2329 Iowa • 842-1200: All-you-can-eat-Freshtasticks Food & Desert Bar for $2.99 Dos Hombrés VI• 815 New Hampshire • 841-7286: Buy 1 menu item, get the 2nd for 1/2 price Punkin Donuts • 511 W 23rd • 749 B 51E • 15% off any purchase MERCHANDISE & PRODUCTS Fifth's Restaurant: 925 Iowa * 841-7226: 10% off any entree (limit one) Imperial Garden • 2907 W 6th St • 841-1688: 10% off any dinner entree (limit one) Johnny's Tavern • 401 N 2nd St • 842-0377: Buy a cheeseburger w/ fries at reg. price, get the 2nd for $1 (Good Mon - Fri, 4pm to 9pm) Little Caesars Pizza-Pizza • 1410 Kasold, 865-5400/520 W 23rd, 842-8000: FREE Crazy Bread w/ any pizza/pizzal purchase Perkins Family Restaurant • 1711 W 23rd • 842-9040: $1.00 off any entree, 24 hours a day *Prum Tree* *2620 Iowa* *841022* FREE apperation (o r alrngang of 6 rog roll w/purchase of any entree Pyramid Pizza *507 W 104 St* (under The Wheel) *842-3232:* $4m-$6 med-$1g ea add topping 75e (W void w/o other offers) Shoney's Restaurant *2412 Iowa* *843-3519* FREE salad bar w/any purchase of a sandwich and fries Vista Drive In *1527 W 61st* *842-4311* FREE reg. French Fry w/purchase of a Vistaburger & drink the Athlete's Foot • 914 Massachusetts • 841-6966: $10 off a shoe purchase of $65 or more The Athlete's Foot • 914 Massachusetts • 841-6966; $10 off a shoe purchase of $85 or more Community Mercantile • 901 Mississippi • 843-8544; 15% off any coffee purchase Cycle Works • 1601 W 23rd • 842-6363; FREE lock set w/ new bike purchase Englewood Florist • 939 Massachusetts • 841-2999; 3 FREE latex balloons with any purchase of $20 or more Francis Sporting Goods • 731 Massachusetts • 843-4191; 15% off all Champion Sportswear It's Your Party • 1601 W 23rd • 749-3455; Buy any 3 greeting cards and get 1 FREE Jaybowl • Level 1-Kansas Union • 864-3545; FREE shoe rental during open bowling Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826; Get an extra 5% CASH back during Semester Buyback Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826; Save 10% on Computer Softwear EVERYDAY! Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826; Blue Books for 10¢ Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826; 20% off Blank Computer Diskettes Jayhawk Spirit • 935 Massachusetts • 749-5194; $1.00 off all adjustable hats, $2.00 off all fitted hats Jock's Nitch • 840 Massachusetts • 842-2442; 15% off all shoes Junior's Farm • 924 1/2 Massachusetts • 842-3344; Buy 2 CD's at reg. price, get the 3rd(equal or lesser value) at 50% Kansas Sports Club • 837 Massachusetts • 842-2992; 20% off KU sweatshirts Laser Logic • 865-0505; 20% Off Recycled Laser Printer Toner Cartridges (FREE pick-up and delivery) Miracle Video • 1910 Haskell, 841-7504/910 N 2nd St, 841-8903; Rent 1 video, get 2nd FREE (Sun thru Thurs) Rentco USA • 1741 Massachusetts • 749-1605; 25% off all rentals Sports Fan-Attics • 942 Massachusetts • 842-2323; 15% off everything in store (excluding sale items & leather jackets) Stereo Lane • 2024 W 23rd • 865-2677; $10 off any purchase of $50 or more Union Technology Center • Level 3-Burge Union • 864-5690; 10% off any accessory (disks, diskholders, cables, paper, surge protec Video Blz • 832 Iowa • 749-3507; 2 For Tuesday! Rent 2 Videos for the Price of 1 (Tuesday only) Vormehr Studio & Gallery • 1 Riverfront Plaza, Ste 321 • 749-0744; 15% off framed prints of KU and sororities The Auto Medic • 3631 W 10th St • 842-0384: 20% off any service call B.C. Automotive • 510 N 6th St • 841-6955: 20% off tune ups and brake repair Copy Co • 1401 W 23rd • 832-2679: 10% off all merchandise or services Enterprise Rent-A-Car • 3030 Iowa • 842-8040: 10% off car rental Fantastic Sam's • 2223 Louisiana • 749-1976: 15% off any regular price service or product NailTIque • 2449 Iowa, Ste N • 832-2900: $3.00 off any service Planned Parenthood • 1420 Kasold-Orchards Corners • 832-0281: 25% off initial or annual visit plus 12 free condoms RC's Stadium Barbery • 1033 Massachusetts • 749-5363: $5.50 haircut Sonny Hill Chevrolet-Geo-Oldsmobile • 3400 S Iowa • 843-7700: 10% off all parts and service Ultimate Tan • 2449 Iowa, Ste 0 • 842-4949: 1 FREE session with the purchase of a 9-session package ($5 value) The University Daily Kansan • 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall • 864-4358: 10% off any private party classified advertisement Terms and conditions. The following terms and conditions relate to卡特尔公司 use the *University Daily Kissman Cand* (DDC) at participating Merchants (PM). These DDC must be signed to be valid, is non-transferable, and PM may require identification, conflating the DDC used by I am other than the卡特尔 company. Cardt尔的 signature or use of the DDC shall constitute agreement to be bound by the terms and conditions of the Director of DDC. 3 DDC special Offer discounts are not valid with other offers or special promotions of PM's kis. It does not apply to box position of purchase; it applies only to cardt尔的 reasonable personal purchase for total purchase determined by PM. 1 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 2 new DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 3 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 4 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 5 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 6 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 7 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 8 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 9 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 10 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 11 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 12 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 13 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 14 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 15 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 16 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 17 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 18 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 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239 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 240 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 241 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 242 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 243 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 244 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 245 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 246 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 247 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 248 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 249 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 250 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 251 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 252 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 253 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 254 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 255 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 256 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 257 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 258 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 259 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 260 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 261 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 262 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 263 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 264 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 265 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 266 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 267 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 268 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 269 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 270 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 271 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 272 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 273 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 274 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 275 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 276 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 277 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 278 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 279 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 280 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 281 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 282 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 283 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 284 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 285 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 286 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 287 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 288 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 289 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 290 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 291 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 292 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 293 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 294 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 295 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 296 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 297 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 298 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 299 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 300 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 301 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 302 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 303 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 304 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 305 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 306 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 307 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 308 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 309 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 310 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 311 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 312 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 313 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 314 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 315 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 316 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 317 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 318 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 319 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 320 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 321 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 322 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 323 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 324 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 325 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 326 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 327 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 328 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 329 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 330 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 331 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 332 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 333 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 334 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 335 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 336 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 337 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 338 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 339 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 340 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 341 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 342 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 343 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 344 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 345 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 346 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 347 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 348 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 349 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 350 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 351 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 352 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 353 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 354 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 355 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 356 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 357 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 358 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 359 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 360 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 361 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 362 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 363 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 364 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 365 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 366 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 367 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 368 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 369 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 370 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 371 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 372 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 373 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 374 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 375 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 376 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 377 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 378 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 379 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 380 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 381 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 382 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 383 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 384 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 385 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 386 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 387 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 388 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 389 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 390 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 391 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 392 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 393 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 394 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 395 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 396 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 397 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 398 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 399 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 400 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 401 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 402 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 403 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 404 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 405 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 406 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 407 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 408 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 409 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 410 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 411 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 412 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 413 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 414 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 415 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 416 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 417 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 418 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 419 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 420 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 421 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 422 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 423 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 424 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 425 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 426 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 427 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 428 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 429 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 430 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 431 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 432 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 433 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 434 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 435 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 436 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 437 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 438 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 439 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 440 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 441 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 442 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 443 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 444 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 445 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 446 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 447 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 448 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 449 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 450 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 451 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 452 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 453 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 454 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 455 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 456 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 457 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 458 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 459 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 460 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 461 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 462 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 463 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 464 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 465 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 466 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 467 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 468 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 469 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 470 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 471 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 472 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 473 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 474 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 475 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 476 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 477 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 478 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 479 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 480 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 481 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 482 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 483 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 484 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 485 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 486 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 487 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 488 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 489 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 490 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 491 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 492 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 493 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 494 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 495 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 496 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 497 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 498 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 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519 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 520 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 521 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 522 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 523 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 524 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 525 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 526 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 527 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 528 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 529 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 530 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 531 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 532 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 533 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 534 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 535 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 536 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 537 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 538 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 539 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 540 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 541 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 542 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 543 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 544 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 545 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 546 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 547 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 548 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 549 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 550 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 551 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 552 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 553 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 554 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 555 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 556 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 557 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 558 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 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599 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 600 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 601 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 602 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 603 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 604 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 605 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 606 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 607 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 608 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 609 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 610 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 611 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 612 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 613 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 614 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 615 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 616 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 617 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 618 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 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639 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 640 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 641 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 642 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 643 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 644 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 645 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 646 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 647 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 648 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 649 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 650 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 651 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 652 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 653 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 654 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 655 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 656 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 657 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 658 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 659 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 660 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 661 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 662 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 663 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 664 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 665 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 666 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 667 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 668 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 669 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 670 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 671 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 672 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 673 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 674 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 675 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 676 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 677 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 678 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 679 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 680 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 681 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 682 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 683 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 684 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 685 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 686 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 687 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 688 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 689 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 690 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 691 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 692 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 693 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 694 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 695 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 696 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 697 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 698 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 699 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 700 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 701 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 702 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 703 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 704 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 705 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 706 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 707 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 708 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 709 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 710 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 711 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 712 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 713 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 714 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 715 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 716 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 717 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 718 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 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739 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 740 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 741 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 742 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 743 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 744 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 745 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 746 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 747 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 748 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 749 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 750 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 751 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 752 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 753 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 754 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 755 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 756 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 757 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 758 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 759 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 760 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 761 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 762 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 763 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 764 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 765 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 766 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 767 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 768 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 769 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 770 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 771 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 772 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 773 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 774 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 775 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 776 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 777 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 778 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 779 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 780 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 781 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 782 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 783 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 784 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 785 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 786 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 787 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 788 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 789 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 790 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 791 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 792 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 793 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 794 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 795 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 796 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 797 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 798 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 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819 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 820 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 821 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 822 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 823 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 824 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 825 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 826 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 827 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 828 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 829 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 830 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 831 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 832 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 833 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 834 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 835 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 836 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 837 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 838 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 839 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 840 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 841 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 842 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 843 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 844 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 845 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 846 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 847 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 848 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 849 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 850 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 851 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 852 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 853 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 854 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 855 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 856 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 857 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 858 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 859 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 860 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 861 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 862 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 863 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 864 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 865 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 866 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 867 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 868 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 869 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 870 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 871 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 872 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 873 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 874 now DDC purchases are not the total purchases; 8 S Jayhawk Bookstore Kansas and Burge Unions • 864-4640 1420 Crescent Road 843-3826 1116 W. 23rd St · 749-5206 UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP KU KU BOOKSTORES THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, January 26, 1994 Normality sought in ruins of quake The Associated Press LOS ANGELES — Children trooped back to earthquake-battered schools, and frightened residents started straggling home from soggy, makeshift settlements yesterday as the city crept toward a warped normality. 7 President Clinton asked Congress for $7.5 billion to rebuild highways and get families and businesses back on their feet following the Jan. 17 earthquake, whose death toll rose to 61 yesterday. And the city's 5.6 million commuters refined techniques for threading the maze of crumpled concrete, driving long detours, car-pooling and — to their own amazement — riding the train. Lesson plans gave way to counseling sessions and group discussions when the 640,000-student Los Angeles Unified School Dis trict — the nation's second-largest — resumed classes for the first time since the Friday before the quake. "I guess it's safer to be here than at home," said 14-year-old Monica Renderos at James Monroe High School in Sepulveda, Calif., near the quake's epicenter in the San Fernando Valley. "At home, you run around like an idiot." About 65,000 students had no classrooms to return to because 76 schools were closed by quake damage. District officials weren't immediately able to provide attendance figures. Several principals in the hard-hit San Fernando Valley reported attendance was from 40 percent to 60 percent of normal. Thousands of people who resided in Red Cross shelters instead of their own homes returned to their residences after overcoming their fear of aftershock. Census reveals decline in Americans' net worth The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Hard times and sagging real-estate values pulled down the net worth of American households by 12 percent — that's nearly $5,000 apiece — between 1988 and 1991, the government said yesterday. The Census Bureau report also showed that in every category of investment —real estate, retirement and savings accounts — Black families own less than white families. The years covered by the report included an eight-month economic recession that cost more than 1 million workers their jobs. Falling real-estate values caused much of the $4,849 decline to $36,623 on median net worth after accounting for inflation. Rising prices of stocks, cars and trucks and retirement accounts helped offset the losses. Real estate was America's investment of choice. Fifty-four percent of the average household's wealth was in a home, rental property or other real-estate holdings. Savings accounts and other interest-earning accounts were the second biggest investment: 14 percent. The boom years of the 1980s did little to lift Americans' net worth. Households' median net worth in 1988, $41,472 was little changed from the $42,934 recorded in 1984. Median means that the households had net worth — assets minus liabilities — of more than $41,472 and half had less. Between 1988 and 1991, the net worth of the median white household plummeted $5,796, but the net worth of black and Hispanic households changed little. Radiation research under fire The Associated Press BOSTON - At the dawn of the nuclear age, a 1946 announcement in "Science" magazine sounded reveller for scientists. The Manhattan Project was offering radioactive isotopes for research and medical treatment. Hundreds of the doctors and scientists — the most esteemed of the time among them — took up the offer from the makers of the atomic bomb. They sought to cure the incurable with this wondrous energy of the universe. But now, some of that work is coming into question, prompted by recent disclosures of plutonium and other radiation tests that were performed without informed consent on many subjects, including children or the terminally ill. But the full extent of the work almost defies a complete investigation. Within five years of the "Science" magazine announcement, nearly 19,000 radioisotopes were shipped to more than 600 institutions across the country. By 1954, more than 47,000 isotopes had been allocated. And David Rothman, professor of social medicine at Columbia University, said experimentation that might raise questions today went on for decades. At the time, little was known about the insidious effects of radiation. Shoe store patrons, for example, delighted in the early 1950s in checking the fit of new shoes by X-ray machines, long since outlawed as unsafe. And dermatologists would give children strong doses of radiation to combat ringworm, a practice that was eventually halted. "It was the birth of a new age," said Nello Pace, a University of California-Berkley researcher whose use of radioactive hydrogen to measure body water in humans was listed in the 1951 report. "It became obvious there was great potential here for important kinds of medical research." But modern science has brought some of the work into question. For example, abnormal cancer rates were detected in children whose mothers were given radioactive iron during a 1948 Vanderbilt University study, which was designed to see how pregnant women absorb iron. SEE THE CLASSIFIEDS Admission: Adults *4**/Kids *1** Students free with KU ID NEW TIME - 2 PM Call the KU ticket office at 864-3741 for Info KANSAS WOMEN'S BASKETBALL VS. K-STATE YOU AIN'T SEEN NOTHING YET! LAURA'S BABY LOTION SKIN CARE MOISTURE CLEANSER CRÈME D'ÉCLAT SÉRUM PARFUM HUILE DE SÉRUM Payless ShoeSource KANSAS Womens With A FREE Gift Join us in celebrating our Gold Medal Award for meeting Merrie Moreau's standards of excellence and bringing you unimpaired professionalism. For a fee, please purchase a $14.90 cosmetic paint kit and a $54.90 cosmetic purse kit. *Harry and I register to win our Loving skin care draws, and take the golden opportunity to celebrate on all sides.* "Harry is confident to display his gift of beauty and his love for our company." Fee includes a free Gift Card, a free Guest Gallery Studio and a free Cosmetics Kit. Only one person can participate at each event. Allen Fieldhouse High School Day. Crown Cinema BEFORE 4 PM, ADULTS $3.00 (UNABOUT TO SEATING) SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00 VARSITY 1015 MASSA HOTELS 841 5191 Pelican Brief PG-13 5:00, 8:00 HILLOREST 925 IOWA 841 5191 Mrs. Doubtfire PG-13 4.45 7.15, 9.40 Intersection R 5.15 7.25, 9.40 Air Up There PG 5.15 7.35, 9.35 Tombstone R 4.00 7.15, 9.45 Philadelphia PG-13 4.40 7.25, 9.50 CINEMA TWIN 1110 IOWA 841 5191 ALL RATE $1.25 My Life PG-13 5.00 7.30, 9.45 Rudy PG 8.00, 7.20 Malice R 9.45 MERLE NORMAN MERLE NORMAN Marjorie Norman, owner 9th and New Hampshire ( to rest eak of Massachusetts) Lawrence, KS 60044 913-841-5324 PRE-SUPER BOWL EVENTS Sunday, January 30 KANSAS WOMEN'S TENNIS VS. UTAH 11 AM - Alvamar Racquet Club - FREE Admissionbought all your books for this semester, there is one book you may have missed. The PowerBook 145b 4/80 is so powerful that it can help you through even the most grueling schedule. The ___ BRAND NAME CAR STEREOS University udio 841-3775 2319 Louisiana Red Lyon Tavern 944 Mass. 832-8228 JD's Baseball Cards & Sports Nostalgia Shop 711 W. 23rd 842-1002 LIBERTY HALL THE PIANO(R) Today (4:15), 7:00, 9:30 KALIFORNIA(R) Today (4:30), 7:15 Only SEX AND ZEN(NC-17) 9:35 Only/Ends Thurs DICKINSON THEATRE 841 8600 7239 South Iowa St. Dickinson 6 BlinkR *4*:25, 7:10, 9:45 Shadowlands PG *4*:05, 7:00, 9:45 Iron Will PG *4*:30, 7:00, 9:55 Grimpy Old Men PG *13*:42, 7:20, 9:20 Beetown 2nd PG *15*, 7:15, 9:35 House Party IIIR *4*:40, 7:25, 9:40 Come join the fiesta! We buy back used baseball cards *PrimeTime Show (t)* *Cleaning Baby* *Senior Citizen Ation* *Improved Stereo* Pancho's MEXICAN RESTAURANT 711 W 23rd in the Malls Shopping Center 843-4044 VISA Celebrating 5 years of making delicious homestyle Mexican Food Pancho's MEXICAN RESTAURANT MasterCard MasterCard Here is one book Required spring '94 Book:PowerBook 145b 4/80 For: Success in school. Instructor(s): All. Student price: $1,639.00 utc you still need to buy. Though you have probably PowerBook 145b 4/80 combines the portable convenience of a textbook and the power of a conventional Macintosh. And now is the best time to buy because the Union Technology Center has the PowerBook 145b 4/80 with ClarisWorks, ClarisWorks Professional Software for Windows and Macintosh the Campus Software Set and a laser-quality StyleWriter II printer all for the special student rate of only Macintosh. The Power to be your Best at KU. $1,639^{00} Macintosh. It does more. It costs less. It's that simple. union technology center KU KU VISA MAIN/CARD MICRORC MasterCard Academic Computer Supplies & Equipment Burge Union * Level 3 * 913-864-5609 8 Wednesday, January 26,1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SUPER BOWL Super Savings! And Remember... Our everyday prices are proven the lowest time and time again! Plus—we always have hundreds of Green Tag Specials for added savings. FOOD 4 LESS Tony's FROZEN PIZZAS Assorted Varieties 12 Inch Size 2 $4 for K.C. STRIP STEAKS 378 lb. HEAD LETTUCE 2 $1 for Carl Buddig Sliced SMOKED MEATS Big 1 lb. Pkg.! 298 Mixed VEGETABLE TRAY Approximately 5 Pounds 998 each 24 PACK COKE WITH $1.00 OFF COUPON BELOW Expiration Date: 2-1-94 $1.00 OFF on one (1) 24-pack cans of Coca-Cola products* Valid only at FOOD 4 LESS GRANT'S FARM BREAD Stone Ground Wheat Only 20 oz. Loaf Buy 1, Get 1... FREE! LAYS POTATO CHIPS SUPER SIZE 2 $4 for Big 20 oz. Bag Busch or Busch Light Beer 24 Pack 12 oz cans $958 Sunshine CHEEZ-IT CRACKERS 16 oz. Box 2 $3 for LOOK FOR OUR GREEN TAGS AND Save! Plantation CASHEW HALVES 10 oz. Can 2 $4 for A Green Tag at Food 4 Less means extra savings! They're special discounts from suppliers because of our volume buying. You'll find hundreds throughout the store every time you shop. And Food 4 Less is survey proven time and time again, to save you more than any other store! Tony's SUPREME Tony's PIZZA WITH ITALIAN STYLE PASTRY CRUST 12 Inch Size Tony's SUPREME WITH ITALIAN STYLE PASTRY CRUST Tony's FROZEN PIZZAS Assorted Varieties 2$4 for 12 Inch Size K.C. STRIP STEAKS 378 Ib. Family Pack Carl Buddig Sliced SMOKED MEATS Big 1 ib. Pkg.! 298 SPECIAL 29 CAN CASE Coca-Cola CLASSIC 1b BUSCH -LIGHT- DRAFT BUSCH -LIGHT- BUSCH Bear born of National Legend Susan Refresher BUSCH LIGHT DRAFT BUSCH LIGHT BUSCH Beer Turn of National Ingredients Busch or Busch Light Beer 24 Pack 12 oz cans $958 BUSCH LIGHT DRAFT BUSCH LIGHT BUSCH Beer Born of National Ingredient Smash Refreshment Sunshine CHEEZ-IT HOT & SPICY 16 oz. Box CASELS Sports scrapbook From briefs to boxers, from sweaters to short skirts, sports fashions have come a long way over the years. 11 All photos courtesy of University archives Basketball uniforms a history in briefs By Cathleen Siechta Kansan staff writer When Bill Lienhard watched the Michigan Wolverines' Jalen Rose on the basketball court last week, he wondered how Rose kept his pants up. "His pants were hanging below his knees," Lienhard said. "It looked just awful. But I guess that's what the kids like these days." But Lienhard, a member of the Jaya- hawks' 1952 team, may have looked awful by today's standards in the tight, belted shorts and knee socks he wore when his team won the National Championship. The game may have stayed the same, but basketball uniforms have undergone an almost humorous evolution. "The uniforms were about as brief as they could be when I coached," said Dick Harp, who was Lienhard's coach in the 1950s. "But they're really almost too long now. My personal preference would be to have the shorts hit the players about mid-thigh." Lienhard agreed. "My feeling is that the older uniforms with the shorter pants allowed a lot more freedom on the court," Lienhard said. "The tops of the uniforms haven't changed that much, but boy, those pants are baggy. I wouldn't want them bangging around my knees like that." But the baggy style is hot these days, and inseams keep getting longer. Wesley Haynes, vice president of marketing for Russell athletic wear, said that in addition to requesting longer inseams, players who have a 34-inch waist will order shorts with a 40-inch waist and depend on the drawstrings alone to hold up their shorts. "It's pretty amazing," Haynes said. "In terms of sizing, it's unlike anything I've ever seen. But it's also the trend in street fashion. Quite honestly, I think Michael Jordan started this trend when he played in college, and it's just continued in basketball and into casual wear." Haynes said that today's styles are a far cry from the canvas high tops and form-hugging jerseys worn in the past. However, he said athletic wear manufacturers will continue to produce uniforms in the styles athletes prefer. At the end of their junior year, Kansas basketball players choose the style of the uniforms for their senior year. They decide on fashion factors such as how long they want their shorts, whether to have trim on the shorts and shoe color. Lienhard said that even basketball foot wear has come a long way. "Probably the worst thing about our old uniforms was those red shoes we had to wear," said Lienhard. "But I still think those looked better than those black ones that they wear now." Cheering uniforms: a short evolution By Kevin Hoffmann Kansan staff writer By yelling, cheering and dancing, cheerleaders have supported KU teams for over 70 years. Over those years changes have taken place, both in the cheers and in the cheerleaders' uniforms. Dick Wintermote, former director of the Alumni Association and cheerleader at the University from 1946 through 1949, has witnessed the change from long dresses and white sweaters to short skirts and sequins. "Pep uniforms go with the styles and fads," he said. "When I was in school the girls wore their skirts to the ankles and full sweaters." Winternote said he thought styles had changed as the number of people involved in cheerleading grew. Wintermote said that today's close-fitting uniforms might have been considered risque in years past but that they fit today's athletic cheerleading styles. "They (the uniforms) are stylish, they're sporty and they're probably more appropriate for sports these days," he said. "They probably would have gotten chased off the court 50 years ago." Wintermote said cheerleading uniforms played an important role in attracting fans. "An awful lot of people, particularly during football, come for the pageantry," he said. "The bands, the cheerleaders, the color of the fall games, that's all a part of football." Elaine Brady, advisor of the spirit squad, said cheerleader's uniforms played a dual role. "The men's and women's uniforms didn't even match," she said. "So I got involved in some fund raising and got some uniforms that were more up to date." "The uniforms that they wear are entertaining and provide flexibility for the moves that they do," she said. While coaching for the cheerleading squad, Brady has witnessed changes in uniform styles, especially in the ones worn by the Crimson Girls. Brady has been with KU cheerleading since 1984. When she came to the University, she saw an immediate need for change in the squad's uniforms. "The cheerleaders' uniforms haven't changed much," she said. "The Crimson Girls' uniforms though, have changed from a basic cheerleader's uniform to the sequins and sparkles you have today." Cheerleading fashion may have gone from modest to more revealing styles in the past 70 years, but Brady said she didn't foresee any major changes in upcoming years. "They've worn the same style of uniforms for an awful long time," she said. KANSAS 1940s; Lana skirts and Peter Pan collars were popular. KU 1950s; Tightie whities were standard basketball attire. K 1960s: Cheerleading shirts were getting shorter ... Indiana 1970s: Uniforms weren't the only things to change with the times. Hairstyles evolved as well. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN JANUARY 26, 1994 PAGE 9 KU Life People and places at the University of Kansas. calendar EXHIBITIONS AND LECTURES Exhibition - "The Sleep of Reason: Reality and Fantasy in the print series of Goya," Jan. 9 - Feb. 20 at the Spencer Museum of Art. Exhibition - Dennis Oppenheim: Drawings and Selected Sculpture, Jan. 16 - Feb. 27 at the Spencer Museum of Art. Exhibition - Eric Weldman: Oil Painting and Drawings, Jan. 3 - Jan. 31 at the University of Kansas Regents Center, 12600 Quivira Road. Exhibition - Sculpture by Douglas Warnock, Jan. 22 - Feb. 10 at The Lawrence Arts Center, 200 W. Ninth St. Lecture - The Forma Viva and Razes of Slovenia by Sculptor David Vertacnik, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at The Lawrence Arts Center, 200 w. Ninth St. program - "Women of Color: Self-Image sponsored by The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, 7 p.m. Feb. 2 at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union. PERFORMANCES Inge Theater Series: "Gammer Gurton's Needle" by Mr. S., Master of Art and Ralph Rolster Dolster, 8 p.m. Friday, Saturday, Sunday; 7:30 p.m. Monday; 8 p.m. Tuesday and Feb. 2 at the Inge Theater in Murphy Hall. $6 public, $3 KU students, $5 senior citizens and other students. KU Department of Music and Dance: Faculty Plano recital by Jack Winerock, 7:30 p.m. Monday at Swarthout Recital Hall. MARCH 21, 2017 KU Department of Music and Dance: Master's Recital by Lee Lee Chong, plano, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at Swarthout Recital Hall. KU Department of Music and Dance: Visiting Artists Series: Algirdas Budrys, clarinet, 7:30 p.m. Feb. 2 at Swarthout Recital Hall. Renegade Theater Company of Lawrence presents "East Side Comedy Shop," 8 p.m. Friday and 7 and 10 p.m. Saturday at Renegade Theater, 518 E. Eighth St. $5 public. Lawrence Community Theater presents "Three Men on a Horse," 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday and a 2:30 matinee Sunday at the theater, 1501 New Hampshire St. $10 public, $9 students and senior citizens Friday and Saturday; $8 public, $7 students and senior citizens Sunday. The New Theater Restaurant presents "Blioxi Blues," 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 2 at The New Theater Restaurant, 9222 Foster, Overland Park, Kan. $17.95 public. 10 Wednesday, January 26, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN BRAXTON COPLEY ATTORNEY *General Practice *Traffic *Misdemeanors *O.U.I. *Landlord/Tenant Mon.-Sun. Buffet Hours $2.99 lunch buffet 2630 Iowa 11:00-1:30 (add .70 for salad) 843-1474 719 Massachusetts, Suite D Lawrence, KS 66044 (913) 749-5333 ATTENTION SCHOLARS! ATTENTION SCHOLARS! COLLEGE BOWL 1994 SUNFLOWER Annual Winter Sale Now until the end of February Woolrich Costs...up to 30% off Turtles Neckies...58 Women's Clothing...25% Mens Clothing...20% off Swearing...30% off 1993 Bicycles...Closeout Prices Winter Cycling Wear...20% off Selected Boots...Current Prices 843-5000 804 Massachusetts February 12, 1994 Kansas Union 8 a.m. until 4 p.m. $ 20.00 per Team Call 864-3477 for more info presented by: THE "VARSITY SPORT OF THE MIND" presented by BURENTEN SENIOR AGVINITIES SUA DROP IT! Your payments for SUNFLOWER CABLEVISION can be made at the drop box in the Kansas Union, Information Counter, Level 4 Save time, save a stamp Drop it at the Kansas Union JOCK'S NITCH SPORTING GOODS The Sports Look of Today! LADIES! TIMETOWORKOUT? ALL Workout Apparel 20% OFF Shorts, Tops, andPants From Jogbra, Nike and Champion NEW Aerobic Shoes $4999-$7999 Avia, Reebok, Nike, and K-Swiss (Step, Hi-Low Impact, Slide and Stairmaster) - Don't forget about our coupons Hours M-TH 9:30-7 F&S 9:30-6 Sun 12-5 840 Massachusetts 842-2442 MEN'S BASKETBALL TICKETS ATTN: STUDENTS REDEMPTIONPERIOD GROUP#6 JANUARY26 - JANUARY28 8:00A.M.-5:00P.M. Feb. 6-Nebraska Cornhuskers Feb. 20-Missouri Tigers GAMES: Athletic Ticket Office East Lobby - Allen Fieldhouse 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. ** YOU MAY ONLY REDEEM ONE COUPON PER PERSON.** ** YOU MUST HAVE A RED SPRING 1994 FEE STICKER ON YOUR KUID TO RECEIVE YOUR TICKETS. ** WE ARE NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR LOST OR STOLEN COUPONS. Distances can pose problems for romance For Heather Collier, the awful memory of that day two years ago remains in her mind. By Kevin Hoffmann Kansan staff writer "It was the worst day of my life," said the Clearwater, Fla., junior. "I cried and cried and cried." No, Collier didn't suffer the death of a loved one, nor did she endure a horrible personal attack. She did, however, leave Florida and her boyfriend of two years behind to attend KU. When students leave home for a far-off university, they often must leave a significant other behind. Those students then find themselves thrown into a long-distance romance. Collier's move became necessary when her father told her he would pay for her college if she came to Kansas City to live with him. At first, she and her boyfriend, Tony, were unsure how their relationship would survive the distance between them. "We really didn't know what was going to happen," Collier said. "We didn't talk about it." But Collier and Tony soon found 1,000 miles could not end the love they felt for each other. "I never met anyone like him before, that could take care of me like he does," Collier said. "As we continued to talk, it became obvious that we still had a relationship." Continuing a long-distance relationship has a price though, Collier said. "It's hard being alone," she said. "It's like not having anyone at all. When you come home and have something important to tell someone, there's nobody there. You can't tell your roommates everything." "You can't think about it much," she said. "You have to have a lot of good friends and neighbors to keep you company." Collier said handling the loneliness took time to get used to. Besides loneliness, couples involved in long-distance relationships also must face uncertainty about each other's faithfulness. For Collier and her boyfriend, that wasn't a problem. "We had a lot of trust in each other," Collier said. Julie Westhoff, San Diego sophomore, said long-dis tance romances took more than trust. Westhoff and her boyfriend, Darryl, have survived several different moves and more than five years of separation. A successful long-distance relationship requires that both parties be allowed a certain degree of freedom. Westhoff said she and Darryl had agreed to see other people while separated. "We were honest with each other," she said. "We're both human and realistic." Westhoff said she knew certain sacrifices had to be made when she first moved to Houston and her boyfriend stayed in Boulder, Colo. "I knew he was going to go out with other women, but as long as we talked about it. I could handle it," she said. "There were about five or six times when we weren't sure if it was going to last or not," Westhoff said. Westoff and her boyfriend found their relationship could handle even the distance between Kansas City and the Bahamas when Darryl transferred to a computer firm. Besides the emotional hardships of long-distance relationships, a financial hardship also exists. Phone bills combined with the costs of visits have proven expensive for Collier and her boyfriend as well. "My phone bills have been as much as $200 a month," Westhoff said, "They average around $80." "It's about $300 to $400 dollars each time I go back," Collier said. Paul Kramer, Des Moines senior, found long-distance relationships didn't always work. Kramer and his girlfriend were together for two years before he left for college. Their relationship lasted for three more years before it ended. "I needed to see what else was out there," he said. "We needed to step back and see what other people are like." Kramer said that when he went to Des Moines to visit his girlfriend, he found they often had mixed emotions. "Sometimes we were uncomfortable and other times we were like old friends," he said. Kramer said long-distance relationships weren't for everyone. "It all depends on the people involved," he said. "If they argue all the time, or they are only happy when they can have sex, they should move on." DROP IT! Your payments for - GAS SERVICE KANSAS PUBLIC SERVICE can be made at the drop box in the Kansas Union, Information Counter, Level 4 Save time, save a stamp Drop it at the Kansas Union Self-esteem WE ARE ONE IMPROVED GRADES SOCIAL GATHERINGS COMMUNITY Students Together Excelling in Education as Peers Presents to first year and transfer Students ASSISTANCE WITH: Mentors and Networking *Meet upper-classmen, new friends, and contacts at the personal and professional level. Self-Esteem *Help students gain the confidence needed to become campus leaders Grade Point Average * How to attain it and how to maintain it! TIME: 6:00 p.m.-7:00p.m. DATE: January 27,1994 PLACE: Templin Hall, Stereo Room Refreshments Served!!! KU Contact for more information: Office of Minority Affairs 145 Strong Hall 864-4351 KU --- SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, January 26, 1994 11 Injured Kansas frontcourt faces tough test Cowboys' center feeds on challenge By Gerry Fey Kansan sportswriter Probably no other player takes more delight in seeing Kansas on his schedule than Oklahoma State center Bryant Reeves. He continually has been a nuisance for the Jayhawks. In the teams' two games last season, Reeves averaged 27 points a game. No. 3 Kansas will face the 7-foot junior tonight at 7:05 in Lawrence. The Cowboys are 13-5 overall and 2-1 in the Big Eight Conference. Kansas is 17-2 and 2-1. The game will be televised on Prime Sports Network, which is channel 45 for those who have cable service in Lawrence. Kansas coach Roy Williams said the Jayhawks' defense would try to contain Reeves, who is shooting 59.7 percent from the field. He averages 20.2 points and 9.7 rebounds a game. "We do start with the big guy," Williams said. "We have to minimize the number of times he shoots, gets his rebound and puts it up again. You can't guard Bryant with just one." an eight Bryant just one gate. Even though Kansas will double. team Reeves on occasion, Williams said that Kansas junior center Greg Ostertag had to play a good game. "If there is anybody in the Big Eight who is physically equipped to bother Bryant, it is Greg." Williams said. "But he's got to play." Kansas' injury problems in the front-court could not come before a more difficult game. Kansas senior forward Richard Scott is listed as day-to-day after injuring his shoulder during Monday's practice. Williams said freshman forward Nick Proud would be out for at least a week because of a strained right knee. The injuries and Reeves' strength inside could give Kansas problems. Williams said there would be a switch in the starting line-up if Scott was unable to play. Freshman forward B.J. Williams will get more playing time, but he will play behind sophomore Sean Pearson, Williams said. "He's a pretty tough hombre," he said of Scott. "I would think that if it's possible for Richard to play, he'll play. If he can't play, we'll start Pearson and move Richey down to the four spot." Reeves has played well recently but struggled until the Cowboys' game against Oklahoma on Jan. 8, said Sean Sutton, Oklahoma State assistant coach. Reeves scored 29 points and had 16 rebounds against the Sooners. "For the first four or five games, he played like everyone thought he would the whole season," Sutton said. "After the LSU game, he lost a little pizzazz. We knew without him, we would not win many Big Eight basketball games. I think right now he's back to his old form." Although Reeves leads the Cowboys in scoring, senior Brooks Thompson and junior Randy Rutherford make up, arguably, the best back-court in the conference. "The thing that we're looking at is the play of Thompson and Rutherford," Sutton said. "For us to beat Kansas, those two must play well. Kansas is the kind of team that likes to pressure the ball." Kansas junior guard Calvin Rayford said he and freshman guard Jacque Vaughn would focus on Thompson at point guard. At 6-4, Thompson has a decided height advantage over the 5-0 Rayford. "I think Thompson is their only point guard," Rayford said. "We're going to pressure him and try to tire him out. I'm just going to play him close and pressure the ball." Sutton said he and the team were looking forward to tonight's game. Sutton played at Oklahoma State from 1990 to 1992 and knows how difficult it can be to play in Allen Field House. Students stake out Allen Field House to lay claim to seats "Let's face it," he said. "It's the toughest place to play in the Big Eight. Thompson and the other players always enjoy playing Kansas because it's a challenge. This has been a great rivalry." By Matt Siegel Kansas sportswriter Blankets and sleeping bags are strewn across the floor, people are talking about this and that and listening to music. The scene would resemble a typical slumber party if not for the rhythmic sound of a basketball pounding against the floor of Allen Field House a few feet away. Kansas senior forward Patrick Richey emerges from the men's locker room and makes his way to the court. No one bats an eye. Maybe that's because many of these students have grown accustomed to seeing the players. They also are used to seeing Kansas coach Roy Williams and occasionally receiving doughnuts aid milk from him. Yes, the different groups of students who camp out at the field house are regulars not only on game days, but depending on the opponent, on four or five days before games. They spend much of their free time at the field house. "Originally, we wanted to be on television," said Nate Orr, Kansas City, Kan., freshman, who heads a group of 15 students called Free Slick Rick. "Our No.2 priority is great seats. A lot of the fine women sit up close so it's a big plus to get here early." Arriving early at the field house is one thing but showing up at 6 a.m. is another. Ron Peny, facilities maintenance supervisor for the field house, said that policy dictated that students could not spend the night in the field house. Students must pack up their belongings at 10 p.m. and come back the next day at 6 a.m. to reclaim their spot in line. The students determine who is first in line by signing up on a sheet of paper. Every morning, the first group on the sheet conducts roll call. If a group representative isn't present, the group loses its place in line. To help pass the time, students play cards, listen to music, sleep, watch television or play Nintendo, talk aimlessly and, as a last resort, study. "You can actually get a lot of studying done because it is quiet most of the time," said Ane Taylor, Overland Park junior, whose group, Fu Bar, consists of 20 members. As for their own academics, the groups work out a system of rotating shifts, usually switching after a couple of hours. Among these people is none other than "Kramer," otherwise known as Jeremy Boldra, Hays sophomore. "I'll go home a few hours before the game starts and change into my Kramer costume," Boldra said. "I just like having fun with the fans and meeting different students." And one thing seems for sure, the men's basketball team, win or lose, will see a group of loyal fans patiently waiting for them, even at 6 a.m. in the morning. "I think we have the best coach and program in the country," said Pat Warren, third-year law student from Overland Park, Kan. "The whole tradition of Kansas basketball is so rich in basketball. I want to enjoy as much as I can while I'm here." KU Martin Altstaedten / KANSAN Mike Kneller, Pratt sophomore, Rudy Gustafson, Liberty, Mo., freshman, Spencer Cernich, Leawood freshman, and Justin Handlin, North Platte, Neb., sophomore pass time by playing video games inside Allen Field House. They have been camped at the field house since Monday to get seats for tonight's game. KC /alerie Bontrager / KANSAN Lisa Schoendaller, Walker freshman, left, plays solitaire while holding her spot in Allen Field House. "It's all worth it," Schoendaller said yesterday. "I hope to be right behind the basket." She and seven friends take turns camping out so they won't be crossed off the list when the spontaneous roll call comes. Pat Cliff, Detroit, Mich., freshman, works on a paper for American Studies inside the field house while holding a place in line to buy tickets to tonight's men's basketball game. Cliff is part of a group of fans from McCollium Hall's third floor who have been taking shifts since Sunday. A Heather Lofflin / KANSAN ednesdays Only As Easy as 1-2-3! PYRAMID PIZZA "We Pile It On!" Wednesdays Only! As Easy as 1-2-3! PYRAMID PIZZA "We Pile It On!" Buy a large, get a second of equal value for $3! Buy a medium, get a second of equal value for $2! Buy a small, get a second of equal value for $1! WE HONOR KANSAS Kansan Card offer good carry out only THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN You don't have to be a staff member on one of the top college newspapers to receive its rewards. Join us for a new program that is aimed at first-year students who are interested in reporting editing or photojournalism. Call or write Christine Laue; 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4810 • Organizational Meeting 4:30 p.m. January 27, 1994 Rm. 204 Stauffer-Flint Hall POSTER SALE Recycled Sounds from Lawrence & KC U2 · Coltrane · Lemonheads · Rush Bjork · Frank Zappa · Soundgarden Lenny Kravitz · Resevoir Dogs Specials · House of Pain · Hendrix Bob Dylan · Smashing Pumpkins PJ Harvey · Tosh · Metallica · Sting Cure Jane's Addiction · Ice T Rage Against the Machine · Clapton Blind Melon · Billie Holiday Beatles Madonna · Led Zeppelin Morrissey Red Hots · Bad Brains Blues Brothers · Depeche Mode Nirvana Pink Floyd · Taxi Driver Mon., Jan. 24 - Sat., Jan. 29 KANSAS UNION GALLERY, Level 4, Kansas Union 9 - 5 pm Mon.- Fri/ 10 - 4 pm Sat. TURN IN UNION ACTIVITIES SWA University of Kansas BURDON UNION ACTIVISITIES SUA THE BURDON UNION 804 672 5318 12 Wednesday, January 26, 1994 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THE MAY HARBOUR LIGHTS 1031 Massachusetts Downtown Metropolis BBS 832-0041 Lewis Garten's Mall Green Charmed HQ HARBOUR LIGHTS 1051 Massachusetts Downtown Metropolis BBS 832-0041 Lawrence, Mass. entertainment BBS The Etc. Shop TM Roy's Barn Sunglasses for DRIVING Pancho's MEXICAN RESTAURANT Homestyle Mexican Food 23rd & Louisiana 843-4044 Rings Fixed Fast! Kizer Cummings eween 749-4333 833 Mass. Lawrence, KS bik coYote 910 KENTUCKY 832-2484 DOUBLE RIDE Introducing Full Service Engraving Name Tags, Name Plates, Plaques and More! Jaybowl BOWL GROUP Not just for bowling 864-3545 Rape Victim Support Service RVSS A·S·A·P For more information or to speak to an advocate call Headquarters Counseling Center at 841-2345 Advocacy Support Awareness Prevention STUDENT SENATE The Etc. Shop Ray-Ban Sunglasses for DRIVING Pancho's MEXICAN RESTAURANT Homestyle Mexican Food 23rd & Louisiana 843-4044 Pancho's MEXICAN RESTAURANT Homestyle Mexican Food 23rd & Louisiana 843-4044 910 KENTUCKY 832-2484 ROUTE ONE bik coYote 910 KENTUCKY 832-2484 ACOUNT DINE bik coYote Rings Fixed Fast! Kizer Cummings jewelers 749-4333 833 Mass • Lawrence, KS Rings Fixed Fast! Klazer Cummings Jewelers 749-4333 833 Mass • Lawrence, KS Introducing Full Service Engraving Name Tags, Name Plates, Plaques and More! Jawbow BOWLING GROUP Not just for bowling 864-3545 Introducing Full Service Engraving Name Tags, Name Plates, Plaques and More! Jaybowl AUSTIN, TX Not just for bowling 864-3545 Rape Advocacy Victim Support RVSS A.S.A.P Rape Advocacy Victim Support Support Awareness Service For more information or to speak to an advocate call Headquarters Counseling Center at 841-2345 Prevention STUDENT SENATE But senior diver Tim Davidson is doing his part to make people remember. Some may forget that diving is part of Kansas swimming and diving. To get to the NCAA championships, a diver first must qualify for the zone meet. Thirty-five divers qualify for the championships based on their performances in the zone meet. Davidson is the only Kansas diver to qualify for the zone meet this year, and he is coming off two first-place finishes Saturday at Southern Illinois "I'm trying to focus on raising my scores," he said. "I want to be the best I can be when I get to conference." By Andrew Gilman Kansan sportswriter Diving leader focuses efforts on reaching championships But now Davidson would prefer to focus on improving. Kansas diving coach Don Fearon doesn't think that will be an issue. "He's a competitor." Fearon said. "He's coming around. He's becoming more focused." Davidson will have to remain SAA RUSTEDENT ALUMNI ASSOCIATION "I'm going to have to be stronger," Davidson said. "But that's well within my capabilities." focused even before the Big Eight Conference meet. This week he will face a two-time conference champion in Iowa State's Stephen Nadelman. "I'm happy with my seasonal bests, "he said. "I need about 10 more points, but as long as I don't take a step backward at this point, that's more important." Although Davidson beat Nadelman earlier this season at the Minnesota Invitational, Davidson is concerned about his own performance. There's little chance a step backward is in the future for Davidson, at least not one that his teammates perceive. Davidson was elected co-captain of this year's team. So far this year Davidson has posted a team best 312.90 in the 3-meter dual event. Davidson also has posted a team best 303.60 in the 1-meter dual event, but he said he realized that he needed to improve. Panel discussion with Dr. David Shulenburger JonJosserand, Senator Sandy Praeger and John Shoemaker "But really I try to lead by example. It's more of pushing people in the right direction. I'm a person who's looked to, but there's lots of guys on the team who are leaders. All of us want the same things, we're all looking the same direction." "It's really an honor," he said. Get the facts on the tuition increase! That direction is the conference championship. The Jayhawks' last conference title was in 1979. Since then, Nebraska has won 14 consecutive titles. ThursdayJanuary27 7pm, Adams Alumni Center "I don't ever expect to win," he said. "I approach it one day at a time. The only thing that I expect is to compete at a level that will allow me to win." "Conference is a huge matter," Davidson said. "I want all of us to be able to hit on all cylinders at once. If we can do that, we'll be a force to reckon with." Davidson has never won a conference championship, but he has never finished lower than third. "I've never been a champ," he said. "But I'm looking to raise my game that one extra step." Kansas senior diver Tim Davidson practices an inward dive in the pike position from the 3-meter board. He practiced Monday in Robinson Natatorium. What's Davidson's secret? James Wilcox / KANSAN CANADA DAILY KANSAN CLASSIFIED GET RESULTS Red Lyon Tavern 944 Mass. 832-8228 843-0900 • 843-0900 • 843-0900 • 843-0900 • 843-0900 Mountain Trekking? Studying Abroad? Spring Break? Sight Seeing? Nightlife? Check Us Out! Free Workday Trip Plan, Thursday? 7 pm TRAVEL CO. 3300 W, 19th St. Sie 3, Orchard Corners MONTEREY INSTITUTE OF INTERNATIONAL STUDIES 425 Van Buren Street, Monterey, California 93940 Telephone: (408) 647-4115 FAX: (408) 647-3534 River City Travel Co. is located on the KU bus route 1 ___ RIVER CITY The WorldNew Trip Plan, hourly 1 p.m. TRAVEL CO. 3300 W. 19th ST., Suite 8, Orchards Corners The Graduate School for International Careers Optical Perspectives Optical Dispensary and Lab formerly Fashion eyeland - New Owners - New Services - New Products Your Hometown Doctor's Prescriptions Welcome 600 Lawrence Ave. (913) 841-6100 MONTEREY INSTITUTE of INTERNATIONAL STUDIES SUMMER INTENSIVE LANGUAGE June 22 — August 17, 1994 Arabic, French, German, Hungarian, Italian, Korean, Spanish, and English LAWRENCE BATTERY June 15-August 17,1994 Chinese, Japanese,and Russian 842-2922 M-F7-6 SAT.8-4 VISA Wallet Card Don't Get Caught With Your Battery Down! Jumping up to B75 CCA 70 MONTH 1050 CA 675 CCA 59.92 70 MONTH 825 CA 770 CCA 49.92 60 MONTH 660 CA 550 CCA 42.92 60 MONTH 600 CA 500 CCA 36.92 50 MONTH 540 CA 450 CCA 32.92 40 MONTH 440 CA 400 CCA 29.92 CA – Cranking Amps at 12° FREE CCA – Cold Cranking Amps at 0° INSTALLATION Warranty details at store PERSONAL HEALTH CARE FOR WOMEN CONFIDENTIAL ABORTION SERVICES Complete GYN Care Pregnancy Testing Depo Provera & Norplant Tubal Ligation - Licensed Physicians/Caring Staff * Modern State-Licensed Facilit* * PROVIDING QUALITY HEALTH CARE TO WOMEN since 1974 insurance plan at a price VISA MasterCare COMPREHENSIVE 345-1400 health for women OUTSIDE KC AREA 4401 W. 109th (1-435 & Roe) 1-800-227-1918 Overland Park, KS TOLL FREE Half the Calories! 80% Less Fat! 33% More Protein! Plus, I Can't Believe It's Yogurt offers Nonfat and Sugar Free flavors that have No Fat or Cholesterol! 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Contact Wendy Marshall 749-5645 or Tina Cameli 865-4358 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, January 26, 1994 13 Virginia Tech women file lawsuit for varsity status The Associated Press ROANOKE, Va. — A federal class action lawsuit filed yesterday by 12 female athletes at Virginia Tech accuses the university of discriminating against women athletes by denying female sports clubs varsity status. "There are sacrifices a true athlete must make to succeed, but being victimized by sex discrimination should not be one of them," said Kathy Jones, one of five field hockey club members joining the lawsuit. The other plaintiffs are members of the women's softball, lacrosse and crew clubs. The lawsuit was filed in U.S. District Court in Roanoke by the National Women's Law Center on behalf of all women who want to participate in varsity athletics at Virginia Tech. Club members must pay their own way to travel to their games, are given access to equipment only after the varsity teams are finished and cannot receive athletic scholarships. The Blacksburg, Va., school has women's varsity basketball, soccer, track, volleyball, tennis, cross country and swimming teams. But the law suit said women made up 41 percent of Virginia Tech's enrollment and only 21 percent of varsity athletes. The lawsuit asks the court to order the university to elevate the women's clubs to intercollegiate teams. The lawsuit alleges that Virginia Tech's athletic program violates Title IX of the Federal Amendments of 1972, the federal law prohibiting sex discrimination in education, and the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment. In October, an internal review concluded that Virginia Tech spends a disproportionately small amount of resources on women's sports. At a board of visitors meeting Feb. 14, a study committee intends to present a plan to address the inequities during the next five years, Virginia Tech representative Larry Hincker said. "We believe we have been making good progress toward gender equity. We believe the plan will address their concerns," he said of the plantiffs. Virginia Tech in the past two years has upgraded salaries of women's sports coaches and increased spending on women's sports by $140,000. David Braine, athletic director, said the plan would add significantly to the operating budget, but school officials declined to reveal the estimate before the board considers the plan. Each student pays $156 a year in athletic fees, which make up 35 percent of the athletic department's revenue. "Considering the state's desire to limit increases in tuition and fees, we may be limited in how much we can raise the athletic fee," Virginia Tech vice president Minnis Ridenhour said in a statement. But Amy Sabrin, a Washington lawyer representing the club members, said the suit had been filed only after Virginia Tech refused to grant the women's teams varsity status in a timely manner. The National Women's Law Center said U.S. appeals courts in Denver and Boston had ruled in favor of female athletes in similar cases, and the U.S. Supreme Court last fall refused to hear an appeal by Colorado State after it was found to have violated Title IX. Virginia Tech has non-varsity men's clubs in hockey and rugby, but they are not mentioned in the lawsuit or by the university's study committee. Brother's illness inspires Olympic skater The Associated Press American speedskater Kristen Talbot, who donated bone marrow to her brother in a potentially lifesaving procedure, has a new rallying cry as she prepares for next month's Winter Olympics: "Go, white count!" Talbot not wishing for the ice to be extra hard at the speedskating oval in Hamar, Norway, or for the snow to be especially deep at the scenic venues dotting the picturesque Norwegian countryside. She just wants her brother's white blood cells to continue multiplying like they have in the two weeks since the operation at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore. Doctors said his chances of survival without a transplant were 15 percent at best. Those odds climb as high as 80 percent with a successful transfusion. Jason Talbot, 19, was diagnosed in December with aplastic anemia, a disease that attacks the marrow and slows or halts the production of red and white blood cells. Jason's progress since the Jan. 11 operation has been encouraging, even if he isn't a model patient. "The only problem they have with him," said Neoga Noga, Jason's oncologist, "is he stays up too late watching movies and he's asleep in the morning when they come in for rounds." Jason also may be eating a little too much pizza and too many french fries for hospital dieticians, but his appetite and his stomach's ability to deal with the greasy foods are good signs. In a telephone hookup with his sister and more than a dozen reporters, Jason said he was getting tired of being cooped up in the hospital. "I'm going insane, slowly," he joked. "I just want to get out of here." Jason said his white blood cell count peaked Monday night at 500, half the level needed for him to leave the hospital. It had been as low as 41 after chemotherapy treatments designed to kill his white blood cells so they would not clash with the transplanted cells. At a critical stage in his recovery, there are no signs that his body will reject Kristen's marrow. He could be out of the hospital before the Games begin Feb. 12, although he will remain in Baltimore as an outpatient. "If I hadn't received treatment within three months, I probably would have died," said Jason, a promising short track speedskater. "But since my transplant went as it should have, and since it seems to have took ... my prognosis is about 365 days after the transplant I should be completely cured and won't ever have to worry about this again," he said. Kristen, 23, of Schuylerville, N.Y. was among three siblings found to be a match for the transplant. She was considered the best candidate — even though Jason disagreed at first. Jason tried to keep his sister from finding out about the illness. He worried the transplant would ruin the hard work she had put in to prepare for her third Olympiad. That never was a concern she shared. "The only thing that was important was getting Jason healthy," she said. "That's all that mattered to me." Kristen, the last of four qualifiers at 500 meters on the U.S. women's team, will not be a medal contender in Norway. The most she is hoping for is a personal record or a top-15 finish. "It's definitely not a backback at all," she said. "I'm right back where I should be. It's just made me want to get out and myself even more." She said Jason's ordeal — and his recovery — had been inspirational. SUA Spring Break 94 SUA Spring Break 94 Destination: Panama City Beach FLORIDA Friday, March 18 Saturday, March 26 ONLY $190 ONLY $190 Trip includes: Beach Front Condos Two Bar-B-Ques Volleyball Tournaments KUB-BallPostseasonParty All Kinds Of Fun! So Hurry! BASKETBALL Sign Up Now! 864- 3477 PanamaCity The only placeto be for Spring Break 94! Brought to you by: STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUAK THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS N STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA THE UNIVERSITY OF KARABAS Rentco USA 749-1605 Student Discount Now Carrying Computers 1741 Massachusetts TRAVEL CENTER Break For The Beach Break For The Beach Daytona Beach $119 Panama City $138 Padre $148 Include 7 Night's lodging Break For The Beach Daytona Beach $119 Panama City $138 Padre $148 Includes 7 night's lodging Steamboat Includes round trip transportation from Lawrence by motorcoach. 2 night's hotel accommodations March 18-22 3-day lift tickets $298 per person 3-day ski rentals Cancun Includes roundtrips airfare from KC. 7 night's beachfront hotel airport/hotel transfers March20-27 $640 per person Other packages available let one of our agents help design a package custom tailored for you. Restrictions apply to all rates based on maximum unit occupancy per person. Subject to availability & change. callfordetails 841-7117 TRAVEL CENTER Southern Hills Center 1601 West 23rd mo. 5-20 apart 9-30-3 Steamboat Includes round trip transportation from Lawrence by motorcoach. 2 night's hotel accommodations March 18-22 3-day lift tickets $298 3-day ski rentals per person Steamboat Includes round trip transportation from Lawrence by motorcoach. Cancun Includes roundtrip airfare from KC. 7 night's beachfront hotel airport/hotel transfers March20-27 $640 per person Cancun Includes roundtrip airfare from KC. 7 night's beachfront hotel airport/hotel transfers March20-27 $640 per person Other packages available let one of our agents help design a package custom tailored for you. Restrictions apply to all rates based on maximum unit occupancy per person. Subject to availability & change. call for details 841-7117 TRAVEL CENTER Southern Hills Center call for details 841-7117 TRAVEL DENTER PACK SOON! Nature's nutrition™ FORMULA ONE A 100% natural institutional supplement *LOOK BETTER *FEEL BETTER *HAVE MORE ENERGY FORMULA ONE brings the body a boost maximum performance a truly remarkable health benefit FOR MORE INFORMATION AND A FREE 3 DAY SUPPLY PACK CALL: Alliance USA National Drug Council S&S Distribution 749-3337 Includes the breakthrough mineral nutrient CHROMium PROLNATE! FORMULA ONE A 100 natural nutritional supplement •LOOK BETTER •FEEL BETTER •HAVE MORE ENERGY FORMULA ONE helps the body achieve maximum performance. A truly comprehensive DRINK ONLY Kennedy Glass For All Your Glass Needs All automotive glass replacement & insurance claims handled. 730 New Jersey 843-4416 Kennedy 913-842-1390 GRANADA 1020 Massachusetts Downtown Lawrence 913-842-1390 Wed, Jan 26 Eighties Night 50¢ draws Thurs. Jan 27 MC, DJ, Movie Screen Fri. Jan 28 70's & 80's & Alternative $ 1.50 Vodka wells Sat. Jan 29 SCARTAGLEN KU vs Colorado @ 1pm Sun. Jan 30 SUPER BOWL - 5pm Mon, Jan 31 KU~MU 8:30 pm Voluntary Service with an exploration of cross-cultural experience and ecological themes. In community with other students (KU plus other universities), visit Santa Fe and the pueblos and artisans of the region. Plus hiking, campfire sitting and reflecting on theme. SPRING BREAK ALTERNATIVE IN NEW MEXICO "Are We Different, Are We Alike?" Wed. Feb 2 Eighties Night 50¢ draws Tues Feb 1 MONDO DECO DJ RAY WACKY Thurs. Feb 3 MC,DJ, Movie Screen Sponsor: Ecumenical Christian Ministries (Presbyterian, United Church of Christ, Church of the Brethren) For information, contact Rev. Thad Holcombe 843-4933 COST: $175 (room, board) plus shared expenses of a van and incidentals. HOUSING AND LOCATION: 65 miles northwest of Santa Fe, altitude of 6,300 feet, conference center (site of artist Georgia O'Keefe's home) INFORMATION MEETING: Sunday, January 30, 1:30 pm ECM Center (block north of Kansas Union). Fri. Feb 4 70' s & 80' s & Alternative $ 1.50 Vodka wells Sat. Feb 5- CARABIE 32 dg Bud & Bud Light 2.50 Boulevard & Sam Adams 3.50 Sun. Feb 6 Bob Marley Celebration 1/2 OFF CLEARANCE 1/2 OFF LIZ CLAIBORNE COLLECTION JACKETS,PANTS,SKIRTS, BLOUSES, AND SWEATERS ALL 1/2 OFF 1/2 OFF LIZ PETITES JACKETS, PANTS, SKIRTS, BLOUSES, AND SWEATERS ALL 1/2 OFF 1/20FF JONES NEW YORK COORDINATES COORDINATES JACKETS, SWEATERS, TOPS SKIRT'S PANTS, AND BLOUSES ALL 1/2 OFF 1/2 OFF 1/2OFF SEVILLE LIZ CLAIBORNE DRESSES ALL 1/2 OFF SEVILLE JACKETS, SWEATERS, TOPS, SKIRTS, PANTS, & BLOUSES ALL 1/2 OFF 1/2 OFF Soffees ALFRED DUNNER COORDINATES JACKETS, SWEATERS, TOPS, SKIRTS, PANTS, & BLOUSES ALL 1/2 OFF 922MASS 1/2 OFF DOWNTOWN 843-6375 JH COLLECTIBLES COORDINATES JACKETS, SKIRTS, TOPS SLACKS, SWEATERS ALL 1/2 OFF --- 1/2 OFF PLATINUM JACKETS, SKIRTS, TOPS, SLACKS, BLOUSES ALL 1/2 OFF 1/2 OFF KORET COORDINATES JACKETS, SKIRTS, TOPS, SLACKS, SWEATER ALL 1/2 OFF HOURS: MON-SAT 10-5:30 SUN. 12-5 THURS. 'til 8:30 14 Wednesday, January 26, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Camera America ONE HOUR PHOTO Lawrence's Largest Supplier of Darkroom Materials 1610 West 23rd Street 841-7205 Fine Line Tattoo Inc. - Fraternity & Sorority Letters - Baby Jayhawk Tattoo - Bring your own design or choose from our extensive selection - Reasonably priced - Hospital sterilized Mon - Sat 29* Mass. St 12 - 8pm Topeka Tues. till 6pm 233-8288 Futons & Frames On Sale! BLUE HERON where comfort and quality is assured. 937 Mass. 841-9443 Could my scholarships and grants be taxable? AIM HIGH $2000.00 SCHOLARSHIP AIR FORCE ROTC If you have a GPA of 2.5 or higher and are a full time student, you can qualify for an Air Force ROTC scholarship. In addition, you will receive $100.00 each academic month for your last two years of college. This scholarship is available to ANY ACADEMIC MAJOR. The deadline to apply for the fall 1994 semester is rapidly approaching. For more information on this exciting opportunity talk to Captain Brad Gentry or Captain Bob Wicks at 864-04676. --was read by Cochran, maintained Jackson's innocence. "The resolution of this case is in no way an admission of guilt by Michael Jackson," it said. Yes,check with us. SUPER SUB! ENJOY THE SUPERBOWL EVEN MORE WITH THIS SUPER DEAL . . . $5.00 Off 6 Foot Party Sub with this coupon Sub & Stuff Sandwich Shop 1618 W. 23rd 841-6104 THE NEWS in brief Disillusioned troops prepare to withdraw, leave mission to U.N. At the airport, many U.S. soldiers appear discouraged by a mission that went from a successful humanitarian operation that ended a famine to battles in the streets of southern Mogadishu when they were put in the role of police trying to arrest the faction leader who controls that sector, Mohamed Farrah Aidid. MOGADISHU, Somalia Two months before the U.S. military is scheduled to finish removing its 5,300 soldiers from the capital, the sand dunes and beaches at the airport are crowded with tents. The American soldiers, the backbone of the operation, must finish withdrawing by March 31, along with their helicopters, howitzers, armored personnel carriers and antitank missiles. Many people think that will leave U.N. forces far more susceptible to attacks by Somalis. Most U.S. bases and strongpoints around the city have been turned over to soldiers from other countries who are staying in Somalia as U.N. peacekeepers. Many think that when their friends and families think of Somalia, they do not recall images of Marines carrying food to starving children. Instead, they picture a Somali mob dragging the body of an American soldier through the streets in October. "I think a lot of people are going to think nothing was accomplished here because this country is still in a state of disarray," said Cpl. Dennis D. Hill, 23, of Baltimore, sitting near the helicopters that he and his buddies use to keep a lid on Mogadishu by flying over it day and night. "Stopping the famine was a great success, but Americans are waiting to see a government formed in this place in the middle of nowhere," he said. SANTA MONICA, Calif. Jackson settles lawsuit with boy Legal Services for Students 148 Burge • 864-5665 STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA SENATE The settlement probably would end the criminal investigation, experts said. Without admitting guilt, Michael Jackson settled a lawsuit that said he molested a young boy. Terms of the settlement left the boy "very happy," the youngster's attorney said yesterday. A joint statement from Weitzman and Cochran, which was read by Cochran, maintained Jackson's innocence. Feldman and Jackson's attorneys, Johnnie Cochran and Howard Weitzman, said terms of the settlement were confidential. Various reports put the settlement at at least $10 million. "I am very happy with the resolution of this matter," said Larry Feldman, attorney for the boy, who is now 14. The boy, Feldman told reporters, was also "very happy with the resolution of this matter." the lawsuit, which was filed in September, alleged that Jackson committed sexual battery, seduction, wilful mis conduct, intentional infliction of emotional distress, fraud and negligence in a campaign to entice the boy last year. CLOSET CLEOPATRA'S 743 Mass. St. (913) 749-4664 Hours: Sun 12 5 Mon- Wed 10-6 Thurs- Sat 10-8 DROP IT! Compiled from The Associated Press. CLOSET a unique boutique Classified Directory 100s Announcements 105 Personal 110 Business Personal 120 Announcements 130 Entertainment 140 Lost and Found 300s Merchandise 200s Employment **Help Wanted** **Professional Services** **Typing Services** 305 For Sale 340 Auto Sales 360 Miscellaneous 370 Want to Buy Your payments for can be made at the drop box in the Kansas Union, Information Counter, Level 4 KPL ELECTRIC Real Estate 405 Real Estate 430 Roommate Wanted Save time, save a stamp Drop it at the Kansas Union Classified Policy The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on nationality, gender or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or January29 10 AM to 6 PM Kansas Union Jaybowl Level One Open to KU STUDENTS ONLY Winners advance to Regional ACU-I tournament at K-State on February 25-26 Entrant Fees $3.00-Billiards $5.00-Bowling ku bowling & billiards tournament an real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal for discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or dis- Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are open. ACHRISTIANPERSPECTIVE IF GOD IS A GOD OF LOVE, THEN WHY does he allow bad things to happen? This is one of the most asked questions of persons who have heard that the Bible speaks of God as being loving. I asked it myself when I was searching for who God is. Fortunately for me, my girlfriend in college, who was a Christian, knew the answer. In life there are two types of possible harmful events. The first is one caused by other people. The hurts in this category range from gossip to murder and war with all manner of evil in between. The second group encompasses everything else—from mosquito bites to illness to car wrecks to earthquakes. Many people, probably most of us at some time in our lives, blame God for nearly anything that doesn't seem fair. The truth is, biblically speaking, men and women are to blame for it all. To find out more or join us in joyful praise to Jesus, come to Alcove F in the KS Union Cafeteria on Tuesday at 7:30 PM or call Hugh Wentz at 841-2647. This good news is provided by "Windblown," the student organization of The Mustard Seed Christian Fellowship. Since God is a God of love and mercy, He sent His Son, who we know as Jesus, to pay for our rebellion with His life. So, those humans who believe what God has done and give Him thanks by serving Jesus here on earth will experience the presence and help of God Himself. They will also have eternal life in heaven, a place in which there is no rebellion or pain or suffering. This is good news and is called the gospel of Jesus Christ. You see, the first group of events are caused by people and certainly are not God's fault. Of course God could prevent them if He took away our free will and made us puppets or robots. But who wants that. Not me and probably not you either. The second set of hurts which God apparently allows result from the fact that we live in an imperfect world. Although originally God made the earth perfect with no intention of it having pain, mankind rebelled and decided to do his and her own thing with no real regard for the loving creator. So God has let us go our own way while intervening at times in order to keep humanity from complete lv destroying what was originally created. 105 Personals J (50 organizations) 25 ML, looking for 25F who like to Mi bike ride. Must be good look, athletic, fun loving, spontaneous, like Kravitz, Hendrix and Icahn Nails, plus intellectual health conscious, and totally cool. Oh, yeh, and kinda likes Beavis and Butthead. Yesh, that would be cool. All applicants will be considered. Happy birthday. KS. 6005 Happy "ip Fan Day" Jake. Hope it is COOL! From your #1 fan "Pell. (P.S. Teller Hills. Hillese hello.) 110 Bus. Personals For More Information Call 845-4933 (Sponsored by the Ecumenical Christian Ministries: Presbyterian (USA), Church of the Brethren, United Church of Christ) Hoops, Pendants & More! For G guys & Gals The Etc. Shop 928 Mast, Downtown (USA, International, Lawrence) Unique Sterling Silver Jewelry Volunteer and Intern Placement Fair Thurs. Jan. 27-Fri.Jan.28,10 am-5 pm ECM Center, One block north of the Kansas Union Looking for significant Health Break cash? Startup preventative health company out of KC looking for highly motivated individuals to mark our way. Please call 1-800-782-3900 for more information. For More Information Call 843-493 S SOUTH PADRE from #159 Other destinationsavailable Lowest price guaranteed Information on volunteer placement in Lawrence through The Praxis Project AND SpringBreak1994 Call 865-1352 Information on volunteer placements, internships (215 organizations, many having multiple positions), and over 290 paying positions in environmental concerns, housing, health care, general science, nutrition, energy, communications, women, minorities peace with justice issues, community organizing, day care, and a myriad of other options for short or long term. CANCUNfrom#439 Regular Clinic Hours Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm Saturday 8am-11:30am Pharmacy Hours Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm Saturday 8am-12:30pm Sunday 1.1am-3pm WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500 Urgent Care (Additional Charge) Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm Sunday 8:40pm-4:30pm KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services 120 Announcements Wanted St. Patrick's Day Parade Queen. If interested leave name & number with Lawrence St. Patrick's Day Parade Service 768-68717*2234. Appps available at Marks Bridal, Gauto's, Harper, Headmasters, Jouin, Outfiters, Harpers, Headmasters, Cadillac, Banch, or Cleopatra's Closet Dead Feb, 4th NOTETAKING Workshop. Learn how to more effectively and take more useful notes using the Corwell method. FREE! Thurs, Jan 27, 9:40 p.m. Presented. Presented by the Student Assessment SOUTH PADRE ISLAND NORTH PADRE/MUSTANG ISLAND F-L-O-R-I-D-A DAYTONA BEACH PANAMA CITY BEACH ORLANDO/WALT DISNEY WORLD. C-O-L-O-R-A-D-O STEAMBOAT VAIL/BEAVER CREEK BRECKENRIDGE/KEYSTONE A win in trip to Canucu Look for details and entry blanks in the coupon section of your new Uniwersal Telephone Secretory. Deadline for entry is February 1944. Your records are available now at the KU Bookstore. 13th YEAR! SPRING BREAK'94 Hits! N·E·V·A·D·A LAS VEGAS -S·O·U·T·H C·A·R·O·L·I·N·A MILTON HEAD ISLAND RESERVATIONS AVAILABLE NOW CALL TOLL FREE FOR FULL DETAILS AND COLOR BROCHURE! Call Joan at 865-5611 SCHOLARSHIP CASHE-PLUS SCHOLARSHIP SEARCH CALL OR DROP BY FOR DETAILS UNIVERSITY SCHOLARSHIP CENTER 33 STRONG HALL 864-5439 Student Travel Experts *Student Airfares *Student Airrares *International Railpasses *International Identity Cards *Worldwide Adventure Tours *Travel Gear and Guidebooks *Expert Travel Advice Council Travel 1634Qrington Ave Evanston, IL 60291 1-800-475-5070 1 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, January 26, 1994 15 NOTETAKING WORKSHOP Listen more effectively and take more useful notes using the Cornell method FREE! Thursday, January 27, 7-9 pm 4034 Wescoe Sponsored by the Student Assistance Center 130 Entertainment Cruise for two to the Bahamas, $350. Contact Bob at (913) 865-1566. 0 BENCHWARMERS Wed. Drink Specials $.50 Boulevard draws Samuel Adams draws and $1.50 Domestic Bottles 140 Lost & Found Cash reward for return of Apple Newton Message back leather case. Lost at Food P4 Less call. Bk-3700 Brown leather jacket left in 2002 Dole on Jan 13. If you contact mark contact K 749-9555. Found: *Three keys found out in host of Hayworth with distinishing key chain*. Call 864-3446 LUX Gold ring with Black eyes setting in 3rd floor bathroom in the Kansas University. If found please contact us. 200s Employment 205 Help Wanted 1994 EXPANSION Part-time temporary and permanent openings. Flexible schedule around class. $9-140 to start. Positions need to be filled by 2/1/94. Please call $8811 for more info. 600 CAMPS IN THE USA. RUSSIA AND BURGOS YEED VOLTS SUMMER or the best summer of your life-see you career center or contact: Camp Counselors USA 421 Florence Palo Alto, CA 94301 www.campcounselorsusa.com ACADEMIC AIDE POSITION AVAILABLE Law Repo(Recened). Duties include: Reading textbooks and other materials for students who are blind or have read disabilities. Reading exams and assisting with library research. $85.00/acr. Assessment of students' available at the Student Assistance Center, 133 Strong Hall, 864-404. Application deadline: January 28, 1994, 5:00 PM. Adams Alumni Center needs banque prep cook and salad person. Flexible shifts, position available immediately, apply in person no phone calls. 1266 Oread Ave. AEROBICS INSTRUCTORS NEEDED. Students are needed now to teach various aerobics classes. Prior experience necessary. $10/hour. Fill out application with Recruitment Services. 26 Roan-in Counselors/Support Staff/Children's Camps/Northeast top salary, RMJ/BLD/Malmuda, travel activities: archery, arts & crafts, baseball, basketball, dance (jazz, bat, ballet), drama, drums, gymnastics, gymnastic, ice skating, backyard hockey, backseat riding-hunt seat, kratze, lacrosse, mature, photography, piano, pioneering, rocketry, rollerblading, ropes, sailing, scuba, sports, video recording, track video, water ski, WSI, wind surfing, Kitchen steward, cooks, bus drivers, maintenance, nurses, secretaries. Men call office 404E, Boca Raton, FL. FL3431 (407) 954-5000 Women call or write: Camp BocaVR for Girls, P.O. Box 1717, Boca Raton, FL 34310. campus in the student union from 1am-4pm on #6/12 in the Oregan and Regional Rooms. Camp Daisy Hindman Resident GIFI Scout Camp has positions available: business mgr, camp director, canoe driver; cooks, craft & nature managers; scuba divers and wranglers. For an application come to the Summer Job Fair on Feb. 2. Or write to Kaw Valley High School, 1568 N. Hinder Hike, P. O. Box 431, Tulsa, KS 65044. KSA 66044. Do you like preschool children to 10 years old? Do you want to make a difference in a child's life? Do you have a free time? Volunteer at Head Start or day a week. For information call 425-215, EOE. Pizza Hut needs delivery drivers part-time, weekends and weekdays. Must have own vehicle and insurance. Good driving record. Contact Downtown Pizza Hut 944 Massachusetts St. Work around classes, prefer experience with children, Sunshine Acres School 842-2232 Lawrence-based, growing, international, technical publishing company has a part-time (15 hours per week) position available in marketing and mailing statements; computing computerDisks for inventory; taking the mail to the office daily; and providing backup support to the fulfillment leader as needed. Prep materials and monitor progress working as a team required. Ability to maneuver up to 50 pounds and 50 wpm preferred. This position is part of our internal clerical support team (ASCISI) and help other areas of the company as R & D Publications, Inc. is an equal opportunity employer company. Please contact a pleasant work person you are looking for in your work environment with a reliable company. please come and fill out an application at 1610 West 23rd Street, New York, NY 10017. **STUDENT ASSISTANT IN ENGINEERING/ MAINtenance:** Deadline: 02/14/94. Salary: $43.55 hr. Duties include pickup and delivery of equipment, check inventory levels; data entry; assist technicians in light mechanical and electronic repair; and other duties as assigned. Required college degree or equivalent. The University of Kansas, demonstrated ability to work with customers, good oral and written communication skills, available to work 16 to 20 hrs. in week, in a 3 to 4 hr. blocks, valid driver license. To apply, complete a job application which is available at the Computer Center, IO/OA EMPLOYER Evening and weekend CNA's need to work with clients in their homes. Reliable transportation necessary. Call Sharon at Douglas County Visiting Nurses 843-3738. Greenspace is now hiring intelligent energetic people or in-person staff to fill a variety of position are available and include guaranteed wage and benefits. Call 815-6381-0084 today for more information. Every day Greenspace is seeking. Looking for a few serious people interested in earning extra cash and Sell a Lawrence car Now taking prisoners, Sullivan Higdon & Sink in four of the world's five best-selling five- hard labor. Do turn a Sink into a hard- drive. Do turn a Sink into a hard- drive the hardened edge it takes to survive in the cut- outheart word of advertising. Contact your advice from our experts. sailman Higdon & Sink. (263-8124/ Find out you can land in the big house.) EARN CASH ON THE SPOT $15 Today $30 This week By donating your life saving blood plasma WALK-INS WELCOME! NABI Biomedical Center 816 W 24th 749-5750 STUDENT CLERICAL ASSISTANT Deadline: 10/28/94, $79.45/3-hour. Duties include assisting in invoicing; mailing & filing of Computer Center records; preparing and maintaining ledgers; assisting in Repair Shop orders; making daily deposits; recording microcomputer work history; managing office equipment on a fill-in basis; and miscellaneous Business office duties. To apply, complete a job application available in Room 202 at the Computer Center. **STUDENT DISTRIBUTION TECHNICIAN** Deadline: 01/31/91. Salary: $4.35 per hr. Durates include performing bursting and dissolving functions, stocking and maintaining inventory file systems using the delivery van; paper shredding functions; on occasion will assist in receiving shipments; stocking and maintaining inventory file systems; on occasion will operate forklift and assist in maintenance; assists in Open Landscape Furniture maintenance; provides waste recycling program; uses personal computer or mainframe software as part of record keeping function. To apply, complete computer Center in room 202. OE/AEEMPLOYER Telemarketing, Monday-Tuesday, 6-9 pm. 841-1290. Salary and commission Wanted: Sculpture models, I male and I female. Wanted: Sculpture models, low body fat. 843-548-81, even events. 225 Professional Services Christian Daycare offers the best care at low rates. Transportation is free. Hospitalization. Transportation. West location. 605-423-8791. www.carefirst.com. Driver education offered through Midwest Driving School, servicing KU students for 20 yrs. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749. BRAXTON B. COPLEY Attorney at Law General Practice Traffic Tickets, Misdemeanors, Landlord/Tenant **English tutor:** All English classes, proofreading, proofing. **English tutor:** All English, BS Education, Mfi 81-3113费城大学。 For a confidential, caring friend, call us. We're here to listen and talk with you. Birthright 81-4021. Free pregnancy testing TRAFFIC-DUI'S Fake ID'$ and $ alcohol offenses divorce, criminal $ civil matters The law offices of DONALD G. STROLE Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey 16 East 13th 842-1133 INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS DV.1.Agency Green cards provide the U.S. Immigration Dept. green cards provide permanent resident status, Citizens of almost all countries are allowed to take part. Students, tourists, anyone may apply. For info & forms: New Era Academy, 2021 Stag 5, Canoga Park, CA 91368 Tel: (818) 998-4425; Fax: (818) 882-9681 OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense For free consultation call Rick Frydman, Attorney 813-40729 www.oui.com VIDEO EDITING AND PRODUCTION SERVICES A/B roll video tape editing suite with EDL and audio adapter. Hit field production package. Award winning screen writer. PRIMAL SCREEN COMMUNICATIONS 235 Typing Services 1-der Women Word Processing. Former editor transform scribbles into accurate pages of letter documents. Office located right next to campus Elizabeth Leach Attorney at Law-Former Prosecutor 414 W 14th 749-0087 DUI/MIP/Fake ID's MASS STREET MUSIC word processing, applications, term paper rush, dissertation writing, research download, award-winning, Master's Degree, 843-6524 www.worldcoding.com X DESKTOP DOCUMENTS For all of your word processing needs. 844.3729 **Looking for a good type** • Papers, Applications, Spreadsheets, Charts • Lesson plans • Your own proofs • Grammar and spelling free • 18 years experience call Jack at Makin' the Grade www.makin.com 305 For Sale Words by Chris Wendt Processing. High quality handwritten spell check spell check 865-3099 300s Merchandise 1347 Mass. St. 843-3535 92 Specialized Rock Hopper. Many x-tra. Must sell 92 Call: Tommy 832-6138. Almost new twin mattress and box springs. $60. b.o.b. Cell 841-9495. Beds, desks, bookcases, chest of drawers. Everything But Ice. 938 Mass. CD Players For Sale: Shwarod 3 disc changer, 4 disc changer, 5 disc changer, 6 disc changer, 8 disc charger $490.00 only #ipl44143 Open: 10-6 Mon.-Sat. 10-8 Thurs. ShowusyourKUID andget *EXTRA DISCOUNTS *PURCHASE BONUSES thruJanuary The Midwest's finest selection of electric and acoustic guitars, keyboards, amps, sound gear, recording equipment and accessories. Columbian Box $200, Albino Corn Snake $100 obo phone 843-302-792 Diamond Back Mountain Bike. 17in frame. $250 or best offer call Tricia at 823-1248. GUITARISTS - smooth Westone, 1/3 body size. Pleoy Rockers $29; Callen $65; Freless Rockers $29; Callen $65; leave message. FOR SALE! T148 calculator and manual $50; colon colon trumpet, $150; Large colon colon trumpet. GR Bass Amp. 300 Mp Bass w/ chorus, comp- 餐 Ampl. 15 in. EV 1K, asking $499, $699, $899, $1299, $1699, $2199, $2699, $3199, $3699, $4199, $4699, $5199, $5699, $6199, $6699, $7199, $7699, $8199, $8699, $9199, $9699, $10199, $10699, $11199, $11699, $12199, $12699, $13199, $13699, $14199, $14699, $15199, $15699, $16199, $16699, $17199, $17699, $18199, $18699, $19199, $19699, $20199, $20699, $21199, $21699, $22199, $22699, $23199, $23699, $24199, $24699, $25199, $25699, $26199, $26699, $27199, $27699, $28199, $28699, $29199, $29699, $30199, $30699, $31199, $31699, $32199, $32699, $33199, $33699, $34199, $34699, $35199, $35699, $36199, $36699, $37199, $37699, $38199, $38699, $39199, $39699, $40199, $40699, $41199, $41699, $42199, $42699, $43199, $43699, $44199, $44699, $45199, $45699, $46199, $46699, $47199, $47699, $48199, $48699, $49199, $49699, $50199, $50699, $51199, $51699, $52199, $52699, $53199, $53699, $54199, $54699, $55199, $55699, $56199, $56699, $57199, $57699, $58199, $58699, $59199, $59699, $60199, $60699, $61199, $61699, $62199, $62699, $63199, $63699, $64199, $64699, $65199, $65699, $66199, $66699, $67199, $67699, $68199, $68699, $69199, $69699, $70199, $70699, $71199, $71699, $72199, $72699, $73199, $73699, $74199, $74699, $75199, $75699, $76199, $76699, $77199, $77699, $78199, $78699, $79199, $79699, $80199, $80699, $81199, $81699, $82199, $82699, $83199, $83699, $84199, $84699, $85199, $85699, $86199, $86699, $87199, $87699, $88199, $88699, $89199, $89699, $90199, $90699, $91199, $91699, $92199, $92699, $93199, $93699, $94199, $94699, $95199, $95699, $96199, $96699, $97199, $97699, $98199, $98699, $99199, $99699, $100199, $100699, $101199, $101699, $102199, $102699, $103199, $103699, $104199, $104699, $105199, $105699, $106199, $106699, $107199, $107699, $108199, $108699, $109199, $109699, $110199, $110699, $111199, $111699, $112199, $112699, $113199, $113699, $114199, $114699, $115199, $115699, $116199, $116699, $117199, $117699, $118199, $118699, $119199, $119699, $120199, $120699, $121199, $121699, $122199, $122699, $123199, $123699, $124199, $124699, $125199, $125699, $126199, $126699, $127199, $127699, $128199, $128699, $129199, $129699, $130199, $130699, $131199, $131699, $132199, $132699, $133199, $133699, $134199, $134699, $135199, $135699, $136199, $136699, $137199, $137699, $138199, $138699, $139199, $139699, $140199, $140699, $141199, $141699, $142199, $142699, $143199, $143699, $144199, $144699, $145199, $145699, $146199, $146699, $147199, $147699, $148199, $148699, $149199, $149699, $150199, $150699, $151199, $151699, $152199, $152699, $153199, $153699, $154199, $154699, $155199, $155699, $156199, $156699, $157199, $157699, $158199, $158699, $159199, $159699, $160199, $160699, $161199, $161699, $162199, $162699, $163199, $163699, $164199, $164699, $165199, $165699, $166199, $166699, $167199, $167699, $168199, $168699, $169199, $169699, $170199, $170699, $171199, $171699, $172199, $172699, $173199, $173699, $174199, $174699, $175199, $175699, $176199, $176699, $177199, $177699, $178199, $178699, $179199, $179699, $180199, $180699, $181199, $181699, $182199, $182699, $183199, $183699, $184199, $184699, $185199, $185699, $186199, $186699, $187199, $187699, $188199, $188699, $189199, $189699, $190199, $190699, $191199, $191699, $192199, $192699, $193199, $193699, $194199, $194699, $195199, $195699, $196199, $196699, $197199, $197699, $198199, $198699, $199199, $199699, $199199, $199699, $199799, $1997 Yamaha Acoustic Guitar. Vp electric bass guitar. I give you a great deal. Call Mat 841-949-2644. 83 Chevy Caprice Classic, power locks & brakes 7309 OPD Call Brian Rellman Queen size classic tuton bed, solid maple w/ natural oil tint, 800-1-898-714k ask for Sherri 340 Auto Sales 85 Pontia Florea, New red paint. Runners perfectly. A; S.Terro, 5 speed. Gokur 12qm. Call 749-3600. Honda Accord 90° LX Coupe ssp. Full Pwr $8300 & Honda Prelude 18° SiR Stpw II & wind hall damage $5 good. Good Conn. OBOs 085-0139 400s Real Estate 405 For Rent 2½ bedroom townhouse, $15/room. Fireplace, vaulted ceilings, available immediately. #82-105. 2 DBRM townhouse w/ AC and basic cable paid. washer/dryer and appliances. $460/mo. Pets safe. 3 furnished rooms in nice spacious house close to the beach. Warehouse/Driver: A/C $285 Phone: 411-829-2858 Phone: 411-829-2858 Available at West Hills Apts. Spacious bed unfurnished apt. $295 per month. Water pad. Great location near campus. 1012 Emery Rd. No pets. 841-3800. 532-3884. 3 bedroom apartments now available. On bus route, d/w and microwave.5mote Call 789-1549. 4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished, very nice! Interested? Call 841-2535, 748-4495 or call 612-3056. 5 bedroom room now available to campus $700/month, 6 month lease. Call 841-8468. Newer 1, 2 and 3 bedroom apartments available for August '94. *Washer/dryer, dishwasher, microwave, private patio/balconies*. Avoid the preserve your place now!! *Call 819-1568 for details.* First month free. 1 bedroom apartment: $329/month water. Boardwalk Apartment: $489/month water. Available Now. Newly renovated studio apt. 1360 seating space, window AC, window ac- barn berm. $259/mo or no付金. JEFFERSON PEACE Great location 180 Miss 3 bedroom apartment hardwood floors, CA. No pets: 480 Call 841-844-944 Stocked fishing lake, courtyards w/fountain, sand volleyball, pool, jacuzzi & exercise facility Leasing for June and August. New 4 bedroom, includes洗衣, dryer, dishwasher, croissant, microwave, refrigerator, covered parking avail. Early sign-up special offered. For more information call Day at 841-372-5900. EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY The Best Place to Live at KU is in K.C.! 764-1471 119th&I-35 Looking for two roommates for a three bedroom Rent free until the end of the month, water paid. VILLAGE SQUARE apartment meadowbrook A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere woodland woods - Close to campus • Spacious 2 bedroom • Laundry facility • Swimming Pool • Waterbed allowed Water and Cable p... M-F 8-5;30 Sat 10-4 Sun 1-4 15th & Crestline 842-4200 Sorry no nets -1-3 bdrm,2 bath Apartments Available Now 9th& Avalon 842-3040 homes available now. M5 STA- NS. HBR apt includes availAI for sub-learning until AUl STA-NS. MORNING STAR One bedroom apt, sublease next to campus, off street parking. free rent for month of January. 800-643-5910. Rooms, apartments, and well kept, older homes available now. 841-STAR (7827) Sick of your Roommate? Try Sub-Leasing. 1 berm apt. 2 bikes from $355, cardi. 832-2194 Studio apartment now available close to campus. Utilities paid. $295, 6 month lease available. Call Sunset SUNRISE VILLAGE 660 Gateway Ct. Now Leasing for Fall Mon.-Fri. 1-5 *Luxurious 2,3,&4* Bathrooms 2, 3, & 4 Bedroom Town Homes • Garages; 2 1/2 Baths • Microwave Ovens • Some with Fireplaces • On KU Bus Route • Swimming Pool and Tennis Courts 841-8400 or 841-1287 Sublease new 2 Bdmr. Ap-Chamberlin C1-close to K450-4400 -please call 749-2903. Sublease new 2 bldg. Apk 749-2948- Sublease new 2 bldg. Apk 749-2948- Sublease quiet room at 15th and Tennessee- Wash/dryer-share kitchen, bath, bach, independent 生活 $115/month + utilities -832-8142 Sublease till July, new 2 bldg. Apk central, catering $120/month + utilities + m. dep. $050 Montery Way 843-2030 /749-0266 Holiday Apartments Tropical island with palm trees and a beach. NOW LEASING FOR FALL'94 - 1,2,3 or 4 Bedrooms • On KU Bus route • Newly Constructed • Quiet Location 211 Mount Hope Ct. Apartment A3 843-6500 or 843-0011 Sublease: 2 bedroom apartment. February-August 14th,月半 Mass. Haan Place 841-1122 Would you like to like your own bedroom, bathroom, and kitchen for under $200 a month? 1-464-847-Ask for Bill Sublease. 1 bdmr apt. w/ study. Boardwalk Apts. $345 mo. 843-0145. Also Leasing For Spring & Fall! Park25 2 & 3 BEDROOMS AVAILABLE NOW!! South Pointe APARTMENTS We are now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature studio1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. We also have 3 bedroom, 2 1/2 bath townhomes. We presently have available a select few 1 & 2 bedroom apartments for immediate occupancy. *2Pools - Volleyball Court * On KU Bus Route with - *On KU Bus Route with 4 Stops on Property *21 laundry Rooms - Some Washer/Dryer Hookups LUXURY New appliances New bath fixtures Mini & vertical blinds Walk-in closets Water, heating of water & trash paid!! Patio balconies available Swimming pool and Sand volleyball court Small pets OK with deposit Ample off-street parking Call or stop by today. 2401 W. 25th, 9A3 842-1455 (sorry no pets) 430 Roommate Wanted West of Iowa on 26th Street K U bus route LOCATION GREATLOCATION!!! 1 female non-smoking room for 3 bdm. Abbr. new w/d bathroom & microwave $225 2 female new w/d bathroom & microwave $225 1 male roommate required for 3 bdm and 2 bathrooms with w/d, brant new fully furnished, new bathroom & microwave $225 843-6446 West or west on 20th Street K.U. bus route Walk to shopping, banking, Walk to restaurants & six theaters Next to new Holcom Recreational Center- Basketball, baseball, indoor Track, racquetball and Aerobics. For n/4 roommates needed ABAP to share 4 bdmr apt. after 50% credit - Call 861-736-8716. Call 861-736-8716. 1 or 2 roommates needed for new 3 bed appl 1800 / mo, Call for details: new 5 bed appl in 4941 NW, Call for details: new 5 bed appl in 4941 NW 3 makes looking for a N/N male or female KUU lice. Visit the A/C availability now, 4 bedrooms and 2 baths. 1 | 2 roommates need immediate to share 3 rooms; 1 need 1 block from campus. From campus. Call 849-561-8201 unused roommate needed now for BR BAIVA homes. 11$/mm水 pd. jan. rent free. fresh air. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 5 rooms in Apt.1 block behind Prasser. Peb rent will be $135 + Vollition 4钟. All rooms have mausens Fem. roommate needed for nice left style duplex. Fen. roommate needed for nice left style duplex. $900/week/$800/month $750/week/$800/month Female, non-smoking, roommate needed immediately to share spacious bedroom, own bedroom - By phone: 864-4358 Female needed to share 3 bsp apt. 800 mo free. util w/d, darkroom. 839 Mississippi. 841-8487. Female roommate beautiful 3 bedroom house Female roommate, beautiful 3 bedroom townhouse on bus route, 129th St. no smoke no smokers. $140-$180 per week. Male roommate for 4 bdrm 2 bath furnished apl. $77/mo. +/- 1 vlta | 1 blk to KU. How to schedule an ad: Female roommate needed for a 3 bedroom 2 age group, 10 months per year or a month w/ u/Lili- al. Kratzer at 725-3881. Kratzer at 725-3881. Male rommitee trained to end of semester. Male turnsted, near campus $B4/mo. + 1/2 uclt Rommitee trained to end of semester. one roommate needed for needs. ap, Close to campus, free cables, pets allowed, AC, DW, call resumes. One roommate wanted to share 3-B house, garage,篷房 to 275/m². Call M615- 804-2098 for more info. Roommate needed for 4 bdm house near campus. W/D, appliances, furnished except for bdrm. Willing to help with part of rent, pets possible. Call 865-2431. Needed by Peb: 1. NS RM to share 3 BR Dpks 8 min. 2. Dpks 8 min, D/W, dpkt 8 min. f/w: Call B: 841-3506 Call H: 841-3507 - By Mail: 119 Stafford Flint, Lawrence, KS. 60045 - A phone planned in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made. $59.00 Planned Fee - No pick-up! 19 a.m. to Print Office Stop by the front desk office between 8. a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged Wanted to 1 or 2 roommates & share new brand condo for $600. Call tg #178-282-4120 & Mtl #178-381-3810. Calculating Rates: Classified information and order form by my mark. It is required that you confirm the account information you may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas offices. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or VISA account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before the due date. **Classified Rates:** are based on the number of connective day interruptions and the size of the ad (the number of aged lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run. Dunlop Warehouse The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00. When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or VISA, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds on credits that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available. Num. of insertions: Notes: Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to Cost per mile per day 1X 2X 4-7X 8-14X 15-28X 30-X 2.65 1.55 1.65 .85 .75 .90 1.90 1.15 .85 .70 .65 .45 1.85 1.85 .75 .65 .60 .40 1.75 .90 .65 .60 .60 .35 Classifications 105 personal 118 business personas 119 announcements 130 entertainment 140 lot & bonded 265 lot rentals 285 lot rented 245 ladie table 225 professional services 280 antibaculous 235 yoga services Please print your ad one word per box ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | | | | | 370 want to buy 485 for rent 498 roommate wanted Name: Date ad begins: ___ Total days in paper ___ Total ad cost: ___ Classification: ___ Name: ___ Phone: ___ VISA Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □ Visa (Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansan) Furnish the following if you are charging your ad: Account number: Exniration Date: Print exact name appearing on credit card: MasterCard Signature: The University Dairy Kansas, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045 THE FAR SIDE By GARY LARSON DAILY PLANET tuples After many years of marital bliss, tension enters the Kent household. 16 Wednesday, January 26, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN +---+---+--- Walgreens DRUG STORES 23rd and Louisiana 832-8188 Store 832-8388 Pharmacy OPEN 24 HOURS Sale Ends 1-29-94 6th and Kasold 841-5400 Store 841-9000 Pharmacy DRIVE THRU PHARMACY 2.5-oz. PREFL with 13-oz. com PLANTERS MIXED NUTS Mixed Nuts $2.59 Walgreens ICE CREAM Planters 14.5 oz. Limit 4 Reg.$3.79 Ice Cream 99¢ Walgreens Half Gallon LImit 4 Reg. $1.99 Walgreens C Vitamin C Gardette! ORIGINAL SNACK-LENS MILKSHED 99c Walgreens 500mg 100's Gardettos 99¢ Suave Suave 6 oz. Limit 3 Reg. $1.49 Suave 69¢ Shampoo or Conditioner 12 oz. Limit 3 Reg. $1.29 NEW! GELATIN COATED EXTRA-STRENGTH TYLENOL GELCAPS extra pain relief. contains no aspirin. Solid Gelcaps - 500 mg each (more than one capsule) preferred in capsules Tylenol 2 Pack 48 Gelcaps $1.99 SUPER BOWL SAVINGS Copenhagener Hausjes BLUEBERRY OIL NUT SUGAR Otis Spunkmeyer 3 Pack Limit 4 SUPER BOWL SAVINGS 99c Reg. $1.59 Jack's Original Jack's Original 12 inch Pizza 2 for $3.00 Limit 4 Reg. $2.99 PHARMACY COUPON You Choose Your Savings SUPER BOWL SAVINGS 1000 OFF OR Free Clock Radio with New or Transferred Prescription Limit 1 thru 2-28-94 PEPSI PEPSI 69c Everyday Low Price 2 Liters Limit 3 MILK JUICE MAKER Everyday Low Price 2% Milk One Gallon $1.99 ICE Everyday Low Price ICE 8 lb.Bag 69¢ BREAD BREAD County Fair 1 lb. 39¢ FEATURES: On '80s night at the Granada Theater, students dance to the music of their childhood davs. Page 6. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOL.103,NO.88 THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA KS 66612 ADVERTISING: 864-4358 THURSDAY. JANUARY 27,1994 (USPS 650-640) NEWS:864-4810 Struggling to reach a consensus University Council to vote today on latest relationships policy Conflicts over CONSENSUAL RELATIONS By Stephen Martino Kansan staff writer A consensual relations policy at the University of Kansas was born amid the controversy of the dismissal hearings of Enil Tonkovich, former professor of law. The hearings were the first hint that the University would hint that the University would to address the question of faculty dating their students. Today, the latest version of that policy will be voted on by University Council. If it passes, the policy will place a limited ban on consensual relations. The adminstr... ions. The administration has agreed to this draft before Council. But if the policy fails to pass, it will leave intact an administration decree that completely bans faculty and student relationships. The administration based this on two point For the past six months, the administration, governance and the University community have struggled with the process of consensual relations, a process that some of its active members say was heavy-handed and unsatisfying. Yet almost everyone agrees, it should not have been this difficult. No less than three governance groups have grappled with this question. Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor, announced the administration's ban on consensual relations July 30, 1993. The policy took effect Aug. 20, 1993. The ban was absolute, but how long it would remain in effect was unclear. Tomorrow in The University Daily Kansan: THE VOTE: University Council votes on the change to the consensual relations policy. STUDENTS: How a policy on consensual relations will affect students. OFFICIAL COMPLAINT: A member of the Special Task Force on Consensual Relations files a complaint to have the KU judicial board declare "null and void" the policy passed Dec. 9 by Council. SEPARATE ISSUES: is consensual relations really the problem at the University? The Beginning Of The Conflict The nine-page policy and announcement did make clear the administration's insistence that consensual relationships between faculty and students be completely prohibited. The administration based this on two points. First, faculty involved in relationships with students would be violating a section of the Faculty Code of Conduct that prohibits faculty from behavior that violates "commonly accepted standards of professional ethics." Second, University Senate Rules and Regulations prohibit "grading student work by criteria other than academic performance." "The University is a large community where people work closely," Meyen said. "However, when a teacher is in a position to make evaluations of a student's work, romantic relationships can have a serious negative impact on the student and disrupt the environment for other students. The consensual relationship policy is designed to prevent those situations." However, the administration was unsure how the faculty and students would react to having a policy imposed by decree and not something the University's governance structure produced. The administration was committed to the University having an effective policy that it and the faculty could live with, said Robert Friauf, professor of physics and astronomy and head of Council. He said that the administration always had intended for the faculty and student governance to come up with a policy of its own. T. P.Srinivasan, professor of mathematics and head of SenEx. agreed. "There is no question that was the intention of the administration," he said. "If we have a policy that affects the academic community, we want to make sure it has the backing of the community as a general rule." That backing — if it is there — will come in today's vote. BAN: The policy that University Council will vote on today is not the one that was recommended by the consensual relationships task force. Page 3 do you believe that the option that was voted on by Council was representative of the work product and positions of the task force? Kim Wiloox, km of the task force and associate language and speech, lauteure and hearing. "There were things in the policy that I thought didn't represent the findings of the task force, but Option C didn't seem that it was too much different." Elizabeth Banks associate professor of classics Nobleza Ausunclon-Lande professor of communication studies "Yes." John Altevogt, graduate University Senate Executive Committee member "It was pretty much a combination of the other options." "It reflected the view after the line was struck in Council. After it left ExEn, it was internally inconsistent." Jill Bechtel, undergraduate Bezaeiloel Benjamin, professor of architectural engineering Benjamin had not seen the policy. "No, everyone agreed that we shouldn't try to enforce any kind of ban. There should be no penalties for this behavior." "Yes, they were very representative." Robert Frinauf. Robert Friauf, professor of physics and astronomy and University Council Jeff Bottenberg, undergraduate senator marrie, undergraduate student and director of community outreach "It is representative. "We worked with the chairperson, so I believe it was." Cindy Nodges. Julio Harris Hodges never knew of an Option C. Evolution of the policy Sandy Wick, assistant director of honors program "U = " July 30.1993 Carol Jean Brune, budget analyst, Robert Harrington, associate professor of education psychology and research, and Dennis Pawitz, professor of psychology, did not Chander Jayaraman, undergraduate SenEx member, Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor, announces policy written by administration that completely bans consensual relations at the University. "It was pretty close." Joe Zeller, professor of ceramics Aug. 20,1993 Administration ban goes into effect. Micah Laaker / KANSAN Meyen writes to Srinivasan and Friauf saving the Jan. 12,1994 Srinivasan and Fri saying the administration accepts the policy-passed at Dec. 9 Council meeting. But he seeks to expand the nature of faculty to remove themselves from evaluative power positions over students a violation of the Faculty Code of Sep.16, 1993 University Council calls for formation of Special Task Force on Consensual Relations, chaired by Kim Wilcox, associate professor of speech, language and hearing. Kim Wilcox Nov.24.1993 Task force reveals report to T.P. Srinivasan, head of University Senate Executive Committee, in letter from Wilcox, containing Options A and B. Task force makes clear it opposes ban on consensual relations. Conduct. A violation could result in disciplinary action, including termination. I Robert Friauf Jan. 19, 1994 1954-1967 T. P. Srinivasan Council considers Option C and votes affirmatively for the policy, as amended. Dec.1,1993 SenEx meets, Options A and B are revealed to SenEx Also, an Option C, written by Srinivasan and Robert Fruifu, head of Council, is the focus of his discussion. SenEx votes unanimously to advance Option C to Council. Dec. 9, 1993 SenEx makes editorial changes to administration recommendation and forwards the policy to Council for consideration at Jan. 27 meeting. Revision still contains the inclusion of violation to code of conduct. Council to vote on amended version of policy from SenEx, based on administration recommendations. Jan. 27,1994 Task force members say effort ignored by leaders Micah Laaker / KANSAN By Stephen Martino Kansan staff writer When Sandra Wick was asked to serve on the Special Task Force on the Consensual Relations policy, she said she thought that her work would be appreciated and discussed. Now that the task force has finished, she is not sure that has been the case. "I feel like I've been conned," she said. "We all spent a lot of hours and time to work for this. If we had known what the outcome was going to be, we could have stopped, and SenEx could have written its own policy to begin with." Wick, assistant director of the honors program, is referring to a series of conflicts, misunderstandings and suspect procedural irregularities on the part of University governance officials, who also seemed to have ignored relevant parts of the task force's recommendations. The task force was formed Sept. 16 by University Council. It was told to report back to both the University Senate Executive Committee and Council within six to eight weeks. The task force reported its findings to T.P. Srinivasan, head of SeX on, Enx Nov. 24 in a letter from Kim Wilcox, associate professor of speech, language and hearing and head of the task force. In addition to specific answers to eight charges presented by Council, the task force included two posone which seems to forbid consensual relations but leaves just how forbidden they are vague, was written by Srinivasan and Friau. This third option was the subject of discussion, and its amended form was forwarded from SenEx to Council. to be interviewed. Of those nine said it had been their understanding that the options they had presented were to be voted on. Two said that they were recommendations. Not having their options voted on has angered some members of the task force and confused others. Eleven of 16 task force members contacted by the Kansan agreed Srinivasan said that SenEx had never intended for the options to be presented as policy, ar. he said they had not been. However, minutes from the Dec. 1, 1993, SenEx meeting would seem to indicate othsible options for policy, which SenEx and Council could consider. Option A was written by Elizabeth Banks, associate professor of classics, and Option B was written by Robert Friauf, professor of physics and astronomy and head of Council. Both options did not expressly forbid consensual relations. Conflicts Over The Ban "We put a fair amount of work in it,so Iwas it,so I was troubled by what occurred." Those two options were never voted on by SenEx or Council. Instead, a third option, Kim Wilcox Head of the relationships task force "We put a fair amount of work in it, so I was somewhat troubled by what occurred," he said. The lack of a vote on the task force's work especially angered Wick. On the contrary, Wilcox said, the options were written to be policy proposals. According to the minutes, Srinivasan said the task force "did not submit a formal policy draft as we would have preferred" and that, he said, is why no vote was ever taken. the task force's work known that a third policy had been written. Two task force members, Clindy Hodges, former president of Classified Senate, and Bezaleel Benjamin, professor of architectural engineering, said they had not even "I had no understanding that there would be a melding of the policies," she said. "I thought they would go through SenEx and then to Council." Wilcox, Srinivasan said, was in on the writknown that a third policy had been written. Friiaf said that he and Srinivasan had written Option C, which is the policy facing Council's final approval today, because it was the best melding of Options A and B. Friauf said that for about two hours Nov. 30, 1993, the day before SenEx would meet, he and Srinivasan met to write the third onition. Not exactly so, Wilcox said. He characterized his inclusion on the writing of the policy as "an 11th-hour operation." "The day before the policy was presented, the secretary of SenEx called asking if I had time to look over something Srinivasan and Friauf had written. "Wilcox said, 'I spent one hour, maybe more, looking over what they had written. Most of the policy was written by the time I got there, so I just made minor editorial changes." That policy was what ended up leaving SenEx for Council, amended in form. Wick said conflict might not have developed from certain members of the task force if the final policy had been more representative of what the task force had recommended. Both options from the task force opposed to a ban to consensual relations on philosophical and practical grounds. Hardly anyone disputes that Option C takes a stronger stance on consensual relations than anything produced by the task force. "It is, perhaps, a little stronger on some circumstances." Prifau said. But it's a lot more than a "little stronger" to some task force members. "If you're going to have a task force, I'd like to see the work of the task force supported," Hodges said. "You spend a lot of time on it, and to have this happen, it makes you wonder. We all thought we were doing the right thing." INSIDE What a shot! Guard Steve Woodberry made a gamewinning three-pointer with less than two seconds left. Page 7 Board of Regents has final say on degree cuts 50 15 PULL By Jamie Munn Kansan staff writer Despite complaints from state legislators and appeals to University Council, seven degree programs are likely to be eliminated at the Board of Regents meeting today in Topeka. The master's degree in atmospheric science, the only one of its kind in the state, is among the degrees the University has decided to discontinue. Frank Sabatini, a member of Regents, said he didn't think there would be any special considerations for the proposed eliminations. "Basically we're relying on the University to weed out what they think should be integrated or dropped," he said. Sabatini said he thought that the University's study, which had determined student interest in each program, had been complete. Keeping programs without any interest did not make much sense, he said. "That's why we're asking them to consolidate and eliminate." Sabati said. David Shulenburger, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said the University's limited funds would focus on those programs central to the mission of the University. "Had we ample funding, all of the programs we have discontinued would have Bachelor's, master's and doctoral been maintained and strengthened," he said. Although some of the programs will be completely eliminated, others will be incorporated into other departments. "We would certainly like the Regents to reverse the decision on that program," Prosser said. The cuts became effective Dec. 31, 1993. Although no new students will be enrolled in the discontinued programs, students currently pursuing these degrees will be allowed to complete their studies by Dec. 31, 1996. However, Francis Prosser, associate chair of the department of physics and astronomy, said he still had hope, especially for the master's in atmospheric science. On the line The fate of seven KU academic degrees rests with the Board of Regents today. Master of science in atmospheric science Bachelor of science in atmospheric science Bachelor of arts in atmospheric science Bachelor of arts in comparative literature Bachelor of arts in computer science Bachelor of general studies in computer science Bachelor of arts in Italian degrees in computer science will continue to be offered in the School of Engineering. Comparative literature classes will continue in the department of English, and Italian courses will be consolidated into the department of French and Italian. 2 Thursday, January 27, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Red Lyon Tavern 944 Mass. 832-8228 The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stuaffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan 60454. SPEND THE SUMMER OF'94 IN RUSSIA join Russian students at a resort hotel just outside Moscow. Study the Russian language and or Russian literature with the latter being taught in English. The program is open to students with no prior Russian. The Russian students on full scholarship with hopefully future Yeltsins and Solzhenitsyn amongst them will be taught economics & western history Total cost for the 8 week course, books, room and board, bicycle rental The mornings will be devoted to the class room courses leaving plenty of time for other planned and unplanned activities with the Russian students Only $2395 A local four day trip and a weekend in St Petersburg are offered at $150 each as optional extras. Nine credits possible for the 8 week Russian language program from the State University of New York (SUNY) New Paltz for an additional fee of $150 credit. GRANT'S RUSSIAN EXPERIENCE INCORPORATED 7330 Westmoreland Dr., Sarasota, FL 34243 ON CAMPUS The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an information table about summer abroad opportunities from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. today in the lobby of the Kansas Union. For more information, call Debra Brodsky at 864-3742. The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an informational meeting for students interested in studying in Great Britain at 4 p.m. today at 3 Lippincott Hall. For more information, call Nancy Mitchell at 864-3742. KU Karate Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Brad Bernet at 832-2157. KU NOW will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at the Regional Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call 864-7337. University of Kansas League of Undergraduate Art Historians will meet at 6 p.m. today at Alceve A in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Lisa Winett at 832-0051. The Vietnamese Student Association will meet at 6 p.m. today at 223 Haworth Hall. For more information, call Cuong Ly at 749-4065. KU Champions Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at Parlors A, B and C in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Kirk Lindslev at 841-4585 InterVarsity Christian Fellowship will meet at 7 tonight at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call David Zimmerman at 864-7117. The Spencer Museum of Art will sponsor a lecture by Dennis Oppenheim at 7 tonight at the auditorium in the Spencer Museum of Art. For more information, call Sally Hayden at 864-4710. Students in Communication Studies will sponsor a lecture by Steven Curtain at 7 tonight at 100 Stauffer-Flint Hall. For more information, call Mic Johnson at 842-9713. University Chess Society will meet at 7 tonight at the Hawk's Nest in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Nathan Welch at 842-0049. LesBiGay Services of Kansas will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Scott Manning at 864-3091. Amnesty International will sponsor a letter-writing session at 8 tonight at the Glass Onion, 624 W. 12th Street. KU Fencing Club will meet at 8:30 tonight at 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Jen Snyder at 841-6445. WEATHER WEATHER Omaha: 23°/13° LAWRENCE: 32°/20° Kansas City: 33°/21° St. Louis: 51°/30° Wichita: 35°/24° Minneapolis: 20°/11° Phoenix: 60°/42° Salt Lake City: 40°/24° Tulsa: 47°/25° TODAY Tomorrow Saturday Light morning snow, becoming partly Partly cloudy winds Partly cloudy winds Weather around the country: Atlanta: 57'/52' Chicago: 29'/18' Houston: 70'/53' Miami: 80'/70' Minneapolis: 20'/11' Phoenix: 60'/42' Salt Lake City: 40'/24' Seattle: 48'/31' LAWRENCE: 32'/20 Kansas City: 33'/21' St. Louis: 51'/30' Wichita: 35'/24' Tulsa: 47'/25' Sun High: 32' Lgw: 20' High: 27° Low: 20° 3300 --- Partly cloudy, winds 5 mph. Partly cloudy, winds 5 mph Light morning snow, becoming partly cloudy, winds 1.0 mph Low: 20° Low: 20° Source: Dan Coash, KU Service; B64-3300 Sunny CORRECTIONS ■ In the Associated Press Top 25 men's basketball poll, which ran in Tuesday's paper on Page 11, Kansas was listed incorrectly as the only Big Eight Conference team recognized in the national poll. Both Kansas, No. 3, and Missouri, No. 24, are ranked in the poll. ■ In an article about Court Appointed Special Advocates, which appeared in Monday's paper on Page 3, Peter Thomas, a volunteer for the advocates, was misrepresented as a volunteer for Cottonwood Inc. and Independence Inc. Thomas is employed by Cottonwood Inc. and used to be employed by Independence Inc. COLUMBIA MATTE VISION MOISTURE MISS MOORE The Student Friendly Store THE PRAIRIE CELEBRATE ON US! With A FREE Gift Join us in celebrating our Gold Medal Award for mentoring and bringing you unparalleled personal service. For a limited time, receive an exclusive Gold Medal gift. You free with a $149 purchase; we also provide one-year care training and take the golden opportunity to celebrate on us! * Bring this certificate to submit your gift with me! Join John Bathrook, Chairman of Gold Medal Education, Lewis Lippman, Careers Director, Dr. Charles Dornan, director of planning teams. MERLE NORMAN The Stude Marjorie Brammell, owner 9th and New Hampshire bridge of the Lawrence, KS 65044 913-841-5324 natural fiber clothing natural body care products GRAHAM'S RETAIL LIQUORS 1906 MASS 843-8186 SUA Spring Break 94 SUA Spring Break 94 Super Keg Sale (limited supply) Friday, March 18 to Saturday, March 26 FLORIDA Sign Up Now! 864-3477 PanamaCity The only placeto be for Spring Break 94! Brought to you by. STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUAK INDSU UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS I ONLY $190 Trip includes: Beach Front Condos Two Bar-B-Ques Volleyball Tournaments KUB-BallPostseasonParty All Kinds Of Fun! So Hurry! DIICover MasterCard VISA Accepted ALVIN'S 843-2313 9th & Iowa Cost Kutter IGA - Check Cashing •Post Office •Carry Outs Limit1 with $10 Purchase 24 Pack - Deli •Bakery •Videos The only placeto be for Spring Break94! Brought STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES to you by: UNIVERSITY OF KARAOE $479 WARNING DO NOT VAR CAMP'S PORK 'N' BEANS Pepsi & Mountain Dew VAN CAMP'S PORK 'N BEARS VAN CAMP'S PORK 'N BEARS Van-Camps Pork-n-Beans 16 oz. can 25¢ PURINA CAT FOOD PURINA CAT FOOD IQA Macaroni & Cheese IQA Macaroni & Cheese IGA Macaroni and Cheese 7.5 oz. box 25¢ El Choco BURRITO El Choco BURRITO Fairmont/Zarda Yogurt 8 oz. cup 25¢ El Charrito Burritos 4 oz. Asst. 25¢ Fairmont Zerda Frazeen Yogurt Fairmont Zerda Frazeen Yogurt Purina Cat Food Asst. Var. 6oz. can 25¢ Keg Beer $3999 16 gal. call 843-2313 Prices good thru Feb. 1. Prices read NATURALWAY 820-822 Mass St. 841-0100 --- ATTENTION SCHOLARS! COLLEGE BOWL 1994 THE HARVEST SCHOOL 12 198 February 12, 1994 Kansas Union 8 a.m. until 4 p.m. $ 20.00 per Team Call 864-3477 for more info THE "VARSITY SPORT OF THE MIND" January 29 10 AM to 6 PM Kansas Union Jaybowl Level One Open to KU STUDENTS ONLY Memore advanced to Regional ACH Tournament at 5-10am on February 25-26 at SUA Doc. Office, Level 4, Kansas Union by Jan Extended Deadline Friday, January 28 Sign up at SUA Dax Office, Level 4, Kansas Union by January 26. Extended Deadline! Friday, January 28 Cell presented by: BUVENI UNION ACTIVITIES SWK TRAGGAGE OF SANIDA SIUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUAK THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Jaybowl GENERAL MIDDLE Entrant Fees $3.00 - Billarde $5.00 - Bowling Extended Deadline Friday, January 28 ku bowling & billiards tournament MEN'S BASKETBALL TICKETS ATTN:STUDENTS REDEMPTION PERIOD GROUP#6 JANUARY26 - JANUARY28 8:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M. GAMES: Feb.6-Nebraska Cornhuskers Feb.20-Missouri Tigers Athletic Ticket Office East Lobby - Allen Fieldhouse 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. ** YOU MAY ONLY REDEEM ONE COUPON PER PERSON.** ** YOU MUST HAVE A RED SPRING 1994 FEE STICKER ON YOUR KUID TO RECEIVE YOUR TICKETS. ** WE ARE NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR LOST OR STOLEN COUPONS. 1 CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Thursday, January 27, 1994 3 Policy runs counter to recommendations Task force opposes ban on relationships By Stephen Martino Kansan staff writer Banning consensual relations was a quick fix for the administration in August because of the dust raised by the Emil Tonkovich dismissal hearings. Today, University Council will vote on Today, University College will never whether to change the wording that bans relationships between faculty and students whom faculty could grade or otherwise evaluate. But interviews with members of the Special Task Force on Consensual Relations indicate that a ban was not what they recommended. The reasons for opposing the ban, task force members said, were based on several factors, the foremost being the practicality of imposing a ban on private behavior. "The task force members are opposed to a ban on consenting relationships," the task report says. "This opposition is both philosophical and practical." "We said that these relationships were extremely upwise," said Joe Zeller, task force member and professor of ceramics. "But it seemed to us that you can't ban something that isn't illegal." When the task force submitted its report, the two policy options it submitted contained the phrase "while not expressly forbidden" when referring to consensual relationships. Those words do not appear in the policy that Council will vote on today. In fact, the option that Council is considering once stated, "It is therefore unprofessional for a faculty member, administrator, or supervisor to initiate or accept such a relationship so long as a power differential exists." Task force and Council members questioned whether administrators could construe a ban from that line. Conflicts Over The Ban Don Marquis, Council member and professor of philosophy, said the language would have created a ban. He said that it had been the opinion of a majority of Council members that the line would have created a ban, and a motion was brought to strike it from the policy. The motion was passed, and the line was struck from the policy at the Dec. 9 meeting. Robert Friraud, head of Council and co-author of the policy on which Council voted, said the removed line had not been written to create a ban. But he conceded that the policy had been made weaker by its removal. "It took the teeth out of the policy, and the administration was not able to accent the policy in that form," he said. After Council passed the amended policy, it was sent to the administration, which said it could accept the first four points of the policy, according to a letter from Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor. But the administration sought to make consensual relations, where an evaluative power exists, a violation of the Faculty Code of Conduct. Such a violation could result in disciplinary action, including termination. At the Jan. 19 meeting of the University Senate Executive Committee, SenEx made some editorial changes to the administration's proposal but forwarded the rewritten part to Council for consideration at today's meeting. SenEx left in the clause that would make consensual relationships a violation of the Faculty Code of Conduct. T. P. Srinivasan, head of SenEx, said that the group had achieved a compromise and had zeroed in on the real culprit. it's the conduct that could come from the evaluative powers of a relationship." he said. Marquis said that SenEx, by accepting the administration's position, was advancing a ban that it and the administration wanted — not what was discussed by the task force. "What's quite amazing about SenEx adopting this is that SenEx is simply agreeing with the administration, and it's what the Council explicitly rejected," he said. "I was really under the impression that the Senate Executive Committee was supposed to represent the Council, faculty and students. To adopt this, after we explicitly rejected it, suggests that the Senate Executive Committee doesn't represent us at all, and perhaps we should elect a group that does." Friauf said the policy that Council would be voting on today mirrored his views on the matter. "I would like to see a good policy at the University of Kansas that included a limited ban," he said. "We've had a considerable number of Council members express their support. I feel reasonably comfortable it will pass." Marquis safti he did not think that anyone could claim a victory in passing the policy when it still had to go through Council. "My guess is that people on Council would say, 'Why are you doing this? You tried to shove through this policy in two different ways at our last meeting. It was rejected both times,' he said. "Now you're coming back to us with the same policy." Paper denied Senate funds Rv Heather Moore Kansan staff writer Who'sinations, an alternative student paper, was denied its request for $3,770 last night in the Student Senate Finance Committee. The paper now may limit its production or go out of business altogether. Travis Harrod, Student Senate Executive Committee chair and sponsor of the bill, tried to put the bill before the finance committee, but many senators raised objections. Alan Pierce, non-traditional senator, said the bill had been heard once before and had been ruled out of order. He said Harrod's presence at the finance committee meeting had constituted a conflict of interest. "It was taken to StudEx, and the chair of StudEx is bringing the bill here," he said. Eric Medill, holdover senator and head of the finance committee, said that Harrod — as StudEx chair — had stepped down when the bill had been brought before StudEx on Jan. 19. At that meeting, StudEx had discussed whether Who'sinations should receive financing since its interns could receive credit hours for their work. Senate bylaws prohibit Senate financing of organizations that give credit hours. Who'sinations first was denied The money trail Getting your organization's request funded. $\textcircled{1}$ Fill out a request at the Student Senate office $\textcircled{2}$ Your request is given to a senator who supports it. Source: Travis Harrod, Student Senate Exec funds by the finance committee Dec. 12, 1993, when its request was ruled out of order because of the credit-hour issue. "The circulation and the quality of the paper went up and so did the cost," he said. "Now they've run out of money, and they are asking for supplemental funding. It's likely that February could be the last issue." Harrod said that Senate was punishing Who'sinations for doing its job well. A Jon Schwark, Kansas City, Kan. That senator discusses the request with you and helps revise it. 4 5 A line-item request is made before the finance committee. "I feel like we have gone twice, and it's like, 'We're not dealing with you,'" he said. "I understand that there are important issues of procedures. "I don't think Who'sinations will end," he said. "It will be a matter of not putting out that type of paper anymore." Schwark said the paper probably would decrease its size and would distribute fewer issues around campus. With approval, the request goes to the full Senate to be granted or denied. Committee Chair S.A. Moore / KANSAN junior and senior editor of the paper, said that he felt put-off by the finance committee. rebe Taking a moment before venturing out into the rain, Arianna Leason, Lawrence sophomore, smokes a cigarette while sheltered by the canopy in front of the Kansas Union. Amy Solt/ KANSAN No butts about it, KU smokers must brave the cold to light up Kansan staff write By Angelina Lopez Kansan staff writer Smoking a cigarette before his class begins, Dan Norwood stood outside Murphy Hall and shivered in the freezing wind. "Having to smoke outside is a slight inconvenience," said Norwood. Topeka graduate teaching assistant. But Norwood said it had not given him an incentive to quit. A University policy, enacted July 1, 1993, forbids smoking in campus buildings and has left many smokers out in the cold. Huddled in jackets, they brave the elements for a smoke. Ann Pierce, secretary at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said she usually smoked twice a day at work. She goes outside near the docking area on the east side of the building. Norwood, who smokes five or six times a day while at work, said that because he couldn't smoke in his office, he spent more time working at home. However, he said he thought that the policy was fair. "Before, when I walked down the fourth floor hall of Wescoe, there was so much smoke that it looked like a bar," he said. "It's a pain, but it's only horrible when it's really cold," Pierce said. "I understand the reasoning for the policy, but I think people should have a place to smoke inside where they can't bother anyone else." Jason Dailey, employee at Wesco Terrace, said he smokes four or five times a day at work. He said that having to smoke outside was not as bad as he had thought it would be. "You just sit outside with your coat on," he said. "It only takes five minutes." Beyond being an inconvenience, the combination of smoking and being outside in the cold weather makes many KU smokers more susceptible to colds. Dennis Dahl, physician at Watkins, said that smoking suppressed the immune system, which made it harder for the body to fight colds. Cilia — small hair-like structures that are in the lungs and clean them out — are inhibited by smoking, he said. This makes it difficult for them to rid the lungs of sicknesses. According to information from the American Lung Association, smokers are sick in bed 16 percent more days a year than nonsmokers. Dailey said he did not think that having to smoke outside affected a cold he had. In fact, he said he liked the colder weather because it made smoking more uncomfortable and therefore he smoked less. Wende Walston, Mansfield, Ohio, senior, said that although she understood the policy, she thought an area should be provided for people who want to smoke. "Even teachers and faculty have to smoke outside," she said. "If there are that many smokers, a lounge should be provided for them to smoke in. My boss can't even smoke in her own office." Pierce said there was, understandably, little sympathy for her plight. "Having to smoke outside agnagates my cold," she said. "But if I have a cold, they say I shouldn't be smoking. 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Buffet Hours $2.99 lunch buffet 2630 Iowa 11:00-1:30 (add .70 for salad) 843-1474 MEN’S SPRING INFORMAL RUSH The Interfraternity Council is now forming a list for those men interested in rushing a fraternity. For more information, call the IFC office today at 864-3559. Rings Fixed Fast! Kizer Cummings Jewelers 749-4333 833 Mass • Lawrence, KS Pancho’s MEXICAN RESTAURANT Homestyle Mexican Food 23rd & Louisiana 843-4044 Kennedy GLASS MEN'S SPRING INFORMAL RUSH The Interfraternity Council is now forming a list for those men interested in rushing a fraternity. For more information, call the IFC office today at 864-3559. Rings Fixed Fast! Kizer Cummings jewelers 749-4333 833 Mass Lawrence, KS Pancho's MEXICAN RESTAURANT Homestyle Mexican Food 23rd & Louisiana 843-4044 / 4 Thursday, January 27, 1994 OPINION 新版 2018.12.19 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VIEWPOINT Separate representation for graduates is illogical Last week, Student Senate voted to create a Senate for graduate students. Although it is necessary for graduate students to be represented at the University, a separate Senate is unreasonable. Creating a separate Senate gives graduate students and undergraduates equal voices in University Governance, even though undergraduates outnumber graduate students almost 3 to 1. In addition, the justification of those who voted to create the second Senate is illogical. They argue that graduate students are not fairly represented in Senate. Proportionally, however, graduates would have equal representation if they could find enough students to fill the 13 seats allotted them. Currently, only six of those seats are filled Maybe they don't realize that a graduate Senate will have to be built from the ground up. The new graduate senators will need to write a constitution, hold elections, attend meetings and write legislation all the things that Senate is required to do. Graduate students contend that they don't have enough time to participate in Senate. And yet they seem to think that they can find the time to create a whole new governing body. If graduate students think that separating themselves from other students in governance will give them better representation, they should consider more closely the reasons they are not well-represented in the first place. The six graduate senators who have seats in Senate will have a hard time building the new Senate on their own. Even without the course load graduate students carry, they still would not have the time. DONELLA HEARNE FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD After all, there's plenty to praise in Lillehammer. The marksmanship courses have devices designed to prevent lead bullets from polluting ground water. The Gjørvik ice rink is housed inside a mountain to minimize its effect on the surrounding village. From energy-efficient accommodations to a new fuel for the Olympic torch, the games have been planned with the environment in mind. Norway should be praised for the environmental theme of the Winter Olympics. Instead, it fears retaliation from environmentalists who, angered by Norway's continued defiance of worldwide commercial whaling bans, threaten to force the issue onto the Olympic stage. Norway deserves credit not criticism for Games Though protest is sometimes the answer, embarrassing Norway could slow its environmental progress. But by helping the country showcase its Green Games, activists can keep Norway's environmental movement going long after the Olympics. The design was no accident. Since 1987, when Norway won the right to host the Games, local environmentalists have been working with the Olympic organizing committee to make sure that these are the greenest games possible. Cheering for their accomplishments could help activists gain ground on other issues after the Games. The world will learn from Lillehammer's Green Games; whether those lessons are positive or negative depends on environmentalists. Norway deserves a green medal for sponsoring an environmentally friendly Olympics. Let's hope that the country gets it. SAMANTHA ADAMS FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD KANSAN STAFF BEN GROVE, Editor LISA COSMILLO, Managing editor LISA COSMILLO, Managing editor TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator Assistant Managing Editor...Dan England Assistant to the editor ...J. R. Clarkbree News...Kristi Fogler, Katie Greenwald, Editorial...Colleen McCain ...Nathan Olson Campus...Jess DeHaven Sports...David Dorsey Photo...Doug Hesse Features...Sara Bennett JUSTIN GARBERG Business manager JENNIFER BLOWEY Retail sales manager JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser Business Staff Campus sales mgr ..Jason Eberly Regional Sales mgr ..Troy Trayer National & Co-op sales mgr ..Robin Kring Special Scaffolds mgr ..Shelly McConnell Production mgr ..Laura Guth Gretchen Kootterleinrich Marketing director ..Shannon Reilly Creative director ..John Carlton Classified mgr ..Kelly Connelys Teachets mgr ..Wing Chan Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address, and telephone number affiliated with the University of Minnesota, to whom they are addressed, or faculty or admissions office. 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 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed. Nude dancers deserve more respect than society grants Just when you think you have a group of people stereotyped, somebody throws a monkey wrench into the works. This happened to me within the last year. I met a topless dancer. COLUMNIST JACOB ARNOLD I got to know the dancer very well. She went into dancing because she was a 16-year-old girl living on her own. You can't pay bills and eat on minimum wage. She tried. A friend talked her into dancing. A naturally modest person, she was afraid, but she had to eat. She made $200 that first night. She overcame her shyness. A part of her was lost. Her story is not unique. Women usually take up dancing because there are no other options left. Without a college education, they have no real hope of getting a good job. Many of these women have kids to support. With dancing, they can make good money, badly needed money. There is a price to pay, though, a heavy price. From the moment a woman starts dancing, her self-respect is under siege. Two kinds of men frequent strip bars. There are the polite ones. Lonely, shy or just horny, they treat the girls with some respect and dignity. They talk to the girls, they buy them drinks and they tip them. They treat the girls like people. Then there are the jerks. These guys think of women only as objects. They need buddies and liquor to give them the artificial courage they lack. Like little boys in a toy shop, they try to touch and play with everything. They paw and leer at the women. They insult, degrade and humiliate the dancers. Some women are strong. They believe in themselves and their own worth. They can withstand these attacks. Others have little or no self-respect. They have been told all their lives that they are worthless, and they begin to believe it. Many are dragged down by the advances of these men. Constantly degraded, these women lose respect for themselves. Their lives are thrown away on drugs or abusive men. For those who survive the attack within, their trial is not over when they step out the door. The self-righteous have declared these women bad. Dancers are shunned by "good" people, ridiculed, despised. Dancers are caught in a loop. Try getting a job with "dancer at the Flamingo" on your resume. Try to get fair treatment when your boss finds out what you used to do. There is nothing sick about the display of the human body. It is a beautiful thing. Many of these girls are talented dancers. My friend trained in both ballet and gymnastics before she fell on hard times. Sometimes I have been awestruck by the abilities of some of those girls. Nude dancing can be an art form of life. All across the United States, zealous citizens are trying to have strip bars shut down. They call them sick and sleazy. They are only half right. What is sick is the way these women are treated by some customers. The customers, not the dancers, make it sleazy. Common manners tell you that these women should be treated with more respect, but some men are just stupid. Because these men have no honor, there are laws. In many bars, it is illegal to touch the breasts or buttocks of dancers. This law is rarely enforced except by the dancers who still care about themselves. It is a pity. I know that you will find it hard to believe, but those girls whom some of you look down on and some of you openly lust after and try to fondle are real people. They are somebody's wife, girlfriend, sister, daughter or mother. The stigma of being a nude dancer sometimes drives a wedge between the dancers and their loved ones. It shouldn't be that way. Better laws and better enforcement can regulate customer actions. Only you can change society's opinions. Somebody cares about these women, and somebody is hurting because of your actions. Do you care? Jacob Arnold is a Wichita Junior in Journalism. OKAY, WE'LL STAY OUT, BUT YOU'LL HAVE TO COUGH UP 600 BUCKS FOR A LICENSE. Weird uses for microwave radiate fear I stumbled upon the most interesting sight last week. I had just put a Lunch Bucket in the microwave after sampling the delicacies offered in the Residence Hall Dining Facilities. I left the room while it was microwaving, and when I re-entered the room, I noticed that my roommate was huddled in the corner next to the trash can. She nonchalantly looked up from the book she was reading and said that she was trying to escape the microwave radiation. My first thought was, "The trash can? Why not the hallway?" I decided not to argue with her logic. Then we both looked at the offending contraction. It gurgled ominously while it swayed from side to side on top of the refrigerator. "Radiation is bad for you," declared my intellectual roommate. If radiation doesn't kill me, the Lunch Bucket certainly could. The Wall Street Journal reported on Feb. 2, 1993, that "food scientists now admit that mastering the high-speed and error-prone art of microwaving has proved far trickier than anticipated." Lovely. The key words that strike fear into my heart are "now admit" and "error-prone". Considering that the heating ability of microwaves was accidentally discovered by Army technicians during World War II, "error-prone" is not inaccurate. Between bombings, some hero noted that rations left near the radar gear heated up. COLUMNIST ALISHA ARORA Now, maybe I'm being a bit narrow-minded, but isn't this an overly enthusiastic implementation of the word "multipurpose?" I left my coffee mug on top of my hot rollers once, and the coffee stayed warm. But I'm not going to sate vegetables on them while I'm doing my hair. Entrepreneurial spirits are going to further extremes in an effort to use microwave energy. One brilliant inventor suggested a microwave hair dryer. John Gerling, a consultant in Twain Harte, Calif., was not impressed, observing that "It would coagulate the eyeballs and curdle the brain." Not to be outdone, Robert Schiffman, a microwave consultant from New York, developed a microwave blood warmer to defrost plasma in hospitals. Great idea, Bobby. This could lead to pleasant conversations like: DOCTOR: How long has this coffee been here? it's kind of syrupy. NURSE : Gosh, Doctor, I just made it. DOCTOR : Well, maybe we should use instant. Hey, has anyone seen the bag of plasma Linda just defrosted for Mr. Wilkins? NURSE : Plasma? If you're not into microwaving food or body substances, International Marketing Partners Inc. of Atlanta has developed microwaveable flannel bandannas. Nice idea, but somehow I don't quite see Mean-Looking Biker Man With Several Tattoos zapping his grungy, dirt-encrusted bandannas before hitting the road. I suppose that Stanley Protokowicz Jr. discovered the worst use for a microwave oven. Protokowicz, a lawyer, pleaded guilty to breaking into the home of a friend's estranged wife and killing her kitten in the microwave oven. Apparently, the animal was underfoot, and Protokowicz used the machine as a Pet Taxi. The oven "accidentally" turned on and steam-roasted Kitty-Kat. As James Watkins, chief executive of Golden Valley Microwave Foods Inc., said, "It is very difficult to have a positive experience the first time with any (microwave) product." I think I'll be joining my roommate in the corner. Alibaba Aorra is an Overland Park freshman in biology and English. Anti-abortion activists get favored treatment Your incredibly biased coverage of the 21st anniversary of Roe v. Wade shocked me. A front-page picture and an inside article about anti-abortion activists, but nothing about the 70 to 80 percent of Americans who support abortion rights. We saw the anniversary as a reminder of the tens of thousands of women who died from illegal abortions and of those who continue to die because of parental-consent laws. It was a reminder that all women now have the legal right to a safe and legal abortion. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Your omission is especially troubling after this country has seen a year in which anti-abortion activists murdered a doctor in Florida and shot and wounded a doctor in Kansas. Doctors now are living in fear. This is not a time to glorify the anti-abortion crusades. It must have passed unnoticed to you that there were also abortion-rights rallies in Washington and across the country. I hope that next time the Kansan can be more objective and fair to both sides. Michele A. Kumm Leawood senior Education about AIDS is vital to community The Senate's charitable act should be seen as a public service to Lawrence as well as the University. I, for one, support the use of my money to expand the community's The $3,200 that Student Senate allocated for the Douglas County AIDS Project is money well spent. Considering that every person is susceptible to the AIDS virus through unprotected sex, contaminated needles or other practices that involve shared body fluids, it is vital that information concerning HIV, AIDS and protection from the virus be produced and distributed. knowledge about this deadly disease. Perhaps through education, some of the myths surrounding the virus and its victims will be dispelled. Student senator Michael Moyer says the project is not a student organization. He is correct in this assertion. Would it make him feel better if the funds for the project were labeled a donation? If labeling the money as a donation will suffice, let the project educate the community about AIDS. Isn't that the idea of an educational institution? To educate the community. The Senate is only taking an alternative approach to do so. Timothy Mathews --- Overland Park sophomore 4 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Thursday, January 27, 1994 Campaigning for grades OK in this political science class By Susan White Kansan staff writer Some KU political science students will be getting firsthand experience in the political world while earning class credit. Scott Wagner, professor of political science, has given the students in his Political Science 110 class the option to work on political campaigns since he began teaching at the University in 1992. Wagner said that at the beginning of this semester he had given his students a survey that had included a question about what students thought of politics. Most of the responses he received — such as "dirty politics" — were negative. "Ihave students work on campaigns so they get to see the positive side of politics," Wagner said. Four of his students will start working on campaigns within the next few weeks. During the project, the students will write journal entries of what they do each day. "They keep a log of their activities," he said. "They write what they did and what the strategies and the politics were for the campaign." paper analyzing the experience. Allison Davidow, Leawood senior, said that she had taken the class during Spring 1993 and that she had worked on Jo Andersen's campaign for City Commission. She learned much from her experience and recommended the class to other students, she said. "Iattended weekly campaign meetings every Sunday night," she said. "They talked about strategies and future plans for the campaign. I also researched Lawrence crime statistics and environmental issues. It was a good excuse to get hands-on experience with political campaigns and candidates." Student seeks indicators of autism By Roberta Johnson Kansan staff writer The lack of certain blood cells may be a sign of autism, said Fred Metzinger, Lawrence graduate student of psychology. Metzinger is searching for a correlation between autism and a lowered number of CD-4T helper cells. Autism is a mental disorder characterized by extreme withdrawal and an inability to communicate or relate with people. Veronica Zysk, administrative director of the Autism Society of America, said she had not heard of any evidence tying the lower number of the cells to autism. She said, however, that there was a correlation between autism and childhood illnesses such as rubella. Metzinger said that a correlation between the number of cells and autism would not necessarily mean that children were more susceptible to illnesses. "It may just be a diagnostic indicator." he said. The CD-4T cell is responsible for a number of activities within the immune system, said Lawrence Draper, professor of microbiology. The cell creates antibodies, kills virus-infected cells and triggers other cells within the immune system. To prove that the lower number of CD-4T cells typically occurs in autistic children, Metzinger said, he took samples from normal, healthy children and from children with Tourette's syndrome. Metzinger said that some medications could affect the immune system and that cells from children with Tourette's syndrome were sampled as a psychiatric control. Children who are not on medication and who are between the ages of 7 and 20 may participate in the on-campus experiment, he said. Participants and parents receive $20 for one hour. Jayhawk Bookstore "Your Book Professionals!" At the top of Mishmish H! 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PROTECTIVE EYEWEAR $999 - $7999 GLOVES, BALLS AND ACCESSORIES 18th AMENOMENT (Formerly "The Hawk") DICKINSO THEATR THE PIANO(R)(4:15) 7:00 9:30 KALIFORNIA(R)(4:30) 7:15 SEX AND ZEN(NC-17) 9:35 Only Dickinson 6 841-8600 2339 815 W. Iowa St. LIBERTY HALL 749- 642 Mass 1912 Theatre 1 is accessible to all persons $1999 - $8999 RACQUETBALL ANYONE? Blink R "4;25, 10; 9.45 Shadowlands R "4;50, 7.00; 9.45 Iron Will PG "4;30, 7.00; 9.35 Grumpy Old Men PG "4;30, 1.20; 7.20; 9.50 Beethoven's 2nd PG "4;15, 7.15; 9.35 House Party R "4;40, 7.25; 9.40 JOCK'S NITCH SPORTING GOODS The Sports Look of Today! 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JAN. 30 IN THE LINE OF FIRE PelicanBrief PG-13 5:00, 8:00 STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SURFILMS MyLife PG-13 5.00 7.38 9.45 Rudy PG 5.00 7.20 Malice R 9.45 CINEMA TWIN ALL STATE 3110 IOWA 842 5197 $1.25 Mrs. Doubtfire PG-13 4:45 7:15.9:40 Intersection R 5:15 7:15.9:40 Air Up There PG 7:30.9:35 Tombstone R 4:50 7:30.9:45 Philadelphia PG-13 4:40 7:25.9:50 SHOWNAMES FOR TODAY ONLY IN THE LINE OF FIRE FRI. & SAT. 7:00PM FRI. & SAT. 9:30PM SUN. 2:00PM 6 EARN CASH $15 Today $30 This Week Plus a $3 Bonus By donating your blood plasma Walk-ins welcome Lawrence Donor Center 816W.24th 1816 W. 24th Behind Laird Noller Ford 749-5750 Hours: Ford M-F9-6 749-5750 Sat. 10-3 $ $ NABI The Quality Source ) NABI The Quality Source trends '80s fever Blondie and Boy George are becoming the musicians of choice for manystudents. By Cathleen Siechta Kansan staff writer JOHN LEWIS FREDERICK It never failed Each song played by deejay Jim White prompted cheers of recognition. William Alix / KANSAN Jim White of Lawrence plays a selection of music from the last decade for '80s Night at the Granada Theater. 1020 Massachusetts St. Every Wednesday night, about 200 people visit the theater to relive the '80s. "Oh my God, I loved this song in high school!" squealed one woman, as the dance floor filled with people eager to dance to the music of Eurhythmics, Culture Club and the Police. Wednesday night, better known as "80s night" at the Granada, 1020 Massachusetts St., brings out the high schooler in everyone. "This is the music that everyone who's in college now grew up on," White said "Everyone says how silly the songs were, but they enjoy them just the same. You can go into anyone's house and find tons of music from the '80s. It's like the classic movies of the '80s, like 'Valley Girl' and 'Fast Times at Ridgemont High.' People still rent those movies and watch them. People still listen to this music." The 1980s may seem too recent to be viewed in retrospect, but students said those were the years they related to their youth. Many clubs and bars have "70s nights, which remain popular, but some maintain that the music of the 1970's doesn't represent the "twentysomething" generation. White said the '80s may represent a more carefree era to college students. "Once a decade passes, everyone wants it back." White said. "It doesn't matter how bad the decade was or what they went through. Most people who grew up on this music are at a point in their lives when they want to be a kid again." Some students said they had more simple explanations for listening to music from the '80s. "The '80s were when we were in high school, when things were easy," said Tony Hubbard, Paola junior. "Listening to the music of the '80s lets you reminisce about your freer, younger days and all the stupid stuff you did then." Monica Harbit, Kansas City, Mo., senior, tends bar on Wednesday night. Harbit said she liked working on Wednesdays because she preferred the music of '80s to the music of the '90s "I'm an '80s reject," Harib said. "I love this music, and I forever stuck in the '80s." But some people don't see the '80s as an era to celebrate. "Popular culture of the 1980s was a phonetic response to shrinking horizons," said Barry Shank, assistant professor of American studies. "From the hysterical trading of commodities on Wall Street to the development of hip-hop and post-punk music to the soporific tragedy of 'thirtysomething,' American popular culture of the '80s reflected the crisis of identity that comes from having an actor as president." "This is the music that everyone who's in college now grew up on." Jim White Deejay at the Granada review 'Intersection' is a wreck; moviegoers, steer clear "Hey, Matt, when do we get to review our next movie?" Right now, Sludge, we're on! "Oh, man, let me get my wits about me. Cover for me." I'll see what I can do. The film "Intersection," which Sludge and I had the displeasure of seeing this weekend, begins and ends with a grisly four-car collision. The problem is that everything in-between is equally mangled and unsalvageable. Richard Gere plays Vincent Eastman, an architect whose life with two women flashes before his eyes after a car wreck. The flashback is a dilemma. How does he choose between his wife, Sally (Sharon Stone), who runs their architectural firm, and the new woman, Olivia (Lolita Davidovitch), a writer for an alternative magazine. Sally is a cold-hearted ice queen, and Olivia is an annoying, spunky fruit loot. Not much of a choice. Add to that the fact that Vincent is a sneaky wow who can't keep his pants on, and "Intersection" doesn't leave anything for the audience to care about. Not a good characteristic in a drama, right Sludge? "Yup. Sharon Stone was a witch, and Olivia was just too darn peppy, and I didn't give a rat's butt whether Gere lived or died in that car哭." Exactly. Add to the fun the fact that we had a couple of recent lobotomy patients in our row who laughed like wounded seals throughout the entire film. They obviously didn't realize that "intersection" isn't a comedy and is in no way amusing. Oh, except for Davidovitch's riotous line, which I think was their favorite (judging by the relative volume of their response): "Yes, I'd like some red wine please." This must have been their drink of choice immediately before the movie. "Those glonkterheads! I was ready to pop both of 'em." "Someone who laughs at the wrong times in a movie." What's a glonkterhead, Sludge? "I'm sure it will. Say, I was just wondering, why did they call the movie "Intersection?" The place where he wrecks isn't an intersection at all, it's not even a three-way stop. It's just a crummy dirt road off a two-lane highway." Oh. Then that term will probably pop up again. That's a good question, Sludge. Maybe it's because the three lives are intersecting, you know, metaphorically. "Yeah, thanks for clearing that up, Francis. What I mean is, if you're going to call it "intersection," then I want concrete, four-way traffic lights, the works. That wasn't an intersection at all." Good point, Sibb. The film has several other shortcomings, as well. Besides being synthet- Matt & SLUDGE AT THE MOVIES by Matt Gowen c and talse, at times the film is just plain strange. First of all, the movie is a series of flashbacks so haphazardly edited together that it makes your head hurt trying to figure out when is what and why. "I know. There were about twenty too many jumps. He's dead. He's alive. It's today...No! It's five years ago, maybe ten. This is real, no walt, it's a dream, and why are they swimming through coffee?" Yes, there was that awful, pseudo-symbolic underwater scene where Gere swims after Davidovitch through tar-colored water. Very odd indeed, Sludge. "We've replaced the water you normally swim through with Folger's Crystals. And speaking of breakfast, what was the deal with pancake man?" Yes, Sludge, there is some bad writing in the movie. The worst of which happens near the end, when Vincent's problems are apparently miraculously solved by a Shirley Temple look-alike delivering pastries who says to him, "Hey mister, wanna sticky bun?" Then he has an existential conversation with her crusty grandpa: Ah, yes, Sally's new man is referred to as "The Pancake Man" by Vincent because he's the one who makes her breakfast now. "It was making me hungry. I wanted to hop over to Village Inn for some flap jacks." The grandpa asks, "You lost?" "She didn't look like she enjoyed it very much, either." theater "No," Vincent replies. "Yeah. Take your $5 and go to Village Inn for a short stack with mulberry syrup." Like I said, she's branching out, trying new things. Parting remarks, Sludge? Definitely, Folks, steer clear of this one. (Ooh, sorry about that.) KU theater graduates perform again under Broadway spotlights By Kevin Hoffmann Kansan staff writer Greg Cunneen and Sarah Terrell didn't plan on seeing much of each other after they graduated from the KU department of theater and film in 1990. Less than five years later, they found themselves touring the country together with a Tony Award-winning Broadway musical, "City of Angels." Cunneen and Terrell, who both played leading roles in the theater department's production of "Cabaret," are touring with the Troika organization, a touring company performing "City of Angels" across the country. The two theater alumni at the University had played a significant role in his successful theater career. "It was through the theater department at KU that I was able to go on to study in New York," he said. "That in turn led to my career." The University did more than help to sharpen his acting skills, Cunneen said. Larry Gelbart, who previously wrote for the television series "M*A*S*H", "wrote the musical, which is described as a witty tribute to Humphrey Bogart-style movies. have returned to the Lawrence area this week to perform the musical — a 1940s-style show about a mystery writer's struggle to enter the film industry — at the Music Hall in Kansas City, Kan. After graduation, both actorsingers left Kansas for New York; Cunneen to go to graduate school and Terrell to find work on the stage. "We sometimes laugh about it," Cunneen said. "How we ended up touring together after spending so much time together on-stage at KU!" "I've always known that I was going to move to New York and act." *KU also has a class called 'Auditioning Techniques' that helps with "I am constantly in contact with people who were at KU the five years I was that are now in New York," Cunneen said. "I'm sure the department at KU played a big part in that." A native of Leawood, Cunneen sings in a quartet featured in the musical. He said it was a coincidence that he and Terrell, an understudy for two characters, wound up in the same touring company after graduating together. While in New York, Cunneen was surprised to find many KU alumni working in the theater field. Cunneen said his theater studies Sarah Torroll KUtheater department alum that part of the career," he said. "I talked with other people who had never heard of anything like that." Cunneen said his move f r o m Lawrence to New York had not been much of a culture shock. "I had spent a lot of time in New York and had a lot of friends there," he said. "It's more of a shock now when I come back." A Wichita native, Terrell has an apartment in midtown Manhattan. She said she enjoyed working in New York. "After I finish this tour, I hope I can stay put in New York for a while and stay close to home," she said. Terrell said she always had planned to be on-stage. "I started in Wichita's Children Theater," she said. "I've always known that I was going to move to New York and act." Before getting her break with "City of Angels," Terrell often found herself waiting to find work, a part of her career that was hard to adjust to. "I would tell people who are just starting out to make sure they had some kind of skill and know what kind of work they wanted to do while waiting for work," she said. "It's a helpless feeling when you're waiting, so you need something to do." THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN "City of Angels" will be playing through Sunday at the Music Hall, 13th and Central streets, Kansas City, Kan. Performances through Saturday are at 8 p.m., 2 p.m. matinees Saturday and Sunday, and a Sunday evening performance at 7 p.m. Tickets may be obtained through Ticketmaster outlets. JANUARY 27,1994 PAGE 6 KULIife Your guide to Entertainment in the Lawrence Area. calendar NIGHTLIFE Benchwarmers Sports Bar and Grill 1601 W. 23rd St. November, 10 tonight The Wake, 10 p.m. tomorrow ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ The Lonesome Hounddogs, 10 p.m. Feb. 3 The Bottleneck L. A. Ramblers, 10 p.m. Saturday 737 New Hampshire St. The Urge, MU330, Citizen King, 10 p.m. tomorrow The Thick with Possum Dickson, 10 tonight (18 and over) Open Mic Night, 10 p.m. Monday Naked Soul, 10 p.m. Tuesday Love Squad and Grumpy, 10 p.m. Saturday Poster Children, Zoom, From, 10 p.m. Sunday (18 and over) "Stop the West Lawrence Parkway" Benefit featuring Ricky Dean Sinatra and Lonesome Hobos. 10 p.m. Wednesday WTCF Benefit featuring Kill Creek, Flackjaw and Showertrick, 10 p.m. Feb. 3 (18 and over) The Crossing 12th and Oread streets The Lonesome Hounddogs, 9:15 p.m. tomorrow row Drake Magnet, 9:15 p.m. Saturday Full Moon Cafe 803 Massachusetts St. Tim Cross Jazz Group, 8:30 tonight White Trash, 8:30 p.m. tomorrow Timber Rattlers, 8:30 p.m. Saturday Michael Paull, 1-4:30 p.m. Sunday The Jazzhaus 926 1/2 Massachusetts St. Monkey Meet, 9:45 tonight Common Ground, 9:45 p.m. tomorrow Soul Shaker, 9:45 p.m. Saturday Whitey, 9:45 p.m. Feb. 3 The Grange Theater 1020 Massachusetts St. "Whack!" 9 tonight '70s, '80s and Alternative Music, 9 p.m. tomorrow Scartaglen, 8 p.m. Saturday Superbowl XXVIII - Buffalo Bills vs. Dallas Cowboys, 5 p.m. Sunday Mondo Disco, 9 p.m. Tuesday "80s Night, 9 p.m. Wednesday "Whack!" 9 p.m. Feb. 3 Hockenbury's Tavern 1016 Massachusetts St. Orquesta Flamante, 10:30 tonight New Riddim, 10:30 p.m. tomorrow Crap Supper with Sunday Drive, 10:30 p.m. Saturday Walking on Einstein, 10:30 p.m. Feb. 3 --- ( SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Thursday, January 27, 1994 7 Last-second shot shoots down Cowboys Woodberry heroics not unexpected By Gerry Fey Kansan sportswriter It was the right player at the right time for Kansas last night. Kansas senior guard Steve Woodberry hit a three-pointer, defeating Oklahoma State 62-61 in overtime at Allen Field House. After Oklahoma State senior forward Fred Burley missed his last free throw with 10.4 seconds left, Kansas junior center Greg Ostertag grabbed the loose ball. Behind by two, freshman guard Jacque Vaughn took Ostertag's outlet pass and sent it to Woodberry on the right side. MICHAEL BORNESTER Woodberry drove down the sideline with two Cowboy defenders closing in. He set himself and launched a 23-footer while the field house crowd went silent. The ball fell cleanly through the net with 1.3 seconds left, and the crowd erupted with a victory celebration. "I sort of had the feeling he was going to knock it in," Kansas coach Roy Williams said. "I've got a lot of confidence in our entire team, but it starts with him. I think he's a big-time player and it's appropriate." Woodberry led No. 3 Kansas with 17 points. Oklahoma State players and coaches knew exactly what Woodberry was going to do, Oklahoma State senior guard Brooks Thompson said. "Great players make great plays." Oklahoma coach Eddie Sutton said. Thompson led the Cowboys with 23 points and six three-pointers, and sophomore forward Sean Pearson and Woodberry each made five for Kansas. In a game that was won from the three-point line, Kansas shot 10 for 16 from behind the arc, and Oklahoma State shot 11 for 23. William Alix / KANSAN The Jayhawks improved to 18-2 overall and 3-1 in the Big Eight Conference. The Cowboys fell to 13-6 and 2-2. Ostertag said he thought that he had lost the game for Kansas. Williams said the play of Ostertag, Woodberry and Pearson had won the game. After Woodberry sank the final shot, Ostertag was moved to tears while he crouched down to the court. It could have been a different ending for Kansas after Ostertag turned the ball over with a bad pass in overtime. "I sort of had the feeling he was going to knock it in. I think he's a big time player." "I did cry because I was upset with Teary-eyed Kansas junior center Greg Ostertag hugs Kansas senior forward Richard Scott after Kansas' overtime victory against Oklahoma State. The Jayhawks won last night's game 62-61 when Kansas guard Steve Woodberry made a three-pointer with 1.3 seconds left on the clock. With the victory, Kansas gained sole possession of second place in the Big Eight Conference behind Missouri, and Oklahoma State fell into a three-place tie for third with Kansas State and Oklahoma. Roy Williams Kansas basketball coac myself because of the missed dunk and the turnover I had," Ostertag said. With 37.5 seconds left in regulation, Oklahoma State junior center Bryant Reeves blocked Ostertag's dunk out of bounds. The score was 64-54 when Woodberry missed a shot and the 35 second shot clock sounded. The Cowbies did not have any timeouts, but Oklahoma State junior forward Scott Pierce appeared to stop play. It would have been a technical foul, but the officials had already blown the whistle to stop the clock with 0.3 seconds, thinking the game clock had expired. Despite Ostertag's mistake, Williams had nothing but praise for the 7-foot-2 center, who had nine points, a team-high 11 rebounds and tied a school record with eight blocks. He also held Reeves to 13 points, well below his average of 20.2 points a game. "I've always thought Greg Ostertag had the chance to be an outstanding player," Williams said. "All those people that call in and talk and complain about him, they can ... you fill in the rest of that." Both teams shot poorly from the field in the first half. Kansas shot 29.2 percent, and Oklahoma State shot 29 percent. Williams attributed it to the tough defense of both teams. "We've always felt that over the last four or five years that Oklahoma State and ourselves play the hardest on the defensive floor," Williams said. "Defense dominated the game." The game was an ordeal for Kansas senior forward Richard Scott, who injured his shoulder in Monday's practice. He played only 20 minutes, but Williams said Scott's toughness helped the Jayhawks. "Nobody in this room would have been tough enough to play tonight," Williams said to reporters. "We don't win without Richard Scott." Toughness was something shared by both teams last night, Sutton said. "Both teams played as hard as any college basketball team could play," he said. "Both teams never allowed a good look at the basket." Kansas 62, Oklahoma St. 61 OKLAHOMA STATE (13-6,2-2) Player Burley 1-5 1-2 ftm/fta tp Collins 0-3 0-0 0 Reeves 6-18 1-4 13 Rutherford 5-12 0-0 15 Thompson 7-15 3-5 23 Sutton 0-2 0-0 0 Pierce 0-2 1-2 1 Roberts 2-6 0-0 4 Manzer 0-1 2-2 2 Phillip 0-0 0-0 0 Totals 21-64 8-15 61 KANSAS (18-2,3-1) Player fgm/fga ftm/ta tp Vaughn 2-9 0-0 4 Woodberry 6-12 0-1 17 Richey 1-4 4-4 6 Scott 0-4 1-4 1 Oortest 2-5 5-6 9 Pollard 3-7 0-0 6 Rayford 0-1 0-0 0 Gurley 0-1 0-0 0 Pearson 5-6 0-0 15 Williams 2-3 0-0 4 Totals 21-52 10-15 62 HalfTime Kansas 12, Oklahoma State 24, 3-point goals Kansas 10-16 (Pearson 5- Woodbury 5-7, Richey 2-O, Vaughn 0-2), Oklahoma State 11-23 (Thompson 6- Rutherford 5-Burie 0-2, Sutton 2-O, Roberts 0-2), Robbinsa Kansas 35 (Rutherford 11). Assateke Kansas 17 (Vaughn 6- Woodbury 4, Rayford 3), Oklahoma State 16 (Thompson 4) Total fouls Kansas 12, Oklahoma State 15. Attendance 15,500. Streak of three-pointers in second half is a confidence builder for Jayhawk forward By Andrew Gilman Kansan sportswriter On a night when some of the Big Eight Conference's best guards were knocking down three-pointers, sophomore forward Sean Pearson calmly made his presence felt. Pearson hit five three-pointers, all in the second half, to help Kansas defeat Oklahoma State 62-61 in overtime. "I was taking more open shots," Pearson said. "I was getting more involved and more enthusiastic." Pearson, who was five for five from beyond the arc and is eight for 11 in conference play, did not surprise Oklahoma State coach Eddie Sutton. "We knew he was a good shooter," Sutton said. "His three's were as important as Woodberry's." Senior guard Brooks Thompson agreed. "He got a couple quick looks at the basket," he said. "You expect him to make shots like that." The question is whether Pearson expected to make those shots. Pearson, who was only hitting 29 percent of his three-pointers coming into the game, was dealing with a confidence problem. "Sean Pearson had not been the most confident player in the world," Kansas coach Roy Williams said. "But he was five for five tonight." Although his confidence may have been a factor, Pearson wasn't bothered by it last night. "When my shots are going in, it gets me more into the game," he said. "But if my shots are not falling, then I don't worry about it as much." Pearson didn't have to worry at all last night when he traded three pointers with some of the premier shooters in the conference, Thompson and junior guard Randy Rutherford. "Every time he made one, then I did, it was feeling good," Pearson said of Thompson. And what was Pearson's strategy against the Cowboy guards? "they shot the ball really well," he said. "I was just trying to make them shoot over our hands and not let them get a good look." Rutherford and Thompson combined for 38 points on 12 of 27 shooting. But Pearson held his own, and that impressed Williams. "I think it was important for him to step up," he said. "It really kept the crowd in it." Sutton was equally impressed. "He had an outstanding evening as far as putting the ball in the hoop," he said. Pearson, who averages only 6.4 points a game, leads all Kansas players in field goal shooting percentage in conference play at 64.7 percent. "I wanted to go out there and just do the best I could," he said. "I want to keep getting better, especially in the big games." Although Pearson's offensive showing was impressive, he was more concerned with the team's performance. "I hope we keep getting better as a team and keep improving," he said. Darts We Buy, Sell Trade & Consign USED & New Sports Equipment PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 1029 Massachusetts phone 841-PLAY PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS Join us for a new program that is aimed at first-year students who are interested in reporting editing or photojournalism. You don't have to be a staff member on one of the top college newspapers to receive its rewards. Call or write Christine Lane, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864.4810 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN write Christine Laue, 111 Stauffer-F 864-4810 • Organizational Meeting 4:30 p.m. January 27, 1994 Rm. 204 Stauffer-Flint Hall BRAND NAME CAR STEREOS University udio 8^1-3775 2319 Louisiana 2015 $8.50 Spicy Red Wine Sauce!!! Almost the Weekend Thursday Special!! Large Pizza 2 toppings 2 drinks ONLY $8.50 plus tax RUDY'S PIZZERIA 749-0055 Open 7 days a week CLEOPATRA'S CLOSET a unique boutique CD-ROM 743 Mass. 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Many more titles available! $2000.00 SCHOLARSHIP Connecting Point XXX COMPUTER CENTER 813 Mass · Downtown Lawrence · 843-7584 KANSAS WATER POLO CLUB TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY & SUNDAY 7:00 P.M. TO 9:00 P.M. ROBINSON NATATORIUM AIR SPORTS --- SOME SWIMMING ABILITY RECOMMENDED NO WATER POLO SKILL REQUIRED FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE CALL: DAVID REYNOLDS: 841-6475 OR NICK RIWONKA: 841-6107 NICK PIVONKA: 841-6197 8 Thursday, January 27, 1994 SPORTS USED BOOKSTORE 1908-1925 Volume Set Historians History of the World VAGABOND BOOKMAN 1113 Mass. 842--BOOK Hours: Mon.-Sat. 10-6 we buy and sell hardback books UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Camera America ONE HOUR PHOTO Lawrence's Largest Supplier of Darkroom Materials 1610 West 23rd Street 841-7205 -843-0900 • 843-0900 • 843-0900 • 843-0900 • 843-0900 Mountain Trekking? Studying Abroad? Spring Break? Sight Seeing? Nightlife? Check Us Out! Free Worldwide Trip Plan, Thursdays 8? pm TRAVEL CO. 3300W, 159th St., Suite 3, Orchard Corners 。 Optical Perspectives Optical Dispensary and Lab formerly Routon eyeland • New Owners • New Services • New Products Your Hometown Doctor's Prescriptions Welcome 600 Lawrence Ave. (913) 841-6100 - River City Travel Co. is located on the KU bus route 1 Ex-husband implicates Harding in attack The Associated Press PORTLAND, Ore. — Tonya Harding, whose ex-husband reportedly is prepared to testify that she was involved in the plot to disable a figure skating rival from the start, is "virtually certain" to face criminal charges, the *Oregonian* newspaper reported in yesterday's editions. Sources told the newspaper that Harding's former husband, Jeff Gillooilly, was willing to admit his own role in the attack on Nancy Kerrigan and to testify that Harding helped plan the assault as well as cover it up after learning that the FBI was investigating. The report came on the heels of an NBC News report Tuesday night that Gillooily, charged with conspiracy to assault Kerrigan, hopes to have a plea bargain worked out by the end of the week that implicates Harding. Sources told NBC that Harding's legal strategy is to maintain that she found out about the alleged conspiracy and got involved in a cover-up out of fear of Gillooly and Shawn Eckardt, her 310-pound bodyguard. NBC said Harding would point out that her divorce papers accuse Gillooly of beating her. The Detroit News reported that any criminal trials in the case would be held in Portland, where the alleged conspiracy occurred, rather than Detroit, where Kerrigan was attacked. "It would make no sense to derail everything they have done there," an unnamed official in Detroit involved with the case told the News. "The cost of bringing all those witnesses back here to testify — what would be the point? Meanwhile, the deadline for a report from the grand jury investigating the case has been extended six days into the Winter Olympics. The Feb. 18 extension likely will keep the U.S. Figure Skating Association waiting until the grand jury decides whether Harding played any role in the attack on Kerrigan. But promoters looking to cash in on the notoriety of the case are not waiting for anything. Harding has been swamped with money-making offers, such as books and movies, but hasn't committed to any of them, said Janis Timlick, legal assistant to one of Harding's lawyers, Robert Weaver. "There isn't even time to count them," Timlick said. "It's difficult to get the calls back in because the calls are so numerous." "How do YOU like it?" she asked sarcastically. The skater turned the tables on the pack of news crews following her on Tuesday when she skated onto the ice at her practice rink with a video camera that she aimed at them. Harding skated for about an hour, falling twice during a routine that included triple axels and other jumps. NBC said Gillooyl was telling authorities that Harding had been part of the plot to knock Kerrigan out of the national figure skating championships. Neither Gillooyl's attorney, Ron Hoevet, nor authorities would comment on whether Gillooyl was trying to make a deal. Valid Through July 31, 1994 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN C A R D AT&T Nager Through July 31, 1997 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN CARD AT&T Spend $1...Save hundreds Membership has its privileges... THESE DISCOUNTS AND OFFERS ARE GOOD THROUGH JULY 31, 1994! JUST SHOW YOUR CARD...USE AS OFTEN AS YOU LIKE! Britches Corner • 843 Massachusetts • 843-0454; Buy 1reg, price Tommy Hilfiger, get the 2nd of equal or lesser value at Cleopatra's Closet • 743 Massachusetts • 749-4664; 15% off everything in store (excluding sale items) The Etc Shop • 928 Massachusetts • 843-0611; 20% off Etc Shop brand sunglasses Harper's Fashions • 835 Massachusetts • 749-0626; Additional 20% off all regular price merchandise KU Bookstore • Kansas and Burge Unions • 864-4640; $5 off any gift or clothing purchase of $25 or more Natural Way Natural Fiber Clothing • 820 Massachusetts • 841-0100; 15% off all regular priced clothing Outfitters Clothing Co. • 740 Massachusetts • 843-3933; 15% off the regular price of guy's and gal's jeans Outfitters Clothing Co. • 740 Massachusetts • 843-3933; 10% off tuxedo rental University Bookshop • 1116 W 23rd St • 749-5206; 20% off all clothing (except sale items) Weavers Department Store • 901 Massachusetts • 843-6360; 20% off all lingerie, hosiery, or intimate apparel RESTAURANTS & BARS American Bistro • 701 Massachusetts • 841-8349: 10% off any entree (limit one) Bonanza • 2329 Iowa • 841-1200: All you-can-eat-Frestasticks Food & Desert Bar for $2.99 Dos Hombres VI • 815 New Hampshire • 841-7286: Buy 1 menu item, get the 2nd for 1/2 price Dunkin Donuts • 521 W 23rd • 749-5015: 15% off any purchase Fiff's Restaurant • 925 Iowa • 841-7226: 10% off any entree (limit one) Imperial Garden • 2907 W 6th St • 841-1688: 10% off any dinner entree (limit one) Johnny's Tavern • 401 N 2nd St • 842-0377: 10% off a cheeseburger w/fries at reg. price, get the 2nd for $1 (Good Mon - Fri, 4pm to 9pm) Little Caesars Pizza-Pizza • 1410 Kasold, 865-5400/520 W 23rd, 842-8000: FREE Crazy Bread w/ any pizza/pizza purchase Perkins Family Restaurant • 1711 W 23rd • 842-9040: $1.00 off any entree, anytime, 24 hours a day Pizza Shuttle • 1601 W 23rd • 842-1212: 1 carryout, 1 topping pizza w/a lg. coke for $4.00 Plum Tree • 2620 Iowa • 841-6222: FREE appetizer (2 crab rangoons or 1 egg roll) w/purchase of any entree Pyramid Pizza • 507 W 14th St (under The Wheel) • 842-3232: $4 srm $6 med-$8 lg - ea add topping 75¢ (Void w/ other offers) Shoney's Restaurant • 2412 Iowa • 843-3519: FREE salad bar w/y purchase of a sandwich and fries Vista Drive In • 1527 W 6th St • 842-4311: FREE req. French Frw w/purchase of a Vistaburger & drink MERCHANDISE & PRODUCTS The Athlete's Foot • 914 Massachusetts • 841-9606: $30 off a shoe purchase of one or more Community Mercantile • 901 Mississippi • 843-8544: 15% off any coffee purchase Cycle Works • 1601 W 23rd • 842-6363: FREE lock set w/ new bike purchase Englewood Florist • 939 Massachusetts • 841-2999: 3 FREE latex balloons with any purchase of $20 or more Francis Sporting Goods • 731 Massachusetts • 843-4191: 15% off all Champion Sportswear It's Your Party • 1601 W 23rd • 749-3455: Buy any 3 greeting cards and get 1 FREE Jaybowl • Level 1-Kansas Union • 864-3545: FREE shoe rental during open bowling Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826: Get an extra 5% CASH back during Semester Buyback Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826: Save 10% on Computer Softwear EVERYDAY! Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826: Blue Books for 10¢ Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826: 20% off Cartoon Computer Diskettes Jayhawk Spirit • 935 Massachusetts • 749-5194: $1.00 off all adjustable hats, $2.00 off all fitted hats Jock's Nitch • 840 Massachusetts • 842-2442: 15% off all shoes Junior's Farm • 924 /12 Massachusetts • 842-3344: Buy 2 CD's at reg. price, get the 3rd (equal or lesser value) at 50% Kansas Sports Club • 837 Massachusetts • 842-2992: 20% off KU sweatshirts Laser Logic • 865-0505: 20% Off Recycled Laser Printer Toner Cartridges (FREE pick-up and delivery) Miracle Video • 1910 Haskell, 841-7504/910 N 2nd St, 841-8903: Rent 1 video, get 2nd FREE (Sun thru Thurs) Rentco USA • 1741 Massachusetts • 749-1605: 25% off all rentals Sports Fan-Attics • 942 Massachusetts • 842-2323: 15% off everything in store (excluding sale items & leather jackets) Stereo Lane • 2024 W 23rd • 865-2677: $10 off any purchase of $50 or more Union Technology Center • Level 3-Burge Union • 864-5690: 10% off any accessory (disks, diskholders, cables, paper, surge protec- Video Biz • 832 Iowa • 749-3507: 2 For Tuesday! Rent 2 Videos for the Price of 1 (Tuesday only) Vormahr Studio & Gallery • 1 Riverfront Plaza, Ste 321 • 749-0744: 15% off framed prints of KU and sororities SERVICES The Auto Medic • 3631 W 10th St • 842-0384: 20% off any service call B.C. Automotive • 510 N 6th St • 841-6955: 20% off tune ups and brake repair Copy Co • 1401 W 23rd • 832-2679: 10% off all merchandise or services Enterprise Rent-A-Car • 3030 Iowa • 842-8040: 10% off car rental Fantastic Sam's • 2223 Louisiana • 749-1976: 15% off any regular price service or product NailTlque • 2449 Iowa, Ste N • 832-2900: $3.00 off any service Planned Parenthood • 1420 Kasold-Orchards Corners • 832-0281: 25% off initial or annual visit plus 12 free condoms RC's Stadium Barbery • 1033 Massachusetts • 749-5363: $5.50 haircut Sonny Hill Chevrolet-Gec-Oldsmobile • 3400 S Iowa • 843-7700: 10% off all parts and service Ultimate Tan • 2449 Iowa, Ste 0 • 842-4949: 1 FREE session with the purchase of a 9-session package ($5 value) The University Daily Kansan • 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall • 864-3458: 10% off any private party classified advertisement **Terms and conditions.** The following terms and conditions relate to candidate's use of the *University Daily Kuman Card* (DRC) at participating Mamme (PM). If the DRC must be signed to be valid, it is non-randizable, and PM may request confirmation for Card used by anyone other than the candidate. Candidate's signature on a DRC shall constitute agreement to be bound by these terms and conditions of the Director's Office. 2.DRC special Offer Documents are not valid with other offers or special promotions of PM's kit but do not apply to tax portion of purchase. 3.apply only to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 4.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 5.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 6.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 7.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 8.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 9.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 10.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 11.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 12.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 13.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 14.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 15.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 16.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 17.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 18.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 19.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 20.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 21.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 22.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 23.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 24.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 25.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 26.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 27.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 28.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 29.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 30.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 31.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 32.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 33.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 34.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 35.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 36.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 37.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 38.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 39.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 40.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 41.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 42.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 43.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 44.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 45.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 46.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 47.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 48.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 49.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 50.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 51.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 52.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 53.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 54.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 55.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 56.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 57.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 58.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 59.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 60.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 61.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 62.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 63.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 64.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 65.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 66.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 67.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 68.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 69.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 70.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 71.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 72.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 73.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 74.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 75.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 76.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 77.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 78.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 79.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 80.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 81.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 82.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 83.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 84.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 85.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 86.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 87.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 88.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 89.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 90.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 91.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 92.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 93.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 94.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 95.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 96.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 97.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 98.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 99.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 100.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 101.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 102.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 103.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 104.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 105.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 106.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 107.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 108.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 109.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 110.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 111.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 112.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 113.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 114.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 115.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 116.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 117.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 118.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 119.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 120.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 121.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 122.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 123.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 124.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 125.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 126.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 127.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 128.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 129.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 130.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 131.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 132.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 133.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 134.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 135.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 136.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 137.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 138.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 139.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 140.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 141.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 142.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 143.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 144.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 145.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 146.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 147.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 148.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 149.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 150.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 151.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 152.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 153.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 154.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 155.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 156.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 157.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 158.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 159.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 160.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 161.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 162.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 163.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 164.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 165.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 166.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 167.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 168.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 169.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 170.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 171.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 172.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 173.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 174.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 175.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 176.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 177.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 178.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 179.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 180.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 181.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 182.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 183.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 184.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 185.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 186.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 187.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 188.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 189.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 190.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 191.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 192.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 193.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 194.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 195.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 196.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 197.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 198.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 199.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 200.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 201.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 202.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 203.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 204.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 205.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 206.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 207.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 208.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 209.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 210.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 211.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 212.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 213.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 214.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 215.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 216.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 217.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 218.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 219.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 220.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 221.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 222.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 223.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 224.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 225.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 226.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 227.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 228.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 229.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 230.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 231.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 232.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 233.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 234.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 235.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 236.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 237.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 238.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 239.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 240.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 241.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 242.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 243.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 244.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 245.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 246.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 247.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 248.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 249.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 250.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 251.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 252.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 253.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 254.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 255.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 256.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 257.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 258.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 259.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 260.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 261.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 262.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 263.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 264.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 265.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 266.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 267.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 268.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 269.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 270.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 271.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 272.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 273.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 274.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC purchases are the total purchase, or only if purchaser uses another party's credit card for payment. 275.applicable to candidate's reasonable personal purchase for the total purchase determined by PM. if non-DRC Jayhawk Bookstore 1420 Crescent Road 843-3826 Kansas and Burge Unions •864-4640 UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP KU KU BOOKSTUDIES 1116 W.23rd St *749-5206* THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358 Hockenbury Tavern 1016 Massachusetts Thurs.-Flamantie Fri.-New Riddim Sat.-Crap Supper w/EJ Rose 865-4055 100s Announcements 25 10 15 Classified Directory 105 Personal 110 Business Journal 120 Announcements 130 Entertainment 140 Lost and Found 235 Typing Services 200s Employme 205 Help Wanted 225 Professional Classified Policy Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are subject to change. The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against a woman's race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 and the Americans with Disabilities Emergency, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or dis- 100s Announcements 105 Personals 110 Bus. Personals 25M, looking for 25F who like to Mt bike ride. Must be good look, athletic, fun living, spontaneous, like Kravitz, Hendrix and totally Nails, plus intellect, health conscious, and totally cool. Oh, yeah, and health conscious, and totally cool. Oh, yeah, and health conscious, and totally cool. Oh, yeah, and health conscious, and totally cool. All applicants will be considered. Response to Box 50, 119 Stauffer-Flint, Lawrence KS, 6044 SpringBreak1994 CANCUN from #439 SOUTH PADRE from #159 Other destinations available Lowest price guaranteed Call 865-1352 WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500 Regular Clinic Hours Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm Saturday 8am-11:30am Urgent Care (Additional Charge) Monday Friday - 4:30pm-10pm Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm Sunday 8am-4:30pm KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services Pharmacy Hour Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm Saturday 8:30am-12:30pm Sunday 11am-3pm 300s Merchandise 400s Real Estate 305 For Sale 340 Auto Sales 360 Miscellaneous 370 Want to Buy --Kansan Classified: 864-4358 - 405 Real Estate 430 Roommate Wanted 120 Announcements Looking for significant Spring Break cash? Startup preventive health company out of KC locking for highly motivated individuals to market our products in time. Please call 1-800-728-3980 or fill out my program form. Unique Sterling Silver Jewelry Hoops, Penendants & More! For Guey & Gals The Fashionista 928 Mass. Downtwon NOTETAKING Workshop. Learn how to listen more effectively and take more useful notes using the Cornell method, FREE! Thurs. Jan 27, 7-9 p.m. Course Presented. Students the Student Assistance SPRING BREAK 94 13th YEAR! 94 stik! SOUTH PAUKE ISLAND NORTH PADRE/ MUSTANG ISLAND T·L·O·R·I·D·R DAYTONA BEACH PANAMA CITY BEACH ORLANDO/WALT DISNEY WORLD C·O·L·O·R·A·D·O STEAMBOAT VAIL/BEAVER CREEK BRECKENRIDGE/KEYSTONE SOUTH PADRE ISLAND NORTH PADREI MUSTANG ISLAND N·E·V·A·D·A LAS VEGAS S-O-U-T-H C-A-R-O-L-I-N-A HILTON HEAD ISLAND RESERVATIONS AVAILABLE NOW CALL TOLL FREE FOR FULL CALL TOLL FREE FOR FULL DETAILS AND COLOR BROCHURE! Call Joan at 865-5611 Student Travel Experts *Student Airfares *International Railpasses *International Identity Cards *Worldwide Adventure Tours *Travel Gear and Guidebooks *Expert Travel Advice Council Travel 1634Orrington Ave Evanston, IL 60201 1-800-475-5070 1 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Thursday, January 27, 1994 9 Wain a trip to Canunc! Look for details and entry blanks in the coupon section of your new University Telephone Directory. Departures for entry is available in the Telephone Department are available now at the KU Bookstores. Wanted St.Patricks Day Parade Queen. If interested leave name & number with Lawrence St. Patricks Day Parade Service 789-6577*2124-3214, www.stpatrickdayparade.org. KLW/KNZL, Jawahyk Spark, Red Lyon, Outfitters, Harpers, Headmasters, Cadillac Ranch, or Cleopatra's Dead Close Fashion. 4th NOTETAKING WORKSHOP Listen more effectively & take more useful notes using the Cornell method FREE! Thursday, January 27, 7-9 pm 4034 Wescoe Sponsored by the Student Assistance Center 130 Entertainment Cruise for two to the Bahamas, $350. Contact Roh at (913) 865-1566. PUP'S Grill (inside) inside benchwarmers) open late night 11:00-3 a.m. Alternative Dance DJ Thur.-Sat. 1:30-3:00 BENCHWARMERS Thursday featuring November .25 draws Friday featuring The Wake $2.00 Teas Saturday featuring L.A. Ramblers 2 for 1 Wells 2 for 1 Wells 140 Lost & Found Brown leather jacket left in 2022 Dose on Jan. 13. If brown contact mark Contact k 749-8955. Cash reward for return at Apple New Message lockback leather case. Lost at Food Dool 4 Less, call 841-3700 Found: Three keys found on top of Havoray with distinguishing key chain. Call 864-3446 LOST Gold ring with black waxy keys in 3rd floor in the Kansas University. If you please contact us. 男 女 200s Employment 205 Help Wanted 1994 EXPANSION Part-time temporary and permanent openings. Flexible schedules around class. $8-$10 to start. Positions need to be filled by 2/1/94. Please call 842-831 for more info. EUR NEEDS YOU THIS SUMMER. For the best summer of your life-lease your career center or contact: 48 Florence St. Palo Alto, CA 94301 48 Florence St. Palo Alto, CA 94301 ACADEMIC AIDE POSITION AVAILABLE. Law Reader (Reopened). Duties include: Reading textbooks and other materials for students who are blind or have reading disabilities. Reading exams and assisting with library research. $50.0h/Acr. Attendance events. Applications available at the Student Assistance Center, 183 Strong Hall, 846-4046. Application deadline: 183 Strong Hall, 19:48, 5:00 PM. Adams Alumni Center needs banquet prep cook and salad person. Flexible shifts, position available immediately, apply in person no phone calls. 1266 Oread Ave. AEROBICS INSTRUCTORS NEEDED. Students are needed now to teach various aerobics classes. Prior experience necessary. $10/hour. Fill out application with Recreation Services, 402 Robinhousekeeping for retired faculty widow. Part time, fictional hours, no events. Very close to the public. Please visit us at 1234567890. After school school and evening babyssitter. Tue Wednesday, 10 a.m., pm, some weekend evenings. Car required. Requires 2 minu- sion of driving. Camp Daiyind Hainan resident Girl Scout Camp has positions available: business mgrp, camp director, cannon driver, cooks, craft a nature instructor, medical student, and wranglers. For an application come to the Summer Job Fair on Feb. 2. Write to kaw Vallima P., O. P. 4314, Stoneia KS, 6K5004. Corks (female) needed for beautiful summer camps in Eustes Park, Colorado. Contract period 8/6 to 8/18. Contact Ruthann Holle, Cheley Colorado Camps. To 508-368-4244. CAMP SEQUIA in New York is Catskill Mills, 10 min. nyc) JOB: summer job available. Cabin counselor, specialty instructors for sports, aquatics and dance programs. Outdoor Education Art, English Horseback Riding, Outdoor Education Adventure Programs and more Competitive Sports. Join us for a day of fun and dry. See us at The Summer Employment Fair in the Kansas Union Ballroom on Ground Hog Day, 8:30am-6pm or by information call SEQUIA at 0141-6799-5291. Cruise line, entry level, on-board positions available, great benefit Summer or year round (613) Evening and weekend CNA needed to work with clients in their homes. Reliable transportation necessary. Call Sharon at Douglas County Visiting Nurse 843-3738. EARN CASH ON THE SPOT $15 Today $30 This week By donating your life saving blood plasma WALK-INS WELCOME! NABI Biomedical Center 816 W 24th 749-5750 Female grad student or upperclassman: light in occupancy is now hiring intelligent energetic staff. Full and part-time positions are available and include guaranteed wage and benefits. Call 813-531-2084 today, for more information. Every occupant has access to the same amenities. Looking for a few serious people interested in earn- ing and learning to play the piano or a Lawrence entertainment book. FOE 748-448-3920. Part-time farm hand, some experience with farm machinery and cattle. Wage 8 weeks hourly. Pizza Hut needs delivery drivers part-time, week nights and weekend. Must have own vehicle and insurance. Good driving record. Contact Downtown Pizza Hut 934 Massachusetts St. Work around classes, prefer experience with children. Sunshine Acres School 482-223 Reporter/ Assistant Editor need now. J-Degree or 2 years exp. instruction. Salary, benefits, bonus package. Resume send with references, employment. P.O. Box 349 Baxter Springs, KS 66713. STUDENT ASSISTANT IN ENGINEERING/ MAINTENANCE. Deadline: 02/14/94. Salary: $4.35/hr. Duties include pickup and delivery of equipment on campus; receiving and write up of orders; check inventory levels; data entry; assist technicians in light mechanical and electronic work; provide training. repair; and other duties as assigned. Required qualifications currently enrolled as a student at the University of Kansas, demonstrated ability to work with students in computerization skills, 6 months previous hardware experience, available to work 16 to 20 hrs. per week, in 3 to 4 hrs. blocks, valid driver license. To apply, complete a job application which is available on the Computer Center EO/AA EMPLOYER STUDENT DISTRIBUTION TECHNIQUE. day, 01/31/19. Salary: $4.35 per hr. duties include performing bursting and decolating functions; delivery of computer output and interface equipment; installation of new systems; on occasion will assist in receiving shipments, stocking and maintaining inventory figures, tape library duties, and other warehousing functions; on occasion will assist in maintenance activities; assists in Open Landscape Furniture maintenance; performs duties in conjunction with the campus wide recycle program; uses personal computer or mainframe software as a data center system; completes and applications available at the Computer junction with the campus wide recycle program; uses personal computer or mainframe software as well as a server; includes application available at the Computer Center in room 202. EO/AE_EMPIER Telemarketing: Monday-Thursday, 6-9 pm. 841-1289. Salary and commission. Tennis Jobs-Summer Children's Camps-Northeast-Men and women with good tennis background can who teach球队 to play tennis. Good salary, room & board travel allowance. Women with good tennis background, MA 02332 (817) 643-9538. Men call or write: Camp Winnadu, 2255 Glades Rd., Suite 490E, Boca Raton, FL 33431 (407) 984-5500. We will be on campus in the hotel and on campus on 4pm at 6/18 in the Glead and Regional listens. Wanted: Sculpture models, 1 male and 1 female. Wanted: Low body fat. Call 824-5481. sections Work in beautiful Colorado mountains this summer at Cheley Colorado Camps summer program. RNs; drivers; secretaries; wringlers; nanny; school bus driver; sports coaches; sports, crafts counselors. Camp age 9-17. Room and board, cash salary, travel allowance. Our 74th summer! Must be at least 19 to apply. Applicants will be notified of campus interview. Apply to Cheley Colorado Camps, 302-377-3616. 225 Professional Services OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense Rick Frydman,Attorney 823 Missouri 843-4023 T Driver education offered through Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 yrs. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749 For free consultation call English tutor: All English classes, proofreading English teacher: All English classes, EBSA Education Arthur b141-3313 English A confidential, caring friend, call us. We're here to listen and talk with you Birthright 914-4021. Free pregnancy testing HERITATIONAL STUDENTS DV1-青光学院 U.S. Immigration Dept. Green坡省 provides permanent resident status, Citizens of almost all countries are allowed to take part. Students, tourists, any may apply. For info & forms: New Exxa University, 20231 Stag, Canoga Park, CA 91036. Tel; (818) 998-4425; Fax; (818) 882-9681 DUI/MIP/Fake ID's Office located right next to campus Elizabeth Leach Attorney at Law-F former Prosecutor 414 119 740 2087 BRAXTON B.COPLEY Attorney at Law General Practice Traffic Tickets, Misdemeanors, 719 Massachusetts 749-5333 MARKUPS Fake ID & & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of 235 Typing Services Donald G. Strobe Sally G. Kelsey 16.East 13th 842-1133 1-der Women Word Processing. Former editor authority type. 894-603 in accurate pages of letter usage. 894-603 VIDEO EDITING AND PRODUCTION SERVICES A/B roll production with EDL. 3D computer animation. His8 field production package. Award winning screenwriter. PRIMAL SCREENWRITER 013-841-4000 Looking for a good type? •Papers, Applications, Spreadsheets, Charts •Laser printing to WOW! your prof's •Grammar and spelling free •10-year experience cell Jack in at Makin' the Grade DESKTOP DOCUMENTS For all of your word processing needs. 842-3722 X Words By CTS Word Processing. High quality papers and printing, spell check Word processing, applications, term papers, dissertations research, Editing, computer, rush projects. 300s Merchandise 22 Specialized Rock Hopper. Many x-tras. Musl e $350 Call Torry #832-8218. 305 For Sale 14x7 mobile hive, 2 BDRM, 1 bath. Cent. A/C & heat. Fenced yard w/ shed & deck. All Appl. Great investment at $8000! Call 865-3641. 3 CD Players For Sale: Sheward 5 dice change, 4 dice change, single single single phone call 64-44-1444. FOR SALE: Prowizer Prof Matriz Printer $100.00 FOR SALE: Prowizer Prof Matriz Printer $100.00 obc Large iguanae FOR SALE: Call 1-859-260-0044 Beds, desks, bookcases, chest of drawers. Everything But Ice. 936 Mass. Diamond Back Mountain Bike, 17in. frame, $250 or best call for treat Bike at $93-1800 Jolumban Box $200, Albino Corn Snake $100 obo hall 843-302. FREE kLB Lab-Callup puppie, 3 months, shots pd, free to good home. 778-806-253. Leave me contact info. GK Bass Amp. 200 Watt Combo w/chorus, com- fessional 49-980 Volt in EV. 1 KW asking $500 499-980 Volt GUITARS—smooth Westone, 4/8 body size. Floyd Rosses $2 point electric ektc. $8 Kramer Frenkel $10 point electric ektc. Queen size classic futon bed, solid map w/ natural pillow. $400 / 888-7174 1ask for Sherri FT-82 Calculator. Brand new condition. $60 Call 814-7927. Tak trask, walk trask: DEJA RECYCLED Tak trask, walk trask: DEJA RECYCLED Simple Goods, 723 Mass, Mat-10: 140, Thril 8 Simple Goods, 723 Mass, Mat-10: 140, Thril 8 340 Auto Sales 74 Dodge PU, 6 cyl., 3 speed, good cond. $750 Call 832-1984. 83 Chevy Caprice Classic, power locks & brakes 7260 ROO Call: B418 943-855 85 Pontiac New, red paint. Runners perfectly. A/C, Stereo, 5 speaker. Kokel $649. Call 91-749-2000. 400s Real Estate 405 For Rent 1 bedroom with wood floors available Mid Febro- uary and the bus route water and paper pad. 708-2490 Yaui 3 bedroom apartments now available. On bus route, d/w and microwave. 800 calls. Call 794-1598. 4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished. Interested? Contact 841-1595, 794-445 or 842-445. 21/3 bedroom townhouse, $150/month. Fireplace, valenced ceilings, available immediately. #42-1605. DBRM townhouse w/ AC and basic cable paid. wash/dryer and appliances. $560/po. Peta pos. location. Available at West Hill Arts. Spacious bed i furnished apt. 328 per month. Water pad Great location near campus. 1012 Emery Rd. No pets. 841-380. 542-384. 5 bedroom room now available close to campus. $700/month. 6 month lease. Call 841-8468. Newer 1, 2 and 3 bedroom apartments available for August '94. Washer/dryer, dishwasher, microwave, private bath/balconies. Avoid the place you save now! Call 744-7586 for details. Available Now. New! renovated rosette ap30 1560 equiv. 1560x960. NEW AVAILABLE. aBDRmber dbrm24 $260. no pets. bk41-1074 Extra quiet and nice. 2 BR apartment. All appli- cations available immediately. 814-6000. No prizes. EASILY AVAILABLE. 814-6000 Leasing for June and August. New 4 bedroom, 2 bathrooms. Gas fireplace, ceiling fans, cable-painted 1900 feet, and covered parking avail. Early sign-up specials offered. For more information call Dave at 841-763-6750. First month free. 1 bedroom apartment. Second month free. Boardwalk Apartments. Third month free. 852-234-6780 Campus Locations Looking for two roommates for a three bedroom house, rent in the water paid, water paid, wash dresser included. Call 841-8902. B2S BIRE app, available ASAP for sub-leasing until tug, 836-904, +.untiles, 865-905 VILLAGE SQUARE apartments A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere OAK STREET CAFE - Close to campus • Spacious 2 bedroom • Laundry facility • Swimming Pool • Waterbed allowed Rooms, apartments, and well kept, older homes available now. 81A.STAR (7927) Luxurious 2,3, & 4 Bedroom Town Homes • Garages; 2½Baths • Microwave Ovens • Some with Fireplaces • On KU Bus Route • Swimming Pool and Tennis Courts One bedroom, parking sublease to campus, off street parking, free rent for month of January. MORNING STAR 9th& Avalon-842-3040 Sick of your Roommate? Try Sub-Leasing. 1 bdmpt. 2 ibks for Your Campus. $25/month. call 831-3948. Spacious 1 bedroom bedroom to campus. Furnished. Avail. immediately. Call 831-4124. Auck Studio apartment now available close to campus Utilities paid $295, 6 month lease available. Call (800) 342-1070 Palm Tree SUNRISE VILLAGE 660 Gateway Ct. Now Leasing for Fall Mon.-Fri. 1-5 841-8400or 841-1287 Holiday Apartments NOW LEASING FOR FALL'94 *1,2,3 or 4 Bedrooms - Newly Constructed - -OnKU Bus route - Quiet Location 211 Mount Hope Ct. ApartmentA3 843-6500 or 843-0011 SUB-LEASE 2 Br. ap1 for lease $9 per month. SUB-LEASE 3 Br. ap1 for lease Very close to camouflage Call 848-7099 Release new 2Bdm. Apt.-Champlain CL-close to KU460-month|month please 749-2903. Sublease quiet room at 13th and Tennessee 826-205-8422 diving, living, monthly $822-8142 Park25 We are now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature studio1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. We also have 3 bedroom, 2 1/2 bath townhomes. We presently have available a select few 1 & 2 bedroom apartments for immediate occupancy. *2 Pools - 2 Pools * Volleyball Court * On KU Bus Route with 4 Stops on Property * 2 Laundry Rooms * Some Washer/Dryer Hookups Call or stop by today. 2401 W. 25th, 9A3 842-1455 (sorry no pets) meadowbrook Apartments Available Now Bubblesill tide, 2 new bldm in 428 m². Centralair heat, DW & more. Jan rent free in $425 per mo. +dep 109 Monterrey Way W43-2050/749-0268. Monterrey Way W43-2050/749-0268. w/. study Boardwalk Apta 345 m4-0415. m4-0415. -1-3 bdrm,2 bath - Furnished studios * Water and Cable paid M-F8-5:30 Sat 10-4 Sun 1-4 15th & Crestline 842-4200 Sorry no seats Sorry no pets 430 Roommate Wanted carrier and interware $125 monm + utilities Call Tina at 455-783-6900 Also Leasing For Spring & Fall! South Point AMUSEMENTS apt. $200-$246 w/ W/D available, utilities paid, on bus route. Call Shaw at 842-7196. or 2 roommates needed for new 3 bedroom apt. 1 or 2 + /v utilities. Near campus. W/D in apt. 1 or 2 roomsmates need immediate to share a room; they block from campus. Very cheap. Call 621-9152 South Point ACADEMIC 2 rooms in Apt. 1b behind Prazer Feb rent 950.00 $155 + utilities Feb rent 1850.00 message received 2 & 3 BEDROOMS AVAILABLE NOW!! College-aged roommate needed now for $3 BR Aurora, 1850 sq. ft., water pdx. Jan. rent free. 641-892-4050. Frm. roommade for nice look style dress. Very close to bus on bus! Great deal/$mo/- night! $20/night! LUXURY THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN New appliances New bath fixtures Mini & vertical blinds Walk-in closets Water, heating of water & trash paid!! Patio balconies available Swimming pool and Sand volleyball court Small pets OK with deposit Ample off-street parking Female 2 share nice 3 brc bus, 2 bkks 2 $U0 +$u0+l or exchange 2 babysitting 1 brc old girl 3 brc bus, 2 bkks 2 $U0 +$u0+l West of Iowa on 26th Street K.U. bus route Looking for roommate starting Feb. the 1st min from campm. $22.50, oat and cable paid but not included in the package. LOCATION Female roommate need, own room, bath & study W/D; luggage w/opener $90 each. paid 841-263-2577 Female, not-an-okening; rmuneed needed; immature; female; not an okening; washers/water; 8100 + /utilities 842-0000 843-6446 GREATLOCATION!!! How to schedule an ad: Female roommate, beautiful 3 bedroom townhome on bus route, $250 per night, no smoke, no pets - By phone: 864-4358 Walk to shopping, banking, Restaurants & six theaters Next to new Holcom Recreational Center- Basketball, baseball, indoor Track, racquetball and Aerobics. Needed immatured, immate Jr., Sr., Grad, female non- 嫁 for BDR 8185/ms/Co. #481-8310 Male roommate for 4 bdm 2 bath furnished apt $270/mo. +/-1/vltls 1 btk to KU. smoker for $100 for 1 Hour Use. $35 for private 2 bairn lowbounce. $180 a month * up to private 2 garage. DA, DW, FF and GF for 1 hour use. Have your own room, covered parking, private room, covered parking, for etc. for $170/mm + units. call 749-8563 Needed by Feb 1: B. NRH to share 3 BR Dpk 8F4 B. Call Rqal 81-ND, W.D, dpa 5 min ffr B. Call Rqal 81-WD, S.D, dpa 5 min ffr Male rominate needed under 10 of semester before, near campus $145/mo. + √u/lf Call 811-276-9325 One roommate to share 3-Br house garage, (encased in backyard) $175/mo. Call 864-290-2933 Wanted to 1 or 2 roommate to share a brand new bond for $60. Call Greg at 743-844-1214 Mel at 782-391-8100 Roommate needed for 4bdm house near campus. W/D appliances, furnished except for bdm. Willing to help with part of rent, pets possible. Call 865-2431. Calculating Rates: Ad phone in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made. Amount $1,854.50 Earned Flood Classified Information and order form Stop by the Kansas office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or Visa. When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused debt. Ranks on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check with cash are not available. Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of agile lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, melling the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run. The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a tee of $4.00. 3 lines 4 lines 5-7 lines 8+ lines Classifications Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. 140 laptop 1 fund 285 hawked wanted 295 prestigious services 295 lyrics services 365 for sale 340 auto sales 360 miscellaneous 105 personal 118 lujusness personals 129 announcements 130 entertainment Cost per mile per day 1 2X 1-3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-28X 30-X) 2.95 1.55 1.05 .95 .75 .50 1.99 1.15 .90 .70 .65 .45 1.85 1.05 .75 .65 .60 .40 1.75 1.05 .65 .60 .55 .35 370 want to buy 405 for rent 430 roommate wanted Please print your ad one word per box: ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print: Total ad cost:___ Classification:___ 1 | | | | | | 2 | | | | | 3 | | | | | 4 | | | | | 5 | | | | | Phone: Date ad begins: Total days in page Total ad cost: Classification Address: VISA Method of Payment (Check one) ☐ Check enclosed ☐ MasterCard ☐ Visa (Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansan) Furnish the following if you are charming your ad: Account number: Expiration Date: MasterCard Print exact name appearing on credit card: Signature The University Daliy Kansas, 11 Stauffer Fint Hall, Lawrence, KS, 6044 587-234-3955 THE FAR SIDE By GARY LARSON © 1994 Ta-Works Inc. Ltd. By Universal Press Syndicate "Oh, and that makes me feel even worse! ... I laughed at Dinkins when he said his new lenses were indestructible." 1 10 Thursday, January 27, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN N Rentco USA 749-1805 Student Discount low Carrying Computers 1741 Massachusetts DON'S AUTO CENTER "For All Your Repair Needs" *Complete Auto Repair *Machine Shop Service *Parts Department 841-4833 920 E. 11th Street Moving? Let Lawrence Paper Company Solve your moving hassles Sturdy boxes for moving and storage. Boxes with handles for easier moving Large quantities at discount prices. Small quantities -walk-in's welcome Call 843-8111 Ask for sales/service dept. Futons & Frames On Sale! BLUE HERON where comfort and quality is assured. 937 Mass. 841-9443 POSTER SALE Recycled Sounds from Lawrence & KC U2 · Coltrane · Lemonheads · Rush Bjork · Frank Zappa · Soundgarden Lenny Kravitz · Resevoir Dogs Specials · House of Pain · Hendrix Bob Dylan · Smashing Pumpkins PJ Harvey · Tosn · Metallica · Sting Cure Jane's Addict · Ice T Rage Against the Machine · Clapton Blind Melon · Billie Holiday · Beatles Madonna · Led Zeppelin Morrissey Red Hots · Bad Brains Blues Brothers · Depeche Mode Nirvana Pink Floyd · Taxi Driver Mon., Jan. 24 - Sat., Jan. 29 KANSAS UNION GALLERY, Level 4, Kansas Union 9 - 5 pm Mon.- Fri./10 - 4 pm Sat. STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUK UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS STUDENT WHICH ACTIVITIES SUK UNIVERSITY OF VIENNA Keep your belly and your wallet full Buffet Specials Everyday! Daily Lunch Buffet Mon. - Sat. 11:30-2:30 $4.95 Sun. 11:30-3:00 $5.95 Daily Dinner Buffet 7 Days a Week 5:30-9:00 $6.95 IMPERIAL GARDEN 25 items including soups, salads, appetizers, fruit, entrees, and dessert 聚豐圉 2907 W.6th 841-1688 (Across from Dillons) THE NEWS in brief Pentagon makes plans to send South Koreans Patriot defense missiles WASHINGTON The Pentagon is planning to send Patriot air defense missiles to South Korea as "sensible, rational defense preparations" for a potential North Korean Scud rocket assault, a senior official said yesterday. The move seemed likely to raise the level of tension on the Korean peninsula, where a North Korean army of a million people stands just across the border from a South Korean force bolstered by 36,000 U.S. Army and Air Force troops. Tensions have been inflamed in recent months by a standoff between Washington and Pyongyang about international inspections of the communist nation's nuclear program, which the United States says is covertly pursuing nuclear bombs. North Korea denies that its nuclear facilities have any military purpose. Frank Wisner, the undersecretary of defense for policy, said the Patriot deployment would go ahead although no final decision had been made and details such as timing had not been set. White House press secretary Dee Dee Myers said, "The only thing we can say is it's moving in that direction, but the operational decisions have not been made." A At the North Korean mission to the United Nations in New York, an aide said Ambassador Ho Jong was not available to comment on the Patriot plan MIA search yields improved ties HANOI, Vietnam The United States' biggest search to try to account for American troops missing in the Vietnam War ended yesterday after drawing praise from U.S. officials for Vietnamese cooperation. A U.S. official declined to say how many remains were found during the three-week search pending a joint U.S.-Vietnamese forensics review. A similar operation is planned to begin in late February and to run for four weeks. U. S. officials visited during the operation to try to gauge the extent of Vietnam's cooperation. Two participants, Sen. John Kerry, Massachusetts Democrat, and Adm. Charles Larson, commander of U.S. military forces in the Pacific, said the Vietnamese were not holding anything back. President Clinton has made resumption of economic and diplomatic ties with Vietnam contingent on Hanoi's cooperation in trying to account for 2,238 American MIAs in Indochina, including 1,647 missing in Vietnam. Relatives of MIAs and veterans organizations who oppose lifting the trade embargo accuse the Vietnamese of withholding information. Kerry said in Washington on Tuesday that he planned to meet with the president later this week and recommend ending the embargo. Larson's favorable assessment also will weigh in Clinton's decision. The United States backed South Vietnam during the Vietnam War and cut off diplomatic and economic ties in 1975 when the South fell to communist North Vietnam. BRUSSELS, Belgium BRUSSELS, Belgium Romania enters NATO partnership Romanian Foreign Minister Teodor Melescanu signed the document during a meeting with ambassadors of the 16 nations in the alliance. NATO enrolled Romania yesterday as the first nation in its new program offering cooperation to former Warsaw Pact foes while denying them full membership in the military alliance. In doing so, his nation became the first to accept the partnership offered earlier this month by President Clinton and other NATO leaders. "I hope it is a good omen for the future of our relationship. "Melescau said. The program, proposed by the United States, will allow East European nations to join NATO in military exercises, peacekeeping operations and other activities. But it does not grant them the membership and security guarantees they are seeking President Algirdas Brazauskas of Lithuania planned to sign up today, followed by Poland and possibly Estonia next week. The program is part of NATO's efforts to redefine its role in the post-Cold War era. NATO was formed in 1949 as a deterrent to Soviet expansion. GREENBELT, Md. NASA displays space-trip leftovers "Micrometeorites," says John Wood, a NASA expert. The curved faceplate of the huge camera removed from the Hubble Space Telescope in December looks as if a kid with a BB gun and bad aim had a go at it. *Micronectones*, says John Wood, a NASA expert. The pockmarks on the wide-field planetary camera are about the only visible sign of wear and tear on parts exposed for more than three years to the harsh environment of space, where dusk and dawn alternate every 45 minutes while temperatures swing by 300 degrees. The pockmars look like paint chips no more than 1/8 inch in diameter. Most likely they were caused by dust the size of a grain of sand or perhaps debris from earlier launches trapped in orbit. In its vast clean room at the Goddard Space Flight Center on Tuesday, NASA showed off the 15,000 pounds of parts returned from space Compiled from The Associated Press. KU Fencing Club Seoul, Barcelona, Montreal, Atlanta... Fencing Can Really Take You Places! Join the KU Fencing Club Drop By During Our Practices: Where: 130 Robinson When: Tue.7:30-9:00 Thur.8:30-10:30 Fri.5:30-7:00 If only I would have joined TIBARIUS VERONA ACTUALIS UNDERGREVE BY NURY Don't miss your chance! your chance! Student Union Activities is taking Officer and Coordinator applications for the 1994-95 school year. Officer applications are available now and due by noon, Thursday February 3. Coordinator applications will be available Monday, January 24 and are due by 5 p.m., Monday, February 28. Applications can be picked up in SUA office, Level 4, Kansas Union. Officers: President, VP of Administrative Affairs, VP of University Affairs. VP for Membership Development. Coordinators: Feature Films, Fine Arts, Forums, Live Music, Public Relations Special Events, Spectrum Films, and Recreation & Travel. For more information call 864-3477 DAILY KANSAN CLASSIFIED GET RESULTS United Parcel Service Part time Jobs ups $8 Hour ups Interviews will be held Wednesday, Feb. 2nd from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Sign up in the placement center, 110 Burge Union E/O/E m/f 1 Sports: The Kansas women's basketball team faces Kansas State Sunday in Allen Field House. Page 11. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOL.103,NO.89 THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA KS 66612 ADVERTISING: 864-4358 FRIDAY. JANUARY 28,1994 (USPS USA) Haskell Regents reject trafficway proposals County, state will now consider options The Associated Press The Board of Regents at Haskell Indian Nations University has rejected proposed design alternatives for a highway it believes would hurt the school. Douglas County commissioners presented the board with the list of 12 options to address the school's concerns on Wednesday. The $62 million South Lawrence Trafficway, which has been planned for decades, is designed to connect Kansas 10 to Interstate 70 and relieve traffic congestion in Lawrence. Haskell officials contend the proposed route — adjacent to Haskell's south campus along 31st Street — would disturb ground the school uses for sacred purposes and harm a wetlands area students use for study. The dispute involves about 3,000 feet of the 14-mile highway. Since the Regents rejected the proposals, the county now will meet with state and federal officials to determine the next step. Buhler said. The 15-member board heard comments from students, faculty and concerned members of the community following the county's presentation. building ways to control water and improve drainage near the wetlands, and offering the school a $160,000 grant for science study. Mark Buhler, Douglas County commissioner, said the alternatives included such things as lowering the proposed height of the trafficway, screening the area with native trees, The Regents unanimously approved a resolution yesterday that said the school wanted to work with county officials to identify alternatives to the trafficway. The estimated costs of all 12 alternatives would be between $735,000 and $12 million. Buhler said. they have basically said the 31st Street alignment will not work, unequivocally," Buhler said. "All our efforts have been associated with that alignment, so we're not sure what our choices are now." "We would like to hold on to the land we currently have left," Stacy James, head of the Haskell Save the Wetlands committee, said at the meeting. "The dominant society should be thankful that they own 97 percent of our land currently." Hannes Combest, educational assistant to Haskell president Bob Martin said Haskell was not sure of its next step either. "We don't have a plan," she said. "We just stated our position." James said students were pleased with the board's decision. She said the committee would continue working with the county to try to get the alignment of the trafficway changed. "I'm not sure what the plan is," she said. "It will be interesting to see what happens." Kansan staff writer Denise Neil contributed information to this story. The image provided is too blurry to accurately recognize any text or details. It appears to be a monochrome photograph of a person standing in front of a conference room, likely giving a speech or presentation. The background shows a large screen and several people seated at tables, suggesting a formal meeting or event. Council approves relationship policy Doug Hesse / KANSAN Content and wording spark heated debate NEWS:864-4810 By Stephen Martino Kansan staff writer P. Srinivasan, head of SenEx, opens the floor for discussion on the consensual relations policy during the University Council meeting After about an hour and a half of spirited and contentious debate, University Council approved a SenEx-recommended amendment to the consensual relations policy. The policy is all but assured of going into effect because the amendment was based on an administration recommendation, David Shuilenburg, vice chancellor for academics affairs, said last week that the administration was willing to accept the SenEx version. The meeting included a heated discussion between Emil Tonkovich, former professor of law, and Robert Friauf, head of Council, and resulted in Tonkovich being able to address Council. For about 30 minutes, the Council discussed the definitions of words in the amendment. Don Marquis, Council member and professor of philosophy, questioned whether the words "should not" equaled "ought not" or were closer to defining proscribed conduct. "Should not" was used to describe faculty involving themselves in relationships with students. Proscribed conduct was described as conduct that could result in disciplinary action against faculty members. Two motions were brought to change the wording of the amendment but both failed. As debate continued, speakers often strayed from designated points of discussion and expanded on their views of the policy. "I can believe we are considering voting on a policy when a crucial aspect of the policy is unclear." Marquis said. Many of her colleagues nodded their heads in agreement. Sandra Zindars-Swartz, professor of religious studies, said she had never been in favor of the administration's ban, which was imposed on Aug. 20, 1993, but said it was clear what the policy intended. "I don't mean to be crude, but the policy has the three f's in it," she said. "You f- your students, you're found out, you're fired." She said that if amendments were passed, they could blur the intent of the overall policy. couldburthe intentionof the T.P.Srinivasan,head ofSenEx,said that Council should not be tinkeringwith the policy becauseif it did the administration might not accent it. Marquis said that there was good reason to tinker with it if there were varying interpretations. About this time, Tonkovich, who had been sitting in the corner of the room since the beginning of the meeting, stood and started to address the Council. Immediately, Friauf said that Tonkovich had no right to speak because he was not a member of Council. Friauf had said at the beginning of the meeting he would not recognize nonmembers, a departure from past precedent within Council. "This kind of action is indicative of the totalitarianism in the way this University operates," Tonkovich said. "I would ask that a Council member make a motion that will allow me to speak." Friauf was clearly agitated by Tonkovich's outburst, moving closer to him and warning Tonkovich that although the Council did not have a sergeant-at-arms, he could be removed. Friauf then said that he would require a unaniof appointed members from special-interest groups. Considers policy that directly affects students and appropriates money collected from student fees. Frauf then said that he would require a unanimous vote to allow Tonkovik to speak. His statement brought a chorus of disapproval from his colleagues. It was decided that a simple majority would be enough for Tonkovich to speak, and the motion easily passed. Tonkovich proceeded to criticize the University for the handling of his termination, saying it was based on no policy violation. "I was fired for allegedly violating a rule that you are voting on today," he said. "This is typical of the disregard for the law that permeates at this University." He said that he was fired for having sex with a student, a charge he denies, and not sexual harassment or moral turpitude. "I'm not here to argue the merits of the policy you are considering," he said, "but to point out the real power differential is between the administration and faculty governance, who knuckle-under every time there is conflict." Once Tonkovich concluded his statement, the Council continued its discussion but only shortly. The motion was passed an hour and 23 minutes after they started debating, with only a handful of opposing votes. What's what at KU ADMINISTRATION: Chancellor, executive vice chancellor, the three vice chancellors and the subordinates within their offices. Executes the policies and procedures of the University. Several University organizations have been involved in the process of developing and passing the the consensual relations policy. These are the major organizations and their functions. FACULTY SENATE: Composed of administration, all deans, tenured faculty and other professors and directors of University offices. Considers policy that directly affects faculty. POLICY: Student's opinions. Page 3. GOVERNANCE: The umbrella name for all representative bodies at the University. STUDENT SENATE: Composed of students (elected directly) and also a number UNIVERSITY COUNCIL: Composed of 12 student senators and 39 faculty members. Acts on behalf of Student Senate and Faculty Senate to consider policy that affects all members of the University community. SENEX: Executive group of University Council, six of whom are faculty members and three of whom are student senators. One student senator must be a graduate student. Meets weekly to enforce and carry out code in an expeditious manner. JUDICIAL BOARD: Composed of three law professors with tenure and many other members from all aspects of the University community, including students, classified staff and administrators. Acts to resolve conflicts, grievances and complaints coming out of the University community. Graduate students get senate By Heather Moore Kansan staff writer Kansan staff writer The hopes of the former graduate student council were answered on Dec. 19, when Student Senate granted it the right to separate from the main body. The final decision on the split still will have to go through administrative channels, said Chris O'Brian, former graduate student council president. The newly formed Graduate Senate will be changing in prestige more than in organization, making it equal to Senate. Graduate Senate plans to keep amicable relations with Senate. Nancy Scott, communications director for the Graduate Senate, said one of the things that the group would be working on was a graduate student experience survey. "We hope to let the grad school know what issues graps are facing," she said. "They are decentralized, older, support families, worry about child-care and financial support." Another one of the issues that the group is working on is a centralized job search network. Lynette Sharp Penya, executive director of Graduate Senate, said that this would allow the graduate students to find out about jobs before they came to campus. "We'll have a telephone number that students can call to find what jobs they are interested in," she said. "People are so busy. This way they can call up and find on-campus jobs." Penya said that although the service was aimed at graduate students, it would be available to all students. After the separation is finalized, graduate student fees will be sent to the Graduate Senate and the undergraduate fees will be sent to the Senate. There will be a joint account that will handle the common services and work the way the Senate Finance Committee works now. Of the graduate fees, 20 percent will be used for graduate needs and 80 percent will be used for the joint interests. Graduate student council received $83,700 this year from Senate, and it expects to receive approximately that amount next year as Graduate Senate. O'Brien said that the other 80 percent of the fees had to go to Senate because the graduates still needed to take advantage of services that the Senate provides, such as health care, busing and child care. "The percentage can flex and compensate for a rise in graduate enrollment," he said. The Graduate Senate will retain the same structure as the graduate student council. Academic departments that do not currently have representatives in the graduate student council have an opportunity to elect representatives to the Graduate Senate. The Graduate Senate will meet once a month and the Graduate Senate Executive Committee will set the agenda for the Graduate Senate. The Graduate Senate will be phased in over one year. O'Brien said that this would protect the people who are in positions this year and that it would give time to work out the financial bugs. Some senators from each organization will attend meetings in both Senate and Graduate Senate. A joint affairs committee will be established of the executive officers in both senates to ensure that legislation has been brought before both bodies. INSIDE Take Two KU alumnus Antonio Shepherd will direct his play "Color Doesn't Matter" at 8 tonight in the Lied Center. Page 5. . Court restricts student fees from lobbyists The University of Kansas withdrew from the League of Kansas Students on Dec. 26 because of a decision made by Attorney General Bob Stephan. By Heather Moore Kansan staff writer Kansas college groups unsure about future The decision, which was handed down a month ago, said that student lobbying groups cannot use student fees for lobbying. The reasoning for Stephan's decision is based on a California Supreme Court case in which a student group was using student fees to lobby for pro-choice causes. The Supreme Court said that student fees could not be used for lobbying because lobbyists' views may not represent all students' views. Because of this ruling, lobbying efforts have been restricted to on-campus activities. Alan Tikwart, Westwood Hills "The separation can still represent the school to the Legislature, Tkwart said. is ashame." Benjy Schwartz Co-director of KU's student lobbying group senior and co-director of KU's student lobby group, said student representation at the statehouse would be hurt. "We can't go to Topela because student fees can't fund these trips," he said. "Our schools have litte in common because of geography and size," he said. "Our views are so different. We have different outlooks on all issues." Student Body President John Shoemaker Tikwart said KU lobbyists also encountered problems agreeing with other schools in the league, which was formed just last semester. Those schools are Kansas State University, Wichita State University and Washburn University. Tikwart said that KU's lobbyists would concentrate their efforts on letter-writing campaigns. "We have rules to ensure that lobbying is non-partisan and for the budget," he said. Shoemaker said the ruling also would hinder the free speech of lobbyists. non-partisan and for the budget," he said. Shoemaker said that KU was not a professional lobbying group. we provide legislative information," he said. "We let them know about student thoughts on tuition." Benly Schwartz, Northbrook, Ill., senior and co-director of KU's student lobby group, said the lobbyists still were deciding what actions they will take. 4. Schwartz said they would make the best out of a bad situation. "Alan and I will make a joint effort to let students know what's going on," he said. Schwartz said they would make the best "The separation is a shame," he said. "The constitution was OK'd by Senate and it all fell apart." 2 Friday, January 28, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The University Dally Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-FlintHall, Lawrence, KA, 66045. Weights We Buy, Sell Trade & Consign USED & New Sports Equipment used weights—.25cents per lb. 8 PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 1029 Massachusetts phone 841-PLAY The Lowest CD Prices In Town! Current, Popular CDs for $5.95! Buy 5 or more CDs for $4.95! Also available, special selection CDs $3.95! Buy 10 or more CDs for $2.50 each! For the Best Values in Town Visit Lawrence Pawn 843-4344 718 New Hampshire PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS 842-1212 1601 W.23rd Southern Hills Center "NO COUPON" SPECIALS EVERYDAY TWO-FERS 2-PIZZAS 2-TOPPINGS 2-COKES $900 PRIMETIME 3-PIZZAS 1-TOPPING 4-COKES $1150 PARTY "10" 10-PIZZAS 1-TOPPING CARRY OUT 1-PIZZA 1-TOPPING 1-COKE $350 $30⁰⁰ DELIVERY HOURS MON-THURS 11 AM-2 AM FRI-SAT 11 AM-3 AM SUN 11 AM-1 AM THE CINEMA TWIN presents A SOLUTION FOR THE BACK-TO-SCHOOL BUDGET BLUES! Every Seat, Everyday, $1.25 The best of both worlds... First Class service... discount prices... big screen entertainment... for the budget minded. ON CAMPUS N 9th Street Hillcrest Shopping Center Joea Street Allen Field House Massachusetts 31st Street K-MJ Cinema Twin S E W Ecumenical Christian Ministries will sponsor a Volunteer-Intern Placement Fair from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. today at the center, 1204 Oread. For more information, call Thad Holcombe at 843-4933. Ecumenical Christian Ministries will sponsor an information session about volunteering with the Praxis Project at 10 a.m. today at the center, 1204 Oread. For more information, call Thad Holcombe at 843-4993. The Women's Student Union will meet at 5 p.m. today at Alceve D in the Kansas Union. For more information, call 864-7337. St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today in Danforth Chapel. KU Cultural India Club will sponsor an Indian movie, "Darr." at 7 tonight at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Priyesh Patel at 749-4190. KU Fencing Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Jen Snyder at 841-6445. Ecumenical Christian Ministries will sponsor an informational meeting on spring break alternatives at 1:30 p.m. Sunday. For more information, call Thad Holcombe at 843-4933. St Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a Vespers Concert Series at 7:15 tonight at the St Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call 843-0357. The Astronomy Associates of Lawrence will meet at 8 p.m. on every clear Sunday on the top floor of Lindley Hall to stargaze. For more information, call Corey Zirlin at 842-2225. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN HOW TO REACH US Call 864-4-810 for the newsroom: ■ News tips — Campus Desk ■ Comments/Complaints/Corrections Call 864-4358 for advertising: Classified Department Comments/Complaints — Gretchen Koetterheirich, Classified Manager Lisa Cosmillo, Managing Editor for News - Ben Grove, Editor or Display Advertising Comments/Complaints — Justin Garberg, Business Manager Kansan fax #--- 913-864-5261 WEATHER Omaha: 16°/15° LAWRENCE: 31°/24° Kansas City: 28°/23° St. Louis: 29°/26° Wichita: 31°/30° Minneapolis: 9°/-2° Phoenix: 59°/42° Salt Lake City: 39°/32° Seattle: 46°/37° TODAY Tomorrow Friday Freezing rain with snow flurries later in the day Snow flurries in the morning Partly cloudy High: 33° Low: 24° High: 28° Low: 19° High: 33° Low: 23° Sunny Rainy day ON THE RECORD Someone left a box of feces at the front door of a KU student Jan. 21 at the Jayhawker Towers, KU police reported. Mon..Sun. Buffet Hours $2.99 lunch buffet 2630 Iowa 11:00-1:30 (add .70 for salad) 843-1474 A bookbag containing credit cards, a checkbook and textbooks was stolen Tuesday from a room on the 10th floor of Haworth Hall, KU police reported. 843-0900 • 843-0900 • 843-0900 • 843-0900 • 843-0900 • 843-0900 Suburban Trekking Mountain Trekking Studying Abroad? Spring Break? Sight Seeing? Nightlife? Check Us Out! World New York Trip, Thursdays at 17 pm TRAVEL CO. 20W 15H 8W Ship 3 Carrier Domes TRUSTEES River City Travel Co. is located on the KU bus route! 3300W, 15th St., Ste 3, Orchards Corne CURE SINCE 1972 LAWRENCE'S FOREMOST NAME IN OUTDOOR CLOTHING SUNFLOWER 804 MASSACHUSETTS CURE FOR THE COMMON COLD THERMAL UNDERWEAR * GLOVES * MITTENS LINERS * SOCKS * BOOTS * OUTERWEAR WOOL * COTTON * FLEECE. Spring Break '94 South Padre Island, Texas Let's Padre! Located on the tropical tip of Texas, South Padre Island is the hottest Spring Break destination. Literally! This year, Spring Break at SPI is hotter than ever with more music, more watersports and more legendary nightlife. Where else can you be breakin' and get a spicy taste of Mexico to boot? Be a part of the College Beach Volleyball Championships, or build your part in a sand castle contest. The Country Music Association will be sand-blastin' on the beach with Confederate Railroad, the Gibson/Miller Band and Brother Phelps. But that's not all. Lari White, Little Texas and Twister Alley will rock you till the sun goes down. South Padre Island is convenient by car or by plane. You'll find a flight to fit your schedule on Southwest, American or Continental Airlines via the Valley International Airport in Harlingen or, by Continental to Brownsville's International Airport. So what are you waiting for? Pick up your phone now and call 1-800-343-2368. Tell them you want your South Padre Island Spring Break '94 information in the mail TODAY! 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For reservations call: 1-800-292-7704 1-210-761-6511 Fly to South Padre Island via Hartlingen's Valley International Airport Valley International Airport 0 J CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Friday, January 28, 1994 3 Student leaders support plan ___ Policy protects students, they say Doug Hesse / KANSAN Emil Tonkovich listened to University Council members discuss consensual relationships yesterday. By Stephen Martino Kansan staff writer As faculty fought about definitions to the policy on consensual relations yesterday, the policy's impact on their rights seemed at the forefront of the discussion. However, just as important to the policy is the way students will be treated and how their consensual relations with faculty members might change. According to the policy passed by University Council, faculty members should not initiate or accept a relationship with a student whom they can grade or otherwise evaluate. Furthermore, if the relationship preexists the enrollment in a class, the faculty member must remove himself or herself from the power of grading that student. Failure to do so will violate the Faculty Code of Conduct, which could result in disciplinary action against the faculty member. John Shoemaker, student body president, said yesterday that the student body was against rules that prohibited all relations but said the policy before Council was agreeable to students. Student Senate, at its meeting Jan. 19, endorsed the proposed revision that was voted on yesterday. John Altevogt, SenEx member and graduate student senator, said that the policy that eventually passed was a good start on consensual relations. He said the policy would help protect students from being victimized. Altevogt also said that Student Advocacy, a group he helped create, would assist anyone who felt a faculty member had violated the consensual relations policy. "We are going to start gathering information about procedures in different departments and schools to get students out of a class where a professor has asked them out," he said. Altevogt said that faculty members who asked students out but were rejected might have just as much or more reason to be unfair to that student than those who had a relationship but broke up. "Students have been victims too long at this University," he said. "It is time for them exert some influence and power." Yet students who make it a habit to date their teaching assistants might not find that so easy anymore. The policy affects all faculty members, not just professors. Jill Bechtel, SenEx member and holdover senator, said that even though there had been a long history of successful relationships between students and faculty members, the policy was a good one for students. "We were concerned about students being caught in a power differential," she said. "We only outlawed the conflict of interest and not the relationships." The Bottom Line FACULTY: Faculty members cannot initiate or accept a relationship with a student whom they can grade or evaluate. If a relationship pre-exists, faculty members have to remove themselves from the evaluative power or risk violating the Faculty Code of Conduct, which could lead to disciplinary procedures. STUDENTS: Students will not be able to have a relationships with a faculty member that can grade them, without that faculty member breaking the Faculty Code of Conduct. They can still have relationships with faculty members who do not evaluate their work. Source: Kansan staff reports KANSAN Task force member condemns policy 'Irregular procedures' cited in letter to Judicial Board By Stephen Martino Kansan staff writer A member of the Special Task Force on Consensual Relations seeks to "null and void" the consensual relations policy that was passed Dec. 9 at the University Council meeting through KU Judiciary Board. Elizabeth Banks, associate professor of classics and task force member, wrote a letter on Jan. 3 to A. Kimberley Dayton, professor of law and head of the KU Judicial Board, to begin the judicial process. The task force submitted two options for consideration by Council and University Senate Executive Committee. One was written by Banks and another was written by Robert Friau, head of Council. In her letter, Banks wrote that the policy presented to Council for its Dec. 9 meeting from SenEx was "arrived at by irregular procedures." Banks said in her letter that Option C, the third consensual relations policy written by T.P. Srinivasan, head of SenEx, and Friusur畏u 1930 the two options written by the task force and contained language that was inconsistent with the spirit of what the task force concluded in its report. Specifically, Banks said that the two options written by the task force contained the phrase "while not expressly forbidden" with reference to consensual relationships. The Elizabeth Banks third option did not use language forbidding a ban. Banks said that Srinivasan and Friai did not want to discuss the lack of a ban in Council, and both wanted to present their policy — with a ban — to the administration. She said she was recommending that the policy be declared null and void because of the procedural irregularities surrounding its passage by Council. "For whatever reason, Srinivasan and Friau chose to do an 'end run' around what is right and proper, and consequently, 1 challenge the result." Banks wrote. Dayton and Friauf declined to comment about Banks' letter. However, Srinivasan said that he welcomed the challenge to the policy and the procedures surrounding its passage so that Banks could be shown how her letter was wrong. "I am glad that she filed the complaint," he said. "I will welcome any individual or group of individuals to meet with her so she can see the facts that are on the record and not as she imagines them to be." Srinivasan said he wanted to stress that even though he and Banks were on opposite ends of this issue, he held her in high regard as an educator and as a contributor to governance issues. According to University policy, once the head of the Judiciary Board receives notice a complaint, the board has five class days to begin the hearing process. Even though Banks filed her letter Jan. 3, classes did not begin until Jan. 11, so Jan. 17 was the fifth class day. No action has yet been taken. "I can't understand why Betty Banks is don'i it," he said. "She's not that kind of person." Banks said that she had not been told why no action on her petition had been taken and that she had been given no indication by Dayton as to when the process might begin. Doug Hesse / KANSAN Conflicts over CONSENSUAL RELATIONS Policy's ability for solutions questioned By Stephen Martino Kansan staff writer While the University of Kansas was mired in the Emil Tonkovich dismissal hearings, calls for a consensual relations policy were being heard from every corner of campus. Marquis is not the only one who believes consensual relations may not address a larger problem that exists at KU. "Assuming the charges against Tonkovich are true," said Don Marquis, Council member and professor of philosophy, "what he did amounted to rape, and a consensual relations policy isn't going to address anything like that." Now that the University is close to enacting such a policy, some people question whether a consensual relations policy will be the best medicine for the illness Tonkovich seemed to bring to light. Joe Zeller, Special Task Force for Consensual Relations member and professor of ceramics, said that during the task force's discussion it was clear that it could not impose a ban on consensual relations. "The committee makes the assumption that students are naive, innocent, little victims," he said. T. P. Srinivasan, head of the University Senate Executive Committee and professor of mathematics, said a consensual relations policy was necessary to monitor the conduct of faculty members involved in a relationship with a student they grade or evaluate. He said a relationship between a student and a faculty member was acceptable as long as the faculty member did not have the student in class. However, Marquis said integrity should guide faculty members involved in relationships, not a policy. "I think it is an intrusion on privacy of both students and faculty, and it creates problems for faculty and student," he said. "If problems develop, you have a situation of sexual harassment, and we have procedures already that cover that. It's real simple." Other members of the consensual relations task force said they thought the enforcement of a ban on relationships would be difficult. "Everyone agreed that we shouldn't try to enforce any kind of ban," Jeff Bottenberg, graduate senator and task force member. "We said these relationships weren't wise, but there should be no penalties for this behavior." Duplication of policies is what Sandra Wick, assistant director of the honors program and task force member, said the University was engaging in by developing a consensual relations policy. She was head of the Task Force on Sexual Harassment that recommended against a ban on consensual relations. "It is absurd that you are prohibiting behavior that is extremely private," she said. "Any ban would be practically unenforceable, plus any violations could be prosecuted under the existing policy of sexual harassment." Autorized Apple service provider It's never too early to start investing in the future. Big return! Big return! The Campus Software Set for Macintosh. Just like any good investments, the Macintosh LC 475 4/80 is extremely stable, has growth potential and pays big dividends. Grade dividends. So it is not just an investment in a computer, but also an investment in yourself. And now is the best time to invest in your future because the Union Technology Center is offering a great inside deal. They have the Macintosh LC 475 4/80 with ClarisWorks, Campus The Campus Software Set for Macintosh. Software Set, a StyleWriter II printer, a Color Plus 14" monitor and a standard keyboard all for the special student of only $1,509^{00} Macintosh. The Power to be your Best at KU. union technology center KU 4 Friday, January 28, 1994 OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VIEWPOINT Women's basketball team deserves equal support The women's basketball team remains one of the University's best kept secrets from KU students. But their games are no less exciting than those of the men's team. Both games have all the exciting elements of college basketball fast breaks, steals, the no-look and behind-the-backpasses, 3-point shots and an extremely physical game under the basket. All that separates the women's games from the men's games is the lack of high-flying dunks and a fan-packed Allen Field House. In recent years, the women's team has paralleled the achievements of the men's team. Both teams have been and are ranked nationally. Both have played in the NCAA tournament the past three years. Our women's team is now ranked No.7 in the nation and sits atop the conference with a 6-0 record. A misconception exists that women's games are boring. But they are far from dull. Few who saw the televised game between the then- No. 12 Jayhawks and the No. 4 Colorado Buffaloes would disagree that it was one of the most exciting games played in the field house this year. The game was highlighted when junior forward Angela Aycock became the ninth female Jayhawk in history to break the 1,000-point barrier. The best part of women's games is the admission. Unlike the hard-to-get tickets for men's games, which are $3 for students, tickets to women's games are free with a KUID. So quit missing out on some of the University's best basketball games. Your next opportunity to see a game will be at 2 p.m. Sunday in the field house when the Jayhawks play Kansas State. J. R. CLAIRBORNE FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD Mexican government must address rebellion President Carlos Salinas de Gortari's Institutional Revolutionary Party surely did not invent bad social conditions in Mexico. But because it has ruled the country since 1929, and the peasants continue to be repressed, it largely should be held responsible for the problems. The Indian rebellion in Mexico stems directly from the misery and the exploitative atmosphere in which the Indian peasants live. The Institutional Revolutionary Party, known as PRI, often has gained rule by fraudulent means. The peasant rebellion opposes the party, but the electoral law weighs in the party's favor. Although there was news of a truce last week, the Zapatistas will not vanish quickly from the headlines. They say they fight for democracy, justice and better treatment of the country's Indian peasants. These things are sometimes hard to obtain in Latin America. Even if the United States does not interfere, it will play an important role in the conflict. The North American Free Trade Agreement, which the peasants targeted by staging their rebellion on the date it went into effect, will make the United States pay attention to the situation. If the Mexican government did not fear repercussions from other countries, and if institutions such as Amnesty International were not monitoring the situation, bloodshed already would have occurred. Like almost all Latin American countries, Mexico needs land reform, decent public schools, jobs and decent housing—rather than slums. The Indian rebels also demand that their people's "genocide" be stopped. The PRI should be pushed to implement the changes. GERALDO SAMOR FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD KANSAN STAFF BEN GROVE, Editor LISA COSMILLO, Managing editor TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator Editora Assistant Managing Editor...Dan England Assistant to the editor...J. R. Clairbone Newe...Kristi Fogler, Katie Greenwald, Todd Selert Editorial...Colleen McCain Nathan Olson Campus...Jess DeHaven Sports...David Dorey Photo...Doug Hesse Features...Sara Bennett JUSTIN GARBERG Business manager JENNIFER BLOWEY Retail sales manager JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser Business Staff Campus sales mgr...Jason Eberly Regional sales mgr...Troy Tarwater National & Co-op sales mgr...Robin Kring Special sections mgr...Shilah McConnell Production mgr...Laura Guth Gretchen Kootterleinbrick Marketing director...Shannon Kelly Creative director...John Carton Classified mgr...Kelly Connealy Teaheats mgr...Wing Chan Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position. Guest columnists should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be pleased to answer. The Kanzen reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kanzen newsroom, 111 Stauffer Fint Hall. Rush Limbaugh's views mirror graffiti found in bathroom stalls With successful radio and television shows, two best-selling books, and even a sitcom parodying his life and attitudes, Rush Limbaugh is a popular man. Last week, rumor had it that CBS — which gave him his television debut as temporary host of the short-lived "Pat Sajak Show" — wanted to cash in on the Rush craze by building a new talk show around him. They apparently know a lucrative deal when they see it. Why do so many people listen to this vacuous, second-rate radio hack? Then again, why do so many people write on bathroom walls? Limbaugh and bathroom graffiti are symbolically equivalent. Rush's rantings are the latrine humor of American politics. Bathroom walls are a middle ground between the private and the public, a place to express thoughts that are often best kept hidden but that are nevertheless driven to be recorded in some sort of clandestine way. Sometimes, lavatory tiles contain serious information. At Brown University, for example, women's restrooms are scrawled with the names of male students suspected of date rape. But COLUMNIST BRIAN DIRCK more often, bathroom graffiti messages sexist, racist, homophobic messages that ought never see the light of day. Limbaugh occupies this same netherworld of the open and the hidden, walking a thin line between criticism and bigotry, discernment and intolerance. He expresses ideas many others are thinking but dare not say in this era of speech codes and political correctness. And, like a choice bit of bathroom poetry, his material is clever and sometimes entertaining. Rush has constructed his act in such a way that he is never held immediately responsible for what he says. His books are filled with abrupt, distinct assertions of so-called truth, largely unsupported by fact or analysis. During his television show, he sits alone and grandly pontificates, accompanied only by an occasional video clip or other visual aid. Guest stars are scarce, and Limbaugh rarely invites a direct confrontation with anyone who might challenge his views or engage him in a serious dialogue. The same goes for bathroom graffiti. Those who write it need rarely fear punishment, and so they are not held accountable for their vandalism. The words are simply there, unanswerable except by those who stoop to the same level as the writer. There is a playful quality to such graffiti. Sure, most of what you find written in a bathroom is obscene and unprintable. But sometimes it is downright funny, provoking an embarrassed giggle. Limbaugh often has this same, don't-take-me-too-seriously quality. "I demonstrate the absurd by being absurd," he once said. Certainly Limbaugh himself possesses nothing in the way of a coherent ideology (unless indiscriminate Clinton-bashing could be called an ideology), and he sometimes reveals a humorous, self-deprecating quality that makes him seem somewhat less of an oaf and more of a P.T. Barnum-style huckster. Of course, there are a few pitiable souls who actually take the man at his word, professing admiration for his "high ideal" and "principles." But most of the Rush fans I know say they like him for his entertainment value. He provides an emotional outlet in this deadly serious era of intolerance for the intolerant. This catharsis quality is, in the end, the secret of Rush's success. Like bathroom graffiti, his material is appealing because of its imbecility and surreptitious rule breaking. Litterals ought to keep in mind that it is their humorlessness and often censorious suppression of opposing viewpoints that created Rush Limbaugh in the first place. Brian Dirck is a Conway, Ark., graduate student in history. MKNEELY Chicago Tribune THIS?..IT'S PURE ARKANSAS MONKEY... REAL WARM, TOO... OF COURSE IT'S STILL ALIVE... Senator stabs with forked tongue I worry about Bob Dole. I don't mean that I worry about our senator's physical health or his ability to pass or impede legislation, nor do I worry about his political future. Rather, I am concerned about the fate of his soul in whatever afterlife there may be. This concern is brought on by the Senate Minority Leader's recent sniping at President Clinton about the Whitewater affair while the latter was in Arkansas at his mother's funeral. You have to be pretty low-down to do that, regardless of your politics. We all know that Dole isn't exactly Barney the Dinosaur when it comes to working and playing well with others. That's part of his charm. The senator has left a trail of caustic comments that extend back for decades. He's so mean, in fact, that I wonder why he went into politics in the first place. Watch C-SPAN, which is my favorite channel, and you'll see a kind of ritualized politeness among our elected officials. What they really want to do is call their opponents' parentage into question, but they're accountable to the people, and the people don't cotton to that sort of thing. So they wish their opponents the best of luck, even though they don't mean it. COLUMNIST PAUL HENRY My personal favorite Doleism was on Feb. 16, 1988, the day of the New Hampshire primary. Dole, who earlier that day had told a rival candidate's supporter to "get back in your cave," had lost the primary to George Bush, and both men were being interviewed by "NBC Nightly News" anchor Tom Everyone likes to be surrounded by nice people. It's like when you reach for the check after a meal with a friend at a fancy restaurant: You really don't want it, but you like it when the other guy does it, so you do it, too. Unless you're Bob Dole. Brokaw. Brokaw asked Bush if he had a message he would like to give Dole. "Just wish him well, and we'll meet him in the South," said Bush. Brokaw later asked Dole if he had a message for Bush. "Tell him to stop lying about my record," Dole growled. Calm down, Bob. And this was a member of his own party. So we've come to expect and accept this kind of nastiness from Mr. Dole. But then he went and slammed the president while he was burying his mother. To insult a man going through such intense personal pain goes completely beyond the bounds of decency that we expect from any member of any civilized society. It's against the code of the West, for gosh sakes. Remember the outlaw from the old Time-Life Books commercial who once shot a manjes' for snorin' too loud? He would never do a thing like this. President Bush's mother passed away just after the 1992 election, at a time when the urge for people of my political persuasion to gloat was at its greatest. For the sake of common decency, though, the Democratic leadership chose to lay off Bush for a while. Apparently this kind of civilized behavior is too much to ask of our senator. I'm not concerned that a man like this will ever become president, a position he seems to covet. Americans don't elect people they wouldn't want to have living next door. There was Nixon, who came close, but Nixon more or less kept his misanthropy to himself. Dole's acerbic personality is too well-known to let him be elected president, and for that a nation is grateful. But Dole has gone beyond the usual political battles and has caused a family personal pain at a time of vulnerability. I call upon our senator to publicly apologize to the Clinton's for his immature behavior toward them and to learn that there are times when his prickly comments simply are not appropriate. Paul Henry is a Tacoma, Wash., graduate student in Journalism. KU program strives to retain young scholars LETTERS TO THE EDITOR I am writing in response to your Viewpoint found in the Jan. 20 Kansan. I commend you for being concerned about Kansas' outstanding young people who leave Kansas and our efforts to retain them. You mentioned a valid concern about Kansas' marginal attempt to retain young scholars. While we certainly need to do more, I want to promote the Kansas Honors Program. This 23-year-old program, sponsored by the University of Kansas Alumni Association and supported by the Kansas University Endowment Association, recognizes nearly 3,000 Kansas high school seniors in the top 10 percent of their classes from all 105 counties. KU administrators (the chancellor, executive vice chancellor, vice chancellors and deans), Alumni Association staff and local KU alumni present the young scholars with The American Heritage Dictionary at 38 banquets. The purpose of this program is to recognize Kansas' best and encourage them to stay in Kansas. As a KU student you have already expressed great concern for Kansas. I hope that when you graduate and are in a Kansas community, you can serve as one of the 150 volunteers who coordinate the Kansas Honors Program. If you have questions about this Director, Student and Kansas Honors Programs Fans have right to cheer at KU basketball games Suddenly, a man behind me grabbed my shoulder, practically forced me back into my seat and program or what the Alumni Association does for higher education in Kansas, do not hesitate to call. I am very disturbed by an incident that occurred during last Monday's basketball game. During KU's second-half run, I and many others stood up and yelled at the top of our lungs in support of the team. For many years, KU fans have touted Allen Field House as a great place to watch basketball. It still is. However, I cannot help but be disturbed by this occurrence. The field house is special because of the fans, and when a fan does not even stand up in support of the team and tries to prevent others from doing so, that is a sad event for the University. asked me to sit down. At the next timeout, I explained that this was a KANSAS BASKETBALL GAME, not the opera. When students attend a sporting event, people should expect some standing and cheering. If this is a problem, watching on television is always an option. Mark C. Stover Lawrence sonhomore UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Friday, January 28, 1994 5 Show will go on for KU alumnus Play will continue despite accident A Martin Altstaedten / KANSAN After being severely injured in a car accident last semester, Antonio Shepherd is ready again to direct his play. "Color Doesn't Matter." Shepherd spent most of Saturday rehearsing at his house in Kansas City, Kan., to prepare for a performance scheduled for 8:00 tonight at the Lied Center. By Denise Nell Kansan staff writer A play written, produced and directed by a former KU student will finally be performed in front of a KU audience tonight — three months after it was originally scheduled. Antonio Shepherd's play, "Color Doesn't Matter," is about racial issues on a college campus. The play was supposed to have been performed at the Lied Center Oct. 22. But a week before the production, Shepherd was involved in a serious car accident that left him hospitalized for a month and a half. The actors decided at the time to cancel the play, saying that they didn't feel confident they could perform it the way Shepherd would have wanted. "At the time of the accident, didn't know if he was going to come through or not," said Rollyn Moore, Kansas City, Kan., resident and member of the cast. "We didn't feel quite together to put something on without Antonio. We tried our best, but it really wasn't clicking." The cast had performed the play twice already before the accident — once in Topeka and once in Kansas City, Mo. The KU audience would have been the largest and the most important to Shepherd. "I really didn't think I'd be fortunate enough to get it back at KU," Shepherd said. "For me, it's a lifelong mission." Shepherd said that the play, which will be performed at 8:00 tonight in the Lied Center, was set on a college campus. Two life-long friends are exposed to opinions about their history that they had never imagined. In one scene one of the characters, who is a history major, goes to the dean's office enraged that one of his professors is suggesting that Jesus was African American. "These are the ideas I want to share," Shepherd said. "I want people in the audience to walk out with something that's valuable." Cast member Janice Moore, a Kansas City, Kan., resident who graduated from KU in December, said the play would send an important message. "What 'Color Doesn't Matter' says is that a lot of racism exists today," she said. "Black people have not been taught their history." The play also includes three songs. In one scene, Rollyn Moore will sing a rendition of the Boyz II Men hit "It's So Hard to Say Goodbye to Yesterday." "Black people play a much larger part in history than they've been given credit for," he said. KU graduate Lovie Dana Abner, a Kansas City, Kan, resident who will play the lead role in tonight's production, said she hoped the play would open the minds of those who saw it. "I want them to take away from it the fact that there isn't just one way of interpreting things that have been given to you," she said. Shepherd said that regardless of what people thought about the play, he hoped they were receptive to its message. "As we begin to address ignorance with validated answers, then we begin to make changes that have longevity," he said. Tickets to the play, which is sponsored by the Black Student Union and Student Senate, are $8 general admission and $5 for students. Recovery inspires writer to spread message By Denise Nell Kansan staff writer Antonio Shepherd considers his recovery from a car accident a sign. when the accident occurred he said he did not remember anything from the time he left rehearsals. "I was as close to death as a person gets," Shepherd said. "People tell me, 'It wasn't your time to go yet.' They say, 'You've got something you need to say.'" Shepherd, who is the writer, director and producer of the play, "Color Doesn't Matter," which will be performed at the Lied Center tonight, was seriously injured in an Oct. 16 car accident. Shepherd was driving home to Lawrence from play rehearsals in Kansas City, Kan., "I called my wife at 11 and I'd be home in a little while," he said. "I came home about a month and a half later." Shepherd lost sight in one of his eyes, suffered a punctured lung, a shattered right ankle and right knee, and still will on his left knee. Although he does not remember anything about the accident, he said that the police As humanity, we can move forward. " Antonio Shepherd Writer, director, producer of "Color Doesn't Matter" later told him he must have fallen asleep at the wheel. "The only thing I recall is being dead," he said. "People were working on me and I thought, These people are trying to save my life and I'm already dead." Shepherd still walks with a limp. He still has pieces of metal lodged lodged under his skin. But he said that when he regained consciousness, his main concern was to get on with his life. "My mentality as soon as I woke up was that I felt recovered," he said. "There's really nothing you can do but move on." Shepherd said now he will concentrate on recovering and continuing to deliver his message through his play. "The bottom line is, as humanity, we can move forward," he said. "I guess I want to make sure people know that I have something to say." Multicultural center plans for fall opening Planners want center to reflect KU community By Denise Nell Kansan staff writer The opening of KU's Multicultural Center now may be in sight, three years after its original proposal. Sherwood Thompson, director of the office of minority affairs, said that if all went as planned, the center would open by Hawk Week this fall. The center was originally proposed by the Student Senate in the fall of 1991. The center will be located in the present Supportive Educational Services building, south of the Military Science building on campus. The SES offices will move to the basement of Strong Hall. In the meantime, the Multicultural Center Planning Committee is working on a proposal for what the center will include. Thompson said the group hoped to submit the proposal to David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, in May. "It's not going to be a clubhouse for student groups," Thompson said. "It's not going to be a cafeteria. We'd like the center to be a showcase of diversity on campus." The approximately 32-member core planning committee decided in early December to divide into five subcommittees. The subcommittees will spend the next few months researching cultural centers on other campuses, deciding what types of activities will take place in the center and planning what renovations will be necessary in the building. "The building is in fairly decent shape," Thompson said. "If nothing else, we'll give it a new face lift." The subcommittees will also decide what role the center should play on campus. Center's proposed site "One of the first things we have to do is come up with a definition of what Mican Laaker/ KANBAN Military Science Building Supportive Educational Services Building Summerfield Hall Haworth Hall Sunnyside Ave. multiculturalism is," said Gregory Leon Frost, assistant to the associate vice chancellor and assistant to the dean of the graduate school. Frost heads two of the five subcommittees. Thompson said the core group planned to conduct an informational meeting early in February where anyone interested in becoming involved with the planning of the center could volunteer to work on one of the subcommittees. "We want to make this Multicultural Center a uniquely KU facility," Thompson said. "We want it to have the personality of the population here at KU." Karen Seals, the director of SES, said that her staff had received word from the Office of Student Affairs Wednesday that renovation of their new space in Strong Hall would begin in mid-March and be completed by this summer. Seals said the move to Strong Hall would give SES more room and a better location. She said the University was doing everything it could to get the move completed as soon as possible. "Facilities operations can only move as fast as human bodies can move," she said. "It's just a typical project that takes a while to happen at a busy institution doing a lot of other projects." ADVERTISE IN THE DAILY KANSAN FOR ALL YOUR NEEDS Meet me at the Lied Center! TICKETS FOR BOTH SHOWS HALF PRICE FOR KU AND HANDY KESTLLEN! STUDENTS! Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office (864-ARTS): Murpry Hall Box Office (864-3982); or any Ticketmaster outlet (full price tickets only) (816) 931-3330 and (913) 324-6545, all seats reserved. KU student tickets available through the SUA office, Kansas Union; phone orders can be made using VISA or MasterCard. THE LION SENIOR IN A NATIONAL Sunday, February 6, 1994 Ying Quartet 7:00 p.m. America's hottest new string quartet! Wednesday, February 16, 1994 Lewitzky Dance Company 8:00 p.m. One of the authentic voices of American modern dance! Partially funded by the Kansas Arts Commission, KU Student Senate Activity Pee, Friends of the Lied Series and the Kansas University Endowment Association. Special thanks to this year's Very Important Partners: Hallmark Cards, Inc., Kie's Audio and Video, Payless ShoeSourus, and W.T. Kemper Foundation, Commeres Bank Trusts. The Etc. Shop welfalf service barafter 57years of downtown tradition THE HARBOURLIGHTS SERENGETI. DRIVERS POST-SEASON BASKETBALL 928 Mass. Downtown Park in the rear ATTN: STUDENTS APPLICATIONS FOR KU MEN'S BASKETBALL POST-SEASON TOURNAMENT ACTION ARE AVAILABLE NOW AT THE ATHLETIC TICKET OFFICE LOCATED IN THE EAST LOBBY OF ALLEN FIELDHOUSE BIG 8 CONFERENCE NCAA FINAL FOUR. 1994 OF ALLEN FIELDHOUSE. CHARLOTTE Don't miss out on your chance to see the Jayhawks in action during the: - Big 8 Tournament - NCAA Regionals - Final Four ATHLETIC TICKET OFFICE EAST LOBBY - ALLEN FIELDHOUSE 8:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M. SE Application Deadline: Feb. 18, 1994 1 6 Friday, January 28, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN + Regents vote to cut seven degrees Program discontinued despite heated protest By Jamie Munn Kansan staff writer Despite complaints from state legislators and appeals to University Council, seven degree programs are likely to be eliminated at the Board of Regents meeting today in Topeka. The master's degree in atmospheric science, the only one of its kind in the state, is among the degrees the University has decided to discontinue. Other degree cuts include the bachelor of arts in comparative literature, bachelor of arts and bachelor of general studies in computer science, bachelor of arts in Italian, and the bachelor of arts and the bachelor of general science in atmospheric science. Frank Sabatiin, a member of Regents, said he didn't think there would be any special considerations for the proposed eliminations. "Basically we're relying on the University to weed out what they think should be integrated or dropped," he said. Sabatini said he thought that the University's study, which had determined student interest in each program, had been complete. Keeping programs without any interest did not make much sense, he said. "That's why we are asking them to consolidate and eliminate." Sahatiimi said. David Shulenburger, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said the University's limited funds would focus on those programs central to the mission of the University. "Had we ample funding, all of the programs we have discontinued would have been maintained and strengthened," he said. However, Francis Prosser, associate chair of the department of physics and astronomy, said he still had hope, especially for the master's in atmospheric science. "We would certainly like the Regents to reverse the decision on that program," Prosser said. The cuts became effective Dec. 31, 1993. Although no new students will be enrolled in the discontinued programs, students currently pursuing these degrees will be allowed to complete their studies by Dec. 31, 1996. Although some of the programs will be completely eliminated, others will be incorporated into other departments. Bachelor's, master's and doctoral degrees in computer science will continue to be offered in the School of Engineering. Comparative literature classes will continue in the department of English, and Italian courses will be consolidated into the department of French and Italian. Earlier in 1993, the Regents approved similar discontinuance recommendations presented by the University. The bachelor's degrees in geophysics, toxicology, recreation, history and philosophy of science and the doctorate program in visual arts education all were cut. No new students have been admitted in these programs since Dec. 31, 1993. Student president supports Partnership program for KU By David Stewart Kansan staff writer TOPEKA — While the battle of the 1965 state budget continues in the Legislature, one KU student leader made his views clear to a Kansas Senate subcommittee yesterday on the Partnership for Excellence proposal. John Shoemaker, student body president, spoke briefly before the Senate Ways and Means Committee to express his support for the Partnership. The three-year plan would raise faculty salaries at the six Board of Regents schools through increased state funds along with a proportional increase in the schools' tuitions. While he acknowledged that no student liked increasing the cost of classes, Shoemaker said he thought the prevailing attitude among KU students favored the Partnership plan and its subsequent tuition increase. "Tuition increases are in our own best interests," Shoemaker said to the committee. Shoemaker said the Partnership program would allow shared responsibility of faculty salary increases between the students at the Regents schools and the state. "With additional state participation, the students are prepared to shoulder in this additional responsibility." Shoemaker said. State Sen. Gus Bogina, R-Shawnee, chair of the committee, said that he appreciated Shoemaker's comments but questioned whether the Partnership for Excellence plan allocated financial responsibility fairly. When asked by Bogina whether he would object to a smaller increase in faculty salaries than the proposed 3 percent in 1995, Shoemaker replied he did not feel in the position to make this distinction. "I don't want to get in the position as student leader of bickering with legislatures about the exact, amount of the increase," Shoemaker said. After the committee adjourned Bogina said that deciding to finance projects such as the Partnership plan would require looking at the priorities of the education budget. "We have just so much money to work with," Bogt. na said. "I think the Regents feel they submitted an offer that is considered a priority. But we're in no position to bargain." --- 944 Mass. 832-8228 Red Lyon Tavern KU HOMELESS COALITION Help us update our spring phone list! CALL: Tonya 841-6185 Gabe 865-1565 ALSO: Learn about our spring volunteer projects! Tuesday, February 1, 1994. Kansas Union 3rd floor Alcove H STUDENT 7 pm SENATE Auto Loans 5.9% Apr Fixed Rate 100% Financing Take advantage of low rates at KU Credit Union. Don't miss your opportunity for 100% financing of a new auto at the low fixed rate of 5.9% for 36 or 48 months and 60 month financing at the fixed rate of 6.75%. KU CREDIT UNION An Affiliate of 66 Federal Credit Union Scartaglen Saturday January 29th GRANADA Saturday, January 29th TICKETS ON SALE NOW 1020 Massachusetts • Downtown Lawrence 913-842-1390 • OR • TICKET MASTER Valid Through July 31, 1994 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN C A R D AT&T Membership has its privileges... OTHIERS THESE DISCOUNTS AND OFFERS ARE GOOD THROUGH JULY 31, 1994! 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Regret or employee of the University of Kannah Companies structure group, any individual or group, involved in marketing or marketing in the United States, for any damages caused by an action of PM or any other group or individual associated with the DKC. S AVAILABLE AT 12 Jayhawk Bookstore 1420 Crescent Road 843-3826 Kansas and Burge Unions •864-4640 1116 W.23rd St·749-5206 UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP KU K'U BOOKSTORES THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358 1 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Friday, January 28, 1994 7 Ukranian couple met, fell madly in love at KU William Alix / KANSAN THE CITY'S NEW YORK FOOTBALL MEMORIAL CENTRE "American-style" wedding planned By Roberta Johnson Kansan staff writer Vladimir Riabokon and Nataliya Grekh, both from the Ukraine, study business at KU. They met last August in Lawrence and are getting married at 7:00 tonight in Danforth Chapel. They lived in the Ukraine; he in Kiev, she in Lief. They studied in Moscow but never met. Then they came to Kansas and fell in love. Last summer the School of Business received a letter from Nataliya Grekh, an exchange student at a community college in Oregon who wanted to join the MBA program. Vladimir Riabokon, Kiev, Ukraine, graduate student, was an exchange student who was trying to extend his length of time at Kansas. That day he was working for Bruce Bublitz, associate professor of business. "Bruce picked up the phone and put it on the microphone," Riabokon said. "She had such a tiny voice. She sounded very sweet and very scared." Riabokon and Bublitz helped her make the necessary arrangements to come here. "I was not very happy about it." Riabokon said. "I had to study for the GMAT, and I worked full time. Talking to her kept me up. "I told her to send a picture as part of the application package. I never got." Greek said she never thought of the possibility of a romance with Riabokon. "I thought he was some guy from Moscow helping me out," she said. Riabokon picked her up at the airport when she arrived in August. "She looked pretty exhausted," he said. "I felt sorry for her, but it wasn't give at first sight. I wish it were." A few days later, the two were supposed to get together before he left Riabokon said she had failed to give him a wake-up call, and he woke up three hours before his flight. She had no idea what had happened. "I thought he was a nice guy. I didn't know he hated me." she said. "Nataliya had already left," he said. She never woke me up or left me a note. I had to run to school in 100 degree heat. Gosh, I hated her." He had calmed down on his vacation and bought her a t-shirt. "She was so grateful," he said. "I didn't expect it." He asked her out soon afterwards, and a month later the couple decided to get married. "We did not expect a romance," Bublitz said. Grekh and Riabokon had lived in separate rooms in his house before recently moving to Stouffer Place Apartments. "At first it was no problem because they were friends," Bublitz said. "Then when I came home, they didn't want to talk to you anymore, they wanted to talk to each other. By the time they moved out they spent all their time with each other." The couple is getting married at 7:00 tonight in Danfort Chapel. There will be a small reception afterward. The couple will have an "American" wedding. "When we go back we will have something Ukrainian," he said. "This is something fun — getting married in another country with our parents and friends across the ocean." The couple will stay to finish graduate school and plans to remain a few years in the United States. "I believe it's fate," Grek said. "Three years ago I never would have dreamed I would be in the States. When I was in Oregon, I never dreamed of being in Kansas. When I came to Kansas I never thought I would meet a guy from my native land whom I'd fall desperately in love with." Extended Deadline! Friday, January 28 Extended Deadline! Friday, January 28 January 29 10 AM to 6 PM Kansas Union Jaybowl Level One Open to KU STUDENTS ONLY Warner advance to Regional ACU-1 Tournament at K-Storia on February 25-26 Sign up at SUA Box Office, Level 4, Kansas Union by January 28 Entrant Fees $3.00 - Billards $5.00 - Bowling STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS ku bowling & billiards tournament STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUK THE UNIVERSITY OF KANBAS TONIGHT*TONIGHT*TONIGHT "NEW STAGEPLAY DELIVERS A STRONG MESSAGE. .A FILL IN WHAT WOULD GO UNNOTICED. EVERYONE SHOULD SEE IT." ANDREA STEWART, KANSAS CITY KANSAS THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS BLACK STUDENT UNION PRESENTS A MUST SEE STAGEPLAY 200 LIST SERVICES 21ST CENTURY COLOR DOESN'T MATTER At the Lied Center University of Kansas FRIDAY JANUARY 28th 8:00 PM TICKETS: $8 GENERAL ADMISSION $5 STUDENTS THE LION MANOR GARDENS STUDENT SENATE To charge tickets by phone using MasterCars or on-site access; In Lawrence 864-ARTS; or call any Ticketmaster outlet including Hy-Vee and Sound Waves 1330-3330 or (913) 234-4545. fifiY 925 IOWA 841-7226 Lunch & Dinner Great Food D DICKINSON THEATRE 841 8900 Dickinson 6 232 7598 5175 fifi's 925 IOWA 841-7226 Lunch & Dinner Great Food DICKINSON THEATRE Dickinson 841-8000 Blink R *25*; 7,10; 9,40 Grump Old M朋 *14-13*; 7,20; 9,50 Iron Will PG *4*; 30*, 700; 9,35 Shadowlands PG *4*; 700; 9,45 Beehoven's 2nd PG *4*; 15*, 7; 15,35 Sister Act I PG *1*; 7,10; 9,45 STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA FILMS FRI..JAN.28 - SUN..JAN.30 IN THE LINE OF FIRE FRI. & SAT. 7:00PM FRI. & SAT. 9:30PM SUN. 2:00PM 3 Primetime Show (+) Clearing Baby Senior Citizen Anytime Impressed Stress SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER FRI. & SAT. MIDNIGHT The Etc. Shop ALL SHOWS IN KANSAS UNION TICKETS $2.50. MIDNIGHTS $3.00 FREE WITH SUA MOVIE CARD. CALL 864-SHOW FOR MORE INFO. 743 Mass. St. (913) 749-4664 CLEOPATRA'S CLOSET a unique boutique "SIZZLER! An irreverent riff on a classic of 17th century Chinese erotica. David Rooney VARIETY "HOTI! An exceedingly deft blend of outrageous sex and equally outrageous humor!" Kevin Thomas, L.A. TIMES Sex and Zen IMM FILM DISTRIBUTORS, INC. Exclusive Engagement Exclusive Engagement Kevin Thomas, C.A. 1983 Sexand Zen HOT FILM DISTRIBUTOR, INC THE PIANO (R) (4:15). 7:00.9:30 KALIFORNIA (R) (4:30). 7:15.9:30 SEY AND ZEN (NC-17) MIDNIGHT ONLY FRII & SAT 928 Mass. Downtown 642 Mass 749 1912 1912 N BEFORE 6 PM ADULTS $1.00 (UNITED STATES) SENIOR CARE $3.00 VARSITY BRISTOL MASSA HIGH 841 5191 Rentco USA 749-1805 Student Discount low Carrying Computers 1741 Massachusetts Crown Cinema ATTENTION "PRE-EDUCATION" STUDENTS Pelican Brief PG-13 5:00,8:00 Mrs. Doubtfire PG-13 4,45 Intersection R 9,48 Air Up There PG 9,48 Tombstone R 9,28 Philadelphia PG-13 7,15 Riverside R 9,28 Philadelphia PG-13 7,15 Applications for admission to: - Elementary CINEMA TWIN 3170/OWA 841 5191 $1.25 SHORTTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY - Middle Only wwwwwwwwww - Elementary/Middle Jurassic Park PG-13 5.00, 7.20,9.45 Good Son R 5.00, 7.30,9.45 - Middle/Secondary English - K-12(inC&I) - Middle/Secondary Social Studies - Secondary Social Studies are due FEBRUARY 15 CAMP CHI NOBODY MAKES MORE OUT OF SUMMER Co-ed Overnight Camp of the JCC's of Chicago Located in the Wisconsin Dells. STAFFWANTED Positions Available: Unit Supervisors, Counselors, Specialists in Waterskiing,Sailing Athletics, Aquatics, Outdoor Adventure,Cultural Arts Ropes Course. Etc., Stop by and See Us at the Summer Employment Fair on FEBRUARY 2nd 10:00am-3:00pm At the Kansas Union Ballroom or Call Camp Chi at (708)272-2301 B Be Your Best in '94 Begin at Body Boutique 10 Tans for only $20 exp. 2-2-94 No joining fee! $139.00 off avg. $20/month exp. 2-2-94 Special rates for graduating seniors 749-2424 925 Iowa BODY OUTIQUE The Women's Fitness Facility s ch we REAL WORLD EXPERIENCE Ever wanted the experience of the real world, but thought the only way to get it was to hit the streets? Are you motivated and want work alongside other hardworking individuals? If you like a challenge and want to gain real-world experience, feel like to hear from you. We need self motivated team we'd like to hear from you. We need self motivated team players interested in being Sales, Management, and Research assistants. Join the nationally recognized, award winning advertising program of the Kansan and watch as doors begin to open. The University Daily Kansan is now accepting intern applications. Applications are available in 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Application deadline: Friday, Jan. 28 Interviews start on Monday THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Advertising Staff 8 Friday, January 28, 1994 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Bills confident despite three 'Super' losses The Associated Press ATLANTA — The Buffalo Bills have become masters of ignoring certain things, such as results at the end of January. Such as 20-19, 37-24 and 52-17. They also tend to训出 things the Dallas Cowboys talk about last year's Super Bowl; and this season's meeting with the Bills. Maybe that's how they will finally win a Super Bowl. Just make believe all those nasty things never happened or don't matter. "That has no bearing — zero, zip, nothing — on what happens on the field Sunday." Bills linebacker Cornelius Bennett said Tuesday, which was media day at the Georgia Dome. "We've just got to be better than they are Sunday. I don't even think or talk about the three Super Bowls. It has nothing to do with this." Nor do the Bills put any stock in their 13-10 victory against Dallas in week two, even though the Cowboys are using it as a motivational tool. "I don't look at that game at all," Bills linebacker Marvcus Patton said. "Emmitt Smith did not play and he's the key to their offense. I doubt if we'll even watch film on that game." OK, what about avenging last year's rout, when Dallas just missed setting a Super Bowl scoring record? “There’s no revenge factor here.” Bill cornerstone Nate Odews insisted. “They’re the champs last year, we’re trying to be the champs this year and it won't be on my mind who are the champs when we go on the field." "There's not any extra incentive because of last year," Bills safety Henry Jones said. "The biggest incentive is to win a world championship, if it's against Dallas or Washington or whomever." Whomever, of course, is Dallas, a team that never lacks confidence and carries solid credentials into the game. The Cowboys have won three Super Bowls and could tie the record held by Pittsburgh and San Francisco by handing the AFC a 10th successive loss in the title game. Although the Bills can display some records of their own — the only team to reach four straight Super Bowls, for example — they try to ignore one they are famous for; three consecutive Super flops. The two boys did something. "I sort of wish they'd won one, so they wouldn't be so hungry," Cowbills fullback Darrel Johnston said. How can they know it if they're dismissing the past? Leon Lett tried to dismiss his past by not talking about it. But he had to discuss it Tuesday. By league order, every player must attend media day "We know these guys have been here three times and lost three times," Cowboys linebacker Charles Haley added. "They are a good team and they know they can beat us." — Cowboys All-Pro tackle Erik Williams missed the bus and was fined — and Lett did his part. So he spoke, reluctantly, about his showboating in last year's Super Bowl. He recalled how he was headed to the end zone after picking up a pumice when Bills wide receiver Don Beebe caught him and knocked away the ball. "I want to get it over with," he said, then, sweating profusely, Lett responded to queries about his infamous Super Bowl gaffe. And about his even more infamous Thanksgiving muff on a blocked field goal that turned a victory against Miami into a bitter, baffling defeat. "I thought I had lost my job," Lett said. "But I thanked God when we beat the New York Giants, won the division and the homefield advantage. It meant I didn't hurt the team." Lett was hurting recalling the blunders. At one point, 11 minutes into the interview, he walked off. An NFL official convinced him to return. Persevering is something the Bills can lecture on. Of course, first they have to overcome their reluctance to remember. "I've learned people will take a shot at you whenever they get a chance. You just have to persevere." Lett said. Bills quarterback Jim Kelly was somewhat willing. "I know last year's game was not much to watch," he said of the nine-turnover fiasco. "I probably wouldn't have watched. But this year will be a different outcome." Bills want to play Dallas receivers aggressively The Associated Press ATLANTA — Nate Odomes, his feet propped on a table, emphasized he wasn't pleased that more people were talking about Dallas' wide receivers Michael Irvin and Alvin Harper than his Buffalo Bills defensive backfield mates. Finally, someone asked him point blank. "Is there too much made out of their wideouts?" Odomes, who is tied for the NFL interception lead this season with nine, looked up. "You all make a hell of a lot out of them," he said. "Henry Jones led the league in intersections last year. I led it this year. We have some capable people as well." Further discussion about Irvin and Harper is cut off by Odomes. "I'm not the type to talk about how good somebody is if I have to play against them. I don't want to talk about their receivers." Who can blame him? Irvin and Harper combined for 150 yards and three touchdowns in Dallas' 52-17 victory in last year's Super Bowl. Making sure that doesn't happen again will be a job left to Odomes, strong safety Jones, cornerback Mickey Washington, free safety Mark Kelso and key reserves Thomas Smith, Matt Darby and Kurt Schulz. They know it will be difficult. They also know they can't shy away from the challenge. "The key is to be aggressive." Kelso said. "If you go out there afraid to make a mistake, you're probably going to make a mistake. The more aggressive you are, the better chance you have of something good happening." The Bills can't be too aggressive, however, in their base two-deep zone, where safeties Jones and Kelso stay back until the pass is thrown. "When we're in our zone coverage, when they catch the ball, we're going to have to get people there and make them pay for catching the ball short," Jones said. Buffalo will mix man-to-man coverage with the zone. When that happens, the pressure will be on Odomes, Washington and Smith. "When we're in man-to-man, we're going to have to have good coverage on the outside by the corners," Jones said. Occasionally, the Bills will play a three-deep zone, using backup safety Darby. "If you get on your knees and we both pray enough, we may see some of that," Irvin said. More likely, Irvin said he expected Buffalo to mix up coverage frequently, as it did in the Bills' 13-10 victory against the Cowboys in the second week of the season. "They did a lot of things," Irvin said. "We just never got in the groove offensively." With Dallas running back Emmitt Smith, a holdout in the earlier meeting between the teams, Buffalo doubled Irvin and Harper most of the game. That probably won't happen this time. "With Emmitt in the game, if they do that, there'll be a lot of holes up the middle," Harper said. "Without Emmitt, they could do things in the secondary they don't normally do." Irvin said while the Bills "have one of the better secondaries in the league, their strength is up front, guys like (Darryl) Talley (Bruce) Smith and (Cornelius) Bennett." Asked to rate Buffalo's secondary, Harper gave it a seven out of 10. Not exactly a rousing endorsement — but better than what Odomes finally said about Irvin and Harper. "They're good NFL receivers," he said. "That's probably the best I can tell you about that." Barkley wants to trade hoops for state office The Associated Press ATLANTA — There are times when Charles Barkley looks like the perfect politician. Like Wednesday night, when he walked onto the court at the Omni, shaking hands and signing autographs. Then there are times when Barkley looks like the worst politician. Like Wednesday night, when an Atlanta Hawks fan heckled him about his purple shirt. "Yeah, you can get one too for $175," Barkley said sarcastically. But Sir Charles insists he's serious when he says he wants to be Governor Charles. "Sooner or later I've got to get a real job," the injured Phoenix Suns for- ward said. "I figure this will be it." Barkley, a native of Leeds, Ala., wants to play another season or two in the NBA — however long his aching back will allow — then return to his home state to run for governor. "I don't care if I get it or not, but I'd definitely like to try," he said prior to the Suns game against Atlanta, which was attended by about 60 of his family and friends even though he was in street clothes with an injured knee. "I think I can make a difference." Barkley even thought he was going to get to meet the man whose job he wants, Alabama Gov. Jim Folsom. "I've got to go meet the governor before I take his job," he said. Alas, Folsom wasn't there. Barbara Thomas, the governor's press secretary, said yesterday that Folsom was unable to travel to Atlanta because of a busy schedule in Alabama. "He's a busyman," Barkley said. "I'm not sure I want his job. I don't like to work." So what would be your platform, Candidate Charles? "The most important thing is the public schools," he said, returning to his political mode. "A lot of our problems start in the public schools. "We're creating two different societies," said Barkley. "We're creating two different kinds of people. The upper and lower levels of society are getting two different kinds of education. Everybody can't afford to go to private schools. We've got to get that problem solved or we're always going to have trouble with our inner cities." Barkley said he would bring a new perspective to the governor's office. "I've been really, really poor and I've been really, really rich," he said. "I've been on both ends of the scale." But it's Barkley's personality that could be his biggest asset and his biggest drawback as a politician. With his bald head and engaging smile, he has become one of the most recognized athletes in the world. He appears to love every minute of it. "If you live under a shell, you'll go crazy." Barkley said. Barkley does worry about his back, which he figures won't hold out for another season without surgery. He hopes to return in about two weeks and lead the Suns to their first NBA title. Then he could retire on top without having an operation. "My decision would be easy if we win the championship," he said. "I want to leave the game while I'm playing well. That's always been important to me. I've been in a gradual decline the last two or three years, even though I'm still playing well." But it's still uncertain whether he would make a good politician. For one thing, only one black has ever been elected to statewide office in Alabama, which was a focal point of the civil rights movement only three decades ago. Rest assured, Barkley will speak his mind whether it's running up and down the court or running for office. "I just tell the truth," he said. "You can't please everybody. I'm not trying to win friends. I'm just trying to make the world a better place." SUPERBOWL SUNDAY Specials Every day of the Week Free Delivery Gourmet Pizzas RUDY'S PIZZERIA 749-2999 Taste The Rudy's Difference 704 Massachussetts Lawrence,KS 749-0055 SPECIALS·SUPERBOWL·SPECIALS five TV's surrounding you in the action. 50¢ Tacos Live acoustic music on weekends - Featuring * 15¢ Buffalo Wings For the Superbowl only HenryT's Bar&Grill 6th & Kasold $1.50 Margarita's Feellike you are part of the game,with $2.50 Taco Salad - Superbowl Sunday - SPORTS EMPORIUM & FUNDRINKERY WIN 2 TICKETS TO LAS VEGAS Match wits with the coaches of the NFL playing QB1 only at JOX. 865-4040 6th & Kasold UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Friday, January 28, 1994 9 23 SUPERBOWL SUNDAY 24 Come Join us for our Superbowl Celebration DOS HOMBRES Thursday $1^{00}$ Drafts • $1^{25}$ Margaritas Friday $8^{25} Margarita Pitchers Saturday 2 for 1 Well Drinks sunday $325 Pitchers of Miller Lite $102 20oz Draws 815 New Hampshire • 841-7286 Personal Checks Accepted ... Juicers Showgirls Juicers Showgirls The Midwest's Most Elite Juice Bar Opens at 7:00 pm 913 N Second I-70 West to 204 Exit, turn left, just past new factory outlet Lawrence, KS 913-841-4122 Y It's everywhere you want to be... The University Daily Kansan Card... A semester of savings for only $1.00! 40% Off Buttery Soft Leather Jackets and Skirts Reduced Prices! Cartouche, inc. importers 110 Riverfront Plaza 865-5242 Waiters on Wheels Delivering from Delivering from Lawrence's favorite restaurants: Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse Cornucopia Full Moon Cafe Low Rider Mexican Cafe Henry T's Bar & Grill Paradise Cafe Quinton's Bar & Deli Tin Pan Alley Uptown Bagel Super Bowl Special FREE DELIVERY on orders over $25 Delivery for $1 for orders under $25 Coupon good all day Sunday, Jan 30 open 10:30am-10pm M-F 12:00-9pm Sun 842-2662 The Yacht Club Friday: lunch-Chicken Quesadilla $3.25 dinner-Nacho Supreme $4.95 drink-Busch, Busch Light, Keystone Light $1.50 OR 5 in a bucket $6.00 5 House shots $5.00 (Free Taco Bar 5p.m.-???) Saturday: lunch-Turkey Club $3.75 dinner-Fajitas Salad $3.50 drink-Yacht Shots $1.00 (all well shots: watermelon, kamikazee, andsex-on-the-beach) Cheeseburger/Curly Fries and either a draw or a Coke $2.50 (refills $.75) Sunday: THE YACHT CLUB Jamaica 182 6 842-9445 530 Wisconsin IT IS YOUR RIGHT!!! 18th AMENDMENT (Formerly"The Hawk") SUPER BOWL XXVIII BASH OF ALL BASHES 10 Ft. Projection T.V. Big Screen and more Super Bowl Snacks Galore Raffles and Prizes Great beer and shot specials Missing this party is not a good idea!! 1340 Ohio 843-9273 Sun.-Sat. 3p.m.-2a.m. 6 Join us for all your college and professional sporting events. 806 W.24th behind McDonald's 843-2000 Open daily 4:00pm-2:00am SUPERBOWL PARTY KING OF THE NORTH KING ARTHUR'S 2228 Iowa Open 7 days 9:00-2:00am 842-8225 ●COLDEST BEER IN TOWN !!! ●BIG SCREEN TV ●$ .25 CHILI DOGS WATCH THE BIG GAME ON THE BIG SCREEN BRANDING IRON SALOON **SUPER BOWL SUNDAY** - Jan 30st 2ND GOLDEST BEER IN TOWN BEST PROJECTION SCREEN IN LAWRENCE CLEAR 120 FREE CHILI AND POPCORN The Largest T.V. Screen in Lawrence ING IRON SALOON 1 AT THE GRANADA Come see the Super Bowl and All the KU Games - Fri. Jan 28 70's, 80's & Alternative $1.50 Vodka wells *Sat. Jan 29 YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO YO SCARTAGLEN KU vs Colorado @ 1pm 32oz Bud & Bud Light $2.50 - Tues. Feb 1 32oz Sam Adams $3.50 MJ, DJ Ray, Movie Screen MONDO DISCO *Mon. Jan 31 KU vs MU @ 8:30 pm BASKETBALL - Wed. Feb 2 Eighties Night 50¢ draws 10 Friday. January 28,1994 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Sunday 50¢ bowling Not just for bowling any more! Jaybowl 864-3545 Sunday 50¢ bowling Jaybowl Not just for bowling any more! 864-3545 Up to 50% Off! CLEOPATRA'S CLOSET WE HONOR KANSAN a unique boutique 743 Massachusetts St. 749-4664 Rings Fixed Fast! Kiera Chinnings Jewelers 749-4333 833 Mass • Lawrence, KS SUPER BOWL PARTY IN THE HANGAR #4 LOUNGE FREE • Sub Sandwiches • Chili • Chicken Wings • Snacks 90¢ Tap Beer • $1.25 Margaritas Fun starts at 3 p.m. Super Bowl Sunday 2309 Iowa St. • Lawrence DAYS INN 842-0100 Rings Fixed Fast! Kizer Cummings jewelers 749-4333 833 Mass* Lawrence, KS Up to 50% Off! CLEOPATRA'S CLOSET WE HONOR KANSAS a unique boutique 743 Massachusetts St. 749-4664 SUPERBOWL PARTY SUPER BOWL PARTY DAYS INN DAYS INN 2309 Iowa St. Lawrence 843-9100 If you have a GPA of 2.5 or higher and are a full time student, you can qualify for an Air Force ROTC scholarship.In addition, you will receive $100.00 each academic month for your last two years of college. This scholarship is available to ANY ACADEMIC MAJOR. The deadline is apply for the fall 1994 semester is rapidly approaching. For more information on this exciting opportunity talk to Captain Brad Gentry or Captain Bob Wicks at 864-4676. AIM HIGH $2000.00 SCHOLARSHIP AIR FORCE ROTC dan querciagrosa, senior distance freestyle/butterfly swimmer, prepares for tommorrow's meet at Iowa State. The Kansas swim teams practiced yesterday at Robinson Center. Swimmers eye Big Eight title By Andrew Gilman Kansan sportswriter Kansan sportswriter "The outcomes now are not as important," Hanson said. "It's the starts, and turns, and all sorts of other little things," said the 1992 All-American distance swimmer. The way junior swimmer Frankie Hanson sees it, it's the little things that matter. "They're improving a lot," said senior distance swimmer and co-captain Dan Querciagrossa. "Especially this year. We've beaten them in the past, but they're steadily improving." But don't look for a letdown from the Jayhawks. The No. 13 Kansas men, and the No. 16 Kansas women will travel to Amcs, Iowa, Saturday to take on Iowa State in a conference dual meet. Both the men and the women defeated the Cyclones last year in Lawrence, and the men have put together eight consecutive victories against Iowa State while the women have won 11 consecutive meets against the Cyclones. Those little things include pushing themselves and trying to get ready for the Big Eight Conference championships at the end of February. "Coach Kempf told us that he knows Iowa State will be ready," Querciagrossa said. "They'll be fired up. They get that way every year, and each year we shut them down." 14-time defending conference champion. Hanson and the women's team are not lacking in confidence, either. "We won't lose," Hanson said. "We have more Big Eight champs and more All-Americans, and what we have, compared to them, is that we are at a higher level." The No. 24 Iowa State men's team lost last week at No. 21 Nebraska, the But a main concern for the Jayhawks is elevating themselves regardless of the competition. "Everything is geared toward doing what we have to do to win conference," Hanson said. "I expect to keep moving forward." That's exactly what the pollsters expect out of the Kansas men. The No. 13 ranking moves the Jayhawks up three places from the last poll and is the highest in program history. do is motivate each other in practice and keep a positive attitude." "Our goal is to win conference," Querciagrossa said. "What we hope to The Jayhawks will only have three more meets in order to prepare for the conference championships, during which they can correct any of the little things that might go wrong. "Last year things did not go as well as expected," Queriagrossa said. "This year we've changed things through consistent training and hard practices." The women also look to Iowa State as a stepping stone to a third consecutive conference title. --- "They're not the same caliber as a Nebraska," Hanson said. "But it's good to get up and race. This will always prepare us for the next level." Juicens Showgirls The Midwest's Most Elite Juice Bar Opens at 7:00 pm 913 N Second U-70 West to 204 Exit, turn left, just past new factory outlet Lawrence, KS 913-841-4122 I Can't Believe It's Yogurt! vs. Premium Ice Cream Half the Calories! 80% Less Fat! 33% More Protein! Plus, I Can't Believe It's Yogurt offers Nonfat and Sugar Free flavors that have No Fat or Cholesterol! 50¢ OFF a medium or large serving! Louisiana Purchase 23rd & Louisiana 843-5500 Orchards Corners 15th Kasold 749-0440 EXPIRES 2/10/94 a medium or large serving! I Can't Believe It's Yogurt! ® We Put A Smile On Your Taste MEN'S BASKETBALL TICKETS ATTN: STUDENTS GROUP#6 JANUARY26-JANUARY28 8:00A.M.-5:00P.M. REDEMPTIONPERIOD Feb.6-Nebraska Cornhuskers Feb.20-Missouri Tigers GAMES: Athletic Ticket Office East Lobby- Allen Fieldhouse 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. ** YOUMAY ONLY REDEEM ONE COUPON PER PERSON. ** YOU MUST HAVE A RED SPRING 1994 FEE STICKER ON YOUR KUID TO RECEIVE YOUR TICKETS. ** WE ARE NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR LOST OR STOLEN COUPONS. 1 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Fridav. Januarv 28.1994 11 Kansas prepares for Colorado, Missouri 20 William Aiix / KANSAN Kansas senior guard Steve Woodberry prepares to drive against Oklahoma State junior guard Randy Rutherford. Woodberry made the game winning three-pointer Wednesday night against the Cowboys. The Jayhaws play tomorrow at Colorado. By Gerry Fey Kansan sportswriter When the Kansas men's basketball team plays Colorado tomorrow, it will be the Jayhawks' longest Big Eight Conference road trip. Combine that with the Jayhawks' game against No. 24 Missouri on Monday night in Columbia, Mo., and it makes for a difficult weekend, Kansas coach Roy Williams said. No. 3 Kansas will enter Boulder, Colo., at 18-2 overall and 3-1 in the conference, while Colorado is seventh in the conference at 9-7 and 1-3. The game will be televised on Raycom Network at 1 p.m. CST. Williams said back-to-back road games were not an excuse for his team to let down. Missouri was in the same situation last weekend when it played at Oklahoma State on Saturday and at Nebraska two days later. The Tigers won both games. Although Williams never likes to look to future games, he had to look ahead to plan the team's practices. "The only reason I know we're playing Colorado and Missouri is because I looked down the schedule." Williams said. "Missouri and Kansas are the only teams in the Big Eight that have this kind of schedule." "It really hurt Missouri," Williams said sarcastically. "They went on the road and beat Nebraska." The Tigers are first in the conference at 5-0. Kansas will play a Colorado team that has gone through changes during the past few weeks. Colorado coach Joe Harrington lost freshman guard Dameon Page on Jan. 4 because of personal reasons, but Williams said the Buffaloais might have benefited from it. "They've lost some players, but it was good for them." he said. "Some players wanted more playing time and left the team. But the guys that are playing are the ones that should be." Kansas faces a premier conference player in Colorado junior guard Donnie Boyce, who averages 20.1 points and 4.3 assists a game. As a sophomore, Boyce averaged 28 points in the two games against Kansas, including a 30-point performance at Allen Field House. Williams said Boyce's play and Colorado's experience would be tough against Kansas. "Donnie is back at the point, and I think that's helped them," Williams said. "The experience factor is huge. They have six or seven players that have started and they're good." Harrington said Boyce elevated his game against Kansas. Boyce dueloed with former Jayhawk Rex Walters in last year's games and is the fifth leading scorer in the conference this year. He is also in the top 10 in four conference statistical categories. "I just think he likes playing against those nationally-ranked teams," Harrington said. "He really likes those Big Eight teams. He enjoys the challenge. It seemed that way going against Rex Walters last year." Kansas senior guard Steve Woodberry likely will cover Boyce. Against Oklahoma State on Wednesday, Woodberry won the game on a last-second three-pointer in overtime, but his defense was impressive as well. On one play, Oklahoma State senior guard Brooks Thompson moved around low picks for what he thought was an uncontested three-pointer. He didn't count on Woodberry, who fought around Cowboys just in time to swipe the ball away. "You look at the numbers and it looks like three-pointers dominated," Williams said. "I'd like to think that defense dominated the game." Colorado is riding the momentum from its 86-81 upset victory of Nebraska on Jan. 19. The Buffaloes ended the Cornhuskers' 11-game winning streak and improved Colorado's record to 1-3 in the conference. It was an even bigger accomplishment, considering Nebraska had defeated Colorado by 39 points two weeks earlier. Talent, top-ranked players integral to women's tennis Harrington said the blowout was good for his team because Colorado started to play harder. "We had a long meeting after the loss," he said. "It was about keeping our heads into it the whole season. It was like a wake up call for us." Kansan sportswriter By Matt Siegel Some coaches complain about not having enough talent on their team. Not so with Kansas women's tennis coach Chuck Merzbacher. The No. 15 Kansas women's tennis team opens match play at 11 a.m. Sunday at the Alvamar Racquet Club against Utah, which is 1-2 this season. "We've got a lot of horses," Merzbach said. "We've got five studs on this team. The other spot is a question mark but all of our freshmen have a lot of talent." One of the players that Merzbacher is counting on is senior Mindy Weiner. Weiner enters the season playing in the top spot for the Jayhawks and is ranked No. 35 in the nation. She finished the fall season with a 15-4 singles record. Joining Weiner will be juniors Nora Koves and two-time All-American Rebecca Jensen, who are nationally ranked No. 10 in doubles, and seniors Kim Rodgers and Abby Woods, who are ranked No. 15 in doubles. Merzbacher said that the sixth spot was still up for grabs and would go to one of the incoming freshmen: Chessa Bierl, Heather Heidel, Bianca Kirchhof or Amy Trytek. Woods and Rodgers ended the fall season on a high note by winning the Central Regional Rolex Championship. Woods said that the reason why she was successful in doubles was because of her familiarity with Rodgers. "It's almost to the point where we know exactly where the other one is going to hit the ball," Woods said. "I think when you have two strong, tall girls, constantly attacking the net and attacking the opponent, it gets tiring for an opponent to constantly have to come up with great passing shots and try to figure out how to break us down." As for singles play, Weiner, who won the Central Regional Rolex singles championship against her teammate Rodgers, said she already had fulfilled some of her goals. "I'll always remember winning the Big Eight Championship," said Weiner, who transferred from Clemson to Kansas in 1992. "When I played at Clemson, there was no way we were ever going to win the ACC Championship because Duke was always a top-five team in the country. No matter what I do the rest of my life, I can always look at my ring and remember that I was part of the Big Eight Championship." The Jayhawks have made two consecutive trips to the NCAA Tournament and won the Big Eight Conference title and tournament last season. The Utes, who finished third in the Western Athletic Conference last season, are led by senior Rebecca Smith. Merzbacher is confident about the Jayhawks chances to repeat as conference champions. "I think barring injuries we should be the pick to win it," he said. Kansas faces improved K-State Bv Matt Siegel Kansas sportswriter The last time the Kansas and Kansas State women's basketball teams faced each other was an experience that the WIldcats would rather forget. Kansas pounded the Wildcats, 77-45 on Feb. 28 last year in Allen Field House. Kansas went on to win the Big Eight Conference Tournament and secure a NCAA tournament berth. Meanwhile, K-State muddled through a 1-13 conference record and finished 10-17 overall. The rematch is here. The No. 7 Kansas women's basketball team plays K-State at 2 p.m. Sunday in Allen Field House. "We're still trying to overhaul a situation that wasn't positive from last season," Kansas State coach Brian Agler said. "We're still trying to build a foundation. Kansas has that foundation and they are building upon it. Kansas is more advanced than us." "The team is doing a good job getting the ball to them," Agler said. "Even though it might not show up on the stat line, it has been a key to our Last weekend against Oklahoma and Oklahoma State, Decamp and Stires combined for 92 points in two K-State victories. Decamp is the top scorer in the conference and second in the nation in three-point field goals made, averaging almost four a game. Either DeCamp or Stires has led the Wildcats in scoring every game. Although in the building phase, behind the solid play of Shawdwn DeCamp and Shanele Stires, the Wildcats are 3-3 in the conference and 7-7 overall. DecCamp and Stires are both averaging more than 20 points per game in conference play. success." Kansas coach Marian Washington said that in order for the Jayhawks to be successful they would need to limit turnovers, keep the pace up-tempo and contain Decamp and Stires. "They are two great players, so you are only going to limit them to so many." Washington said. "We have to force them to work hard for what they get." The Kansas defense leads the league in field goal percentage defense and is ranked sixth nationally, limiting the opposition to 35.3 percent shooting. The defense is largely responsible for a 10-game winning streak that has Kansas sitting on top of the conference with a 6-0 record. "I think that one of our main strengths as a team is that we don't have necessarily one player." Washington said. "We have had a lot of players do a lot of nice things throughout the season and that is what I've really enjoyed about the ballclub." The Wildcats are 0-5 on the road this season. Kansas is undefeated at home this season and is averaging more than 81 points per game compared to K-State's 61.7. Agler said that even if K-State played well, he didn't know if it would be enough to defeat the Javahwks. "They do so many things so well," Alger said. "They are so talented, smart, and well-coached. Kansas is as talented as any team in the country." 33 Heather Lofflin / KANSAN Kansas freshman guard Tameka Dixon goes for a lay at against OSU. Kansas plays K-State Sunday at upa. Colorado, coach want to forget season's earlier incidents BOULDER, Colo. — Joe Harrington senses an improved chemistry on the part of his team, a formula that may finally percolate into more victories if he couldn't impel his foe first. The Associated Press The season has been a volatile one for the beleaguered Colorado men's basketball team, with lagging attendance and several incidents of coach-player friction, including the dismissal of a promising freshman. Fans and the media have criticized the lack of progress, aiming their barbs at Harrington, who is in the fourth year of a five-year contract as head coach. He insists the program is headed in the right direction and that success is just around the corner. And he refuses to be deterred by his detractors, especially the media. But Harrington, given unwavering support by athletic director Bill Marolt, vows to stay the course. "I've never experienced anything like this as a head coach," Harrington said Wednesday in an interview. "Now that I've gone through it, I'm kind of immune to it. I used to read everything written about our team; now I read hardly anything." On paper the Buffaloes, 9-7, don't look so troubled. They've won three of their last four games. Although two of the victories were over a Cal St.-Northridge team that was distracted by earthquake trauma back home and over a Cal St.-Sacramento team with one victory, the other victory was a resounding 86-81 decision over a Nebraska team that had punched the Buffaloes by 39 points just 11 days earlier in Lincoln. "The win over Nebraska meant a lot," Harrington said. "It gave our kids the positive feedback they've needed." The Big Eight, however, has been a graveyard for Colorado teams over the last several seasons. For Harrington — whose previous Colorado teams have progressively declined from 19-14 to 13-15 to 10-17 — another losing season appears likely. Harrington, however, insists the Buffaloes are just one or two players shy of being a solid contender. "I think our chemistry has improved since then," Harrington said. "Basically, our players understand their roles and really like each other. Early this season, I felt we were standing still. The past month, I finally feel like The Buffaloes lost two of their top five leading scorers earlier this year. Freshman Mack Tuck was declared academically ineligible for the second semester, although Harrington says he would welcome him back. Then, on Jan. 5, redshirt freshman Dameon Page was dismissed from the team for disciplinary reasons. "I know we can recruit those players," he said. "Some of the players we've just missed signing have gone on to have great careers at other schools. Somebody is going to come here and be that one player that turns it around for us." Marolt agrees. "We hired Joe 3 L/2 years ago with the idea it would be a long-term commitment," Marolt said. "We're a young team with five first-year players and only one senior. It takes time to develop a team, and we're going to give him time." we're moving forward." Harrington expects a packed house on Saturday when his team entertains No. 3 kansas. "That place will be rocking, it will be a big-time college atmosphere," he said. "We have to give our fans a reason to keep coming back, and I think we will." Friday, January 28,1994 JD's Baseball Cards & Sports Nostalgia Shop 711 W.23rd 842-1002 We buy back used baseball cards Camera America ONE HOUR PHOTO Lawrence's Largest Supplier of Darkroom Materials 1610 West 23rd Street 841-7205 Futons & Frames On Sale! BLUE HERON where comfort and quality is assured.. 937 Mass. . 841-9443 gotta check us out! Pancho's MEXICAN RESTAURANT Homestyle Mexican Food 23rd & Louisiana 843-4044 Confidential Treat Your Sweetie on Valentine's Day Heart and cupid jewelry: earrings, pins gold and sliver lockets Suspenders: red, white, heart Pantyhose: red, heart Cummerbunds Valentine cards, stickerbooks Barb's Vintage Rose 927 Mass. 841-2451 Mon.-Sat. 10:5-30 Affordable Free pregnancy tests Birth control Sliding fee scale STD screening Metropolis BBS 832-0041 Planned Parenthood Quality reproductive health care for men and women Now Open in Lawrence 1420C Kasold Drive (Orchards Corners) 832-0281 There are many ways to GET BELTED at The Etc. Shop! NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN at The Etc. Shop! The Etc. Shop 928 Mass. Parking in Rear Harding denies knowledge of attack The Associated Press PORTLAND, Ore. — Her hands trembling and her voice strained, Tonya Harding admitted yesterday that she failed to come forward with what she learned after the attack on Nancy Kerrigan, but pleaded not to be denied "my last chance" at an Olympic gold medal. The U.S. Olympic Committee said it was "deeply concerned" about Harding's admission. The committee and the U.S. Figure Skating Association have said Harding could be removed from the team if she is linked to the attack. "I had no prior knowledge of the planned assault on Nancy Kerrigan," Harding said. "I am responsible, however, for falling to report things I learned about the assault when I returned home from nationals. "Many of you will be unable to forgive me for that. It will be difficult for me to forgive myself." Her statement came as her ex-husband, Jeb Gillooil, spoke to investigators for the second consecutive day in what a source said was an attempt to cut a deal in exchange for implicating Harding in the Jan. 6 attack. Harvey Schiller, executive director of the USOC, issued a statement saying the organization "is deeply concerned with statements made today by Tonya Harding relative to her stated knowledge of the attack on Nancy Kerrigan at the national championships." The figure skating association said Harding would be on the list of official entries in the Lillehammer Games submitted to the USOC, but the association has appointed a hearing panel to investigate, a first step in the process that could lead to her removal from the team. The USOC noted that the women's figure skating roster can be changed as late as Feb. 21. Schiller said Harding's name would be on the U.S. roster submitted to international Olympic officials Jan. 31, but added that the USOC "is prepared under constitutional procedures, to initiate any action deemed appropriate relative to the conduct of any athlete entered in the Games." Harding made her statement at a downtown athletic club after a 30-minute workout at a suburban shopping mall rink, where she fell during one of her trademark triple-axels and held her lower back in pain. Wearing the red, white and blue warmup suit from the 1991 world championships, she stood on a stool in order to see over the battery of microphones, and her hands, holding her statement, shook noticeably as she faced some 20 television cameras and dozens of reporters. Harding seemed to come close to crying as she reached the end of her brief statement. "I have devoted my entire life to one objective: winning the Olympic Gold Medal for my country," she said. "This is my last chance. I ask only for your understanding and the opportunity to represent my country with the best figure skating performance of my life." JERUSALEM Israel has reached an agreement with the Clinton administration to purchase 20 F-15I fighter-bombers, one of the United States' most sophisticated weapons. U.S. agrees to sell 20 fighter-bombers to Israeli defense The sale, announced yesterday, would be the first transfer of such high-tech equipment to another country. The Israeli defense ministry said the purchases would "strengthen Israel's qualitative edge." The value of the contract with McDonnell-Douglas Corp., based in St. Louis, was estimated at $2 billion, U.S. officials said. The contract includes an option for Israel to purchase five more F-15Is at a later date, but the exact timetable wasn't immediately known. THE NEWS in brief Israel has 51 older-model F-15s, but the newest planes would enable Israel to reach distant potential adversaries such as Iran, Iraq and Libya. Israel television said the F-151 was a specialized long-range version of the F-15E that will be sold only to Israel. Pentagon representative Kathleen deLaski said the aircraft "will be uniquely tailored to meet Israel's requirements." "It carries a large amount of armaments for long ranges in any weather or lighting conditions and has an excellent air fighting capacity," he said. "It's a plane that is especially capable of carrying out long-range attack missions," Israel Air Force commander Maj. Gen. Herzl Bodinger told Israel television. Australia Indonesia China Japan South Korea France Germany Spain Italy Turkey Mexico Brazil U.S. Canada Netherlands Switzerland Norway Denmark Ireland UK Greece Romania Moldova Czech Republic Slovenia Austria Hungary Slovakia Croatia Montenegro Bulgaria Romania Moldova Czech Republic Slovenia Austria Hungary Slovakia Croatia Montenegro Bulgaria Bodinger said the fighters were due to arrive in Israel in late 1997. McDonnell-Douglas officials did not immediately return telephone calls seeking comment, but Rep. Jim Talent, R-Mo., said he was "ecstatic" that the contract had been approved. News of the sale comes two months after outgoing Defense Secretary Les Aspin and Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin had all but agreed on a deal for the long-range fighter-bomber. WASHINGTON Resignations cause disturbance Deputy Attorney General Philip Heymann, a veteran of four administrations, and who served as right-hand man to Janet Reno, resigned unexpectedly yesterday — a move they both attributed to differences in management style and chemistry. A special assistant to Reno, Lula Rodriguez, who is under Justice Department investigation over alleged vote fraud in a Miami-area election also resigned, spreading turmoil to the top of a third key Cabinet department. The sudden moves at Justice followed recent high-level changes at the Defense Department, where the secretary resigned and his proposed replacement withdrew recently, and the State Department, where the No.2 man last year. There has been speculation that Reno herself has fallen from favor in the White House, which President Clinton denied as recently as last week. Reno is the first attorney general in recent memory to operate without a chief of staff. Instead, she relied heavily on Heymann, who served at Justice in the Johnson administration, worked for the Watergate special prosecutor during the Nixon administration and ran Justice's criminal division during the Carter administration. Heymann's departure brought an instant Republican attack on Reno. Sen. Alfonse D'Amato, R-N.Y., told reporters, "The Justice Department ... is being run by someone who could qualify for the original amateur hour and who has been less than what this nation should be demanding as an attorney general." teno and Heymann sat side-by-side to announce his departure at her regularly weekly news conference. "We don't have any great policy differences," Heymann insisted. "There is no precipitating case or event. The fact of the matter is our chemistry isn't good." Adepartment official, demanding anonymity, said Heymann likes to work intensively on long, major studies and has done a number of those, but at the cost of deferring things Reno needed action more quickly. BRAND NAME CAR STEREOS 841-3775 Heymann said he would stay until a successor was chosen or until he became an ineffective "lame duck." In any event, he said he expected to be back at Harvard by summer. Compiled from The Associated Press. University udio KANSAS WATER POLO CLUB TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY & SUNDAY 7:00 P.M. TO 9:00 P.M. ROBINSON NATATORIUM A MEET SOME SWIMMING ABILITY RECOMMENDED NO WATER POLO SKILL REQUIRED FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE CALL: DAVID REYNOLDS: 841-6475 OR NICK RIVONKA: 841-6197 Bob Eye, NICK PIVONKA: 841-6197 Independent Candidate for Governor of Kansas, in front of the Union today. Noon to 1:00 p.m. Discuss his positions on: 1) Moving to renewable energy; 2) Providing universal health care; 3) Eliminating crime's root causes; 4) Eliminating the property tax. POSTER SALE Recycled Sounds from Lawrence & KC U2 · Coltrane · Lemonheads · Rush Bjork · Frank Zappa · Soundgarden Lenny Kravitz · Resevoir Dogs Specials · House of Pain · Hendrix Bob Dylan · Smashing Pumpkins PJ Harvey · Tosh · Metallica · Sting Cure Jane's Addict · Ice T Rage Against the Machine · Clapton Blind Melon · Billie Holiday Beatles Madonna · Led Zeppelin Morrissey Red Hots · Bad Brains Blues Brothers · Depeche Mode Nirvana Pink Floyd · Taxi Driver TODAY & SATURDAY, JAN. 29 KANSAS UNION GALLERY, Level 4, Kansas Union 9 - 5 pm Fri./ 10 - 4 pm Sat. STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUAK UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS No problem son, I only wanted to make sure you knew about the indoor"sidewalk" sale at the Kansas Union. A huge selection of merchandise at up to 75% off, Jan.31st & Feb.1st. Sidewalk Sale! I KU KU KU Bookstore Kansas Union, Level Two Sale prices not valid with coupons or discount cards SUPERBOWLPARTY NEW60" BIG SCREEN TV --- 4. Catch all the action of the Super Bowl on our new BIG SCREEN, plus: 8 TV's Downstairs Cheeseburger, Fries, & Drink only $2.50. 401 N.2nd 842-0377 Free Appetizers at Halftime! JOHNNY'S TAVERN LAWRENCE / KANEBAS CITY WE HONOR KANSAN 1 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Friday, January 28, 1994 13 Classified Directory Classified Policy The Kanaan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on nationality, nationalism or disability. Further, the Kanaan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise 'any perfume, fragrance, cosmetics, or other race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or dis 1 Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available. 100s Announcements 105 Personals 2SM, looking for 2SF who like to Mt bike ride. Must be good looking, athletic, fun loving, spontaneous, like Kravitz, Hendrix and 9 Inch Nails, plus intellectual ability. Must be a health conscious, healthy conscious, and totally cool. Oh, yeah, and kinda likes Beavis and Butthead. Yeah, that would mean you want a little kid on top of 80. 115 Fitters-Fluor. Lawrence K. 6054. 110 Bus. Personals Looking for significant Spring Break cash? Start building a team to help you market for highly motivated individuals on our product locally on your own time. Please call 1-800-252-8900 or the pro temp led 1890 for more information. Unique Sterling Silver Jewelry Houps, Pendants & More! For Hours & Girls The Show 922 Mass. Downtown WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO Really Listen Call or drop by Headquarters We're here because we care. 841-2345 1419 Mass. We're always open SpringBreak1994 CANCUNfrom#439 SOUTH PADRE from $159 Other documents not available Lowest price guaranteed Call 865-1352 EARN CASH ON THE SPOT $15 Today $30 This week By donating your life saving blood plasma WALK-INS WELCOME! NABI Biomedical Center 816 W 24th 749-5750 WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500 Urgent Care (Additional Charge) Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm Sunday 8am-4:30pm Regular Clinic Hours Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm Saturday 8am-11:30am Pharmacy Hours Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm Friday 8am-9pm Saturday 8am-9pm Sunday 11am-3pm KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services 120 Announcements Wanted St. Patricks Day Parade Queen. If interested leave name & number with Lawrence St. Patricks Day Parade Service 749-68713*221-24. Apps available at Marks Bridal, Gusto's, Outfiters, Harpers, Headmasters, Cadillac Rail, or Cleoratha's Closet Deadline Feb. 4th. Wain a trip to Cancun! Look for details and entry blanks in the coupon section of your new University Telephone Directory. Deadline for entry is January 14, 2019. The telephones are available now at the KU Hookstore. 13th YEAR! SPRING BREAK 94 Hitot! still hot! SOUTH PADRE ISLAND NORTH PADRE/MUSTANG ISLAND NORTH PADREM/USTANG ISLAND T-L-O-R-I-D-A- DAYTONA BEACH PANAMA CITY BEACH ORLANDO/WALT DISNEY WORLD STEAMBOAT VAIL/BEAVER CREEK BRECKENRIDGE/KEYSTONE NEXUS/DRA N·E·V·A·D·A LAS VEGAS B-O-U-T-H C-A-N-O-L-I-N-A MILTON NEAD ISLAND RESERVATIONS AVAILABLE NOW CALL TOLL FREE FOR FULL DETAILS AND COLOR BROCHURE Call Joan at 865-5611 Cruises for two to the Bahamas, $350. Contact Rob c1234567890. 130 Entertainment BENCHWARMERS Friday featuring The Wake $2.00 Teas Saturday featuring L.A. Ramblers 2 for 1 Wells 140 Lost & Found Found: Three keys found out in front of Hearrow with distinguishing key chain. Call 864-3446 LOST Gift ring with blue onyx sets in 3rd floor bathroom in the Kansas Union. If you please contact us. 男厕 女厕 200s Employment 205 Help Wanted 1994 EXPANSION Part-time temporary and permanent openings. Flexible schedules around class. $9-810 to start. Positions need to be filled by 2/1/94. Please call 82-831 for more info. 600 CAMP IN THE USA, RUSSIA AND EUROPE NEED YOU THIS SUMMER. For the best summer of your life-see your career center or contact: Camp Counselors USA 420 Florence St. Palo Alto, CA 94301 ACADEMIC AIDE POSITION AVAILABLE Law Reader (Duties) Includes: Reading textbooks and other materials for students who are blind or have reading disabilities. Reading exams and assisting with library research. $6.50/hr. Academic experience in the field required. Applicable to Bachelor's degree in Assistance Center 133 Strong Hall, 844-6044. Application deadline: January 28, 2019, 5:00 PM. Adams Alumni Center needs banquets prep cook and salad person. Flexible shifts, position available immediately, apply in person no phone calls. 1266 Droad Ave AEROBICS INSTRUCTORS NEEDED. Students are needed now to teach various aerobics classes. Prior experience necessary. $10/hour. Fill out application with Reception Services, 206 Robin Camp Daisy Hindman Resident Girl Scout Camp has positions available: business mgr. camp director, medical clerk, doctor/health officer, life guard, unit leaders, and wanglers. For an application come to the Summer Job Fair on Feb. 2. Write to Kaw Valley High School, 1480 East Hickory Trail, Daisy Hindman P. O. Box 374, Tupelo, AK 98405. KS 658-846-2777. CAMP SEQUOA in New York's Catatchall Mine, (59 min.) nyc has my vacation jobs available. Cabinets, Equipment, Furniture, WS(LIOT), Tennis, Hockey, Gymnastics, Art, English Horseback Riding, Outdoor Education Adventure Programs and more! Competitive Golf, Water Sports, Dry See us at The Summer Employment Fair in the Panama Union Ballroom on Ground Hog Day, or call information call info SEQUOA AT (914) 679-3291. Cooks (female) needed for beautiful summer camp in estes Park, Colorado. Contact period 6/14 to 8/15. Contact Ruthan Holle, Cheiley Colorado Camps. 303-858-4244. Counselors/Support Staff/Children's Camps/Northeast top salary, BM/RD/Laundry, travel allowance. Must have skill in one of the following courses: basketball, jazz, tap ballet, dance, drums, field hockey, football, golf, guitar, gymnastics, ice dance, k舞蹈, jazz, tap ballet, dance, lacrosse, mature, photography, piano, pioneering, rocketry, rollerblading, roaring, sailing, scuba, swim, team, tennis, wisteria (technicians), music, cooking, bus drivers, Kitchen chefs, cooks, bus drivers, maintenance, nurses, secretaries. Male call or write; 402-896-3500; 402-896-3501; #402-Boe Haton Salon F, FL 36311 984-5500; Sooke call or write. Camp Vega for Girls, P.O. Box 1777, Duxbury, MA 03323 (617) 984-5536. We will be on campus in the student union from 11am-4pm on Wednesdays. Evening and weekend CNA's need to work with clients in their homes. Reliable transportation necessary. Call Sharon at Douglas County Visiting Nurses 843-3738. Female grad student or upperclassman; light housekeeping for retired faculty widow. Part time, flexible hours, no evening. Very, very close to the union. Could work between classes. 842-218. Cruise line, entry level, on-board positions avail- anced. Summer. Benefits. Summer or year round (813) 202-478-7487 pace is now hiring intelligent energetic people for its grassroots lobbying and fundraising staff. We have a dedicated team of staff and include guaranteed wage and benefits. Call us at [phone number] for more information. Everyone is encouraged to apply. Henry T's Bar & Grill is now hiring experienced wait staff and cooks. Must be able to work some days. Accept applications Monday through Friday 2-4 pm. No phone calls please. Pizza Hut needs delivery drivers part-time, week nights and weekends. Must have own vehicle and insurance. Good driving record. Contact Downtown Pizza Hut 904 Massachusetts St. Part-time聘. Apply at Alvaran Racquet Club between 10 am and 3 pm. 4250昂克利 Lacking for a few serious people interrupted in earning another book, I received a Lawrence entry book. IOE 704-839. **NANNIES/CHILDCARE** The premier agency- 9 yrs experience. Families gale! Over 2,000 placements in NY, NJ, CT, PA, & Sunny FL. Click today to placement ! Program Specialist part-time, youth experience necessary. Girl Scout experience preferred. Letter of application to Diane Oakes by Feb. 1 Kawaii Scout Corps, 2007. W 8th Suite 4, Lawnerville KS 60079 Work around classes, prefer experience with children. Ainsley Acres School 842-2233. STUDENT ASSISTANT IN ENGINEERING/MAINTENANCE. Deadline: 02/04/94. Salary: $15,000. Include pickup and delivery of equipment on camera systems; equipment checks; order inventory levels; data entry; assist technicians in light mechanical and electronic repair; and other duties as assigned. Require a Bachelor's degree from an accredited University of Kansas, demonstrated ability to work with customers, good oral and written communication skills, experience to work in 20 or 20rs. per week, n in to 4bcks, valid driver license. To apply, complete a job application which is available at the Computer Center. BOA/AA EMPLOYER Part-time farm hand, some experience with farr, machinery and cattle. Wage. 8-10 per hour negotiate **STUDENT DISTRIBUTION TECHNICIAN.** Date: 03/13, 94%. Salary: $43 per hr. Durations include performing bursting and decodifying function on computer systems, email using the delivery van; paper shredding functions; on occasion will assist in receiving shipment from a local warehouse; tape library duties, and other warehousing functions; on occasion will operate forklift and assist in maintenance; assists in Open Landscape management; works with campus junction with the campus wide recycle program; uses personal computer or mainframe software as well as various printers; performs application and application available at the Computer Center in room 202. EO/AEEMPLOYER Telemarketing: Monday-Thursday, 6-9 pm. 841-2189. Salary and commission. Campsis Jobs-Summer Children's Camps-Northeast-Men and women with good tennis background who can teach children to play tennis. Good salary. Job: Campisen P., Vega P., Box 177, Duxbury, MA 02332 (617) 843-6536. Men call or write: Camp Winnipeg. 293d Ridges Slade, COE Boca Raton, FL 33020. Campfire Camping. Student union from 11am-pm on 05/03 in the Oread and Regionalist rooms. Work in beautiful Colorado mountains this summer at Clealey Colorado Campas summer program DRs; drivers; secretaries; wranlers; nanny; kitchen; song leaders; riding, hiking, backpacking. Room and board, cash salary, travel allowance. Our 4th summer! Must be at least 19 to apply. Applicants will be notified of campus interview Drs will be applied to Clealey Colorado Campus, 309-772-3616. United Child Development Center is accepting children for Monday-Saturday 12-30 AM to 4:30 PM. **Bake Sale:** EOE 225 Professional Services Driver education offered through Midwinter Driving School, serving KU students for 20 yrs. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749 English tutor All English classes, proofreading, and writing MA English, BS Education, MS Journalism TRAFICF-DUI'S Fake ID$^1$ & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal and civil matters The law offices of For a confidential, caring friend, call us. We're here to listen and talk with you. BirtightBirth #342-841. Free pregnancy testing Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey 16 East 13th 842-1133 INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS DV-1, iv school in the U.S. Immigration Dept. Green cards provide permanent resident status, Citizens almost all countries are allowed to take part. Students, tourists, anyone may apply. For info & forms. New Era Legal Services, 2021 Stagg S1, Canoga Park, CA Tel: (818) 998-4425; Fax: (818) 882-9681. BRAXTON B. COPLEY Attorney at Law General Practice Traffic Tickets, Midmeenors, Landlord/Tenant 719 Massachusetts 749-5333 VIDEO EDITING AND PRODUCTION SERVICES A/B roll video tape editing suite with EDL. 3D computer animation. High quality video production. Award winning screen writer. PRIMAL SCREEN COMMUNICATIONS WORKSHOP DUI/MIP/Fake ID's Office located right next to campus Elizabeth Leach Attorney at Law-Former Prosecutor 414 W14th 749-0087 235 Typing Services 1-der Women Word Processing. Former editor quality type 90. Creates into accurate pages of letter quantity type 90. Pentair Fire, New red paint. Runs perfectly. Pentair Fire, 5 speed. Cupid $499. Call 861-273-2000. DESKTOP DOCUMENTS For all of your word processing needs. 480 pts. Looking for a good type? *Papers, Applications, Sheetmaps, Charts *Laser printing to WOW! your profs *Grammar and spelling free *18 years experience call Jack at Makin' the Grade Look in the Honda Accord 92 LX Coupe 3.6L Full Purr Bvp 114kW hail damage hail Good Conn. 89000 0809-4199 Honda Accord 92 LX Coupe 3.6L Full Purr Bvp 114kW hail damage hail Good Conn. 89000 0809-4199 X 1475 mobile home. $ BDRM 1-bath. Cwt. & A/t. 1869 mobile home. $ BDRM 2-bath. Cwt. & A/t. Great investment at $800! Call 689-3643. Appls. Word processing, applications, term papers, dissertations, resumes. Editing, composition, rush writing. Words by Chris Wise Processing. High quality papers and printing; spell check resources. 92 Specialized Rock Hopper. Many x-tras. Mus sell 95 Call Torty 832-821-481 305 For Sale 300s Merchandise Columbian Box $100, Albino Corn Snake $100 obo phone 843-3202. FOR SALE: T-120 calculator and manual; $50; BASIC computer; $30, tumpet; $150, Large microwave; $65, 89-200. For Sale Portable Computer w/2MG hard drive 3+/1 in floppy drive $500. Call 748-769-8122 2 CD Players For Sale: Sherwood 5 disc changer, Beds, denk, bookcases, chest of drawers. Everything But Ice. 968 Mass. G Bass Amp. 380 Watt Combo w/chorus, limiter, limiter 15 V, EV KN, answering 4900 Watts GUITARS - smooth Westmont, 3/4 body size, Flood Razors $200; electric motors $60; Kramer Fretless $95. 1 bedroom with wood floors available Mid February for $275, Close KU and on the bus route water and cable pd. 789-8406 Ylixn 2 bedroom at brand new, unsealed from May 15. 405 For Rent 2 bedroom apt. brand new, sublease from May 13 954-778-6000 campus, washer/dryer, mcall call 954-778-6000 340 Auto Sales Talk trash, walk trash: DEJA RECYCLED Talk garbage, walk garbage: DEJA RECYCLED Goods Days, 705; Goods Day, 19-10-20. The full list is 400s Real Estate Large size calcite tufton bed, solid mats w/ oil finish. 440-1890-7114 for Sherri 74 Dodge PU, 6 cyl., 3 speed, good cond. $750 Call 832-1904 You remember the time spent, the frustrations, the hassles. DO IT NOW. HOW? Glad you asked. Call 842-4200 & we'll send our complete program to you immediately. TT-82 Calculator, Brand new condition, $66, Call 841-7837. meadowbrook FALL'94 Call Kathy or Shana at Meadowbrook. 842-4200 15th & Crestline Mon-Fri 8:5:30 Sat 10-4 Sun 1-4 Sorry no pets 3 bedroom apartments now on available. On route, d/w and microwave. $500 mone. Call 749-1556. 4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished. Interested? Interested? 749-1525, 749-0445 or 842-1455 5 bedroom house now available close to campus $700/month, 6 month lease. Call 814-8468. Park25 We are now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature studio1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. We also have 3 bedroom, 2 1/2 bath townhomes. We presently have available a select few 1 & 2 bedroom apartments for immediate *2 Pools 2 Laundry * Volleyball Court * On KU Bus Route with 4 Stops on Property * 2 Laundry Rooms * Some Washer/Dryer Hookups Call or stop by today. 2401 W. 25th, 9A3 842-1455 (sorry no pets) Campus Locations Newer 1, 2 and 3 bedroom apartments available Nower 19. '84 Washer/dryer, dishwasher, microware, private palettes/batens. Avolve your place where you place now! Call 748-1564 for details. Extra quiet and nice. 2 BR apartment. All appliances, centr air, gas, heat, low utilities. No pets. First month free. 1 bedroom apartment. Second month free. Boardwalk Apartment. Middle semester. 032-289-2088. Leasing for June and August. New 4 bedroom, fireplace, ceiling fans, cable-padded 1500 sq ft, gas fireplace, celling fans, cable-padded 1500 sq ft, and covered parking avail. Early sign-up specials offered. For more information call Dai at 841-362-7300. Looking for two roommates for a three bedroom Ken rented on the second of the month, water paid, gas included, water included, Available at West Hill Apts. Spacious bed iunfed apts. 429 per month. Water pd. Great location near campus, 1012 Emery Rd. No pets. 81-3800, 54-3884. Available Now. New renovated studio apd 190. New apartment APD 190, ACP bldm. b246/mp/100, b417/107, b432/108, b440/108, b512/107. Also Leasing For Spring & Fall! Nice 2 BRapt. available &ASP for leasing until Aug. $290/mo. at facilities. 98-70% Rooms, apartments, and well kept, older homes available now. 841-STAR (7827) one bedroom apartment, sublease next to campus, off street parking, free rent for January of each year. MORNING STAR Rooms, apartments, and well kept, older Sick i the Roomate? Try Sub Leasing. 1 bdrm 2 blks from $Caspian. $325mn. call 833-2194. Spacius a bedroom apt very close to campus. Funds upgrades. Call 831-1212. Ask about Coldwater flat #4. Sublette quiet room at 10th and Tennessee Washington more kid-friendly. Cheap, independent, and affordable. No pets allowed. Sublease till July, new 2 lb/m in 4 plex, Central air, tow, HW & TOW, jan rent from $45 per mo - 4 dp after January. audit apartment now available close to campus. Utilities paid. $295. 6 month lease available. Call South Point AQUARIUM Sublease new 2 Bdm. Apl.-Champlain C1-close to KU-8450 month please 749-2603. 2 & 3 BEDROOMS AVAILABLE NOW!! SUB-LASE 2 Br. apt. for lease. $79 per month. Purchase batee, charge paid. Very close to cam- lery. **Sublease:** 1 bdm api w/ study. Boardwalk Apts $345 mo. @ 843-0145. 430 Roommate Wanted or 2 roommates needed for new 3 bed apartment. 1 or 2 rooms +/- utilities. Near campus W/D in apartment. Near college. Call 407-965-2800. LUXURY or 2a/8rmmates needed ASAP to share bdrm apt. apx 820-9366 per mo. W/D available, utilities paid, on bus route. Call Shawn at 842-7196. New appliances New bath fixtures Mini & vertical blinds Walk-in closets Water, heating of water & trash paid! Patio balconies available Swimming pool and sand volleyball court Small pets OK with deposit Ample off-street parking 1 female non-smoking room for 3 bdm. Appl. brand new d/w dishwasher & microwave $825 $99.99 1 t 3 roommates needed immediate to share a stair apartment | block from campus | Very small building LOCATION GREATLOCATION!!! West of Iowa on 26th Street K.U. bus route Walk to shopping, banking, Restaurants & six theaters Next to new Holcom Recreational Center- Basketball, baseball, indoor Track, racquetball and Aerobics. 2 rooms in Aip. I班 behind Pramer, Pb run mess. Classroom $155 + 9 volles. Call Us: 18152 leave message 843-6446 Frm. roommate needed for nice floaty dues. pm. to enqueue on bus vip. Great deal! $90/mo fem. to enqueue on bus vip. Great deal! $90/mo College-affiliated roommate needed now for 3 BR Alava- College-affiliated roommate needed now for 3 BR Alva- college-affiliated roommate needed now for 3 BR Alva- call phone 651-278-0488 Female, non-smoking, roommate needed, immediately to share space with house, own bedroom, kitchen. Female a shirnee 3 hres, b niea 18K $UU+ oillum or exchange for babyhatching 1 yr age old girl 3 $UU+ THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Female commute needed, own room, bath & study. W/D, WG w/opener 9331 will贴. Looking for roommate starting Feb. the 1st. min. from campus $235 stu.贴合 cable paid but not furnished. Female roommate, beautiful 3 bedroom townhouse on bus route 202, no fire, no pets, smoke free. - By phone: 864-4358 Needed immatured, mature J. Jr., St. Gr., female non- maternal for BDR $165/mo. Call 849-2810. Female premature needs for a 14kg b2 bedroom apm. from 18KW at 418 per month x / u.util- lity. (would be better if not available) Male roommate for 4 bdm 2 bhm furnished apt. $72/mo. + 1/3 utile. 1 tbl to KU. Have your own room, covered parking, private area, private washroom, waver, stroller, for only one person and + pigeon fee Neded by Pb: 1. NRl SM to rpare 3 Br DPk lx Neded by Pb: 1. NRl SM to rpare 3 Br DPk lx Bt. Call B41-306. Dw, DPAT, 5 min from Bt. Call B41-306. One room needed for 2 bdrm lowbrow $190 a month + \/u1 cell. Private rooms, AC, DWF, HP and WIFI. One roommate to share 3-birch house. Garage, fence to backyard. $175/mo. Call 843-269-7000. Roommate needed for 4 bdm boole near campus. W/D, appliances, furnished except for dbm. Willing to help with part of rent, pets possible. Bdm 865-2431. Ad phone number in may be issued to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made. *Internet phone 811-524-3170 Wanted i 2 roommates to share brand new cou for $900. Call Gll: t82-734-2111 med m2: t82-733-3001. Stop by the Kansas office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Atty staff can be招呼, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or Visa. Classified Information and order form - you may be called to Case, Court, or Notary. See Inc. You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment for the Kansas offices. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on missed days when cancelled before your expiration date. Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day intersections and the size of the ad (the number of open lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the advertisement rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day * the number of days per day by the total number of days the ad will run. When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or VISA, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check with your cash are not available. The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00. Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Classifications Celes per min por jour 1X 2-4X 4-7X 9-14X 15-28X 30+X 2.05 1.85 1.68 0.79 0.75 0.69 1.90 1.75 1.67 0.78 0.68 0.68 1.95 1.85 .75 .80 .80 .80 .40 1.75 .80 .80 .80 .80 .80 .35 105 personal 110 business persons 120 announcements 120 entertainment 140 lxft & bound 265 lxyft used 285 professional services 292 professional services 295 inline services Please print your ad one word per box 370 grant to buy 405 for rent 438 roommate needed ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print: 1 2 3 4 5 Date ad begins: ___ Total days in paper_ Total ad cost: ___ Classification: ___ Name VISA Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □ Visa (Please make checks payable to the University of Kentucky) Furnish the following if you are charitable for us: Account number: Expiration Date: MasterCard Print exact name appearing on credit card: Signature: The University Daily Kansas, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 68445 THE FAR SIDE By GARY LARSON © 1964 FarWorks Inc./Gust by Universal Press Syndicate "Uh, let's see ...I'll try the mammoth." 14 Friday, January 28,1994 NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WASHINGTON Clinton OKs plan to experiment with welfare in Florida In a preview of the president's plan to overhaul the nation's welfare system, the Clinton administration gave Florida permission yesterday to experiment with time-limited benefits and subsidies to employers who hire welfare recipients. A senior administration official said Florida's demonstration project is significant because it mirrors President Clinton's efforts to expand education, training and child-care for parents on welfare while limiting their benefits to two years. In his State of the Union address Tuesday, Clinton promised to introduce welfare-reform legislation this spring. Although the administration has outlined its plan in broad terms, it has yet to make the tough decisions about costs and financing. In Florida, parents who participate in the demonstration will be allowed to collect welfare for a maximum of 24 months in any five-year period. While on the rolls, parents will be eligible for training, education, child care, health insurance and intensive case management. The Clinton administration also wants to limit welfare benefits to 24 months over a certain, but still undecided, length of time, the senior administration official said. Its plan will also include counseling, education or training, and help with child care for recipients preparing to leave the rolls. In Florida, the state will guarantee a minimum wage job for recipients unable to locate work at the end of 24 months, according to the federal Department of Health and Human Services. THE NEWS in brief WASHINGTON Packwood to appeal court order Sen. Bob Packwood will appeal a court ruling ordering him to provide his diaries to the Senate Ethics Committee, his lawyer said yesterday. A judge said he would delay transfer of the materials to permit the appeal. Defense attorney Jacob Stein said he will go to the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia while the diaries are given to a court-appointed hearing examiner, who in turn will prepare them for the ethics committee. The ethics panel is investigating Packwood for alleged sexual misconduct, witness intimidation and obstruction of the investigation. It wants the diaries to determine whether to expand the investigation to include job offers to the Oregon Republican's wife by lobbyists and businessmen. Senate attorneys agreed to the arrangement in a closed meeting and later in open court. Nothing was said at the hearing about a Justice Department subpoena for the diaries. A department criminal investigation has focused on the job offers. Jackson, who upheld a committee subpoena for the diaries Monday, said he would appoint Kenneth Starr as the neutral examiner. The former federal appellate judge and U.S. solicitor general will block out information on attorney-client, family and medical matters, and will choose an expert to verify the authenticity of tape-recorded diaries. Such verification is needed because Packwood's former secretary, who transcribed the diary tapes, told the committee that Packwood altered some diary materials while awaiting a subpoena. The court took custody of the materials last month after the accusation was made. Jackson also said Starr "will arrange for transmission of the diaries to the FBI to be copied" for Packwood. BURLINGTON, Kan. 'Event' shuts down Wolf Creek The Wolf Creek Generating Station was shut down early yesterday because of a control rod problem, but there was no threat to the public and no release of radiation, officials with the nuclear power plant said. Company officials declared an "unusual event," the lowest of four emergency classifications that require notification of county, state and federal officials, when a control rood failed to respond properly about 2:45 a.m. The plant was shut down at 4:23 a.m. There was no problem with the plant's other 52 control rods, said Mona Grimsley, a plant representative. The control rods provide one means of controlling the power output of the plant's reactor, she said. "We think the problem was a loose cable connection on a control rod drive mechanism," Grimsley said. Wolf Creek officials said they will take advantage of the shutdown to do other routine work at the plant. Compiled from The Associated Press. Gambling ruling fuels feud on Native American casinos The Associated Press TOPEKA — In the wake of a state Supreme Court ruling, Gov. Joan Finney said yesterday that the Legislature should ratify casino gambling compacts with Native American tribes. Finney made her statement even though the chairmen of the legislative committees that handle gambling issues disagreed over the ruling's effect. The ruling said the 1986 constitutional amendment that authorized a state-run lottery was broad enough to allow state-operated casino games. According to the governor and her attorney, Pedro rrigonegaray of Topeka, the ruling means that Kansas has no legal right to keep the four Native American tribes with reservations inside the state from opening casinos. The ruling also opens the door to state-operated casinos, but Finney said she wanted lawmakers to act on the tribes' gambling compacts first. "I believe it is about time that the Kansas Legislature deal fairly and responsibly with the Native Americans and ratify the compacts," Finney told reporters during a news conference. Rep. Clyde Graeber, R-Leavenworth, chairman of the House Federal and State Affairs Committee, said he expected the decision to be as it was, and that it reopened the issue of Native American casinos. He was joined in that opinion by Attorney General Bob Stephan. But Sen. Jerry Moran, R-Hays, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, said he still didn't think the Indians could open casinos unless the state did it as well. He said that would take an act of the Legislature, and he didn't think such an act would pass. Two compacts — one with the Kickapoo Nation and another with the Prairie Band Potawatomi — were negotiated by Finney but rejected by the Senate. Two others, with the Sac and Fox and the lowas, still are pending. Stephan said the ruling should convince legislators that they cannot stop Native American casinos. He said he believed the state never could, based on federal law. "Think of all the consternation that gone on in the Legislature, the high blood pressure, the nights of worry, that I tried to save them from," Stephan said. "It was a waste of time, and I said so." Kennedy CLASSIFIED Kennedy GLASS For All Your Glass Needs All automotive glass replacement & insurance claims handled. 730 New Jersey 843-4416 Heaven for Lounge Lizards Futon Couches Starting at $119 BLUE HERON Futons & Home Furnishings 937 Mass., 841-9443 GOLD MEMORIA BALLET TRINA TRINA TRINA CELEBRATE ON US! With A FREE Gift Join us in celebrating our Gold Medalation Award for meeting Merle Norman's standards of excellence and bringing your unimaginated team to a shared team environment. Encourage Gold Medalion Gift, years free with a $150 connect gift card from Kamp and signed by your loved ones like dancing, and take this golden opportunity to celebrate on all! Using this cup to incarnate your free gift with plan you have! Lovely Kit Ranking Program now open and running through January 29, 1994. Marjorie Brammell, owner 9th and New Hampshire (1) block east of New Hampshire Lawrence, KS 66044 913-841-5324 Dresses good through January 29, 1994 Bottleneck 913.841 Live 737 New Hampshire Lawrence, KS Bottleneck 913.841.live 737 New Hampshire Lawrence, KS Friday The Urge MU330 Saturday Love Squad Grumpy Sunday Poster Children Zoom From 18 & over YOU STILL dialing OPER 0 to CALL YOUR PARENTS COLLECT? WHAT ARE THEY BILLIONAIRES? DIAL 1-800-COLLECT INSTEAD SAVE THE PEOPLE YOU CALL up to 44% USE IT EVERY TIME YOU MAKE A LONG DISTANCE COLLECT CALL. 1 CAMPUS/AREA: A lack of parking spaces on campus makes some students fear for their safety at night. PAGE 3. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOL.103,NO.90 THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA KS 66612 MONDAY, JANUARY 31, 1994 ADVERTISING: 864-4358 (USPS 650-640) The Associated Press ALANTA — All the hard work the Buffalo Bills did in the 30 minutes of the first half took less than seven minutes to undo in the second half. It began with a Thurman Thomas fumble — caused by Dallas Cowboy Leon Lett, of all people — and ended with vintage Emmitt Smith. NEWS:864-4810 Dallas won the game yesterday 30-13 for its second straight championship, but it was decided before the halfway mark of the third quarter. "They chose a slow death," Dallas receiver Michael Irvin said. "They came in and were not going to give up the big play. A lot of teams play us that way. That just leaves a lot of room for Emmitt to run." Last year, it was the second quarter that doomed Buffalo in an eventual 52-17 Super Bowl loss. This year, the Bills lasted until the third quarter. "When you play us, you choose your poison," Irvin said. "But you're eventually going to die." When the poison took effect, the Bills' 13-6 halftime lead had turned into a 20-13 deficit, and Buffalo's place in Super Bowl infamy had been secured as a four-time loser. The Bills did everything they were supposed to do in the first half, led by Jim Kelly's pinpoint passing that helped keep the ball away from the Cowboys big-play offense. Buffalo got the kickoff in the second half and had a chance to add to its lead. But the aggressive Cowboys turned up the heat, and on just the third play of the period, it all came apart for the Bills. Thomas came barreling through the line only to meet Lett's big hand; the ball squirted loose and seemed to lay on the Georgia Dome carpet for several tanzalizing seconds. Finally, James Washington scooped it up in mid-shade heading toward the sideline, cut toward the middle, reversed his path again and scooted into the end zone untouched. The score was only tied after Washington's spectacular run, but there was a feeling that it was only a matter of time before the Bills collapsed. "We were letting the momentum slip away from us, and you could feel it. It bothered everyone," center Kent Hull said. **COVERAGE:** Dallas, Buffalo both make history. Page 6. BEST VOLLEYBALL Robert Jerry, dean of law, plays foosball with children at the Boys and Girls Club of Lawrence, 1520 Haskell Ave. The American Bar Association Work-A-Day program encourages future lawyers to work on community service projects. Law students give time to community Volunteering time helps dispel negative myths about lawyers By Susan White Kansan staff writer jennifer Olsen, first-year law student, spent her free time Saturday playing games and reading with children at the Boys and Girls Club of Lawrence. "I always do community work," she said. "I want to do public service as a career in the future." Olsen and about 80 other law students participated in the national American Bar Association Work-A Day program on Saturday. The program, which includes 10,000 students from 100 different law schools across the nation, encourages future lawyers to work on communityservice projects. The program began last year with 52 schools and 6,000 students, said Mitch Ghoddistin, first-year law student and KU coordinator of the program, but KU did not participate. "This is the first year ever we've done anything like this," he said. "It's something we plan to do every year from now on." Ghodstin said he learned about the program during a meeting last year for the American Bar Association in Kansas City, Kan. Law students painted offices at Haskell LIGHT, 137 Pawnee; the Douglas County Senior Services, 745 Vermont; and the Bert Nash Community Mental Health Center, 714 Vermont. A second group "I heard they needed people to help, so I offered to do it," he said. "I ended up being the coordinator for the program." cleaned up the grounds around the Ballard Community Center, 708 Elm, while a third group spent the day with children at the Boys and Girls Club of Lawrence, 1502 Haskell Ave. Ghodstinat said the program would help dispel the negative myths about lawyers. "Ialways want to do community service," he said. "I also wanted to let people know that lawyers can be good people." "We wanted to generate an interest among the law students to do community service," he said. "Obviously community service is always needed." Ghodstinat said the KU student law division of the American Bar Association was planning to do Don Francis, the KU chapter representative to the American Bar Association, said the program would help law students as well. more projects for the Ballard Community Center in the near future. "It was their plan from the beginning, and we're really proud of what they're doing," he said. "The legal profession has an obligation to do community service, and here students are putting words into action." Robert Jerry, dean of the law school, said he arrived from Wichita early in the afternoon and hurried back to Lawrence to take part in the Work-a-Day. Jerry had he was glad to see the law school had a good turnout. Nathan Muyskens, second-year law student, said he decided to work on the project to improve his image as a future lawyer. "The legal profession has been given a really bad name," he said. "This is a way for us to give something back to the community. There are not a lot of outlets to do this." Regents vote unanimously to cut degrees Master's in atmospheric science gone By Jamie Munn Kansan staff writer TOPEKA — Despite personal appeals by a KU professor and graduate student, the Board of Regents voted unanimously Thursday to discontinue the state's only atmospheric science master's degree. A total of seven KU degrees officially were discontinued by the Regents, but the master's program for atmospheric science was the only cut to draw debate. Other eliminated programs included the bachelor of arts in comparative literature; the bachelor of arts and bachelor of general studies in computer science; the bachelor of arts in Italian; and the bachelor of arts and bachelor of general studies in atmospheric science. "It would be like positioning it for the age of the dinosaurs," Eagleman said. Joe Eagleman, professor of meteorology, said the University would miss out on future technological advances and economic benefits if it dropped the master's program. Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor, said the University was faced with the responsibility of providing services while strengthening its strongest programs with limited funds. Regent John Hiebert said that the atmospheric science department had been evaluated several times in the last few years and that the evaluations had suggested hiring more faculty. "We can't offer everything." Meyen said. "There are strong graduate programs surrounding the state of Kansas in atmospheric science." But the program only has three faculty members now, and the Regents require six faculty members in masters programs. "The issue is not the importance of the program, but the adequacy of the program," Hiebert said. Other universities in Oklahoma, Colorado and Missouri have stronger atmospheric science programs, he said. David Shulenburger, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said the University had rated the program as peripheral because of a lack of faculty and not the quality of the degree. Shulenburger said the discontinuities, both those made by the University in the spring and those made at Thursday's meeting, would bring the number of programs at KU down to about 200. "We can't have 217 strong programs," Shulenburger said. "We'll be in a better position to be a strong university with high quality programs by making these tough choices." Paul Castleberry, Lawrence graduate student, also attempted to convince the Regents to reconsider the master's degree. Castleberry said that he had had the option to attend Texas A&M University and Texas Tech University but that he had chosen KU because of the local severe weather. "Yes, we are a small program." Castleberry said. "But if we start sending students to other places like Missouri and Oklahoma, I think we should keep people here." No specific degrees will remain for comparative literature and Italian, but the courses will continue to be offered in the English department and consolidated into the French and Italian department respectively. The bachelor of science, master of science and doctoral degrees remain for computer science but will be moved to the School of Engineering The unanimous decision came at the first official meeting for several new members on the Board of Regents. New members included Executive Director Stephen Jordan and regents Catherine Conger, Tom Hammond, Philviss Nolan and Karen Krepps. Conger, Hammond, Nolan and Krepps await official legislative appointment hearings this week. Order diploma now to receive it in May I Order diploma now to receive it in May Graduating students who don't register for graduation tomorrow may find themselves empty-handed in May. About 600 of the expected 1,200 applications to receive a diploma on graduation day have been turned in, said Diana Fox, graduate coordinator for the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Students can turn in applications any time until April 15, but the University cannot promise that they will receive a diploma in M. Those people who do not receive a diploma at the graduation ceremony eventually will receive it in the mail, Fox said. INSIDE Unstoppable! The Kansas women's basketball team remained undefeated in the Big Eight Conference with a 77-50 thrashing of Kansas State yesterday in Allen Field House.. BROOKLYN HARVARD STATE UNIVERSITY Page 9. AUS State Haskell students satisfied with board's decisions By Denise Nell Kansan staff writer Last week's Haskell Indian Nations University Board of Regents session ended in victory for the student body. Sleepy Eye LaFromboise, Haskell student senate president, led a group of students who presented to the board a list of changes they wanted. Among them were requests to end weekly room checks and "contribution" hours, which require all Haskell students to work for the university 40 hours each semester. In addition to backing the students' stand against the proposed South Lawrence Trafficway, which would cut through Haskell's wetlands, the Regents formulated a plan that would give students more say in the way they are treated. The board formulated a plan in which the senate could pass a resolution about something it wanted changed. The dean of students and a student and staff committee then would be required to examine the proposed resolution. The resolution would stand if the committee approved it. [Image of an Indian chief with a feathered headdress.] Haskell Indian Nations University Adrian Brown, Haskell student senate vice president, said the new process was long overdue. He said the legal system at Haskell often seemed to work against students instead of for them. "This is going to make a big difference," Brown said. "Before, we had to wait until the Regents rolled around again. It strikes a little more fear into the hearts of the entities we deal with." Brown said the senate would begin working on some of the resolutions immediately. Since Haskell is just now making the transition from a junior college into a four-year university, LaFromboise said, the senate was unsure what problems they may be The board also approved a policy that would prohibit romantic or sexual relationships between students and staff members. The policy was formulated by one of Haskell's Quality Improvement Teams, groups made up of students and staff that studied the issue and made a recommendation to the board. The Regents did not pass another recommendation to increase fees at Haskell and adopt admissions requirements. Brown said the Regents felt that there was not enough student representation on the team that made the recommendations. He said that the team now would reexamine the issue with more student representation and make a new proposal when Haskell's board reconvenes in May. LaFrombose, who also is a member of the board, said he took from the meeting a facing. He said he hoped to communicate with student groups at the University of Kansas, such as Student Senate and the Native American Students Association, to get advice about what types of resolutions they should propose. Approved a policy that would formalize the steps a person with a sexual harassment complaint should take. Regent rulings Haskell's Board of Regents decisions: ■ Approved a policy that would prohibit romantic or sexual relationships between students and staff. Backed the students' opposition of the South Lawrence Trafficway by rejecting 12 compromises offered by Douglas County officials. 1 Approved a resolution process for the student senate. Rejected a proposal that would establish admission requirements and raise student fees. KANSAN feeling that the Regents were willing to cooperate with students. "I was very, very pleased with the leadership the Board of Regents had with students in all areas," he said. "Things can start operating like they should." 2 Monday, January 31, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The University Daily Kansasan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan 68045. LUMBERSTER'S FURNITURE MARKS & GIVENCHY LINCOLN (212) 843-5000 SUNFLOWER Annual Winter Sale Now until the end of February Woolrich Coats...up to 30% off Turtle Necks...50 Womens Clothing...20% off Meas Clothing...20% off Sweaters...20% off 199 Bicycles...Closet Prices Winter Cycling Wear...20% off Selected Boots...Closet Prices 843.5000 804 Massachusetts you gotta check us out! Confidential Affordable Free pregnancy tests Birth control Slidingfeescale STD screening Planned Parenthood Quality reproductive health care for men and women Now Open in Lawrence 1420C Kasold Drive (Orchards Corners) 832-0281 Congratulations New Initiates! 1993-1994 I Your Alpha Xi Delta Sisters TFJ ON CAMPUS The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an information table about Summer Abroad from 9 a.m. until 3 p.m. today in the lobby of the Kansas Union. For more information, call Debra Brodsky at 864-3742. The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an informational meeting about Spanish Study Abroad at 9:30 a.m. today at 4065 Wesco Hall. For more information, call 864-3742. Narcotics Anonymous will meet at 11:30 a.m. today at Alcove in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Andy B. at 843-9461. St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a Catholic law student discussion group at 12:30 p.m. today in 109 Green Hall. For more information, call 843-0357. St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today at Danforth Chapel. KU Tae Kawen Do Club will meet at 6 p.m. today at 207 Robin- Love, Harambe will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at American Baptist Center, 1629 W. 19th St. For more information, call Anthony Case at 865-1682. son. For more information, call Jason Anishanslin at 843-3099 or John Siceloff at 865-7771. Promote Alcohol Responsibility Through You will meet at 7 tonight at Jox Sports Emporium and Fundinkery, 601 Kasid Dr. For more information, call Chris at 842-9653. St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a program, "Exploring the Faith," at 8 onight in the St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center, 1631 Crescent Rd. For more information, call 843-0357. St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a class, "Fundamentals of Catholicism," at 7 onight in the St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center, 1631 Crescent Rd. For more information, call 843-0357. ON THE RECORD ken into Tuesday in a parking lot No. 111, at Gertrude Sellars Pearson-Corbin Hall. Two credit cards and a compact disc were stolen, KU police reported. WEATHER Weather around the country: Atlanta '46/'31' Chicago '19/'5' Houston '47/'34' Miami '76/'69' Nineapolis '10/'8' Phoenix '59/'40' Salt Lake City '30/'12 Seattle '48/'29 Weather around the country: LAWRENCE: 24'/5' St. Louis: 22'/11" Wichita: 28'/8" A wallet and its contents, valued together at $55, was stolen Wednesday from 3090 Wescoe Hall, KU police reported. Tuisa: 31'/15' Kansas City: 23*/6* TODAY Omaha: 22 X-2 Tomorrow Wednesday Partly cloudy An Emporia man's car was broonly $2,399 High: 24' Low: 5' Sunny day Partly cloudy Partly cloudy Partycloudy Partlycloudy High: 33' Low: 10' KANSAN Source: Brandon Dahl, KU Weather Service: 864-3300 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Call 864-4810 for the newsroom: *News tips - Campus Desk* *Comments/Complaints/Corrections - Ben Grove, Editor or Lisa Cosmiso, Managing Editor* HOW TO REACH US Come to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Staufer-Flint Hall for: ■ placing announcements of meetings or events of campus groups for the "On Campus" calendar. Call 864-4358 for advertising: ■ Classified Department Comments/Complaints — Kelly Connealy, Classified Manager ■ Display Advertising Comments/Complaints — Justin Garber, Business Manager Trees make shade... We don't recycle... You're getting warmer. Red Lyon Tavern CLIP A COUPON! X 944 Mass. 832-8228 Laptop "Your Book Professionals" "At the top of Naismith Hill!" Layhawk Bookstore TravelMate 4000E Color At the Top of the Night Hrs: 7-5 M-T-th, 8-5 F-Fri, 9-5 SAT, 12-4 Sun, 843-3826 486SX 4Mb RAM 25MHz - 640x480 VGA Color Display 486 power and color display at a truly affordable price. - 486SX, 4Mb RAM, 25MHz - 120Mb Hard Drive, Windows 3.1 - 120Mb Hard Drive, Windows 3.1 - Microsoft Ballpoint TEXAS INSTRUMENTS business World Software—At Educational Discounts! 5 • Microsoft Word 6.0 ... $129 - WordPerfect 6.0 ... $135 • Microsoft Word 6.0 ... $129 • Aldus PageMaker 5.0 ... $199 • Microsoft Excel 4.0 ... $189 Many more titles available! COMPUTER CENTER ConnectingPoint 813 Mass Downtown Lawrence 843-7584 "Everything you always wanted to know abut Judaism, but thought you were too cool to ask." Four short class sessions FREE-Beginning February 13 at the Lawrence Jewish Community Center. Call841-7636 Green Family Camp (Houston area) in Alcove G from 10-3 to see alumni and to interview potential counselors. Study Abroad With The University of Kansas 1994 Summer Abroad Visit a Study Abroad table Advanced German In Holzkirchen/Munich, Germany may 31-July 20* Visliste Köln, Würzburg, Nürnberg, Rothenburg, and Salzburg. Nine hours of credit in German including literature, conversation, political, cultural and social perspectives, while living with a German family. $2,575. Visit a Study Abroad table at the Kansas Union for information and applications. January31 9:00am-3:00pm Intermediate German In Futin, Germany *May 31 July 26* Lawrence's Sister City. Visit to Hamburg, Lübeck, Kiel, Berlin, Mainz, and Münich. Receive up to nine undergraduate hours in German language, culture, conversation, and grammar while living with a German family. $2,575. French Language and Culture In Paris, France June 17-July 30* Visits to Normandy Italian Language and Culture in Florence, IL *June 6-July 1 and/or July 4-July 29* Six to ten credit hours in Italian language and culture, including cooking: $2,200 (for a one month session) and $3,480 (for a two month session). *June 10, August $5.00 Begin with a two week tour of Madrid and other cities in central, western, and southern Spain. Settle in the heart of Barcelona for four weeks of intensive study while living with a Spanish family. Seven hours credit in Spanish grammar, conversation, composition, poetry, and culture. $5,100. Intermediate Spanish In Guadalajara, Mexico June 6-July29 Seven underm "Europe In Transition" In Copenhagen, Denmark June 4-July 28 $nine hours of credit from the following courses: The European Community, European Stx hours of credit from the following courses: Modern Danish Culture Conflict and Security Issues, East-West Business Relations, Optional study and Danish language instruction. Three-day study tour of Denmark. Tour to Moscow, St. Petersburg, and one of the Baltic states. $3,950 undergraduate credits in Spanish language, grammar, and composition, and Mexican culture and literature. Six graduate credits in Mexican history. $875 (undergraduate)and $500 (graduates)foreach workshop. Airfare, lodging,and books are estimated at $1,600. Humanities In Great Britain *June 24 July 31* Stay in London, Edinburgh, York, Exeter, Bath, Oxford, and Stratford-on-Ave. Six to nine hours of junior-senior credit in British literature, history, and art history $3,200. The London School of Economics, England *June 27; July 15 and/or July 18-August 5* Trefoil six credit hours in economics, business, and politics. $2,050 (for one term) and $3,450 (for both terms). Architecture in Paris, France for Architects "June 17-July 30" Includes building tours, lectures, and seminars by prominent French and U. S. architects. Lodging at the Cite Universitaire, Paris, travel to such cities as Eiffel, Bourdeau, Lyon and Marsalle. Approximately $5,500 plus some meals and personal expenses. Architecture in Paris, France for Architects Broaden Your Horizons! 1. Social Welfare in Asunción, Paraguay *May 20-June 19* Field experience with Paraguayan social agencies, Spanish language and Paraguayan history and culture are the topics of study. Students live with families while in Asunción. Excursions throughout Paraguay and Brazil. Two hours Spanish credit and two hours Social Welfare credit. $1,525. "The program costs do not include airfare, personal travel and expenses, books, or passports. Room and Board vary according to the program. All fees are estimated and subject to change. Students are accepted on a rolling basis. Early application is encouraged." Formore information: KU Study Abroad 203Lippincott Hall 864-3742 --- 0 이므로 몇가지 이유가 있으며 두 개의 원인을 재审视하려 한다. --- CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Monday, January 31, 1994 3 Campus at night can be frightful By Frank McCleary Kansan staff writer Parking on campus at night can be a frustrating journey for many students and faculty. But for some people, parking is more than just frustrating. It is a matter of personal safety. Those who work or study on campus at night often find no parking along Jayhawk Boulevard, which means a trek from parking lots near Robinson Center, Memorial Stadium or elsewhere. But it is the trip back to their cars, well after dark, that worries some. Lisa Golzar, Tulsa, Okla., senior, said she was uncomfortable when she could not park on the boulevard. Pete Johnsen, professor of educational psychology and research, said several of his female co-workers had expressed concern about not being able to find a spot to park and having to walk up to Bailey in the dark. Although some students are concerned about walking alone, the KU police department has not received any reports of assault, harassment or people being followed on campus since the beginning of the school year, Sgt. Rose Rozmiarek said. Rozmiraek said students should walk in groups if they do not feel safe by themselves. If a student feels threatened while on campus, he or she can go to the KU police department in Carruth-O'Leary Hall, she said. There are 28 emergency phones located across campus, both indoors and outdoors, for those who cannot make it to the police department. These phones connect directly to the KU police. The student either has to push a button or take the phone off the hook, depending on the Students who work nights at Watson Library sometimes finish their shifts after midnight and then must walk to their cars. Jayson Mallard, Marshfield, Mo., freshman, works at Watson until midnight one night a week. phone, and a police officer will respond to the phone's location. He said parking close to Watson was not much of a problem early in the semester, but it got worse later on, especially during finals. Mallard said that he felt safe walking alone on campus at night but that he still thought about what could happen. "It is not an enjoyable thing to be walking behind these buildings after midnight," he said. "Every once in a while you find yourself looking over your shoulder." Stefanie Umphenour, Blue Springs. Mo., senior, said being on campus alone at night was a concern for every woman. "It is something women have to deal with," she said. "I have never been followed or harassed, but that does not make feel me safe." Charlene Muehlenhard, associate professor of psychology and women's studies and faculty adviser for Students Against Violence Against Womyn, said women tend to be more afraid than men of being by themselves at night. "Some women are afraid to take night classes because of being out at night," she said. Not all students are afraid. Corey Priesman, Lincoln, Neb., junior, said he had no concerns about his safety on campus after dark. "I never give a second thought about anything happening to me," he said. But April Malicke, Leavenworth freshman, said she carried Mace on campus just to be safe. "Students should be cautious," she said. Rebecca Sapinski, Milwaukee sophomore, said that she felt safe walking on campus but that she also took precautions. Council lifts parking restrictions "I always go with a buddy just to be safe," she said. Kansan staff report Students may find parking on campus next fall a little bit easier after 5 p.m. **Ryan H. Walker** On Thursday, University Council passed a proposal that will remove the evening restriction on almost 20 spaces in Lot 3, which is between Strong Hall and Bailey Hall. Now, all 43 spaces in the lot are reserved for blue permits from 8:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Hob Hartington, associate professor of educational psychology and research, said he sympathized with students, but faculty should have preference because they spend more time at KU. of University Council, said it would not be an inconvenience for faculty. Lisa Golzar, Tulsa, Okla., senior and member "You are not taking spaces from faculty," she said. "You are opening them up to students." The proposal, submitted by the parking board, had requested releasing the restrictions on all 43 places. The council amended the proposal to include about 20. Four places underneath Spencer Research Library will be rezoned for blue permits. Now, they are reserved for the the administration. The council also passed an amended proposal that will extend the closed-campus hours, starting next fall, from 7:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., instead of 7:45 a.m. to 4:45 p.m. 'Myths in Science' designed for non-scientific students By Susan White Kansan staff writer KU students who thought they could never grasp anything related to science are getting the opportunity to try this semester in a language they can understand. A number of faculty members over the past several years have discussed a problem that has generated among college students, Brown said. Jack Brown, professor of microbiology, said Myths in Science was a course for people who had little or no knowledge about science and wanted to improve that knowledge. Bob Goldstein, professor of geology, speaks about nuclear waste and its proper disposal from a geological point of view. Goldstein is one of 10 professors who teaches a science class for people with little or no knowledge about the subject. "There is talk about a basic deficit in science knowledge," he said. Brown said the goal of the class was to take individuals in a university setting and introduce them to all the areas of the science field. The class will cover scientific concepts from the departments of chemistry, microbiology, geology, physics, astronomy and systematics and ecology. "We wanted to generate a course for people to get them interested in science and to help them get a better handle on it," he said. Larry McKenna, assistant professor of geology, said that 10 professors teaching one class gave the students a full range of people with varying ideas and teaching methods. "The class is taught by faculty members who all feel strongly about what they are teaching." he said. Brown said that the professors hoped that as the class progressed, the students would feel that they could ask any questions without other students or the faculty making fun of them. Bob Goldstein, associate professor of geology said that by the end of the course, the faculty wanted the students to have a sound base of science. "We just want them to be able to think scientifically," he said. Chris Murray, Great Bend junior, said he needed another class, so he attended the science class the first day to see what it was like. He enjoyed the class, so he signed up for it. "They told us that the class was supposed to be for scientifically illiterate peo- ple," he said. "They break down information for you and define words like DNA. There are also 10 professors. I like having different people all the time." Boachim Boll, an exchange student from Denmark, said he took the class because it sounded interesting. "It's not a traditional learning style," he said. "There are several professors in several areas." Kent Taylor, Barrington, Ill., junior, said he liked having an overview of everything scientific. "It's a lot easier to understand," he said. Company steps up to environmental challenge turning trash into shoes By Angelina Lopez ansan staff writer Seat cushions, polystyrene cups, diapers and wine corks have much in common. All these items are difficult for Mother Nature to break down. They all occupy space in land fills. They also are ingredients for Deja shoes, the first and only shoes made almost entirely of recycled materials, said B.J. Schmitzer, a representative of Decia Inc. The advantage of these shoes is that recyclers get to see the end products of their recycling efforts, said Sue Dalton, co-owner of Simple Goods General Store, 735 Massachusetts, which is one of several stores in Lawrence that sells Deja shoes. Everything from milk jugs to magazines to coffee filters goes into these shoes. "These shoes are so popular that I'm sure Nike and Reebok will soon come out with shoes made from recycled materials," Kerry Altenbernd, another co-owner of Simple Goods General Store said. "We've sold a lot of shoes for not being a shoe store." George Paley, owner of Natural Way Natural Fiber Clothing, 820 Massachusetts, said that customers bought Deja shoes because the shoes were reasonably priced, and they made a statement about a person's environmental consciousness. "Julie believed recycled materials would be put to good use in making footwear because everyone wears shoes and because so many materials go into making a shoe," she said. Deja Inc. was founded by Julie Lewis, a West Coast entrepreneur who wanted to combine business ideas with environmentalism, Schmeltzersaid. The boxes Deja shoes are sold in are made from 100 percent recycled cardboard and are reversible with a decorative design inside. Schmeltzer said. If people choose not to recycle the box, the design may inspire them to keep it for themselves or use it as a gift box, she said. "Concern for the environment is not just a gimmick with these people," Altenbernd said. "They really mean it." Christine Blanchard, Lawrence junior, said that the most important point of a shoe had not been forgotten in Dela shoes—they are comfortable. Deja shoes' prices and styles range from $47 for a soft cotton sandal to $70 for a rough terrain shoe. Footprints, 1339 Massachusetts, also carries Deja shoes. "They're very attractive, and they seem more flexible and softer than normal shoes," she said. One small step for the environment These new shoes, made by Deja Inc., are made exclusively from recycled products. Drink bottles tire rubber Milk jugs Recycled paper products Recycled garments and fabric waste polystyrene cups Y Source: Deja Inc. Dave Campbell / KANSAN Congratulations New Initiates! Stephanie Bake Tiffany Ball Samantha Barrett Teri Browning Sarah Carson Jen Collins Amy Duethman Tricia Edelman Jennifer Fisher Kimberly Forsythe Julie Goodman A AX $ \Omega $ O Sacha Hales Christy Hughes Alenna Keaton Gina Kim Denise Kinne Amy McVey Tracy Michaelis Amy Monson Meredith Phillips Michelle Robben 743 Mass. St (913) 749-4664 Tracy Ryan Karen Sager Natalie Schwarz Jennifer Smitka Stephanie Sueper Heather Stoehr Melissa Vancrum Misti Westfall Amy Winn Sunny Young ❤ The Actives -a unique boutique CLEOPATRA'S CLOSET An Evening with the State Symphony of Russia Igor Golovchin, conductor A Benefit. A Benefit Performance for the JCCC Foundation 8 p.m., Feb. 12, 1994 Yardlev Hall $30-$75-$125 Patron ticket ($125) includes post-performance reception. Proceeds support the continuation of the Celebrity Series. Box office: (913) 469-4445 JCCC Cultural Education Center Johnson County Community College 4 Monday, January 31, 1994 OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VIEWPOINT PETA should not adopt illegal means of protest Last week People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals raided the Calvin Klein office in New York City. Members plastered the walls with anti-fur stickers and graphic pictures, rendering the reception area unusable. While protest is necessary and worthwhile, at times PETA goes too far. Calvin Klein is not the only company to feel threatened by PETA. Vogue magazine has had its main office stifled by vehement protesters who have splashed blood and used megaphones to demand that they not glorify fur. But with its protests, PETA overlooks a few important facts. The first is that relatively few groups have used illegal means of protest to successfully shut down lawful businesses. The second is that by not exercising lawful methods of protest, some simply may label PETA as "radical" and easily ignore the organization.. Finally, if PETA would engage in only legal avenues of protest, it probably would increase credibility and mass support. PETA should try an age-old approach to its problem: protest peacefully and consistently until the message is heard. PETA should invest its money in nationwide newsletters in lieu of fake blood. Members of PETA obviously are dedicated to their cause. What they should be even more dedicated to is the United States Constitution. The Constitution guarantees groups such as PETA the right to express what ever they would like to, about any activity. But it does not give them the right to shut down legitimate businesses. CARSON ELROD FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD U.S. promise to Russia should not be broken Financial aid is vital to the economically unstable Russia. The United States has not followed through with its pledge to help. In 1993, the U.S. government led a coalition of Western countries that promised Russia's government $28 billion in economic assistance to help Russia continue to pursue market reform. However, less than $5 billion has arrived in Moscow. The Clinton administration has rationalized its inaction by claiming that Russia's government is politically unstable due to radical economic reform. But the cause of Russia's political instability can be traced back in part to the economic betrayal by the West. Russia was depending on the Western nations' aid to cover their 1993 budget. So Russia had to print large amounts of rubles to cover their budget shortfall. This led to inflation in Russia. In turn, inflation led to devaluation of the Russian citizens' savings and wages, leading to widespread poverty and homelessness. Whenever economic conditions become this destitute in any country it is likely that support for the government will disappear and political radicals, such as the Ultranationalists in Russia, will gain power. Thus in the recent Parliamentary elections throughout Russia, the Ultranationalist Party won a pluralistic majority of seats on a platform that includes reversing economic reform and expanding the borders of Russia. J. J. ANDRE FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD Perhaps some of the political instability in Russia could have been avoided if the U.S. leadership had followed through with its rhetoric. If we don't want to give economic aid to Russia, then we should not promise it. KANSAN STAFF BEN GROVE, Editor LISA COSMILLO, Managing editor TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator Editors Assistant Managing Editor...Dan England Assistant to the editor...J. R. Clairbone News ...Kristi Fogler, Katie Greenwald, Todd Selfert Editorial ...Colleen McCain Nathan Olson Campus ...Joe DeHaven Sports ...David Dorsey Photo ...Doug Hesse Features ...Sara Bennett JUSTIN GARBERG Business manager JENNIFER BLOWEY Retail sales manager JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser Business Staff Campus sales mgr...Jason Ebery Regional sales mgr...Troy Tawerre National A & Co-sales mgr...Robin Kring Special Section mgr...Shelly McConnell Production mgr...Laura Guth Gretchen Kottenleishinch Marketing director...Shannon Beilly Creative director...John Carlton Classified mgr...Kelly Connelye Tearehoots mgr...Wing Chan Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the name of the student, date, class grade, number of hours of study, name of Kannas who include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position. Letters should be in a standard font, with no punctuation. These letters will be printed on a white cardstock. The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. a picture in a typo, or too large for your view. photographed The Kanyan reserve has the right to select or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can of kumaṇa rhus inchee class and hidharnow, or ircaud or salt position. Guest column(s) should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be Affirmative action may cause more problems than solutions During the last couple of weeks, I've been awake at 5 a.m. because of work. It's usually bitterly cold and lonely. It seems like it's the only period of the day when not a soul is around. It's also when my dad gets up to go to work. That's how hard he has worked for the past 26 years at his company. His boss knows this, and he has promoted my dad several times. My dad now is in charge of more than 500 people. So when I heard one month ago that my dad was up for director, I had a congratulations card all filled out. But there also was a woman up for the job. She didn't have the experience my dad did. But she did have two things: her gender and affirmative action. She got the job. My dad's boss was straight with him. "We needed to have some women in some upper-management roles, see and, well," COLUMNIST DAN ENGLAND "Because, there was a time when women and minorities who were obviously more qualified than their white, male counterparts were denied leadership roles," he said. "This ensures that they get the jobs they deserve." I was angry. I asked my dad why such rules exist. He then said he was willing to sacrifice a little in order to ensure this. I admire that. But something bothers me. If that woman was as qualified as my dad and was given the job, I could accept it. But she wasn't. Doesn't this sound like the discrimination affirmative action was trying to solve? My dad was denied the job primarily because of his gender. Although I must admit I'm scared that all my hard work at KU may go to waste because of my race and gender. I'm not worried about my dad. There is a happy ending to his story. He loves his job and the people he works with. His boss soon will create a new position to give him as much input and responsibility as a director would have. I'm not too worried about myself. No, I'm worried because those a little less open-minded may lose out on a job to someone less qualified. And that may cause them to resent or even hate those different from them. And then the great strides we all have made to combat racism and sexism may be shattered. I know of places where it already is happening. And the real tragedy doesn't even lie with those denied the jobs. It's with those who got them. How would you feel if someone told you that you were promoted? You would feel pretty good, right? Your confidence would soar. At least that's how I felt when I was promoted at this newspaper. Now, how would you feel if you heard later that the only reason you got the job was your skin color? Oh sure, your boss thought you were pretty good. Not as good as some others, but good enough to fill that spot. You would probably feel pretty bad, maybe even guilty. I hope that woman at my dad's company hasn't heard whispers that she got the job because of her gender. She must be talented to get such a position in a large company. And my dad said that she had really risen to the challenge and was doing well. I would hate for her self-esteem to fall. I'll be honest. I didn't want to write this. I didn't want anybody to think I was racist or sexist. I'm exactly the opposite. I have fought for civil rights for years. I've gotten into fights with my friends because of the things they have said. My dad is the same way. I think I'm fortunate to have been raised in such a healthy environment, one where respecting others' differences and learning from them has been so encouraged. It's just that I don't want the racism that took place 30 years ago to come crashing on my life today. It's just that I wish people were promoted on merit alone. Maybe someday they will be. I can only hope that someday my dad is given what he deserves at that company. Despite the fact that he is a white male. Dan England is a Lonexa senior in Journalism. TONYA HARDING'S FUTURE? Olympic Rings - OR - Hood UDK 94 O O OR - OR - Hood UDK 94 Radiation: friend, foe and good fun Radiation is a double-edged sword: It can be our deadly enemy, as when it leaks out of a nuclear reactor and harms innocent people; yet it can also be our friend, as when it leaks out of a nuclear reactor and harms Donald Trump. 1 - 7043020 - 59 - 28749 www.www.www. Another example: dentists use radiation, in the form of X-rays, to determine which of our teeth are still real, so they can grind them into stumps and cover them with improved spaceage materials costing thousands of dollars per ounce. Yet those very same X-rays, if we are overexposed to them, can cause us to look like Willie Nelson. I base this statement on my own dentist, Stanley Krugman. He is a fine person and a skilled professional, but he looks WAY too much like Willie Nelson for it to be a result of natural causes. When he works on my teeth, I'm always expecting him to burst into song: "...darlin' won't you come back soon, and spit mouthwash in my spittoon." COLUMNIST DAVE BARRY Recently received another example of bad radiation from alert reader Laurie Belin, who sent me a United Press International article that should be of grave concern to all those individuals who use furniture. The article, which I am not making up, begins "MOSCOW — A Russian businessman who died recently of mystere No, seriously, your reaction is to be shocked, but also to be reassured by the belief that, while there might be rious causes was apparently killed by his chair, which was found after his death to be highly radioactive, Russian newspapers reported Friday." Your reaction to this article, as a compassionate human being, is: "How can I get a chair like that for certain people in my office, particularly the creatin who will not stop humming Gary Puckett songs?" The article goes on to state: "Investigators discovered that the deadly office chair was the source of 1.5 million times more radioactivity than normal background levels. ... It was not known how the chair became radioactive, but there have been other incidents in Moscow where ordinary household items and foods have been found to be radioactive." radioactive chairs in Russia, there would never be any here. I wish I shared your optimism. I wish I could tell you that when I contacted the American Chair Council, a representative informed me that every chair sold in this country is subjected a rigorous radiation-testing process wherein an inspector sits in it for a certain period of time and notes, on a clipboard, whether or not he dies. But I'm afraid I cannot tell you this, and do you want to know why? Because there IS no "American Chair Council." And even if there were, I am way too lazy to contact it. So we have reason to be concerned. But we should not panic. We should simply make whatever lifestyle adjustments are necessary to reflect the fact that every single object we come into contact with could kill us, and then we should put it out of our minds. Perhaps it will help if we remember that radiation also benefits mankind in ways that were never before possible. I am referring, as you already may have guessed, to microwave grape racing. I found out about microwave grape racing from Greg Jacobs, a student at my alma mater, Haverford College. Basically, here's how it works: You put a thin film of sunflower oil on the floor of your microwave oven, and then you line some grapes up against one side, with the holes pointing in the wall. Then you turn the microwave on full power, which heats the grapes' interiors until steam goes shooting out the holes, thus turning the grapes into little organic rocket engines that scoot across the lubricated oven floor. WARNING: THE PROCEDURE DESCRIBED IN THE PREVIOUS PARAGRAPH IS NOT APPROVED BY THE AMERICAN MICROWAVE COUNCIL (IF THERE IS SUCH A THING). My son, Rob, and I held some microwave grape races, after taking the standard precaution of making sure that my wife was not home. It was entertaining, although many of the grapes — and I blame the Clinton administration — lacked the Will To Win. Only a few grapes actually moved, and rarely in the right direction. Thus we see that radiation, if used wisely, can provide important benefits to humanity for many years to come. Although you, personally, might not see this come to pass, especially if you are touching this newspaper with your bare hands. David Berry is a syndicated columnist with the Miami Herald. NATIONAL PERSPECTIVE U. S. Postal Service made expensive mistake when the U.S. Postal Service makes a mistake, it does it in a big way. Jan.24 The latest goof involved African-American rodeo star Bill "Willie" Pickett, the originator of steer wrestling. Postal officials meant well when they chose Pickett to be a subject for a commemorative set of stamps honoring famous personalities of the Old West. Willie Pickett certainly was qualified to be in the company of Annie Oakley, Wyatt Earp and William "Buffalo Bill" Cody. A child of former slaves, he became nationally famous as a star of the Miller Brothers 101 Ranch Show. He earned a reputation as all-an-around cowboy of legendary abilities, but his claim to fame was his skill at bringing a thousand-pound steer to the ground. His trademark style was subduing the animal by biting its lip. The Postal Service had spent about $1 million printing 250 million of a planned 400 million stamps in the series, and about 104 million had been distributed to post offices nationwide, when Bill Pickett's great-grandson said "whoe." Frank Phillips of Silver Spring, Md, said family photographs showed the portrait was Bill's brother Ben. Now the Postal Service is recalling and destroying 104 million Old West commemoratives to maintain the integrity of its standards for accuracy. Rodeo cowboys can't afford to be that careless. The Sunday Oklahoman Oklahoma City, Okla. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Monday, January 31, 1994 5 Computer system links teachers, ideas By Roberta Johnson Kansan staff writer A high school student in Pennsylvania tutors a fourth-grade pupil in physics from across the state. An elementary school child regularly writes Poland via electronic mail. A junior high student conducts research with classes from two other states. mantry ention b) This is not some education in the future. In 1994, schools in three states are testing the pilot program of Explorer, a system based at the University of Kansas and designed to connect science and math teachers in kindergarten through ninth grades throughout the United States. Martin Altstaedten / KANSAN Joe Evans, assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering, works with the Explorer system. The system helps school teachers from across the United States plan and organize their lessons by providing background information and suggesting classroom materials such as labs, videos and field trips. 1 Explorer, which operates out of Nichols Hall, is being tested by 52 schools in New York, Pennsylvania and Michigan under a grant by the A.S. Department of Education. Jean Fetzko's fourth grade class at Maclayne Elementary School in Sunbury, Pa., uses it to contact the weather services each day. Then it uses the system to share the data with high school students in a science class on the other side of Pennsylvania. 17 "We're working on kinetic and potential energy right now," Fetzko said. "My students send the results, then they send my advice on how to work the problem." The Explorer system offers labs, field trips, assignments, video catalogs, texts and lesson plans. Ronald Aust, associate professor of curriculum and instruction and a developer of the project, said the curriculum within the program was based on the standards of the National Science Teacher Society and the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics. Teachers call an 800 number in Ann Arbor, Mich., which connects them to Internet, the global computer communications network. Then they can use Internet's resources or connect to Explorer, said Joe Evans, assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering. Mary Van Wert, eighth-grade earth and physical science teacher at Broadway Junior High in Elmira, N.Y., said that the classes used Explorer to conduct research for their individual research projects. "It really is innovative," Van Wert said. "It's what we should be doing: turning it all upside down." Beverly Benfer, facilitator for the program in Pennsylvania, said that one teacher in Harrisburg had told her of two students who constantly skipped school last year but were fascinated with the Explorer system. "They're group leaders, and they're here every day," she said. Benfer said that each state would get an additional 10 sites later this year. "We moved up a level in width and breadth of distribution." Aust said. Aust said he wanted to expand the project to include on-time video delivery and different content and educational levels. Gary Minden, associate professor of electrical engineering, said using Explorer was not difficult. "It's generally automated," he said. "It puts a new document in and pulls out information you want and put it in a data base." Minden said there was no charge for use of the system, which can be contacted through computers in 1050 Learned or at the Computer Center. Forum predicts outcome of health care reform By Ashley Schultz Kansan staff writer Health care reform looms large over the prospects of present and future health care administrators, said Susan Bergstrom, co-chair for the professional development seminar with the KU Chapter of the American College of Healthcare Executives. The chapter sponsored an all-day conference titled "Critical Issues in Health Services Administration" Fridav at the Adams Alumni Center. Health care reform prospects bring excitement and trepidation into the lives of health care administration students, Bergstrom said. She said reform would create or eliminate administrative jobs. "There are a lot of institutions that are going through what they are calling 're-engineering phases', which is a technical term for laying people off." Bergstrom said. "And a lot of those people happen to be managers and administrators." The general consensus is that the Clinton plan will not result in a sweeping federal health care program, but will act as the impetus for state level programs. Bergstrom said. "That opinion is pretty prevalent throughout health care," she said. "The thinking is that the Clinton plan is just kind of a map of what needs to be done in general, and most people think that the action is going to occur at the state level." Reform has caused the health care industry to give itself a head-to-toe examination. Health care professionals are taking another look at the provider-driven model of health care. "We forgot to ask the customer what they wanted," said Cheryl Dillard, public affairs manager at Kaiser Permanente, a health maintenance organization in Overland Park. "We are doing that much more now, and there are some very dramatic changes going on within our organization." Among the topics of discussion was the need for unification and cooperation between hospitals and each entity that has a role in health care. "I think those sacrifices are things that people can live with if they understand the greater good," said Barbara Langer, a member of the Kansas Commission on the Future of Healthcare Inc. Bergstrom said the forum had been composed with diversity in mind. This year's conference was open to alumni, area health care professionals and students. No problem son, I only wanted to make sure you knew about the indoor "sidewalk" sale at the Kansas Union. Sidewalk Sale! A huge selection of merchandise at up to 75% off, Jan.31st & Feb.1st. JOHNSON KU KU MUSICISTRY KU Bookstore Kansas Union, Level Two Sale prices not valid with coupons or discount cards National Campus Ministry Teleconference BEYOND RACISM The Things That Make For Peace BEYOND RACISM Wednesday, February 2, 1994 7:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. Pioneer Room, Burge Union The University Of Kansas Free Admission WHO: In Nashville...student panel from selected universities, Dr. Cain Hope Felder, Professor at Howard University, Washington D.C., and National Campus Ministry staff. Outside Nashville.. students, staff, and faculty from many universities, including KU! WHAT: A Teleconference (town meeting style) broadcast from Nashville, Tennessee to universities across the United States. Large screen TV and call-in telephones. WHY: To provide a forum for campuses to dialogue about common concerns regarding racial disharmony on campus. To explore new and creative approaches to working for peace, To empower and equip our constituents to be agents for change, instruments of peace, collectively and individually. To encourage and support those ministries already meaningfully involved, to enhance the theological understanding or our work in this regard. NATIONAL SPONSOR.. Campus Ministry Section, Board of Higher Education and Ministry, The United Methodist Church CURRENT LOCAL SPONSORS... American Baptist Campus Center, 841-8001 Baptist Student Union, 841-8001 Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 843-4933 (Presbyterian Church USA, Church of the Brethren, United Church of Christ) Immanuel Lutheran Church & Student Fellowship, 843-0620 KU Office of Minority Affairs, 864-4351 Lutheran Campus Ministry, 843-4948 United Methodist Campus Ministry, 841-8661 KU Coalition of the Lawrence Alliance United Students, 864-6473 Harambee Black Christian Fellowship, 841-8001 Check Us Out! Free Work/View Trip Plan, Thursdays at 9:7pm TRAVEL CO. 3100 W. 1500 N. (812) 643-4000 843-0900 • 843-0900 • 843-0900 • 843-0900 • 843-0900 • 843-0900 Mountain Trekking? Studying Abroad? Spring Break? Sight Seeing? Nightlife? Check Us Out! Free Work/Write Trip Plan, Thursday at 11:17 pm TRAVEL CO. National Park Service 3300 W. 15th St., Suite 3, Orlando Corners — River City Travel Co. is located on the KU bus route! HUNTINGTON MUNICIPALITY WATKINS Since "We Care For KU" 1907 TEACHERS Women's Health 27 Annual Gynecologic Exams ✓ Sexual Health Counseling Diagnosis/Management STD treatment Annual Gynecologic Exams Personal Contraceptive and Sexual Health Counseling for Abnormal Pap Smears √ STD treatment ✓ Treatment for Infertility, Endometriosis, Most Gynecological Diseases Services provided by Board Certified Gynecologist, Nurse Practitioner, Registered Nurses. Charges for some services. Some services on walk-in basis. Appointments: ©884-9507 STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES 864-9500 Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS 842-1212 1601 W.23rd Southern Hills Center TWO-FERS 2-PIZZAS 2-TOPPINGS 2-COKES $900 "NO COUPON" SPECIALS EVERYDAY PARTY "10" PRIMETIME 3-PIZZAS 1-TOPPING 4-COKES $11^50 10-PIZZAS 1-TOPPING C $30⁰⁰ CARRY OUT 1-PIZZA 1-TOPPING 1-COKE $350 DELIVERY HOURS MON-THURS 11AM-2AM 11AM-1AM Plan to attend the 4th Annual... INTERNSHIP / SUMMER EMPLOYMENT FAIR Wed. Feb. 2, 1994 10:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. Kansas Union Ballroom Companies and organizations from business, human services, community services, volunteer experiences, temporary work, and summer camps will be at the fair. A Special Event, Inc. American Red Cross Blackbuster Video Steel Brit Beber Camp Camps Airy and Lollise Camp Birchwood Camp Chi Gamp Chief Ouray/ YMCA- Roeders Camps Lincoln and Lake Huron Camp Sequola Camp Winadu Capital Federal Savings and Loan City of Lawrence Creative Consumer Concepts Delux Check Printers Douglas County Comm Corporation The Gap Girl Scouts Greene Family Camps Greepace Hallmark Cards, Inc. Institute of Logopecics Johnson County Park and Recreation Kansas City Zoo Kansas Dept. of Wildlife and Parks Kelly Services KFKF Broadcasting Lawrence Convention Bureau Lawrence Parks and Recreation Manpower Marion Merrill Dow NK Lawn and Garden Co. NW Mutual Life Insurance Co. Overland Park Marriott Hotel PAC Environmental Management Rivertica Financial Services Prudential Insurances R.R.D Publications Ritz-Carlton Hotel Rock, Springs 4-H Center Southwestern Company State Farm Insurance Co. Study Abroad Office-KU Sunflower State Games UPS Upward Bound Program-KU US Department of Health and Human Services US General Accounting Office Vector Marketing Corp. Worlds of Fun/Oceans of Fun YMCA Camp Wood YMCA Child Care Centers Sponsored by the University Placement Center University Placement Center For more information contact Ann Hertley at 864-7677 - 6 Monday, January 31, 1994 Metropolis BBS 832-0041 Louisiana's Matheson Entertainment LLC Have you dined at The Castle Tea Room lately? Reservations only: 843-1151 N Rentco USA 749-1605 Student Discount ow carrying Computers 1741 Massachusetts VUARNET FRANCE The Etc. Shop V V V V 928 Mass. Downtown Park in the rear Futons & Frames On Sale! BLUE HERON where comfort and quality is assured. 937 Mass. · 841-9443 COUNSELING & PSYCH. SERVICES GROUPS For a confidential, caring friend, call us. We're here to listen and talk with you. FREE PREGNANCY TESTING. Anxiety & Stress Management~ Rotating sessions, Topics: Cognitive strategies for stress management, self management & relaxation training. IF YOU'RE PREGNANT AND YOU NEED HELP NOW... Birthright BodyImage Education & Therapy~ Psychoeducational group allowing participants to excessive factors influencing their body image Hours: M1-3 & 6-8 T6-8 W1-3 TH6-8 843-4821 1246 Kentucky 4. ANNUAL PAY RAISES UP TO AT LEAST $37,000 IN 4 YEARS HIRE YOUR EMPLOYER NOW! AS YOU BEGIN INTERVIEWING, LOOK CLOSELY AT YOUR POTENTIAL EMPLOYERS. WHAT DO THEY OFFER YOU? DEMAND THE FOLLOWING: 5. 30 DAYS VACATION WITH PAY FOR THE FIRST AND EVERY YEAR 2. $2,900 EACH YEAR FOR YOUR LAST TWO YEARS AT KU $5,000 1. EXECUTIVE TRAINING 6. FREE MEDICAL AND DENTAL CARE 3. A STARTING SALARY OF AT LEAST $25,000 Developing Healthy Intimacy~ This group is intended to provide a safe environment where persons in couple relationships can work an variety of issues. For information, call CAPS at 864-2277. 7. A NON-CONTributORY RETIREMENT PROGRAM THAT ALLOWS YOU TO RETIRE AT 40% OF PAY AFTER ONLY 20 YEARS AIR FORCE TO SATISFY THESE DEMANDS, CALL CAPT GENTRY OR CAPT WICKS AT 864-4676 9. ADVANCED EDUCATION Auto Loans 5. 9% Apr Fixed Rate 100% Financing Take advantage of low rates at KU Credit Union. Don't miss your opportunity for 100% financing of a new auto at the low fixed rate of 5.9% for 36 or 48 months and 60 month financing at the fixed rate of 6.75%. KU CREDIT UNION An Affiliate of 66 Federal Credit Union An Affiliate of 66 Federal Credit Union STAFFWANTED CAMP CHI NOBODY MAKES MORE OUT OF SUMMER Co-ed Overnight Camp of the JCC's of Chicago Located in the Wisconsin Dells. Positions Available: Unit Supervisors, Counselors, Specialists in Waterskiing,Sailing Athletics,Aquatics,Outdoor Adventure,Cultural Arts Ropes Course,Etc., Stop by and See Us at the Summer Employment Fair on FEBRUARY 2nd 10:00am-3:00pm At the Kansas Union Ballroom or Call Camp Chi at (708)272-2301 Body Body Boutique offers you a Slimmer solution We offer a wide variety of aerobics classes throughout the day B LAST CHANCE! for Offer!!! No joining fee! $139.00 off annual membership average $20/month exp. 2-5-94 749-2424 925 Iowa BODY BOUTIQUE NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 10 Tans for $20 30 min. sessions Wolff Beds exp. 2-5-94 The Women's Fitness Facility Kansas lawmakers focus on juveniles Under the leadership of Sen. Jerry Moran, R-Hays, head of the Judiciary Committee, lawmakers are examining a package of juvenile crime proposals, ranging from starting military-style boot camps to trying 16- and 17-year-olds as adults for certain crimes. Gov. Joan Finney has enlisted the help of Bill Koch, a billionaire and Wichita native, in developing a series of crime measures. Koch is best known for winning the America's Cup yacht race in 1992. The gangs seem to have considerable influence over state lawmakers as they discuss ways to disarm and control an increasingly armed and uncontrollable population of young people. The House Judiciary Committee is focusing on an adult crime package, while the Senate Judiciary mainly focuses on juvenile crime. And politically, getting tough on crime is a safe bet this year. The House Judiciary Committee has heard limited testimony on juvenile crime proposals, but it is supposed to focus its attention on dealing with adult crimes. The Associated Press On Wednesday, the House Judiciary Committee will hold hearings on a "Three Strikes, You're Out" proposal, a concept that has caught fire in state houses in other crime-weary states. Lawmakers have said crime is the biggest issue of the session, and juvenile crime has been the focus of the work by the Senate Judiciary Committee. They have needed no invitation by police or prosecutors. The Legislature began its fourth week of a 13-week session with most work still being done in committees. TOPEKA — Ironically, street gangs might be the strongest lobbying force in the Legislature this year, even if they don't know it. "I think it has some real appeal," said Rep. Michael O'Neal, R-Hutchinson, the chairman of the House Judiciary Committee. Under the proposal, a person who is convicted of three violent felonies could receive an extended prison stay, even life without parole. The idea is to get career criminals off the street. Koch is spending his own money The Associated Press "Forget about Wally Cleaver." Kyle Smith, assistant attorney general for the Kansas Bureau of Investigation, told the committee. O'Neal acknowledged that members of his committee have their work cut out for them. During the Senate Judiciary Committee's hearings, an assortment of law-enforcement officers said the same thing: Kids just are not the same today. researching juvenile crime, and Finney said she plans to work through a Koch commission to examine whatever recommendations his researchers make. Some kids carry guns because they are worried about gangs, some because they think it's neat. "Kids today think it's fashionable," Tito Labra, a Sedgwick County sheriff's deputy who is a gang expert. The present juvenile system was created when parents became indignant if their kids swiped an apple from the corner grocery store. The committee held hearings on juvenile boot camps, although a lean state budget might make it difficult to organize those camps. Lawmakers are looking at the prospect of allowing local jurisdictions — cities or counties — to start their own juvenile camps. "The laws dealing with juveniles were created at a time when juveniles committed vandalism and shoplifting." Moran said. "We've gone beyond that. We have juveniles committing violent acts." House to hear '3 Strikes, You're Out' crime bill TOPEKA — a Bill reinstating the death penalty has stalled in a House committee, but crime continues to be the focus of the Legislature this week. Lawmakers must decide, for example, which felonies would be covered by the "three strikes" concept. They also must decide about the time frame in which the three felonies must be committed. For example, if a man commits two felonies in his 20s, and then the third in his 60s, should he be put away for the rest of his life? "I predict a "Three Strikes, You're Out" bill will pass the Legislature," O'Neal said. Report: millions of jobs needed for Clinton's welfare reform plan The computer estimate, which has been under discussion at the Department of Health and Human Services, would require a massive public jobs program that Congress probably would onose as too expensive. The Associated Press Administration says number is misleading WASHINGTON — Administration officials are discounting a preliminary estimate that as many as 2.3 million jobs may have to be created for people who will be pushed off welfare under President Clinton's welfare reform plan. Although administration officials acknowledged the preliminary estimate, they said the number had little significance because it was based on a false assumption about how many people actually would be on welfare when the new policy went into effect. One official who attended the meeting said the estimate was developed as a preliminary exercise to gauge what impact various policies would have on the size of the welfare rolls. The estimate first was discussed at a Jan. 14 meeting at the Department of Health and Human Services. "It did not account for the effects of current policy, health reform or for other policies," said the official, who spoke on the condition that he not be identified further. The administration plans to propose to Congress this spring that welfare payments be limited to two years and that recipients must find a job after that. Currently, there are an estimated 5 million low-income families, most of them single mothers, getting welfare under Aid to Families with Dependent Children. The official said the Clinton administration still does not know how many parents will be pushed into the job market after the two years expire. "It's certainly not going to be 2.3 million," the official said. Clinton has said health care reform would reduce the welfare rolls by 1 million families because mothers often choose welfare, which comes with health insurance, over minimum-wage jobs that often have no such benefits. The official said that other steps that will shrink the welfare rolls are more aggressive efforts to collect child support payments, a campaign against teen-age pregnancy, development of new training programs and expansion of tax credits for low-income workers. POST-SEASON BASKETBALL ATTN: STUDENTS BIG 8 CONFERENCE APPLICATIONS FOR KU MEN'S BASKETBALL POST-SEASON TOURNAMENT ACTION ARE AVAILABLE NOW AT THE ATHLETIC TICKET OFFICE LOCATED IN THE EAST LOBBY OF ALLEN FIELDHOUSE OF ALLEN FIELDHOUSE. NCAA FINAL FOUR. 1994 CHARLOTTE Don't miss out on your chance to see the Jayhawks in action during the: - Big 8 Tournament - NCAA Regionals - Final Four ATHLETIC TICKET OFFICE EAST LOBBY - ALLEN FIELDHOUSE 8:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M. 1 E Application Deadline: Feb. 18, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Monday, January 31, 1994 7 -abno word v -offen gliez -ban Co-op remembers Kansas' birthday By Ashley Schultz Kansan staff writer James Shortridge, a professor of geography on sabbatical this semester, had some birthday cake Saturday. It wasn't his birthday cake — or anyone else's, for that matter. The cake had a sunflower on top, and it was baked in honor of Kansas. Saturday marked the 133rd anniversary of Kansas' induction as the 34th state in the United States. The Amazing Grains Society, a workers collective for Amazing Grains Bakery, 901 Mississippi St., celebrated the occasion by baking an organic whole wheat cake. They shared it with customers at the Community Mercantile Co-op, which houses the bakery. Kansas' road to admission was not an easy one, said Shortridge, who has taught courses on Kansas culture and the Great Plains at the University of Kansas. Shortridge said that Kansas could have been admitted earlier if not for a period when the Kansas territory was known as "bloody Kansas," as pro- and anti-slavery forces violently fought for control of the territory. "In the time prior to its admission, the unofficial feeling in Congress was that the number of free and slave states would be kept in balance," Shortridge said. It was generally assumed that Nebraska would be a free state and Kansas would be a slave state. According to the Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854, the status of each state was to be determined by the people within its territory, Shortridge said. The thinking was that lowlands would flood into Nebraska to settle it as a free state and that Missourians would cross into Kansas so that it would enter as a slave state. But Northerners, particularly Northeasterners, launched a successful effort to put enough free staters in Kansas to turn the tide. It was admitted as a free state Jan. 29, 1861. Most of the customers who came Community Mercantile Saturday remembered the birthday, said Brenda Frankenfeld, a partner at the bakery and a native Kansan. "We have a lot of positive, good history here," she said. AIGURA Photos by William Alix / KANSAN Top: Brendy Lately, partner in the Amazing Grains Society, decorates the cake commemorating Kansas' 133rd birthday. Customers at the Community Mercantile Co-op, 901 Mississippi St., were able to enjoy samples of the bakery's whole grain goods Saturday. Above: The flag of the state of Kansas reflects in a mirror at Community Mercantile. Kansas was the 34th state to join the Union. KANSAS WATER POLO CLUB TUESDAY,WEDNESDAY & SUNDAY 7:00 P.M.TO 9:00 P.M.ROBINSON NATATORIUM A SOME SWIMMING ABILITY RECOMMENDED NO WATER POLO SKILL REQUIRED FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE CALL: DAVID REYNOLDS: 841-6475 OR NICK PIVONKA: 841-6197 Body Image Education Therapy Tuesdays 4:30-6:00pm COUNSELING & PSYCHOLOGICAL SERVICES GROUPS Anxiety & Stress Management Tuesdays 6:00-7:30pm Body Image Education Therapy- Bulimia Education Therapy Tuesdays 4:30-6:00pm (beginning March 29) Developing Healthy Intimacy- Wednesdays 6:00-7:30pm Women's Personal Growth Mondays 3:30-5:00pm General Psychotherapy- Tuesdays or Wednesdays 4:30-6:00pm FOR MORE INFORMATION: CONTACT CAPS 864-2277 Crisis Pregnancy Outreach Center • FREE Pregnancy Testing • Total Confidential Services • Senior Day Results • Lead for Appointment • Wellness Welcome www.crisispregnancy.com • Topsail Medical (918) 340-2711 Camera America ONE HOUR PHOTO Lawrence's Largest Supplier of Darkroom Materials 1610 West 23rd Street 841-7205 Homestyle Mexican Food 23rd & Louisiana 843-4044 Video Games, Wilderness Discovery, Pancho's - Billiards, & Engraving Service Jaybowl AUTHORIZED MEDIA Not just for bowling 864-3545 Mon.-Sun. Buffet Hours $2.99 lunch buffet 2630 Iowa 11:00-1:30 (add .70 for salad) 843-1474 BRAND NAME CAR STEREOS University Studio 2319 Louisiana XIV Have You Ever Experienced the Chinese New Year Before? International students from China, Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan have planned a series of activities - folk song and folk dance performance, movies, a dance party, folk art exhibitions and Chinese food - to celebrate Chinese Lunar New Year. We sincerely invite you to join us, experiencing Chinese customs and relishing Chinese hospitality. WHEN: 4pm February12 WHERE: Lied Center Tickets are available at the SUA Box Office $6 (before Feb. 7) for performance and dinner $10 (after Feb. 7) for performance and dinner $3 for performance only CTITT STUDENT SENATE ADM ARCHER DANIELS MIDLAND CO. 国 WILL BE RECRUITING BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION MAJORS TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1994 FOR THE POSITION OF: GRAIN MERCHANDISER Imagine an environment where a dozen people are talking at once, phones are ringing constantly, and you're carrying on three simultaneous conversations. If you're the sort of person who can thrive in such an environment, let us welcome you to the world of grain trading, where you'll spend much of your day on the telephone, talking with elevator managers, buying and selling cash grain, and arranging for the transportation of grain. During this 6-10 month training program, you'll spend time at our Decatur headquarters, a processing plant, our traffic and transportation department, a country elevator, a river terminal, our accounting department, and on the floor of the Chicago Board of Trade. Afterwards, you'll take a trading position in either our grain division or our processing division. Advancement opportunities are excellent: many ADM managers, as well as the president of the grain division started as merchandisers. CONTACT YOUR PLACEMENT CENTER FOR DETAILS Multiculturalism and Diversity: Bridging the Differences Students, Faculty, and Staff: - Challenge your definitions of culture - Explode your stereotypes - Deepen your appreciation for groups other than your own - Discover the common threads that connect us all Join us for a series of four small, facilitated discussion groups. The first session is not a prerequisite for the others. Thursday, February 3, 1994 7:00 p.m.-9:00 p.m. Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union Opening with poetry from diverse voices Follow-upsessions: Thursday, February 10th at 7:00 p.m., assigned alcoves Thursday, February, 17th at 7:00 pm., assigned alcoves Thursday, February 24th at 7:00 p.m., 100 Smith Hall ORDER OF OMEGA APPLICATIONS DUE TOMORROW! Sponsored by the KU Coalition Against Racism and Discrimination, an action coalition of the Lawrence Alliance. The Lawrence Alliance is a community organization dedicated to a discrimination -free environment. For more information, contact Ann Weck at 864-4720 or Sherill Robinson at 864-3552 Feb.1,1994 at 5:00pm to Kristy Abel 841-0894 8 Monday. January 31, 1994 --- Learn to Fly 842-0000 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Kennedy For All Your Glass Needs All automotive glass replacement and insurance claims handled. 730 New Jersey 843-4416 JD's Baseball Cards & Sports Nostalgia Shop 711 W.23rd 842-1002 We buy back used baseball cards fifiy 925 IOWA 841-7226 Lunch & Dinner Great Food LIBRER HALL THE PIANO(R) (4:15), 7:00, 9:30 LIBERTY HALL fifty 925 IOWA 841-7226 Lunch & Dinner Great Food LIBERTY HALL THE PIANO(R) (4:15), 7:00, 9:30 KALIFORNIA(R) (4:30), 7:15, 9:35 DICKINSON THEATRE Dickinson 6 2329 South Iowa St. 841-8000 Blink R 4'25", 7:10,9:40 Grumpy Old Men P14-13:24", 7:20,9:50 Iron Will P4 30": 7:00,9:35 Shadowlands P4 0.05:", 7:00,9:45 Beetowners a 2nd P4 4.15"; 7:15,9:35 Sister Act II P4 4.15"; 7:10,9:40 3 Senior Citizen Anytime **Primetime Show (1)** Hearing Dolby **Similar Citizen Anytime** Impaired Stereo Crown Cinema BEFORE 6 PM ADULTS $3.00 (IMMEDIATE CAREERS) SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00 VARSITY HUSSEMAN HOUSTON 44-59-81 Pelican Brief PG-13 5:00, 8:00 HILLCREST 925 IOWA 44-59-81 Mrs. Doubtfire PG-13 4:45 7:15, 9:40 Intersection R 5:00 7:30, 9:40 Air Up There PG 7:30, 9:35 Tombstone R 4:50 7:15, 9:45 Philadelphia PG-13 4:40 7:20, 9:50 CINEMA TWIN $1.25 Jurassic Park PG-13 5.00, 7.23, 9.45 Good Son $^R$ 5.00, 7.30, 9.45 Dallas makes Buffalo stew in 2nd Super Bowl victory By Dave Goldberg The Associated Press ATLANTA — The Dallas Cowboys and the Buffalo Bills played for Super Bowl history Sunday, and they got it. By winning their second straight NFL championship, the Cowboys were proclaimed the team of the '90s. By losing their fourth straight Super Bowl, the Bills ensured that they will live in infamy. Dallas won 30-13 because of Emmitt Smith and because of two unlikely stars, James Washington, starting only because the Cowboys played an extra defensive back, and gaffe-prone defensive tackle Leon Lett. Washington had a hand in 17 of Dallas' points, the most important a 46-yard touchdown return with a fumble forced by Lett 55 seconds into the second half. Smith, who was named the game's MVP, rushed for 132 yards, 61 on the go-ahead drive that immediately followed Washington's return. While commissioner Paul Tagliabue used the "team of the '90s" label as he presented the Vince Lombardi trophy to coach Jimmy Johnson and owner Jerry Jones of the Cowboys. Dallas players were more reticent. "Dynasty? Naw," said guard Nate Newton. "We're just a good team trying to get better every year." In the Buffalo locker room, someone said jokingly, "of for five in 95." But that didn't mask the pain. "How difficult is it?" asked linebacker Darryl Talley. "It hurts. It hurts deeply." Smith, surprisingly named the game's MVP over Washington, scored twice as Dallas became the 10th straight NFC team to win the league's title game. They did it by outscoring the Bills 24-0 in the second half after trailing 13-6 at halftime. It was Washington who turned the game around as the Cowboys became just the fifth team to win in consecutive years and tied San Francisco and Pittsburgh with four Super Bowl victories. In addition to his fumble return, which tied the game at 13-13 just 55 seconds into the second half, Washington intercepted a pass in the fourth quarter that led to another score, and forced a first-half fumble that led to a field goal. Both fumbles were by Buffa- lo's star running back, Thurman Thomas, whose frustration seemed to symbolize the entire team's — he finished with just 37 yards in 16 carries. "We've tried to get playmakers at every position," Johnson said. "We've got them at back-ups. We want to get the players that will do the things they must do to win the game." "Those key turnovers I had changed the momentum of the game," Thomas said. "I wish I could have played a better game to end the season." Washington, whose interception led to Dallas' first touchdown in last year's 52-17 rout of Buffalo, picked it up and rambled in for the touchdown that tied the game, changed the momentum forever and guaranteed Buffalo its place in NFL history. Smith rushed for 61 of his yards on the next drive, scoring from 15 yards out to give Dallas a 20-13 lead. Lett, Haley, Jim Jeffcoat and Darren Woodson, meanwhile, all made big defensive plays to shut down a Buffalo offense that had rung up 216 yards in the first half but got just 98 after intermission. Smith and the Dallas defense then took over. It was not a great day for Troy Aikman, last year's MVP. The Dallas quarterback was 19 of 27 for 207 yards, but couldn't get the ball in the end zone in the first half, when Buffalo's Jim Kelly was moving the ball up and down the field with ease, passing for 176 yards before intermission. Smith, the league's MVP in the regular season, added the Super Bowl MVP award to his collection. After being held to 41 yards on 10 carries in the first half, he took over after Lett and Washington had combined to tie it and Jeffcoat and Haley had combined on a 13-yard sack of Kelly on Buffalo's next series. After Aikman hit Daryl Johnston for 3 yards, Johnston dashed 15 yards up the middle on third and three for the score that gave Dallas the lead for good. But he gave the credit to someone far lesser known. "Washington is a big play player, he was a big motivating factor to get things going." Smith said. "I felt Washington made the biggest plays in the turnaround. Washington had a great game all day. I wish he could have had the MVP also." "After they get big turnovers, you begin to press," said Buffalo coach Marv Levy, who joins Bud Grant, elected to the Hall of Fame on Saturday, as the only coach to lose four Super Bowls. "I said little to them after the game." Levy said. "I told them I admired them. We'll try it again. I think this is a team that will fight back." For a while, it looked like this would be the year. Buffalo controlled the first half. The defense kept the Bills in the game early, holding Dallas to two field goals in the first period after twice getting good field position. The first time came after Kevin Williams returned the opening kickoff 50 yards. The second came on Thomas' fumble at midfield. The Bills tied it 2:22 later on Steve Christie's Super Bowl record 54-yard field goal, set up by a 23-yard pass that Thomas caught in the flat and took to the Dallas 39 by slipping past Larry Brown. The previous record kick was 48 yards, shared by Jan Stenerud of Kansas City and Rich Karlis of Denver. On Buffalo's next possession, Thomas fumbled after taking a shovel pass from Kelly and Woodson recovered at midfield. That set up Murray's second field goal that gave Dalla a 6-3 lead. Then the Bills took advantage of a Dallas mistake — a running into the kicker penalty on Dave Thomas that allowed the Bills to continue a drive that had stalled at the Bills' 41. It ended with Thomas slashing in from 4 yards out at the end of an 80-yard, 17-play drive. Late in the half, Dallas drove 62 yards from its own 1 to the Buffalo 37. The Bills reached the 9, but had to settle for Christie's second field goal, from 28 yards, to go into intermission with a 13-6 lead. As it turned out, that wasn't nearly enough. "It was kind of like our year." Thomas said. "We'd play one good half in a lot of games. In this kind of game, you can't get away with that." Super Bowl causes super sales of food By Frank McCleary Kánsan staff writer Super Bowl weekend is almost always an excuse for Lawrence football fans to party — even if the Kansas City Chiefs are not playing. Jason Martin, manager at Myers Retail Liquor, 902 W.23rd St., said sales had been higher than a normal weekend. The party atmosphere was reflected this weekend in increased sales at local liquor stores, grocery stores and pizza delivery places. "It is mostly beer," he said. "The main difference is kee'd sales." He said that people bought more than they usually would because they invited guests to their homes to watch the game. Super Bowl weekend ranks with New Year's Eve, the day before the Fourth of July and the Final Four as times when their sales increase, Martin said. Chris Robinson, employee at Webb's Fine Wine and Spirits, 800 W.23rd St., said keg and wine sales had increased this weekend. But beer drinkers need food as well as drink. Sales of potato chips, dip and other snack foods also increased during the weekend. David Ornburn, assistant manager of Dillons, 3000 W. 6th St., said the sold had more party items, such as chips and soda, during the Super Bowl. However, sales were better the previous weekend, he said. "There was more of an atmosphere last week with the Chiefs playing." Ornumb said. Of course, when the snacks ran out and the fans still were hungry, they had another option: ordering a pizza. Rich Brown, manager at Pyramid Pizza, 607 W 14th St., said he had expected more deliveries dur ing the big game. "You definitely plan on doing more," he said. "People do not want to go out during the game." But not everybody stayed at home for the game. Sports bars around Lawrence offered food and drink specials and large screen televisions to entice people inside. Kyle Witherspoon, employee at Johnny's Tavern, 401 North Second St., said Johnny's also had expected to do more business than a regular Sunday afternoon. Buy your Kansan Card TODAY...only $1 ... Commerce Bank Mary C. "The Anytime Line of credit from Commerce Bank can help you afford home improvements, college tuition, a dream vacation - even a car. It's a personal revolving line of credit secured by a second mortgage that lets you put your home equity to work whenever you want it. You can borrow from $10,000 to $200,000 or more, depending on your current equity and eligibility. And because it's tied to your home equity, the interest on an Anytime Line of credit is often tax-deductible. That's a real advantage over consumer loans when you're considering the purchase of a big-ticket item. 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MONDAY FEBRUARY 7, 1994 THE LIED CENTER LAWRENCE, KANSAS FREE TO THE PUBLIC Hosted by the KU School of Business BULL SOX! 9145D Hosted by the KU School of Business 1 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN . Monday, January 31, 1994 9 Stubblefield enjoys first pro season SPORTS EDITOR DAVID DORSEY Yesterday at 5 p.m., when practically an entire nation gathered in front of its television sets for the Super Bowl, one man decided not to watch. Instead, he chose to travel around Lawrence and reminisce with old friends and teammates. The man, a 6-foot-2, 302 pound nose tackle named Dana Stubblefield, had just finished his rookie season in the NFL and was one week into his vacation — a vacation that came one week too soon. I'm not even going to watch the Super Bowl," Stubblefield said. "I don't care about it. I could have gone to the Super Bowl and watched it if I wanted to, but I didn't want any part of it. I'm going to go out and visit some friends." Stubblefield, who played at Kansas for three years, returned to Lawrence Friday night. He watched the Kansas women's basketball game yesterday and talked about his rookie season during halftime. His team, the San Francisco 49ers, lost last week to the Dallas Cowboys in the NFC Championship game. Had the 49ers won last week, Stubbeldfield would have started last night, just as he had started in his team's previous 15 games. In 16 regular season games, Stubbeldfield led all rookies in sacks and was named the NFL Defensive Rookie of the Year. Although the honor gives him pride, he obviously would rather have plaved last night. "When I was named defensive rookie of the year, we were going through a slump as a team defensively," Stubbelfield said. "I was in a situation where I was being rewarded for my performance, but as a team we hadn't been winning." Kansas women thrash Kansas State Once again, Stubblefield played well against Dallas, but the 49ers fell 38-21 to the Cowboys. Stubblefield said his immediate success in the NFL surprised him. Being a first round draft pick, and the 26th selection overall, put some extra pressure on him during his rookie year. But Stubblefield not only met his expectations, he exceeded them. The awards are nice, but they don't mean anything if you're not winning," he said. "I had some good tackles last week, but after the very first series, things weren't going our way." "I probably played the most of anybody else on the defensive line," he said. "I played every down of every game. I was in the middle at nose tackle, and there weren't many guys on our team that wanted to play there or that could play there. One week into his first NFL off-season, Stubblefield has yet to decide where to make his permanent home. His contract with the 49ers expires after next season, and if he plays as productively as he did this season, he could find himself being compared to one of his idols, Green Bay defensive tackle Reggie White. But Stubblefield isn't thinking about his future in football. In fact, he isn't thinking about football at all. "Football is the last thing on my mind," he said. "My knees still hurt, my back still hurts, and I still get headaches from getting hit. I'm just going to take some time off and let my body heal." "I've been through a year, and I know what it takes as far as having to perform week in and week out. It's not for fun anymore. It's a job. This is my life. I'm not on scholarship anymore." "I'm being set up with some charities, and I'll be speaking at some hospitals, but right now I'm relaxing," he said. "The little kids, they really look up to me. If there's a little kid out there that idolizes me, that thinks I'm the greatest, and I help him stay on the right track, I'll be happy." But Stubblefield, at least after two weeks of relaxation, plans to spend his off season productively. While at Kansas, he served as a summer camp counselor for kids ages 10 to 12 years old for the National Youth Sports Program. He'll visit some of those kids during the next few weeks before returning to his hometown, Cleves, Ohio. He'll spend his time both in Lawrence as well as in San Francisco Stubblefield, who plans on completing his degree in secondary education in California, can now kick back and enjoy himself. After playing a season nearly two times longer than any of his college seasons, Stubblefield, along with every other pro football player, deserves a break. Jayhawks undefeated in Big Eight By Matt Siegel Kansas sportswriter Two weeks ago, the Kansas State men's basketball team shocked then top-ranked Kansas — in Allen Field House. The K-State women's basketball team had the same aspirations in mind yesterday but fell far short of their goal. The No. 7 Kansas women's basketball team overwhelmed K-State from the beginning and defeated the Wildcats handily, 77-50. 12 "We haven't been the most consistent team," K-State coach Brian Agler said. "In order to beat a good team like Kansas, we have to do everything right. And we did a lot of things wrong today." Part of K-State's troubles started at the offensive end. At the 10:20 mark in the first half, K-State trailed 20-12 and had survived an early run by Kansas. However, things fell apart for the Wildcats as they went the next five minutes without a field goal. By the time the Wildcats scored, Kansas was coasting to a 41-18 halftime lead and was well on its way to an 11th consecutive victory. The reason the Wildcats struggled visibly is an all-too-familiar tune for Kansas opponents. The Jayhawks defense smothered the Wildcats, holding them to 31.7 percent shooting for the game. Although K-State's fearsome twosome of junior Shawna deCamp and Shanele Stires scored 16 and 20 points respectively, none of the other Wildcats scored more than five points. With DeCamp and Stires shooting a combined 14 for 41 from the field and K-State being held to 18 first-half points, it's easy to see how Kansas improved to 7-0 in the Big Eight Conference and 16-1 overall. K-State fell to 3-4 in the conference and 9-8 overall. Richard Devinki / KANSAN Kansas State (9-8, 3-4) Kansas 77, Kansas State 50 Kansas forward Angela Aycock takes a jump shot in the game against Kansas State yesterday at Allen Field House. Aycock scored 14 points from the field, boosting the Jayhawks to a 77-50 victory. "They played really tight defense on me," DeCamp said. "It seemed like every time I got the ball there was somebody on me." Player fgm/fgs ftm/fta tp Stires 8-22 4-6 20 DeCamp 6-19 0-0 16 Holzman 1-6 0-0 2 Larson 1-2 0-1 2 O'Neal 0-7 1-2 1 Pollack 1-2 0-2 0 Grattan 0-2 0-2 0 Neal 2-2 0-0 5 Jones 1-1 0-0 2 Decker 0-0 0-0 0 Benson 0-0 0-1 0 Totals 20-63 5-12 50 Kansas coach Marian Washington said denying DeCamp was part of Kansas' game plan. She said the Jayhawks were able to force an up-tempo KANSAS (16-1, 7-0) Player fgm/iga ftm/fa tp Aycock 5-11 4-5 14 Trapp 2-4 2-4 6 Tate 6-11 8-9 20 Sampson 2-5 4-4 9 Muncy 2-5 1-2 14 Halibble 4-6 0-0 10 Slatter 2-3 1-3 5 Dixon 3-4 2-2 8 Canada 1-2 0-1 2 Leathers 0-3 0-0 0 Thalmann 0-2 2-2 7 Totals 20-51 24-32 77 Haitiine Kansas 41, Kansas State 18.3 point goal Kansas 3-7 (Hallebail 2-4, Sampam 1-2, Leathers 0), Kansas State 5-13 (DeCampe 4-8, Neal 1, Stires 0-4) Rebounds Kansas 46 (Tate 14, Aycock 11), Kansas State 32 (Stires 14). Assists Kansas 16 (Aycock 6, Munchy 4), Kansas State 12 (Larson 5, Stires 3). Total foul Kansas 17, Kansas State 23. Attendance 1,600. pace, and that worked to their advantage. As a team, Kansas shot 49 percent from the field. Kansas also was able to take advantage of a its height as the Jayhawks out-rebounded the Wildcats 46 to 32. Senior center Lisa Tate scored a team-high 20 points and grabbed 14 rebounds. Helping Tate was junior forward Angela Aycock, who scored 14 points and had 11 rebounds, six assists and two steals. "We knew Aycock and Tate were going to score," Agler said. "We even put people up on Aycock, and she still scored with people in her face. What we had to do was to eliminate other things, and we didn't." One thing that Kansas was able to eliminate was the presence of Stires in the first half. Stires was saddled with three fouls in the first half and scored only four points. "We were able to take advantage of Stires playing a post position," said freshman guard Tamecka Dixon. "We Like everything else the Jayhawks did, that plan worked. Stires picked up her fourth foul with 18:14 remaining in the second half and eventually fouled out. K-State repeatedly was forced to foul taller Kansas players, resulting in the Jayhawks shooting 24 for 32 at the free-throw line compared to K-State's 5 for 12. Next up for the Jayhawks on Friday will be No. 3 Colorado. The game in Boulder, Colo., is already sold out. Kansas soon will become accustomed to the road, as they play five games away from home through February, a situation that Washington said she wasn't thrilled about. Still, Washington said she had faith in her team. "We're about to face our biggest challenge of the season," she said. "We still have five games away, but this is a group of young women who are focused and know what they want. The reason why we're so successful is because no one on this team underestimates anyone." Kansas to battle Missouri for Big Eight lead Kansan sportswriter By Gerry Fey Problems with No. 3 Kansas' outside shooting and inside strength may be solved just in time to face Big Eight Conference leader Missouri at Columbia, Mo., tonight. The game will be shown at 8:30 p.m. on ESPN, channel 18 on Sunflower Cablevision, and will pit the Tigers against second-place Kansas. KANSAS 20 4 Coors LIGHT Stop Kansas is 19-2 overall, 4-1 in the conference, and could be tied for first if it defeats Missouri, which is 14-2 and 5-0. "It's got to be a game where we try to play the entire game," Kansas coach Roy Williams said. "We must focus on just what's going on on the court, not what's going on anywhere else." Williams said playing Missouri would be a challenge. "Because of what they have accomplished, they are the best team in the conference right now," he said. "They've been destroying people defensively." Kansas senior guard Steve Woodberry dribble past Colorado junior guard Donnie Bove during the second half of Saturday's 87-53 Kansas victory. Tom Leininger / KANSAN The Jayhawks have had occasional problems against an opponent's zone defense. Teams have used a zone because of Kansas' inconsistent outside shooting. Earlier in the season, Temple defeated Kansas 73-59. Kansas shot 37.9 percent in that game, primarily because the Owls played a tough zone defense. It was their worst shooting performance of the season. In Kansas '87-83 victory against Colorado on Saturday in Boulder, Colo. the Jayhawks had to prove they could shoot from outside. And they did, at the Coors Events Center in front of 8,004 fans - approximately half of which cheered for Kansas. The Jayhawks shot eight for 25 from three-point range and led 39-25 at halftime. Kansas senior guard Steve Woodberry became the 31st player in Kansas men's basketball history to score 1,000 career points with his first three-pointer of the game. With that shot, he set the tone as Kansas went on a 10-0 run to begin the game. Another inconsistency has been the play of Kansas junior Greg Ostergat. But during the last two games, the 7-foot-2 center has averaged nine points, nine rebounds and 5.5 blocked shots. "Our game plan was our everyday game plan," Ostertag said. "They worry about me, Richard, and Scot. If they play us tough inside, we go outside. If they play us tough outside, we go back to the inside." Kansas' strong point in almost every game this season has been its defense. Teams are shooting 36.8 percent against the Jayhawks' pressure defense. Playing defense against Colorado meant shutting down Colorado junior guard Donnie Boyce. Since Boyce switched to point guard six games ago, he has averaged 24.7 points, 5.4 assists and 6.2 Ostergt said that Kansas' ability to score inside may have opened up its outside shooting but that it was nothing new. rebounds a game. Boyce scored only 16 points Saturday, and Kansas' defense was the catalyst for its most impressive run to gain control of the game. After halftime, Kansas went on a 13-0 run that gave the Jayhawks a 52-25 lead. Kansas caused four turnovers during that span and 23 turnovers in the game. However, playing defense against Missouri will be an entirely different story, Williams said. Missouri senior guard Melvin Booker in the 10th lead scorer in the conference, averaging 18.2 points a game, and senior forward Jevon Crudup is ninth in field goal percentage at 50.6 percent. "Missouri gives you a five man group that can score," Williams said. "You look at Colorado's stats, and you've got Mark Dean scoring 19, and you've got Donnie Boyce scoring 20. You can gear your defense toward that. You look at Missouri, and they've got five, six and seven guys that have scored 20 for them this year. That's the most difficult kind of team to guard." Kansas junior guard Calvin Rayford said he thought the Jayhawks' defense would stay the same despite Missouri's balanced scoring. Rayford had one steal against Colorado, but he and Kansas freshman guard Jacque Vaughn tormented Boyce and Colorado junior guard Sande Golgart throughout the game. "I like guarding people taller than me," said Rayford, who is 5-6. "I just watch them dribble the ball. I knocked a couple away from Boyce. It takes them out of their game." Even though tonight's game may signal things to come, Kansas senior forward Patrick Richey said the game was not as big as the hype. "Obviously, one of our goals is to win the Big Eight," he said. "But if we were to lose tonight or Monday night, we still would be all right because the Big Eight season is so long. We're going in there confident, and we want to win." Women's tennis team beats Utah The No. 15 Kansas women's tennis team got off to a fast start to open its spring season. The team blanked the Utah Utes 9-0 SPORTS BRIEFS yesterday at the Alvamar Racquet Club. Senior Mindy Weiner, who is playing in the No. 1 singles spot and is ranked No. 35 nationally, defeated Utah's Rebecca Smith 6-3, 6-2, and improved her overall record to 16-4. At The No. 2 spot, Nora Koves defeated Jennifer Jensen 6-1, 6-2. Juniors Koves and Rebecca Jensen, who are playing in the No. 1 doubles spot for Kansas, defeated Smith and Heidi Chinchiolo 6-1,3-6,6-2. As a team, Kansasq only dropped one set in singles and one set in doubles. Five Jayhawks will be competing Feb. 3-6 in the Rolex Indoor Championships in Dallas. The next home match for the Jayhawks is at 1 p.m. Feb. 15. The team will play the No. 1-ranked Texas Longhones. Track teams win in weekend events The women were paced by Senior John Bazzon continued his winning ways by placing first in the pole vault event with a jump of 17 feet. The University of Kansas track team came away with four first-place finishes at the Sooner Indoor Relays Saturday in Oklahoma City, Okla. Other winners for the men included the distance medley relay team of senior Dan Watters, freshman Kerry Bolze, senior David Johnston and junior Mike Cox. The team captured first place and a provisional qualification for the NCAA championship indoor meet, with a time of 9 minutes, 53 seconds. A provisional qualification does not guarantee senior high jumper Keely Harding. Harding jumped 5-9 to take first place in the event. the team a spot at the meet but puts it in a position where its time has to be beaten. The Jayhawks placed first and second in the long jump events. Freshman Marc Scheil jumped 23-5 1/2, and junior Harun Hazim jumped 23-4 3/4 for a second place finish. The Jayhawks will compete Saturday when they play host to the Kansas-Kansas State-Missouri Triangular at Anchutz Sports Pavilion. 10 Monday, January 31, 1994 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Sampras' power-play too much for Martin in Australian Open By Rob Gloster The Associated Press MELBOURNE, Australia — Pete Sampras, the ultimate power tennis player of the 1990s, evoked images of the sport's past while winning his first Australian Open title. Sampras, who defeated Todd Martin 7-6 (7-4), 6-4, 6-4 in yesterday's all-American final, became the first man in nearly three decades to win Wimbledon, the U.S. Open and the Australian Open consecutively. He reasserted his dominance of men's tennis, drawing comparisons with boyhood idols such as Rod Laver and Ken Rosewall, by overpowering Martin with 126 mph aces and unreturnable groundstrokes. His match with golfing buddy Martin was a throwback in other ways to the yesteryears of tennis, when gentlemen wearing crisp white outfits were more concerned about performance than personality. Sampras and Martin, both of whom have been ridiculed at times as boring and too polite, praised each other after a center-court match of outstanding play but little drama. They also thanked the crowd for supporting their style of play. The first set lasted 63 minutes, longer than the entire woman's final Saturday, Steffi Graf won her fourth Australian Open title and fourth straight Grand Slam championship, overwhelming Arantxa Sanchez Vicario 6-0, 2-1 in 57 minutes. While Graf and Sampras now rule the sport, their toughest challenges are just ahead. Graf's only real rival, Monica Seles, is expected back soon, while the next Grand Slam event will be the one which Sampras is weakest, the clav- court French Onen. Many of tennis' top stars, including Seles, Boris Becker, Andre Agassi, Jennifer Capriati and Martina Navratilova, skipped the Australian Open, and attendance was down nearly 10 percent from 1993. The Associated Press Bv Jeff Maver Angels to give Jackson a chance to play ANAHEM, Calif. — Bo Jackson, whose football career ended in southern California, is coming back to play baseball. The Angels plan to announce the signing at 4 p.m. today. Jackson has agreed to terms with the California Angels, his agent sold yesterday. He became a free agent three weeks ago when he walked away from the Chicago White Sox with an artificial hip. Agent Arn Tellum declined to discuss contract terms but said, "He loves southern California, and he's very excited about being given this opportunity with the Angels." Jackson, 31, missed the entire 1002 season after undergoing hip replacement surgery. Last year, he batted .232 with 16 home runs and 46 RBIs in 85 games for Chicago. Jackson did not start the first two games of last October's American League playoffs against Toronto and complained about it. He started the next three games as the designated hitter, going 0-for-10 with six strikeouts. The White Sox offered Jackson salary arbitration after the season, but he declined this month. The Los Angeles Times reported yesterday that Jackson could earn more than $1 million with bonuses in a one- year deal with the Angels. The White Sox signed free agent Julio Franco during the off-season. They also are likely to have a player in spring camp next month who will create even more attention than Jackson did last year — Michael Jordan. Tellum said Jackson would compete for the job as the Angels' left fielder. The Angels already have a designated hitter in Chill Davis and were planning to start Eduardo Perez in left but are worried that Perez right elbow is suspect. Last year, Jackson became the first pro athlete to play with an artificial hip. 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CLOTHERS Britches Corner • 843 Massachusetts • 843-0454: Buy 1reg. price Tommy Hilfiger, get the 2nd of equal or lesser value at 20 Cleopatra's Closet • 743 Massachusetts • 749-4664: 15% off everything in store (excluding sale items) The Etc Shop • 928 Massachusetts • 843-0611: 20% off Etc Shop brand sunglasses Harper's Fashions • 835 Massachusetts • 749-0626: Additional 20% off all regular price merchandise KU Bookstore • Kansas and Burge Unions • 844-6484: $5 off any gift or clothing purchase of $25 or more Natural Way Natural Fiber Clothing • 820 Massachusetts • 841-0100: 15% off all regular priced clothing Outfitters Clothing Co. • 740 Massachusetts • 843-3933: 15% off the regular price of guy's and gal's jeans Outfitters Clothing Co. • 740 Massachusetts • 843-3933: 10% off of tuxedo rental University Bookshop • 1116 W 23rd St • 749-5206: 20% off all clothing (except sale items) Weavers Department Store • 901 Massachusetts • 843-6360: 20% off all lingerie, hosiery, or intimate apparel RESTAURANTS & BARS American Blastro • 701 Massachusetts • 841-8349 • 10% off any entree (limit one) Bonanza • 3293 Iowa • 842-1200 • All you-can-eat-Frestasticks Food & Desert Bar for $2.99 Dos Hombres VI • 815 New Hampshire • 841-7286 • Buy 1 menu item, get the 2nd for 1/2 price Dunkin Donuts • 521 W 23rd • 749-5015 • 15% off any purchase Fiff's Restaurant • 925 Iowa • 841-7226 • 10% off any entree (limit one) Imperial Garden • 2907 W 6th St • 841-1688 • 10% off any dinner entree (limit one) Johnny's Tavern • 401 N 12nd St • 842-0377 • Buy a cheeseburger w/fries at reg. price, get the 2nd for $1 (Good Mon - Fri, 4pm to 9pm) Little Caesars Pizza-Pizza • 1410 Kasold, 865-5400/520 W 23rd, 842-8000 • FREE Crazy Bread w/y pizza/pizzal purchase Perkins Family Restaurant • 1711 W 23rd • 842-9040 • $1.00 off any entree, 24 hours a day Pizza Shuttle • 1601 W 23rd • 842-1212 • 1 carryout, 1 topping pizza w/ a lg. coke for $4.00 Plum Tree • 2620 Iowa • 841-6222 • FREE appetizer (2 crab rangoons or 1 egg roll) w/purchase of any entree Pyramid Pizza • 507 W 17th St (under The Wheel) • 842-3232 • $4 $m-$6 med-$8 lg-ea add topping 75¢ (Void w/ other offers) Shoney's Restaurant • 2412 Iowa • 843-3519 • FREE salad bar w/y purchase of a sandwich and fries Vista Drive In • 1527 W 6th St • 842-4311 • FREE reg. French Fry w/purchase of a Vistaburger & drink MERCHANDISE & PRODUCTION The Athlete's Foot • 914 Massachusetts • 841-6966; $10 off a shoe purchase of $65 or more Community Mercantile • 901 Mississippi • 843-8544; 15% off any coffee purchase Cycle Works • 1601 W 23rd • 842-6363: FREE lock set w/ new bike purchase Englewood Florist • 939 Massachusetts • 841-2999: 3 FREE latex balloons with any purchase of $20 or more Francis Sporting Goods • 731 Massachusetts • 843-4191: 15% off all Champion Sportswear It's Your Party • 1601 W 23rd • 749-3455: Buy any 3 greeting cards and get 1 FREE Jaybowl • Level 1-Kansas Union • 864-3545: FREE shoe rental during open bowling Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826: Get an extra 5% CASH back during Semester Buyback Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826: Save 10% on Computer Softwear EVERYDAY! Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826: Blue Books for 10¢ Jayhawk Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826: 20% off Blank Computer Diskettes Jayhawk Spirit • 935 Massachusetts • 749-5194: $1.00 off all adjustable hats, $2.00 off all fitted hats Jock's Nitch • 840 Massachusetts • 842-2442: 15% off all shoes Junior's Farm • 924 1/2 Massachusetts • 842-3344: Buy 2 CD's at reg. price, get the 3rd (equal or lesser value) at 50% off Kansas Sports Club • 837 Massachusetts • 842-2992: 20% off KU sweatshirts Laser Logic • 865-0505: 20% Off Recycled Laser Printer Toner Cartridges (FREE pick-up and delivery) Miracle Video • 1910 Haskell, 841-7504/910 N 2nd St, 841-8903: Rent 1 video, get 2nd FREE (Sun thru Thurs) Rentco USA • 1741 Massachusetts • 749-1605: 25% off all rentals Sports Fan-Attics • 924 Massachusetts • 842-2323: 15% off everything in store (excluding sale items & leather jackets) Stereo Lane • 2024 W 23rd • 865-2677: 10% off any purchase of $50 or more Union Technology Center • Level 3-Burge Union • 864-5690: 10% off any accessory (disks, diskholders, cables, paper, surge protector) Video Blz • 832 Iowa • 749-3507: 2 For Tuesday! Rent 2 Videos, for the Price of 1 (Tuesday only) Vormere Studio & Gallery • 1 Riverfront Plaza, Ste 321 • 749-0744: 15% off of framed prints of KU and sororities SERVICES The Auto Medic • 3631 W 10th St • 842-0384: 20% off any service call The Auto Medic • 3631 W 10th St • 842-0384: 20% off any service call B.C. Automotive • 510 N 6th St • 841-6955: 20% off tune ups and brake repair Copy Co • 1401 W 23rd • 832-2679: 10% off all merchandise or services Enterprise Rent-A-Car • 3030 Iowa • 842-8040: 10% off car rental Fantastic Sam's • 2223 Louisiana • 749-1976: 15% off any regular price service or product NailTique • 2449 Iowa, Ste N • 832-2900: $3.00 off any service Planned Parenthood • 1420 Kasold-Orchards Corners • 832-0281: 25% off initial or annual visit plus 12 free condoms RC's Stadium Barbery • 1033 Massachusetts • 749-5363: $5.50 haircut Sonny Hill Chevrolet-Geo-Oldsmobile • 3400 S Iowa • 843-7700: 10% off all parts and service Ultimate Tan • 2449 Iowa, Ste O • 842-4949: 1 FREE session with the purchase of a 9-session package ($5 value) The University Daily Kansan • 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall • 864-4358: 10% off any private party classified advertisement THE GREAT GREEK LEGION Terms and conditions. The following terms and conditions relate to cardholder a use of the *Institute Dayton Kissanai Card* (DDC) at Participating Merchants (PM): 11 T-19 DDC must be signed to be valid, is non-transferable, and PM may request identification, cuffing or locking it if used by other than the cardholder. Cardholder a signature of use of the DDC shall constitute authorization to be bound by these conditions of the Director of Affairs, a not valid with respect to special promotions or PIMs to be not apply to use portion of purchase; a supply only to cardholder a representative's jurisdiction; and a not valid with respect to special promotions or PIMs to be not apply to use portion of purchase. DDC shall constitute authorization to be bound by these conditions of the Director of Affairs, Jayhawk Bookstore Kansas and Burge Unions·864-4640 1420 Crescent Road 843-3826 UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP KU KU BOOKSTORES 1116 W.23rd St *749-5206 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358 "Landmark since 1983 Red Lyon Tavern Red Lyon Tavern A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence 944 Mass. 832-8228 Indoor "Sidewalk" Sale Monday & Tuesday Only Thousands of items at incredible prices! KU 864-4640 Coupons and discount cards may not be used in conjunction with these sale prices. KU Bookstore Kansas Union, Level Two FREE PIZZA BUY ONE & GET ONE FREE From Your Friends at Pyramid Pizza Fast & Friendly Delivery (limited area) 842-3232 (of course) A balloon is flying. 14th AND OHIO (UNDER THE WHEEL) SPECIAL COUPON PYRAMID PIZZA MONDAY MANIA Buy any PYRAMID PIZZA & get the Second Pizza (of equal value) FREE! FREE! PYRAMID "We Wipe It On!" WE HONOR KANSAS Kansan Card offer good carry out only. Classified Directory 100s Announcements 由人 200s Announcements 105 Personal 110 Business 120 Social 124 Announcements 130 Entertainment 140 Lost and Found Employment 205 Help Wanted 225 Professional Services 238 Typing Services 305 For Sale 340 Auto Sales Classified Policy 300s Merchandise The Kanaan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates based on race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kanaan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 and other applicable laws. Occurrence, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or dis- 100s Announcements 360 Miscellaneout 370 Want to Buy Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertisements in this newspaper are removed. 400s Real Estate 405 Real Estate 430 Roommate Wanted Kansan Classified: 864-4358- F 105 Personals 2S, SM looking for 2SF who like to Mt bike ride. Must be good-looking, athletic, fun loving, spontaneous, like Kravat, Hendrix and 9 Ithcah II, plus intriguing personality. Must be health conscious, and totally cool. Oh, yeah, and kinda likes Beavis and Buttchie. That would mean a big smile. Okay, go to Box 50, 118 Foster-Stiff, Lawrence KS, 69045. 110 Bus. Personals Looking for significant Spring Break cash? Start up preventive health company out of KC looking for highly motivated individuals to market our product locally on your own time. Please call 1-800-738-2980 at the prompt dial 7930 for more information. Unique Sterling Silver Jewelry Hoops, Pendants & More! Flip Clips & Gatsby The Show 222 Mass. Downown' UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Monday, January 31, 1994 11 SpringBreak1994 CANCUN from#439 SOUTH PADRE from#159 Other destinations available Lowest price guaranteed Call 865-1352 WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO Really Listen Call or drop by Headquarters We're here because we care. 841-2345 1419 Mass. We're always open WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500 Urgent Care (Additional Charge) Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm Sunday 8:40am-4:30pm Regular Clinic Hours Monday-Friday 8:40pm Saturday 8:11-3:00m Pharmacy Hours Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm Saturday 8.9am-12.30pm Sunday 11am-3pm KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services 120 Announcements COMMUTERS: Self Serve Car Pool Exchange. Main Lobby, Kansas University. NEED A RIDER/RIDEM Use the Serve Car Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union. Visit your name with us. We refer student inquiries to Student Assistance Center, 138 Strong. RESEARCH PAPER RESEARCH PAPER WRITING WORKSHOP Learn where to start, what's next, when to get feedback & how to finish FREE! Wednesday, February 2, 7-9 pm 4035 Wescoe Sponsored by the Student Assistance Center WANT TO HIRE A TUXEDO. See our list of availabl wanted to HIRE A TUXEDO. See our list of availabl SPRING BREAK94 13th YEAR! SOUTH PADRE ISLAND NORTH PADRE/NUISTANG ISLAND SOUTH PADRE ISLAND NORTH PADRE/MUSTANG ISLAND T- L- O- R- D- A- DAYTONA BEACH PANAMA CITY BEACH ORLANDO/WALT DISNEY WORLD C- V- I- O- R- D- A- D- O STEAMBOAT TAIL/BEAVER CREEK BRECKENRIDGE/KEYSTONE N- D- V- A- D- R LAS VEGAS S-O-U-T-H C-A-R-O-L-1-N-A MILTON HEAD ISLAND RESERVATIONS AVAILABLE NOW CALL TOLL FREE 800-265-1491 CALL TOLL FREE FOR FULL DETAILS AND COLOR BROCHURE! Call Joan at 865-5611 Wain a trip to Caunau! Look for details and entry blanks in the coupon section of your new University Telephone Directory. Deadline for entry is May 25. The available storecases are available now at the KU书店storex. Spring Break Alternatives London $395* Paris $389* Madrid $389* - Call for other destinations including the Caribbean. Fares are roundtrip from Chicago and subject to change. Taxes not included. Respectly apply. C Council Travel Evanston, IL 60201 1-800-475-5070 1-800-475-5070 Call for a FREE Student Travels magazine 130 Entertainment Cruises for two to the Bahamas, $250. Contact Roc at 812-858-1566. 男厕 女厕 205 Help Wanted Child care required in bed 2-3 afternoons per week. Near K. U 832-0191 ****** 1994 EXPANSION Part-time temporary and permanent openings. Flexible schedule around class. B$109 to $10. Positions need to be filled by 2/1/94. Please call 840-831 for more info. Athena Alumni Center sends bench prep cook and salad person. Flexible shifts, position available immediately, apply in person no phone call. 1286 Orcad Ave. CAMP COUNSELORS - 18 yr. old, educational camp near Kansas City seeks counselors (WSI help!) for residential summer program for children 8-14. June to August 8. Must be Spoiled education, $100 plus room and board. For details, inquire before February 7, 1994 to Widow Wood Center. CAMP SEQUOIA in New York at Catfish Mills. Nine nyc NYC) have job available. Cabin counselors, specialty instructors for sports, swimming (WSL/OT), Tennis, Hockey, Gymnastics, Art, English Horseback Riding, Outdoor Education Adventure Programs and more! Competitive Salary, room, board travel allowance and launch fees. Attend the Kansas Union Ballet on Ground Hog Day, February 2nd. For more information call SEQUOIA at (914) 679-3291. Cooks (female) needed for beautiful summer camp in Estes Park, Colorado. Contract period 6/6 to 8/15. Contact Ruthman Holle, Cheley Colorado Camps. 308-586-4244. Counselors/Support Staff-Children's Camps/ Northeast Top salary, MRD/BL/Daundry, travel allowance. Must have skill in one of the following activities: archery, arts & crafts, baseball, bassball, golf, hockey, football, golf, gymnastics, ice hockey, horseback riding-hunt seat, karate, lacrosse, nature, photography, piano, pioneering, cer, swim team, tennis, theater, technicians, track, video, water ski, WSI, wind wurking, Kitchen steward, cooks, bus drivers, maintenance, nurses, secretaries. Men call or write to Camp Vega at 843-6150, 404E, Boca Raton, FL 31433 (407) 994-5000. Women call or write: Camp Vega for Girls, P.O. Box 1717, Duxbury, MA 02338 (617) 834-6536. We will be on campus from 4pm - 6pm in 6/30 in the Oread and Regional Rooms. Cruise line, entry level, board positions swill. Cruise line, entry level, on-board positions available, great benefits. Summer or year round (80%) ADVERTISING WORKS! Evening and weekend CNA needed to work with clients in their homes. Reliable transportation necessary. Call Sharon at Douglas County Visiting Nurses 843-3738. Female grad student or upperclassman; light housekeeping for retired faculty wart. part time, flexible hours, no evenings. Very, very close to the union. Could work between classes 928-3108. GREEKS & CLUBS EARN $50 - $250 FOR ONESELF This fundraiser costs nothing and lasts one week. Call now and receive a free gift. Henry T's Bar & Grill is now hiring experienced wait staff and jobs. Must be able to work some days. Accept applications Monday through Friday on phone calls please. $320 W6 St. EARN CASH ON THE SPOT $15 Today $30 This week By donating your life saving blood plasma WALK-INS WELCOME! NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750 KUCHOOL OF EDUCATION SEEKS: Program instructors (2) teach high school students in summer session in 1) Spanish and 2) biology/chemistry. The two teachers experience working with culturally diverse youth required. These two jobs are unclassified monthly position. February 11, 1984, 5 p.m. Common language required. Available from Chris Sykes, UpwardBound, University of Kansas, 409 Ballway, Lawrence, KS, 60045, (013) 864-3415. The University of Kansas is anEqual Opportunity/Affirmative Act employer KU KOHSOOL OF EDUCATION SEEKS: Residence Hall Supervisor (1) coordinate residence hall staff and live in residence hall during summer session; degree required. Tutor/Counselors (3) tutor, counsel and supervise high school students during summer session; at least junior level status in college required. Bridge Counselor (1) live in a residential hall, tutor, counsel, and supervise high school students during summer session; required. All of the above jobs are student monthly positions. Deadline: February 11, 1994, 5 pm Complete job description available from Chris Sykes, Edward Bound, University of Kansas, 408 Bailey Hall, University of Kansas, 287 University of Kansas is an Equity Opportunity/Affirmative Action employer. Looking for a few new people interested in earn- ing and Sell Lawrence at the Entertainment booth. JOEK. Part-time employment. Apply at Alvarnar Racquet Club between 10 am and 3 pm. 4180 Clinton Part-time farm hand, some experience with farm machinery and cattle. Wage & hours negotiate. Students who are looking to get ahead I am looking for 10 students who want the opportunity to make $5000 and get some great experience. Call for more info. 865-702. Program Specialist part-time, youth experience necessary. Girl Scout experience preferred. Letter of application Dana Cokes for F. Ike. Kay at Scout Schools, 8 W. Shuttle 4, Lawncrest KS 65047 Work in beautiful Colorado mountains this summer at Cheley Colorado Camps summer program. RNs; drivers, secretaries, wranglers; nanny; counselors, sports coaches, artists, sports counsellors. Camps age 9-17 Room and board, cash salary, travel allowance. Our 74th summer! Must be at least 19 to apply. Applicants will be notified of campus interview. Apply to Cheley Colorado Camps, 308-377-3616. SUMMER JOBS!! Camp Birchwood seeks college students to work as counselors and instructors in tennis, archery, horseback riding, windsurfing, canoe tripping, sailing and dance. Guitar players United Child Development Center is accepting applicant for referral on Friday-Friday 12:50- 1:30 AM, Tuesday through Saturday, and EOE WORK STUDY POSITIONS AVAILABLE AT THE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS. ABOVE MINI- MUM WAGE, APPLY ONLY IF WORK STUDY QUALIFIED. RM300 OR MALE CALL 845-1640. English tutee: All English classes, proofreading, ESL, early writing, MA English, BS Education **Course Details** - **Name:** English Tutee - **Institution:** University of New England (UOW) - **Department:** English Language and Literature - **Contact:** 904-723-6811 - **Email:** english@uow.edu.au 225 Professional Services Driver education offered through Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 yrs. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 941-7749. For a confidential, caring friend, call us. We're here to listen and talk with you. Birthright 845-4821. Free pregnancy tests INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS DV-1 government Program Sponsored by the U.S. northeast resident status. Citizens of almost all coun- tries are allowed to take part. Students, touris- ers, anyone may apply. Info and info: New Era University; 2021 Stags Ll, Canoga Park, CA 91206 MATH TUTOR. TEACHING EXPERIENCE EXCELLENT CREDENTIALS.$8/HOUR. 842-5192. Leave a Message. TRAFFIC-DUIT'S Fake ID & alcohol offences divorce, criminal & civil matters the law offices of DONALD G. STROLE Gain Dr. Strole Sally G. Kelsey 16 East 13th 842-1133 Tel; (818) 998-4425; Fax; (818) 882-9681 Office located right next to campus Elizabeth Leach Attorney at Law-Former Prosecutor 414 W 14th 749-0087 DUI/MIP/Fake ID's VIDEO EDITING AND PRODUCTION SERVICES A/B roll video tape editing suite with EDL. computer animation. HB film production, education, award winning screen writer. PRIMAL SCREEN COMMUNICATIONS 235 Typing Services BRAXTON B. COPLEY Traffic Tickets, Misdemeanors, Landlord Tenant 719 Massachusetts 749-5333 1-der Women Word Processing. Former editor transforms scraps into accurate pages of letter addresses. Looking for a good type? *Papers, Applications, Sheetsheets, Charts *Laser printing to WOW! your profs *Grammar and spelling free *18 years experience *call Jack in *Makin' the Grade X Word processing, applications, term papers, dis- tortations, resumes, Editing, composition, rush jobs available. Masters Degree. 841-0254. Words by Chris Word Processing. High quality papers and printing; spell check included. 865-0909. Makin' the Grade 305 For Sale 300s Merchandise **85 Grand Marquis $1.5K; zYXEL U-14988+** (internal 19.2kbps uncompressed) modems $364; MS-Works + DOS + "USing MS-MWorks"; WordPfer- d + Turbo Pascal "Extended,keyword" con- troler 3-button mouse, Typing Tupter 5, 256k SIMM's. BOARDING ROBOT, SUGAR GULBURR. 25Mbit 486X microprocessor, VGA graphics card individually or bundle 242-487 92 Specialized Rock Hopper. Many x-tras. Must sell $30. Call Terry 831-8218. 147-70 mobile home 2 BDRM 1 Bath Cern. N/ft. 560 ft. 344 sq. ft. 866 sq. ft. 866 sq. ft. Great investment at 8000 Call; 869 361-865. desks, bookcases,chest of drawers. Everything But Ice. 935 Mass. *98 Bridgeside MB-m 81 st, bike. Iguana green. X-lent must. Hold. $450. Call: 861-749-7148 Columbian Boat $200, Albino Corn Snake $100 obo phone 943-3022. For Sale-Purable Computer w/o/MOG hard drive3/4 in. floppy drive $500, Call 760-824-1220 FOR SALE: Protoware Dot Matrix Printer $10.00 epi $10.00 extra Large $15.00 Call 800-8454 CUTTARS - smooth Westone, 3/4 body size. Flydy Rose $250 - pointy electro, Turtle Fretless Mini $195 - small body, Speaker System Queen size classic futon bed, solid maple w/ natural oil finish. 4400 - 888-7114 ask for Sherri Talk trash, walk trash: DEJEA RECYCLED Talk trash, walk trash: t strings, more Simple Google check, more complex FT-82 Calculator. Brand new condition. $60. Call 814-7327. WANT TO SELL. I Brand New VCR I can use. I have all the prog. eneg. Best offer kits. Call Burt 647-817-3250 340 Auto Sales *85 Volvo 740-GLE, Auto, cruise, sunroof, excellent condition. $5,000. BK1 841-0463. 98 Nissan Sentra, 2-door, black, hall damage, new tires, new clutch, $110,000 B41-0633 1986 Chevvy Corvair Monza 2 door automatic, new fuel pump, dependable Transportation insurance, 5-year warranty 14 Dodge PU, 6 cyl., 3 speed, good cond. #829 Call 835-1984. A 1988 Dishanta spd. one师 No A/C $2000. Call 401-9838 daytime. Honda Accord 95' LX Coupe 5 pdr. Full Pvurr $380 Honda Accord 95' LX Coupe 5 pdr. Full Pvurr $380 hail damage 5 pdr. Good Condo $400 bmw 5 pdr. Good Condo $400 bmw 5 pdr. A Ponte Fiero, New red paint. Runns perfectly. A Stierro, 5 space. Cocktail $649. Call 748-740-3120. 1 bdmrt apt available ASAP for subleave "tii Aug. from campus from campus, excellent view/wood view 3 bedroom apartments now available. Call bus route, d/wand microwave. $500 m.o. 749-1566. Available at West Hills Apts. Spacious b well-furnished apt. $295 per month. Water pdt. Great location near campus. 1012 Emery Rd. No pets. 841-3800, 842-3884. 2 bedroom apt. brand new, sublease from May 13- 800 mw, call 493-6454. 1 bedroom with wood floors available Mid Fri February 5th on the bus route fire pad. 784-890-6322 405 For Rent 400s Real Estate Trailridge Apartments Now leaving for summer and Fall Sindia, Appe, and Town Houses KU Building, Oakland, tennis Court, Tennis Court, call Today for more information 843-7333 2500. 6th W Available Now. Newly renovated studio apt. 1300 block Vermont, private drive to AC,暑 ap, 1600 block Vermont, private drive to AC,暑 ap. 814-1754 Newer 1, 2 and 3 bedroom apartments available for August '94. Washers/dryer, dishwasher, microwave, private patio/balconies. Avoid the reserve your place now! Call **844-749-1568** for details. You remember the time spent, the frustrations, the hassles. DO IT NOW. HOW? Glad you asked. Call 842-4200 & we'll send our complete program to you immediately. Extra quiet and 3 BR apartment. All appli- ances in the unit. Kitchen appliances. No pes- sas! 535 Available immediately.盐冷蔵店 6412 Nakano City, Osaka 607-8600 meadowbrook FALL'84 Leasing for June and August. New 4 bedroom, kitchenette and dishwasher, microwave, gas fireplace, ceiling fans, covered parking avail. Early signup specials offer. For more information call Dave at 841-352-6170. Call Kathy or Shana at Meadowbrook. 842-4200 15th & Crestline Mon-Fri 8:5:30 Sat 10-4 Sun 1-4 Sorry no pets First month free 1. Bedroom apartment. 2. Boardwalk Apartment. Leave message $325-999. For rent, 23bm. furnished ap. on West 7th available Feb. 1. 4698 a.m. 841-301. House for rent 1 bedroom no pets, newly remodeled call 843-2633 For sublease. 1 bedroom apt avail. Mar. 1. Call Connie at 865-2714 Rooms, apartments, and well kept, old homes available now. 841.STAR (9222) One bedroom apt, sublease next to campus, off street parking...free rent for month of February-move in, now leave 865-0126 move in, move there! Resume to Sick of Your Roommate? Try Sub-Leaing. 1.bdmr apt. 2.bdlms from Campus.$35/m, mon. call 83-2194 Spacious I bedroom apt very close to campus. Furnished. Avail. immediately. Call 841-1212. Ask about Coldwater flat #4. --- YOUNG SUNSHINE CAFE SUNRISE VILLAGE 660 Gateway Ct. Now Leasing for Fall Mon.-Fri. 1-5 *Luxurious 2,3,& 4 Bedroom Town Homes *Garages; 2½Baths *Microwave Ovens *Some with Fireplaces *On KU Bus Route *Swimming Pool and Tennis Courts 841-8400 or 841-1287 Upset apartment now available close to camp Utilities paid. $295. 6 month lease available. Call 0141-230-7888 SUB-LEASE 2 Br- apt for lease. $73 per month. Capable of paying a bed. Very close to camp. Call: 845-791-6300 Holiday Apartments SUNSET TREE NOW LEASING FOR FALL'94 *1,2,3 or 4 Bedrooms *On KU Bus route *Newly Constructed *Quiet Location Park25 211 Mount Hope Ct. Apartment A3 We are now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature studio1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. We also have 3 bedroom, 2 1/2 bath townhomes. 843-6500 or 843-0011 Sublease quiet room at 18th and Tennessee- wash/dryer-share kitchen, Cheap. Bheap, indepen- nence, utility space + utilities-832-8142 Sublease: 1 bdrm mpt w./study Board Apts $345.84 mo35.04 mo35.04 We presently have available a select few 1 & 2 bedroom apartments for immediate occupancy. *2 Pools - Volleyball Court * On KU Bus Route with 4 Stops on Property Some Washer/Dryer *2 Laundry Rooms *Some Washer/Driver Call or stop by today. 2401 W. 25th, 9A3 842-1455 (sorry no pets) Space available in bedroom房, $190/month. Close to RU and pool in backyard. Call 844-326-5780. 2 room in Apt. 1 Block behind Fearb. Peb rent Available now. $155 + u/utilities CALL 862- 307-525-4895 843-6446 Also Leasing For Spring & Fall! South Pointe Apartments 2 & 3 BEDROOMS AVAILABLE NOW!! West of Iowa on 26th Street K.U. bus route Female, non-smoking, roommates needed, immediate, share a spacious house, own bedroom, child room. 2-4 bedrooms. Fem. roommate needed for nice hot-style dresses. Fem. roommate needed for great hotel $800 room. Men: 792-267-5987 Female needed to share 1 berm apt with W150. $14 a.m. stadium View Apt, Call 832-2888. Location Female need for 3 bimr, 1 bath, $200 mo + ½ util. Call 823-7926 Female & 3 kids mare or bain, 5 kids a KU $80, female & 1 kid mare/bain, 1 year old girl hurday/day 865-1476 GREATLOCATION!!! Female roommate needed, own room, bath & study.W/D, garageware /w/opeeer 8.92 used付 roomware/office/W/D 7.50 used付 West Iowa on 20th street K.U. bus route Walk to shopping, banking, restaurants & six theaters New Iowa campus Recreational Center Basketball, baseball, indoor Track, racquetball and Aerobics - Byphone: 864-4358 - Commute needed for a Bugs 2 bedroom 10 min. to Kuala Lumpur & 8 min. /& 6 hrs. Kristen at KL 792-358 or Kristen at KL 792-358. How to schedule an ad: Male roommate needed through end of semester. Room number: near campus 814/mo + /+ v1il Call 641-8303 Female roommate, beautiful 3 bedroom town- home on bus route, $250 + will, no pets, no smokers. Available Jan. 1, 749-2886 or 081-5808. Needed immatured, mature Jr., Sr., Grad, female non-motor for BDR 1865/mo. Call 848-2810. New appliances New bath fixtures Mini & vertical blinds Walk-in closets Water, heating of water & trash paid! Patio balconies available Swimming pool and Sand volleyball court Small pets OK with deposit Ample off-street parking Luxury Have your own room, covered parking, private drive, fire service, dawser, etc., for only one occupant. One roommate needed for 3bdm townhouse. $190 room. Call Bea at 866-272-7500, ACD, DW, FF w/d bedroom. Call Bea at 866-272-7500, ACD, DW, FF Roommate needed for 4 bdm house near campus. W/D, appliances, furnished except for bdm. Willing to help with part of rent, pets possible. Call 985-2431. Looking for roommate starting Feb. the lst. 19 min. from campus. Bathroom 60, 90, tiled and cable paid but Ads phone in may be held by your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made. * in person: 119 Stairford Flint One roommate to share 3-B house. Garage, fenced in backyard. $175/m. Call 848-269-0611. Stop by the Kasseon office between 8 a. m. and 5 p. m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or Visa. Calculating Rates: You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas offices. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard quality for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date. Classified Information and order form When cancelling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Rewards on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available. Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of opaque lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run. References: The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansan office for a fee of $4.00 Pricing Cost per line per day 1X 2X 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 30+X 2.85 1.55 1.05 .85 .75 .90 1.99 1.15 0.80 .70 .65 .45 1.85 1.05 .75 .65 .60 .45 1.75 .90 .80 .80 .80 .35 Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Num. of insertions: Classifications 105 personal 140 host a friend 365 for sale 110 business persons 265 help wanted 340 note sales 129 announcements 235 professional services 368 miscellaneous 130 entertainment 235 paying services 1 2 3 4 5 Address: ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print: Date ad begins: Total days in page Total ad cost: Classification: Account number: VISA Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □ Visa (Please make checks payable to the University Daly Kansas) Furnish the following if you are charming your ad: Print exact name appearing on credit card: Expiration Date MasterCard Signature: The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, lawrence. NS. 66445 THE FAR SIDE By GARY LARSON © 1994 farWorks, Inc./Dst. by Universal Press Synoclate ROY'S CITY B. FISH. SHELF. CHRISTMAS FAIR. "Well, I'd recommend either the chicken-fried steak or maybe the seafood platter. But look — I gotta be honest with ya — nothin' we serve is exactly what I'd call food for the gods." 12 Monday, January 31, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN KU ROCK CLIMBING CLUB Meetings: Mondays and Wednesdays 9:00-10:30pm Fridays 8:30-10:30pm KU Rock Cliv (Open recreation times also available!) Contact: Tyler Bergmeier 749-6546 Kevin Stephens 841-6995 KU JUGGLING Meeting: Saturdays 7:00 - 10:00pm (When it gets warm, we'll meet in front of Strong!) Contact: Eric Fellows 865-2894 Jayhawks Juggling is great because it's fun, relaxing, healthy, easy to learn and it can help you develop excellent coordination! Sailboat Meetings: Wednesdays KUSAILING CLUB 7:30 pm Kansas Union, The International Room Contact: Tom Connard 841-4597 Contact: Tom Connard 841-459 Learn, Practice, Compete, or Just Have Fun-With the KU Sailing Club! KU MEN'S RUGBY HU KU E W Established 1964 Kansas University Rugby Football Club Meetings: Tuesdays and Thursdays 5:00 pm Shenk Complex (23rd & lowa) Contact: Rick Renfro 842-0377 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS WOMEN'S RUGBY KUEQUESTRIAN A CLUB Next Meeting: Wednesday, February 2nd.1994 First Organizational Meeting: Tuesday, February 3rd 7:00pm Robinson. Room156 Kansas Union, Regionalist Room Contact: Jackie 843-8069 -No experience necessary! -All women welcome! Give Us A Try! Contact:KariFrederick 841-3139 6:00 pm, Kansas Union. We compete in intercollegiate Meets: Every other Wednesday, Meetings: To be announced! Contact: Kalen Gruber 843-6322 KU-VELOCYCLING CLUB KU-Velo Cycling Club focuses on Intercollegiate Road Racing and Mountain Biking! BICYCLE RIDE KU FENCING CLUB competitions! Meetings: Tuesdays:7:30-9:00pm Thursdays:8:30-10:30pm Fridays:5:30-7:00pm KU KARATE CLUB UNIVERSIDAD DE MANAGUILA DE ESPAÑA 1974-2006 Contact: Jen Snyder 841-6445 Room 130, Robinson Gym Practices: Tuesdays and Thursdays 5:30-6:30pm 刚柔流 Contact: Brad Bernet 832-2157 Learn Traditional Karate Do Gojuryu! JONATHAN HARRIS JOHN LENNARD Getting fit 9 Sponsored by KU Recreation Services 864-3546 LAKEWOOD TRIATHLON/SWIMCLUB 图示 Meetings:Swim-Robinson: Tuesdays 7:30 pm Sundays 2:00pm Thursdays 7:00pm Run-Anschutz: Wednesdays 7:30pm Sundays 10:00pm KUTAE KWON DO CLUB Mondays and Wednesdays 6:00-7:00pm 207 Robinson Instructed by: Grandmaster Choon Lee, 8th Black Master Grant 4th Black Meetings: Mondays and Wednesdays Master Grunt,4th Black Mr. Wright,2nd Black Contact: Jason Anishanslin 843-3099 Contact: Holly Perry 865-4161 Taekwondo Everyone Welcome! Classes: Mondays and Wednesdays 6:00-7:00 pm (Beginners) 7:00-8:30 pm (Advanced) Robinson Gym, Room 130 (Fee $20.00/per semester) KU KEMPO KARATE CLUB Contact: Contact: Mandana Ershadi 842-4713 © 1938 TANG KUMEN'SVOLLEYBALL Contact: Contact: Dan Kopec 843-6244 Jason Winder 832-1924 VOLLEYBALL Meetings: Thurdays Tuesdays and Show up if you are interested! KANSAS WATER POLO Robinson 7:00-9:00pm Meetings:Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Sundays 7:00 9:00am Gym (call for place of meetings) Contact:NickPiyonka 841-6197 1. Water Polo is the #1 sport in terms of overall muscular and cardiovascular conditioning. 2.Water Polo was the first Team Sport in the Olympics. 3.Water Polo has been targeted by the NCAA as an emerging sport on both the men's and women's sides. 4.No, you aren't allowed to touch the bottom. Meetings: NIPPON KENPO KARATE CLUB Meetings: Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays 4:30pm Robinson Gym, Room 207 Contact: Proven Persons 865-5709 Breven Parsons 865-5709 O C Learn sport kenpo and improve overall fitness in a friendly club atmosphere with award-winning instructor Hikaru Murata KUWOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL CLUB Robinson (North Gym) Practices; 7:00-9:00pm Tuesdays and Thursdays Contact: Sam Ghate 841-9860 KU MEN'S SOCCER Meetings:To be announced! Contacts: KipperHesse 841-6472 Brian Robey 749-9654 Mark Salisbury 841-7176 KU WOMEN'S SOCCER CLUB Informational Meeting: Informational Meeting: February 2,1994 8:30-9:30 AnschutzTrack Contact:Carrie 842-3805 Come out and play soccer for the Jayhawks! Come out and play soccer for the boys. S ( )