SPORTS: Kansas took a step back in the Big Eight race last night, losing to Missouri 79-67 on the road. Page 7.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.103.NO.93
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
KANSAS STATE
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA KS 66612
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1994
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
A one-month celebration of history
Observance of achievements starts tonight
By Denise Nell Kansan staff writer
Lisa Blair, coordinator of the Lawrence Alliance, said she hoped someday there would be no need for Black History Month.
B L A C K
H I S T O R Y
M O N T H
Blair, who will be a guest speaker at tonight's opening ceremonies of Black History Month, said she hoped that the panel discussions, guest speakers and activities put on during the month would help inform the population that the contributions of
African Americans should be recognized every day of the year.
"It's one of the few ways we're able to publicize and educate society about the successes, struggles and participation of the members of the African-American community in creating and developing the U.S. lifestyle," she said.
The Office of Minority Affairs has put together a month of activities in observance of the event, which will begin today with an opening ceremony.
my featuring a panel of guest speakers who will address the theme, "Empowering Afro-American Organizations: Present and Future."
Sherwood Thompson, director of the office of minority affairs, said tomorrow's lecture by Deborah Green, a Washington, D.C., lobbyist for democracy and human rights, would be one of the high points in the month's activities.
"Especially now with the advent of democratic elections in South Africa, it should be a timely, thought-provoking program," he said.
Karen Blackwell, Wheaton, ill, sophomore and programs director for the Black Student Union, said that Kwanzaa, a celebration of the African-American family, will take place Feb. 13-14 and 16-17. The celebration traditionally takes place during Christmas, but Blackwell said the organizers decided it would be appropriate to observe it during Black History Month.
"Black history is a part of a wellrounded education," she said. "Maybe if people know why certain things happened, we can get rid of ignorance and prejudice."
Thompson said the month's activities were designed to inform people of all races about African-American history.
"It's an opportunity to interest the non-Black community in issues of the history, life and times of Black people," he said. "One of the most difficult things we have in America as far as race relations is the inability to know about other races."
Events for this week
Tuesday, Feb.1
- Opening ceremonies and program: "Empowering Afro-American Organizations" 7 p.m., Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union Admission is free
* Film: Menace II Society 7 p.m., Kansas Union 2.50 with KUID
* Book exhibit: "Soweto Blues: Life in a South African Township"
Watson Library, Feb. 1-23 Admission is free
Wednesday, Feb. 2
*Lecture: "Women of Color: Self Image" 7 p.m., Pine Room, Kansas Union.
Admission is free.
- Lecture: "Building a U.S. Constituency for Africa" by Deborah Green, Washington, D.C., lobbyist for democracy and human rights. 4 p.m. Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union, Admission is free
- Film: Menace II Society. 7 p.m., Kansas Union. $2.50 with KUID
- Forum: "The Black Church Today: What Does it Offer the African American Students of the '90s? 7 p.m., Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union. Admission is free
- Dialogue Session: "Multiculturalism and Diversity: Bridging the Differences" 7 p.m., Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union. Admission is free
- Film: *Menace II Society*, 7 p.m., Kansas Union. $2.50 with KUID
Friday, Feb. 4
Thursday.Feb.3
- Film: Poetic Justice. 7 p.m., Kansas Union. $2.50 with KUID
Crepe paper and a card for a cashier
KANSAS
Denise Svaglic, staff manager at Wescoe Terrace, loves to serve her student customers- when she's not in Las Vegas
D
Showing off her home away from home, Denise Svaglic, Wescoe Terrace supervisor, explains that her heart is with the cafeteria.
Amv Solt / KANSAN
FACES
By Cheryl Cadue
Kansan staff writer
Style and smile served for lunch
Crepe paper, balloons and a giant card hung from the ceiling of Wescoe Terrace yesterday in celebration of the woman who runs it.
Denise Svaglic, supervisor of Wescoe Terrace, celebrated her 38th birthday with her staff and the approximately 3,000 customers who go through the cafeteria every day.
"My heart's at Wescow. That's what I try to instill in the kids who work here," said Svaglic, who started at Wescow Terrace five years ago as a part-time cashier.
"No one has to eat here, and our food is not gourmet food," she said. "But we hope you come back because you like to eat here."
Svaglia was a model for six years before she became interested in food service. At 19, she was promoted to night manager at Howard Johnson's.
"There was this policy that women could not deliver food to the room," Svagliac said. "This handicapped man couldn't leave his room, and when I asked the night manager if I could deliver his food, he said no.
"So the next day I told the district manger, and the other guy got fired, and he made me night manager."
Before coming to work at Wescoe Terrace, Svaglic owned Dee's Deli in Ottawa.
Now she said she would never leave her iob at Wesco Terrace.
For her vacations, Svaglic said she liked playing blackjack in Las Vegas.
Svaglic has three children: Justin, 20, Gwynne, 15, and Zane, 3. After leaving work, Svaglic said her first priority was spending time with her children.
Svaglic said she welcomed complaints and suggestions because she wanted everyone to feel at home in Wescoe Terrace.
"I will not come back unless I break even. I sit there all day just trying to make back what I lost," said Svaglic, who had won as much as $1,500 playing blackjack.
"One of my problems is that I want to please everyone, but you can't please everyone," she said. "I'm still going to try."
Library floors won't be part of auditorium
Reconstruction overhead limits plans for space in Hoch's blueprint for the future
By Jamie Munn
Kansan staff writer
KU's Hoch Auditorium may not get the facelift many were expecting.
Two floors of library space will be dropped from reconstruction plans to reduce costs, said Allen Wiechert. University architect.
Reconstruction bids were opened on Dec. 7 for Hoch, which was destroyed by a fire when it was struck by lightning in 1991. But the lowest bid for the project, $18.3 million, exceeded the $15 million originally budgeted for the program, making it necessary for the University to scale down its plans, said Dave Schaecher, program manager for capital projects.
He said the revised plans would be open for rebidding later this spring.
"We were discouraged," Schaechar said. "Obviously we knew we'd have to redesign and rebid."
Hopefully the new plans will allow the reconstruction to be completed under budget. he said.
Originally, two library levels were to be built beneath the service drive between Anschutz Science Library and Hoch. The space would have housed a new government documents and map library. The current library is on the sixth floor of Malott Hall.
The internal plans for Hoch still include a 1,000-seat lecture hall, two 500-seat lecture halls, four 50-seat classrooms and a large, multipurpose testing room.
However, budget problems could leave the multipurpose room without floor covering, wall finishes or ceiling tiles. Lighting will be the only fixture provided, Schaecher said.
Wiechert said reconstruction of the auditoriums and classrooms would remain as planned.
The lowestbid
for Hoch Auditorium was $3.8 million over the money budgeted for the project
project
The exterior of the building will not be altered significantly in the new plans, he said. The front facade will remain untouched, and the roof line will resemble that of the old Hoch.
Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor, said he hoped enough money would be available in the future to complete the library
"It is our hope that the bidding will be more favorable, and we will at least be able to construct a significant portion of the library space for completion later," Meyen said. "If that is not possible, the University will begin seriously to explore alternative means of meeting the space needs of the library."
Schaecher said a lower reconstruction price might allow the completion of part of the library.
"If we get good bids, we could complete a sublevels. " he said.
KU officials have reviewed construction options with Lawrence architecture firm Glenn, Livinggood and Penzler, which was part of the design team that drew up the original reconstruction plans.
Hoch's reconstruction is scheduled for completion in Fall 1996. Schaecher said.
INSIDE
Swing your partner
The Square and Ballroom Dancing class was virtually empty a few years ago. Now the popularity of country music has students two-stepping in packed classes. Page 3
Local store owners concerned about bars
City considers plan for new establishments
Pat Kelde, owner of the Raven Bookstore, 8 E. Seventh St., and president of Downtown Lawrence Inc., said that the approximately 20 restaurants and taverns that already served liquor in the downtown area contributed much to the littering and loitering on downtown streets.
The number of bars already in downtown Lawrence and the prospect of more to come has the city and some local business owners concerned.
By Cheryl Cadue
Kansan staff writer
"When you get too huge a number of people in one place, people become afraid to go to that place whether that is someone wanting to go into a store or someone just
walking down the street;" Kehde said.
The Lawrence-Douglas County Metropolitan Planning Commission decided at its Jan. 26 meeting to table an amendment that would require new bars to make 50 percent of their total receipts from food sales. The Lawrence City Commission, which initiated the amendment in November 1993, had referred it to the planning commission for further consideration.
Bobbie Flory, planning commissioner, said she wanted more information before she passed the amendment to the city commission.
"Are bars really taking over?" Flory said.
"It seems that they are, but I wanted to see numbers to back that up."
Some bar owners, however, are more concerned with the proposed food sales amendment than with crime in the area.
Jerry Neverve, owner of the Red Lyon
Neverve, whose business was robbed on Jan. 25, said the incident was an odd occurrence for a downtown business.
"There's always a problem in nightlife areas," Never said. "But at the same time, some of these problems can be taken care of by local bar owners."
Neverve said he would like to see police department figures that link increased crime and bars.
Peach Conroy, owner of The Sandbar,
117E. Eighth St., agreed that crime was not
Tavern, 944 Massachusetts St., said that he would not be able to expand his business if the amendment passed because he was worried that he would not be able to make the required 50 percent in food sales.
"It was just one of those things that occasionally happen in business," he said. "But I can't remember the last time it happened to a downtown business."
a big problem in the downtown area
"I walk down here between two and three in the morning all the time, and I do not feel uncomfortable at all," Conroy said. "The only loiterers are high school kids who park or drive up and down the street and they're of non-drinking age."
---
Conroy said she understood that the city commission did not want an area dominated by bars such as Aggieville in Manhattan to develop in Lawrence. But she said that new bars would be affected more by the amendment because she had no plans to expand.
Price Banks, city planning director, said that while no applications for new bars were pending, the number of inquiries had increased from people wanting to put in new bars, including one that would turn the vacant F. W. Woolworth Co. store, 911 Massachusetts St., into a multi-level bar.
2
Tuesday, February 1, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University Daily Kansas (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and 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,
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Jayrunners will meet to run at 7 a.m. today at Anschutz Sports Pavilion. They also will meet at 5 p.m. today at Allen Field House. For more information, call Kimberly Schober at 864-1507.
ON CAMPUS
Current Year : **Prabhu** 🏆 **Suhantree** 🏆 **Junior** 🏆 **Sadar** — I am interested in living on campus for $100.00 a week.
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.
OARS — Non-Traditional Students Organization, will have a brown-bag lunch at 11:30 a.m. today at the Rock Chalk Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Gerry Vernon at 8647317.
- Inspirational Gospel Voices will meet for choir rehearsal at 6 p.m. today at 328 Murphy Hall. For more information, call Kim at 749-3819.
KU Karate Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Brad Bernet at 832-2157.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center, will sponsor a House/Hall contacts meeting at 6:30 p.m. today at the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Rd. For more information, call Wendy Doyle at 843-0357.
KU Pro-Choice Coalition will meet at p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread. For more information, call Stephanie Gabriel at 842-6894.
Visit this campus to : DelPau University, Summer School Minimaxes, | East Jackson Blvd., Room 9109, Chicago, IL 60644-2357
The image provided does not contain any text. It appears to be a blank or empty space with no visible content.
Native American Student Association will meet at 7 tonight
KU College Republicans will sponsor a speaker, state Representative Phil Kline, at 7:30 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Leigh Smith at 832-8565.
"Windblown," the student organization sponsored by Mustard Seed Christian Fellowship, will meet at 7:30 tonight at Alcove F in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Hugh Wentz at 841-2647.
KU Fencing Club will meet at 7:30 tonight at 130 Robinson. For more information, call Jen Snyder at 841-6445.
at 3012 Haworth. For more information, call Johnnie Young at 864-4351.
KU Triathlon and Swim Club will practice at 7:30 tonight at the Robinson pool. For more information, call Sean Roland at 865-2731.
Original Klub of KU Looney Tunes (OKKLUT) will meet at 7:30 tonight at Alcove G in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Julie Dublski at 844-1233.
Christian Campus Ministries will meet for Taize Prayer at 8:30 tonight at Danforth Chapel. For more information call Leah Pede at 841-8912.
LesBiGays OK encourages everyone who is lesbian, gay, bisexual or unsure about their sexual orientation to call Headquarters at 841-2345 or KU Info at 864-3506 about confidential meetings.
WEATHER
Omaha: 23'/13'
LAWRENCE: 31'/8'
Kansas City: 28'/6'
St. Louis: 29'/9'
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 44'/26'
Chicago: 20'/1'
Houston: 54'/30'
Miami: 73'/62'
Minneapolis: 12'/9'
Phoenix: 61'/35
Salt Lake City: 37'/17
Seattle: 49'/31
TULSA: 45'/17
TODAY
30 percent chance of light snow late in the day
High: 31'
Low: 8'
Tomorrow
Flurries possible
High: 28'
Low: 8'
Thursday
Clearer and cold
High: 27'
Low: 6'
---
Clearer and cold
CORRECTION
A student in a Page 1 story in yesterday's 'Kansan' was misidentified. fied. Jennifer Olsen is a second year law student.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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groups for the "On Campus" cal-
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We sincerely invite you to join us, experiencing Chinese customs and relishing Chinese hospitality.
WHEN: 4 pm February 12 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
Celebration of Chinese New Year Festival
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, February 1, 1994
3
Class coursework keeps students on their toes
JUNE 2014
Amv Solt/ KANSAN
Debbie Zetik, Tula, Okla., sophomore, and Alex Winder, Denver senior, practice two-stepping for the class Square and Ballroom Dancing.
Country music's popularity raises class enrollment
By Roberta Johnson Kansan staff writer
More than thirty students and their partners gather in a circle. Some give their friends bewildered glances as three students demonstrate the "ten-step polka."
Heel. Toe. Ri-i-j-i-light, le-e-e-eft,
right-left.
Now it's the group's turn. One student mumbles an apology as she bumps another. A pair laughs as they attempt to keep up with a fast-paced Garth Brooks song.
The "ten-step polka" is just one of the many dances learned in one of the fastest-growing physical education classes on campus — Square and Ballroom Dancing.
Some sections of the class folded a few years ago because of lack of enrollment, said Leon Greene, associate professor of health, physical education and research.
"There were six or seven in each class," Greene said. "You can't conduct a class like that."
Greene said the class had gained
"I've learned something about Midwest American culture."
Fiona Nicholson Sydney,Australia,junior
popularity over the past year. The class now has more than 60 students in each of its three sections.
Colleen Fletcher, graduate teaching assistant in health, physical education and research, said the popularity of the class was due to the recent successes of country music and line dancing.
"The class used to be one-third country line dancing, then square and ballroom dancing," she said. "Now it's closer to one-half country line dancing."
Fletcher said she hoped line dancing would be a 90's dance trend.
'50s," she said. "If it is, fine, at least it has real rhythm."
Fletcher allows students to help teach the dances for credit. Jeremy Bezdek, Dodge City sophomore, is one of those students. He said he was taking the course to brush up on the dances he had learned at home.
"It might be like the decades of real dances — the '30s, '40s and
Bezdek said that country dancing was popular in his hometown and that he practiced the dances on weekends at the Cadillac Ranch, 2515 W. Sixth St., and at various bars in Kansas City.
Some students said they were taking the course for possible employment opportunities.
Jennifer Blase, Stillwell freshman,
said she had enrolled originally for
fun but found that the class could
help her land a summer job. She
said she would like to teach dance
at a Christian camp near Branson,
Mo.
"Ive learned something about Midwest American culture," said Fiona Nicholson, Sydney, Australia, junior.
Others said they were taking the class simply for fun.
Nicole Weigand, Wellington sophomore, said she took the class to relax.
"It's a very different class than any I've taken before," Weigand said.
Students at wit's end find buyback period extremely frustrating
A matching service could be the answer
By Heather Moore Kansan staff writer
Every semester KU students play the book buyback game. It's a race to the bookstore to get the most money back for a textbook.
William Loats, Overland Park senior, is one of those players.
"I bought the book and was told it was being revised," he said. "It's not even a book. They knew they'd get money from it. They could have made arrangements with the publisher to have it ready on time. I knew I had to have it and hoped it would be bought back."
Robert Brown, professor of mathematics, said that the reason the rough draft book was used was because the department wanted to introduce calculators into the class, and they needed a text that reflected this.
Loats also said that he didn't think it was right to pay $100 for a calculator that he would never use again.
"Texas Instruments is making money by knowing the stores don't buy back their product," he said. "Texas Instruments needs to be student-minded."
When Loats went to the bookstore, he paid $60 for a rough draft version of a book for pre-calculus 104 that no one would buy back.
Angela Sapp, employee in the art department at the Kansas Union Bookstore, said that they did not buy calculators back because they did not know what shape they would be in.
Julie Johnson, Wamego junior and industrial design major, said that there were solutions to the problem.
Teachers send title of book and
The Evolution of a Booksale
>
number of students to bookstore.
Bookstore analyzes what they need through computer records and what other stores have.
↳
Distributor receives orders from bookstores after buyback.
>
"The departments could buy the calculators back and assign them or have students check them out," she said. "The help room could have them available. If students don't return them, the price can go on their tuition bill."
"You can buy a little book for $7 and sell it back for 25 cents," he said. "Too many people—the bookstore, the University, the distributor—have to get their 2 cents' worth in, and the student gets the shaft."
The amount that a student gets back from buyback isn't enough, Loats said.
A student organization or private company could offer a variation to the buyback process, Johnson said.
"They could match students that need books with those that have them," she said. "The organization could make $2 a book, and students would still make more money."
Bill Getz, assistant manager for books at the Kansas Union Bookstore, said there were three factors that influenced how much a student will get back.
Students sell back books based on amount needed by bookstore.
"If a book is assigned for a KU class, based on a requisition, then the amount you get back is half of the new price," he said. "If a book is not adopted for a course, it would have a price
Will Gunderman/KANSAN
of less than 50 percent off the new price. If the book is an old edition, then we can't buy the book back."
Getz said that there were advantages to selling back books.
"It acts on behalf of paper conservation, and the money that we pay for books stays in the community," he said.
The type of book also influences its price, Getz said.
Getz said that students should look at bushwalk over a long period of time.
"Books for professional schools and upper level classes aren't back sold and are often worth more," he said.
at buyback over a long period of time.
"If you're dissatisfied, you have to look at the considerable savings made over the years, not just one semester," he said. "On the whole, you get a significant percentage of what you paid."
Mike Lammers, general manager of University Book Shop, 1116 W. 23rd St., said if the store received late book orders from teachers, the book wouldn't be on the list of books to buy back.
"Students have a shot to get money back, but professors have to get orders in," he said.
Lammers said that the store also must take into account what the other two stores will sell.
Watkins finance bill hangs in balance
Kansan staff writer
By Ashley Schultz Kansan staff writer
Health Center expansion plan awaits approval of full Senate
The bill asking for a separate student fee that would finance the expansion of Watkins Student Health Center may take another step toward approval at tomorrow night's full Senate meeting — or it may not.
The ice storm forecast for Wednesday and the Kansas- Oklahoma State basketball game cut into attendance, Russell said.
The Finance Committee approved the bill last Wednesday without objection and sent an amended form on for the full Senate to hear.
hear it beforehand.
Prior to that meeting, however, it went to the Rights Committee, which heard the bill for about 40 minutes, said Jeff Russell, chair of the committee. Fewer than 15 members attended the meeting, so the committee was unable to call a quorum.
He said that in order for the full Senate to hear the bill tomorrow, a vote would have to be called to pull the bill off the floor, circumventing the Rights Committee's claim to
'the bill also could be heard if StudEx decides to put it on the Senate's agenda, said Travis Harrod, StudEx committee chair.
Harrod said that although it was put on the Rights Committee's agenda Wednesday, Article 7 bills concerning restricted student fees were the sole jurisdiction of the Finance Committee.
If the bill is not presented, it will be stalled until the next Rights Committee meeting Feb. 9. The next full Senate meeting will be Feb. 16.
Watkins gets no state funding. It is supported by the $71 health fee paid by each student and by charges for services.
The expansion project cost now stands at $5,650,000.
The original bill proposed a flat fee, which would expire when the bonds are paid off in about 20 to 25 years, depending on fluctuations in the financial market.
The bill called for an additional $11 a semester fee to begin in the fall. The summer fee would have been $5.50.
Chad Taylor, Finance Committee member ad honorariums sub-committee chair, proposed changing the fee to $15 each for spring and fall and $7.50 for summer.
Savings on interest could factor into the millions, said Chad Browning, administrative assistant to Senate.
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Annual
Winter Sale
Now until the end of February
Woolrich Coats...up to 30% off
Turtles Necklace...58
Women's Clothing...20% off
Men's Clothing...20% off
Sneakers...10% off
1993 Bicycles...Closeout Prices
Winter Cycling Wear...20% off
Selected Boots...Closeout Prices
843-5000 804 Massachusetts
COUNSELING & PSYCHOLOGICAL SERVICES GROUPS
Anxiety & Stress Management-
Anxiety & Stress Management
Tuesdays 6:00-7:30pm
Body Image Education Therapy
Tuesdays 4:30-6:00pm
Body Image Education Therapy-
Tuesdays 4:30-6:00pm (beginning March 29)
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FOR MORE INFORMATION: CONTACT CAPS 864-2277
"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. Call 841-7636
Green Family Camp (Houston area)
Green Family Camp (Houston area) Jonathan Cohen will be here this Thursday in Alcove G from 10-3 to see alumni and to interview potential counselors.
TODAY KU HOMELESS COALITION
Learn about our Volunteer Projects for the spring semester!
7pm Alcove H
Third floor of Kansas Union
*If questions call Tonya 841-6185
STUDENT
SENATE
4
Tuesday, February 1, 1994
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Student Senate wrong to finance county project
Last week, Student Senate passed Bill No. 1994-078. The bill "fund[s] the Douglas County AIDS Project (DCAP)." Senate should not have given the group this money.
The problem is not whether AIDS is important. AIDS is an epidemic. The Centers for Disease Control estimate that in the United States, 1 million people are infected with the HIV virus and 339,250 people have been diagnosed with AIDS. The number is expected to be between 415.000 and 535.000 by the end of 1994.
Nor is the problem a matter of whether the Douglas County AIDS Project needs the money. DCAP's funding was decreased because less money had been coming in from the United Way and other sources.
The problem is a simple matter of jurisdiction. Senate should use the students' money for students, not for the general public that contains some students.
DCAP claims that "25 percent of the DCAP board members are KU students with an additional 25 percent being KU-affiliated, 60 percent of the volunteers are KU students." The funding was requested "in order to continue to provide its services to the community," and not KU directly. Because DCAP does not serve primarily KU students, Student Senate is not justified in financing the group.
The bill passed states that "three of the 20 on file' clients are KU-affiliated." But a main criteria for financing a particular organization is that it serves KU students, not the county.
In the future, Senate should keep the students' money for the students.
DAVID ZIMMERMAN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Two years later, Clinton 'discovers' family values
Isn't it amazing how things that go around come around? It is about time that President Bill Clinton put family values in the pulic conscience.
During the 1992 presidential campaign, George Bush, Dan Quayle and the Republican Party said that many of today's problems resulted from the collapse of the American family. They called for renewed attention toward family values.
In response, Clinton, Al Gore and the Democrats blasted back, saying that it was not a political issue and that it wasn't the government's job to promote values. The issue quickly polarized during the campaign, with the Republicans looking like moral tyrants.
Yet it was none other than President Clinton, in his State of the Union address last week, who called for a return to family values. In his address, he stated, "We have seen a stunning breakdown of community, family and work — the heart and soul of civilized society."
It is, to be sure, a good discovery for Clinton. By spending considerable time discussing values in his address to the nation, Clinton must realize their dramatic effects on society. They are at the epicenter of a wide range of domestic issues: education, crime spouse abuse, divorce, unwed mothers, teen-age pregnancy, and many more.
A return to the United States' unwritten moral code is vital to help our nation alleviate itself of these terrible social problems. Fortunately, Clinton appears ready to put the issue of family values back on the U.S. agenda and out of the endless loop of political rhetoric. Unfortunately for George Bush and Dan Quayle, Clinton had this revelation about two years too late.
RICHARD BOYD 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. Clairborn
News ...Kristi Fogler, Katie Greenwald,
Editorial ...Colleen McCain
...Nathan Gleon
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 Ebery
Regional sales mgr ... Troy Tawray
National & Co-op sales mgr ... Robin Kring
Special Sections mgr ... Shelly McConnell
Production mgr ... Laura Guth
Gretchen Koetterleinrich
Marketing director ... Shannon Reilly
Creative director ... John Carlton
Classified mgr ... Kelly Connealy
Tearshells 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 homerow, or faculty or staff position.
**Guest columns** should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The letters should receive the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Newark newspaper, 111 Staffer Flint Hall.
Fundamental Christian agenda inspires 'religious correctness'
My elementary school principal could predict the end of the world. With a King James version of the Bible in his left hand and my undivided attention in his right, he would begin each day with stories of salvation and eternal damnation.
Even as a youngster, I questioned how such疼 and angst could come from one book, one religion. I didn't dare question out loud, however. In fact, any sort of questioning only fed the growing persecution complex of my tiny Fundamental Christian school.
Spurned by mainstream Christianity, and undeterred, they have taken their message of God out of the church and into the political arena. By winning seats on local school and library boards, they have managed to alter public school curriculums, limit health education andensure
A persecution complex indeed has culminated in the hearts and minds of Fundamental Christians across the country. As a result, we see stealth political candidates and conservative legislation metamorphosed by faith rather than democratic debate.
COLUMNIST
GREG
THONEN
libraries. It is an unwavering faith, non-inclusive and apocalyptic. It is the breakdown of cultural pluralism. It is the dawn of religious correctness.
The most recent example of this persecution complex appeared in a fullpage, Jan. 16 advertisement in the Kansas City Star. The ad contained an essay by James Dobson, founder of the conservative Christian group, Focus on the Family. In his essay, entitled, "How Do Liberals Spell Relief?" Dobson castigates Liberals for being "so bankrupt that (they) can't tolerate a free and fair debate on the issues. Thus, its adherents seek to muzzle their opposition."
This censorship, Dobson claims, is
at the heart of liberal legislation to silence conservative broadcasting. Yet, when accused of running stealth political candidates in local elections, Dobson retorts, "What more can I do to get the word out? My half-hour radio program is heard 12,265 times per week, on more than 2,000 stations in Western nations. Our beliefs are clearly delineated in those programs and are well represented in magazines totaling 3 million copies every month." The breadth of exposure is hardly an example of a persecuted minority muzzled by amoral Liberals.
In an attempt to mix religion with politics, Fundamental Christians will alienate every other religious doctrine in existence. Will they let Muslims and Jews pray right next to the Christian children in public school?
The common implication throughout Dobson's essay is that the hedonistic liberal agenda must be stopped by a heavy dose of the Lord Almighty. I say let the good doctor try to prove himself. But keep this question in mind: Does religious freedom include all religions, or just the Christian, religiously correct ones?
Will they teach the Cherokee version of creation, as well as the Christian one? Will those children so inclined be able to act on the new Supreme Court ruling allowing religious animal sacrifices?
The answer to all of these questions is an emphatic no. Because Fundamental Christians so believe in their anointment by God, they have made the arrogant assumption that the First Amendment was written exclusively for them. From this religiously correct point of view, the only religion worth following is Christianity.
As I suspected during grade school, the fear and angst said more about the people running my school than it did about Christianity. Movies, lectures and daily sermons never were tempered with opposing viewpoints. Neither objectivity, nor truth was not an issue. All that was required was faith.
Although I was raised Lutheran, the message at my church was clear—“If you don't believe like me, then you're against me.”
Greg Thoren in a Kansas City, Kan. senior in Journalism and sociology.
THANKS BILL.
SEE YA' NEXT
SPEECH.
SURE, BILL.
HAVE FUN
GOVERNING.
LIBERAL
BILL
MODERATE
BILL
Night walk inspires sober thoughts
As the clock strikes one, I venture from the nearly deserted Stauffer-Flint.
COLUMNIST
The chill night air bites into my exposed face, and I pull my long overcoat tighter about my spare frame. I briefly contemplate reentering the warm sanctuary of the silent building. The click of the door locking behind me seals my fate.
Without further ado, I round the corner of the building and set off into the hostile blackness.
The wind launches a withering attack against me. Its icy fingers scrape over every patch of exposed skin. With unerring tenacity it digs and prods, finding every crevice and weakness in my winter attire.
Neither moon nor stars can part the murky waves, and I am left with the dull light of a few light posts. I miss the cheery companionship of the celestial lights on a winter's eve. The light posts offer only a depressed, leaden guidance for my wandering spirit.
Fog smothers the landscape. Campus buildings hunch under the woolen coat, glaring at me out of dark gaping eyes.
COLUMNIST
JACOB
ARNOLD
1crossJayhawkBoulevard.Normal
alive with youth, it lies there sleeping,
awaiting another day of its rowdy users.
I tread lightly, afraid to disturb its slumber. I have never seen an angry street awake, nor do I wish to.
I put on a bold face as I pass between the imposing presences of Bailey and Strong halls. A deeper chill rolls off those stone effaces. I have never been one to admit fear, not even to an inanimate object.
As I head down the hill, I feel more at home.
Trees crowd around me, familiar as old friends. They wrap the fog about them like a comfortable old cloak, worn and threadbare but familiar. Nothing needs to be said. We know what is on each other's mind.
These walks are often a time of
Or am I?
reflection for me. I sort out the day's events or plan my ordeal for tomorrow. Sometimes I think not at all, grateful just to be alone with the night.
I hear a noise muffled by the fog. Is it a roving dog or a far more dangerous predator?
My eyes play tricks on me. Is that a branch stirred by the wind, or an assailant stirred by greed?
In Lawrence, I have no real fear of walking alone, even though I have been harassed a few times. Yelled threats from drunken frat boys in speeding cars do me no real harm. My long hair seems to draw unwanted attention, especially from Lawrence police. Still, I have never endured a serious assault. A creature of the night, I feel at home in the shadows.
The broad expanse of the stadium parking lot stretches before me, a concrete plain strewn with metal concealment.
These nightly strolls with only the wind for conversation that I so highly prize are a fearful undertaking for many. Large percentages of the population are denied this simple pleasure.
In any but the smallest towns, it is
dangerous for women to walk alone at night. Evil men have denied women the tranquility of a walk with only the night for company.
In many cities it has become equally hazardous for men to venture out unprotected. In my hometown, Wichita, I no longer dare to walk the streets alone. Vivid experience has taught me otherwise. Even numbers are no guarantee. One gun can hold many bullets.
Our society sinks farther into warlike conditions every day. Women need escorts, preferably big ones. Men need weapons or a supporting unit. Cars serve as our armored transports. Heavily armed guerrilla bands terrorize the cities while lone assailants threaten to strike anywhere. It is a sad commentary on a so-called civilized society.
I suppose one day I will have to give up my solitary walks. Hopefully it will not take a painful lesson to teach me.
I hunch further into my collar and pull my cap low over my eyes, trying to appear more sinister than a sinister world.
Jacob Arnold is a Wichita junior in Journalism.
KU needs a new degree to teach "victimhood"
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
In addition to eliminating several degree programs, the University needs to consider the addition of new degree programs in order to fulfill the educational needs of our society. These new programs should empower individuals to take advantage of job opportunities in new, growing fields.
One of the new vocations emerging in our society is that of the professional victim. This innovative profession demands excellent acting skills and the ability to make
loud demands, but the opportunities abound! For example, the recent trials of Lorenna Bobbitt and the Menendez brothers have demonstrated that when a person can successfully assume the victim's role, he or she can malm and kill with impunity! Furthermore, professional victims can obtain high-paying jobs and admission to prestigious schools without earning them through the hard work that is required of non-victims!
It is for these reasons that I propose the University offer the Bachelor of Science in Victimhood (BSV). This program will teach students
Longer skirts from 40s not that long after all
how to achieve victim status, and how to use it to further themselves once they have it. There's a new way to get ahead in our society, and KU has an educational obligation to teach students how to use it.
Derek Shirk Iola senior
In reference to the issue of the Kansan dated Jan. 26, 1994, page 9,
"Sports Scrapbook," perhaps the
skirt-length of the 1940's cheerleader appears long to those accustomed to today's brief outfits. However, if you look closely you will see that the skirt is only knee-length a la WWII styles. You also are seeing the gracefulness of a pleated skirt which follows the person's body and movements. When the cheerleader stood, the skirt hem was near the kneepc but out of the way when she knelt. Also, her collar has points, which Webster's Unabridged Dictionary shows as "Etonian."
E. G. Green
Lawrence resident
K
103
NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, February 1, 1994
5
North Korea warns U.S. to drop Patriot missile
The Associated Press
TOKYO — North Korea warned yesterday it may nullify promises to accept some nuclear inspections unless the United States drops plans to put Patriot anti-missile batteries in South Korea.
The resistance of North Korea's hard-line Communist government to nuclear inspections has increased suspicions that it is trying to develop atomic weapons. The North Koreans deny doing so, saying their nuclear program has only peaceful purposes.
For a second straight day, North Korea's official news media strongly criticized U.S. plans disclosed last week to send Patriot batteries to South Korea to defend against a possible North Korean rocket attack.
"We are prepared either for dialogue or for a war," an unidentified representative for North Korea's
Bosnian Serbs announce plans for a new draft
The representative said the United States also had stepped up espionage against North Korea and called the moves "premeditated provocative maneuvers which will bring the situation of the Korean Peninsula to an extremely reckless phase of war."
North Korea announced in March that it was withdrawing from the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty, but suspended that move to negotiate with the United States over nuclear inspections.
[9]
committee for reunification with South Korea said in a report carried by the Korean Central News Agency. The report was monitored in Tokyo.
The newspaper of North Korea's ruling party denounced the Patriot plan in a similarly worded statement Sunday.
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia — Bosnian Serbs announced a new call-up of men and women yesterday to prepare for more fighting, reflecting their failure to force Bosnia's Muslim-led government to accept defeat.
The Associated Press
"The Muslims don't want peace because of the support they are getting from Washington and other centers of power," the speaker of the Bosnian Serb assembly, Moncillo Krajlik, told a local radio station.
The U.N. agency says North Korea has balked at procedures the agency considers necessary.
In a telephone interview, the Bosnian Serbs' defense minister, Gen. Dusan Kovacevic, accused Western nations of "supporting the continuation of the war rather than a peaceful settlement in Bosnia."
While the extent of mobilization could not be determined, it seemed to stem from the stubborn resistance of increasingly aggressive Bosnian government troops and fears that the West might intervene on behalf of the Muslims.
Drug use, smoking rising among teens
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Smoking and drug use among American teen-agers are increasing after a decade of decline, a study showed yesterday, and its author warned that "the stage is set for a potential resurgence of cocaine and crack use."
University of Michigan researchers said they noticed a relaxing of attitudes about the dangers of drugs among eighth-, 10th- and 12th-graders in a yearly survey.
The study found a three or four percentage-point rise in the last year or two among students who reported any use of marijuana in the previous 12 months.
After falling from favor in the last 15 years, LSD use has been increasing gradually and there has been a rise in
the use of inhalants like glues, solvents and aerosols.
The Michigan researchers surveyed 51,000 high school and eighth-grade youths in more than 400 schools.
Among other findings:
Sixty-seven percent of eighth-graders, 81 percent of 10th-graders and 87 percent of 12th-graders have tried alcohol.
Fourteen percent of eighth-graders, 23 percent of 10th-graders and 28 percent of 12th-graders admitted to binge drinking (five or more drinks in a row) in the previous two weeks.
Only 53 percent of eighth-graders see a great risk in smoking a pack or more of cigarettes a day. But 70 percent of seniors saw that as a great risk.
Only 36 percent of the eight-
graders, 30 percent of the 10th-
graders and 22 percent of the 12th-
graders perceive great risk in trying marijuana once or twice.
Thirty-one percent of the seniors said they had used an illicit drug in the last 12 months; 17 percent had used an illicit drug other than marijuana.
Two percent of the 12th-graders said they smoked marijuana daily. One percent of the 10th-graders and less than one-half of 1 percent of the eighth-graders did.
Thirteen percent of the eighthgraders said they had tried marijuana sometime in their lifetime; 24 percent of the 10th-graders and 35 percent of the 12th-graders had used it.
Three percent of eighth-graders, 4 percent of 10th-graders and 6 percent of 12th-graders said they had tried cocaine in the past year, which reflects only a small change from 1992.
Computer trade-up coming soon!
The Campus Software Set for Macintosh.
Get inspired!
The Macintosh PowerBook 165 4/160 gives you the power and portability to work wherever you feel most creative. Whether it be the Campanile hill or the courts of Robinson, the PowerBook 165 can accommodate to your every whim without compromising the power and convenience you've come to expect from Macintosh. And now the Union Technology Center wants to help because they are offering an inspiring new deal They have the Macintosh 165 with ClarisWorks, the Campus Software Set. and a StyleWriter II printer all for only
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MEET
Bob Eye,
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.
KANSAS WATER POLO CLUB
KANSAS WATERLOO CLUB
TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY & SUNDAY
7:00 P.M. TO 9:00 P.M. ROBINSON NATATORIUM
SOME SWIMMING ABILITY RECOMMENDED NO WATER POLO SKILL REQUIRED FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE CALL:
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NICK PIVONKA: 841-6197
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Suspenders: red, white, heart
Pantyhose: red, heart
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Valentine cards, stickerbooks
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health
Naturally healthy?
Organic treatments are becoming popular among students. But are these miracle cures as effective as they claim to be?
Melissa Lacey / KANSAN
ZAND
GOLDENSEAL
SOW
INACEA
TRACT
Organic healing products, including liquid herbal extracts, roots and vitamins, are popular dietary supplements for some students.
By Cathleen Siechta Kansan staff writer
Purple cone flower root, that is.
During the winter season, some students are inspired to go back to their roots.
The purple cone flower root, also known as Echinacea, is a liquid herbal extract that can be used as a boost to the immune system.
Echinacea and other organic healing products are becoming popular among students, despite the Food and Drug Administration's growing concern about the "natural cure" claims of vitamins, minerals and other natural substances.
"We sell tons of goldenseal extract to students during the cold and flu season," said Peter Schultz, vitamin and herb manager of Wild Oats Community Market, 1040 Vermont. "It's a natural antibiotic herb, and many people like that. In fact, I'm a little stuffy, and I'm taking some right now."
Schultz said that goldenseal extract was more effective than penicillin for illnesses because it was a natural antibiotic, not a man-made drug.
"Penicillin is really almost worthless," he said. "The strains of viruses today are basically immune to it. Doctors hand out too many prescriptions for penicillin over and over and over again until it's just not effective anymore.
"Seventy years ago we didn't have any of these man-made drugs. People used natural methods of healing. They either took some purple cone root, or they had some guy make up a healing concoction of herbs."
But Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins Health Center, said health has never been dependent on organic cures.
"If people that lived 100 to 150 years ago were healthy, it was because they
got their nutrition from food," Yockey said. "In general, people who eat a well-balanced diet are going to get all the vitamins and minerals they need. I don't know why some people try to make simple nutrition too complex."
In fact, claims against modern medicine can be dangerous, Yockey said.
"There are many dangers in overdoing it with vitamins," he said. "Many mineral supplements are not manufactured correctly. If you buy pills from a company you've never heard of, you don't know if they made the stuff in mufflers in their garage."
Tom Hitchcock, executive secretary of the Kansas Board of Pharmacy, said that in addition to faults in manufacturing, non-repuiteable companies also
made claims that their pills and treatments could cure ailments. These companies often offer no proof or documentation to back up these claims.
"The American public is so gullible that they will buy anything," Hitchcock said. "The FDA's attempts to put tighter restrictions on claims in vitamin labeling are no different than any other FDA restrictions. It's all about truth in advertising and protecting the public."
Hal Sears, herb and vitamin buyer at Community Mercantile, 901 Mississippi, said that even though he sold mass quantities of herbs and vitamin supplements, he realized the risks of making "miracle drug" claims.
"You have to be careful not to really prescribe anything." Sears said. "We
can't be construed as someplace to go instead of getting medical help.
"If people come in and ask questions about what to take, we'll tell them about the traditional uses of roots and herbs. If someone wants to fortify their immune system, we can suggest Echinacea. If someone needs a vitamin supplement, we can show them some good ones. But mostly people come in and know what they want. They read about natural healing and come in to trade information with us. But we can't be seen as a replacement for modern medicine."
Still, some people use herbs and supplements for just that.
"I take goldenseal extract when I'm sick," said Mike Maher, Lawrence resident. "It cleans out your system and gets your poisons out. Besides, going to the doctor is just too expensive."
Keith Miller, professor of human development and family life, sometimes takes micro algae for a few months at a time.
"It soothes the intestines," Miller said. "And its molecules are almost identical to blood molecules, so it's also a good blood builder."
But Yockey had a different opinion about algae, alfalfa and seaweed treatments.
"That stuff works if you have five stomachs," Yockey said. "But it's just not made for humans. The bottom line is that you shouldn't take anything you don't need."
Yockey said the worst and most common abuse of vitamins was substituting them for food.
"If you go and stand in a health food store for 15 minutes, you'll see some of the sickest people there are," he said. "They're scrawny and puny because they're just not eating right, and they don't realize that vitamins can't replace a nutritious diet."
Living choices affect drinking choices
Studies show that where students live can affect how much and how often they consume alcohol.
By Kevin Hoffmann
Kansan staff writer
College students stereotypically drink alcohol.
In part, the stereotype of college students as heavy drinkers is true.
But studies show that where students live can determine how much and how often.
Research confirms that alcohol consumption is prevalent even among KU students.
According to a 1991 study by the National Counsel for Alcohol and Drug Information, U.S. college students consume over 430 million gallons of alcohol per year, enough alcohol to fill an Olympic-sized swimming pool for every college and university in the United States.
in random surveys performed in 1988 and 1992, 90% of the 1,000 KU students questioned for each survey said they drank alcohol.
But researchers suspect that a student's living environment may play a role in the amount and frequency of alcohol consumption.
A study released by the University of Indiana in Jan. 1991 showed that students who lived on college campuses in university-, fraternity- or sorority-sponsored housing consumed more alcohol than students who lived off campus.
Researchers have cited several reasons for this. One reason may be the social nature of alcohol consumption.
Because students who live on campus reside with more people than those living off campus, the opportunity to be invited out for a drink is greater.
Another reason may be a greater amount of peer pressure.
A study conducted by the Department of Psychology at the University of California-Los Angeles indicates that pressure to drink among students in on-campus housing is far greater than among students living off campus.
Some researchers believe that heavier drinking among students
who live in university housing may be influenced by the fact that alcohol is prohibited on most college campuses.
The UCLA study shows that students who are forbidden to drink in their living environments may be more apt to drink heavily when
participating in alcohol awareness programs that educate their members to drink responsibly.
In the Sept. 5, 1993, edition of the Atlanta Constitution, Drew Hunter, executive director of the BACCHUS
Students who lived on college campuses...consumed more alcohol than students who lived off campus.
Studies also show that living in a fraternity or sorority house may increase the likelihood of frequent and heavy alcohol consumption.
- Boost Alcohol Consciousness Concerning the Health of University Students - and GAMMA - Greeks Advocating Mature Management of Alcohol - Network in Denver, said
the opportunity arises.
According to an article in the March 10, 1993, edition of the Washington Post, fraternity and sorority members are more than twice as likely to "binge drink" than students who don't belong to a fraternity or sorority.
Many fraternities and sororites are attempting to change the image they have of encouraging heavy and frequent alcohol consumption by
greek organizations were working to improve their images where alcohol consumption is concerned.
"Positive changes are taking place at the hands of the students," he wrote. "Through concentrated efforts by national fraternities and sororites and programs such as GAMMA, student members are having a profound influence on their peers when it comes to preventing alcohol abuse."
Tonya Cole, Arkansas City, Kan., junior and head of the Student Advisory Board, said she felt members of the greek system were incorrectly stereotyped.
"A lot of people think they always have kegs and that they drink every chance they get," the student senator and Alpha Omicron P soriority member said. "I think alcohol consumption among Greeks and nongreeks is about the same if you look at it.
One reason for the stereotype may be that fraternities and sororities are a visible part of campus life, Cole said, and therefore more likely to be stereotyped.
Cole also pointed out that KU's greek community was working to battle those stereotypes.
"They've passed a few measures to try and break the stereotype such as participating in P.A.R.T.Y. (Promote Alcohol Responsibility Through You), where the focus is on drinking responsibly," she said. "I also think each individual fraternity and sorority is trying to keep outlandish drinking habits down."
Some students however, feel that membership in sororites and fraternities does impact drinking.
Katie Hand, Lake Forest, III, senior and a former sorority member, said she felt the Greek community unintentionally puts pressure on members to drink.
"The people you are around in that kind of environment place more peer pressure on you to drink," Hand said. "I'm not sure if its just the way people feel or actual actions, but I don't feel as pressured to drink now that I'm living off campus."
Molly DiZerega, Englewood Colo., senior and also a former sorority member, said her drinking habits changed when she moved off campus.
"I just didn't feel the urge to drink as often as I used to," she said. "Back then someone was always wanting to go out. It sort of makes me feel old now."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
FEBRUARY 1, 1994 PAGE 6
KULife
your guide to Entertainment in the Lawrence Area.
LEAD STORY
Reuters News Service reported in December that a 72-year-old retired gardener in England was credited with self-diagnosis of a tear in his bladder. The man diagnosed his condition by urinating into a plant pot; eventually a tomato plant sprouted. Doctors said that that indicated a leakage - in this case, of microscopic tomato seeds - between his bowel and his bladder.
CLICHES COMETO LIFE
-David Blake, 22, suffered a broken leg and hip and internal injuries in Toronto in September when he jumped from a fifth-floor balcony. Blake had been naked with his girlfriend in her room in her family's home when her father discovered them. Allegedly, he forced Blake at knife-point out onto the balcony and made him jump.
-USA Today reported in October that Florida Wildlife Park officials planned to set up mirrors around six Caribbean flamingos because they believed flamingos were more sexually excitable when in a group.
-In a report in the August Archives of Dermatology, a 39-year-old woman in Cleveland was reported to have the first adult case of "acquired uncombable hair," which produces permanently coarse, tangled hair. Her condition was attributed to a side-effect of a diuretic.
-The Associated Press reported in December that University of Wisconsin dairy geneticist Denny Funk told Midwest farmers that one reason their milk production had fallen behind that of California is that Midwest farmers had a fondness for keeping better-looking cows around, even if they produced less milk.
CREME DE LA WEIRD
- In November, the St. Thomas Day Nursery in St. Thomas, Ontario, was burglarized for at least the fourth time in five months by someone stealing only dirty disposable diapers. The culprit broke a lock in an outside garbage bin and took only garbage bags containing the diapers.
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SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, February 1, 1994
7
Missouri defense shuts down Kansas
Tigers take a commanding conference lead with victory
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
COLUMBIA, Mo.- An unlikely Missouri player helped end a six-game losing streak against Kansas with a 79-67 upset last night at the Hearnes Center.
No, it was not Missouri senior guard Melvin Booker. Although he led the team with 16 points, it was below his average of 18.2 points a game.
The defeat dropped No. 3 Kansas' record to 19-3 overall and 4-2 in the conference, while No. 20 Missouri solidified its lead in the conference at 15-2 and 6-0.
It was not senior center Jevon Crudup, who has the Big Eight Conference's ninth best shooting percentage. He shot a dismal four for 12 and ended with 14 points.
Instead, it was junior forward Lamont Frazier who surprised Kansas with 13 points, five rebounds and five assists. Frazier had previously averaged 7.5 points a game.
"I think Lamont really gave them some scoring and leadership in the first half," Kansas coach Roy Williams. "Missouri's a club that's got
five, six and seven guys that can score. It was just a tough night for us."
Missouri coach Norm Stewart gave a lot of credit to Frazier in the Tigers victory. It was Missouri's first victory against Kansas in seven consecutive meetings.
"It was his best game as a Tiger," Stewart said. "He gave us a start early on. Defensively he knows the game, and his experience has added to it."
This is the first time this season that Kansas has lost on the road. The Jayhawks were coming off an 87-53 victory Saturday at Colorado, and Williams said that he knew two road games during a three-day span would be tough.
"I was concerned about it, but that was not an excuse," he said. "They outplayed us."
Williams said the Jayhawks' defense, usually their strong point in games, did not plav up to its potential.
"The key to the game was that their defense was better than our defense," Williams said. "They were by far the more active team tonight."
Kansas fell behind early in the first half when Booker and Crudup doube-treated Kansas freshman guard Jacque Vaughn in the back court. The plan caused two turnovers and the Tigers went on a 6-2 run.
Although the Tigers did score points off eight Kansas turnovers, the Jayhawks were able to answer Missouri's runs with outside shooting by Kansas senior guard Steve Woodberry and sophomore forward Sean Pearson. However, Kansas only shot 30 percent from the field. Missouri held on to a 34-29 lead at halftime. Pearson finished with nine points, while Woodberry led all scorers with 19.
Pearson said the second half was a different story for his shooting.
"I wasn't pleased personally," he said. "They picked up their defense a little bit, and I think we were trying to go inside more.
"We weren't as aggressive as they were. We made a run, but they hung on."
Kansas started the second half with a 13-6 run, capped off by a jump shot from the left side from Kansas junior center Greg Ostertag. Missouri would not crack though, and Williams noticed that.
"They're an_experienced team." Williams said. "The leadership was important to them because they were not alarmed when we made our run."
Stewart said he was happy with his team's performance.
"I think our ball club came back realy strong and withstood the run they made," he said. "We were very intent from the start defensively."
"It's just that he's mentally tough enough to say that, 'I can try to do it,'" Williams said. "They were aiming their defense at Steve, and yet our offense was still going to him. I'd like to have five guys that can score, but I don't. We aren't a bad basketball team."
As Kansas tried to come back from a 69-56 deficit late in the game, Woodberry frequently got the ball from his teammates. Williams said that Woodberry wanted the ball.
Williams said that the season was not lost after last night's defeat.
"Missouri is in the driver seat now, but there is still the second half of the season to go," he said. "Hopefully we will be able to have a meaningful game when they come to Lawrence."
MISSOURI 79 KANSAS 67
KANSAS (19-3, 4-2)
Player fgm/fga ftm/ta tp
Woodberry 7-16 3-4 19
Scott 3-3 0-5 6
Ostertag 5-9 3-4 13
Vaughn 2-5 2-2 7
Richey 7-8 10
Williams 0-1 0-0 0
Pollard 1-4 1-1 3
Pearson 4-8 1-2 9
Rayford 0-4 0-0 0
Gurley 0-3 0-0 0
Weichbrodt 0-0 0-0 0
Totals 23-60 17-26 67
MISSOURI (15-2, 6-0)
Crupid 4-12 6-8 14
Winfield 1-2 0-0 2
Thames 5-11 4-4 14
Booker 4-13 8-9 16
Frazier 5-7 3-4 13
Atkins 0-3 3-4 3
O'Liney 4-8 3-5 13
Finner 1-3 0-0 2
Heller 1-1 0-0 2
Sutherland 0-0 0-0 0
Totals 25-60 27-34 79
Halftime Missouri 34, Kansas 29 point
goals Kentucky 4,14 (Woodberry 2,6, Vaughn
1,3, Richey 1,3, Pearson 0,2, Rayford 0,1,
Gurley 0,3) Missouri 1,28 (Oline 2,4,
Kearney 1,1) Missouri 1,28 (Oline 2,4,
Missouri 1,28 (Oline 2,4)
Ostertagt 8), Missouri 38 (Crudp 6)
Anaconda Kansas 12 (Vaughn 6), Missouri
12 (Frazier 5) Total fouls Kansas 25, Missouri
24 Attendance 13,349
Lawrence senior heading for Kansas
By Andrew Gilman Kansan sportswriter
Sitting in the bleachers in the high school gym and putting a baseball cap on his head, Jason Thoren puts football into perspective.
Football is football, whether it be high school or college, he explained.
That's how Thoren, a 6-foot-2, 215 pound Lawrence High School senior puts it, as he remembers his high school success and looks to his future
at Kansas.
Thoren has made a verbal commitment to play for the Jayhawks. The signing period begins tomorrow.
Thoren, who played on three state championship teams for the Lions.
Jason Thoren
gained more than 1,200 yards rushing as a senior. He also was named the most valuable player in the Kansas City metro area.
"He's a guy we're definitely going to miss next year," Lawrence football coach Dick Purdy said.
Although he has accomplished more running the ball, Thoren, who also has played linebacker, will focus his attention on stopping the ball for the Jayhawks.
"That's one of the reasons I came to Kansas," he said. "A lot of other
schools wanted me to run the ball."
Thoren was recruited by Kansas State, Missouri, Boston College and Arkansas mainly for running, but he preferred defense.
"I wanted to be a linebacker," Thoren said. "I remember going to Lawrence football games watching Charlie and Clint (Bowen) and seeing them at KU. I've always wanted to play for them."
Although he was heavily recruited, his role at Kansas has yet to be determined.
Kansas coach Glen Mason was unable to comment under NCAA rules. Mason cannot talk about players until he receives a written commitment.
"I doubt I'll play my first year," Thoren said. "I'll just try to learn from the guys that are there."
Thoren also will be adjusting to playing in front of crowds of up to 60,000 people instead of 6,000.
"It'll be different," he said. "I'm sure that I'll be in awe the first time I walk into Memorial Stadium."
For now, Thoren is content on enjoying his senior year and remembering his days at Lawrence.
"The most memorable part is winning the state championship my senior year," he said. "We all worked so hard."
"I just have to wait and see," he said. "I really don't know what to expect. I just want to go out there and play."
Kansas and Thoren may be a perfect match.
[Image of three silhouetted figures standing behind a railing, facing each other.]
Tom Leininger / KANSAN
Let the games begin
AP Top 25
Stacy Feldman, Buffalo Grove, III., sophomore; Adam Shaf, Highland Park, III., freshman; and Wes Friedman, Wilmette, III., freshman, watch one of the first games of the intramural basketball season at Robinson Center. The Air Up There defeated Almost Anything 52-34 during yesterday's game. Yesterday was the first day for intramural basketball.
Intramural basketball includes three weeks of regular season games followed by a single elimination tournament. Teams with names such as The Aerial Display, What's an Icthus?, Body Fat, Stephenson Vertical Burrito and Harding's Hitmen, will compete for the championship in 10 different divisions of play. Each team is guaranteed at least four games, and the divisions include men's, women's and co-rete teams.
The Kansas men held their ground in the poll at No. 3 despite a blowout victory Saturday day at Colorado.
Others receiving votes: Marquette 131, Xavier, Ohio 116, West Virginia 103, Illinois 53, Boston College 47, Georgia Tech 22, Virginia 17, Mississippi St. 13, Alabama 9, mississippi 9, Penn 9, Texas 7, Michigan 6, Brigham Young 5, Kansas St. 5, Oklahoma St. 4, Tulsa 4, Washington St. 3, DePaul 1, Miami, Ohio 1, Oklahoma 1, Providence 1, SW Louisiana 1.
Source: The Associated Press KANSAN
AP Top 25
rank team record pts. pts. pr
Record Pts Pts
1. Duke (51) 15-1 1,587 2
2. UNC (3) 17-1 1,429 4
3. Kansas (2) 19-2 1,425 3
4. UCLA (1) 14-1 1,401 1
5. U Conn.(7) 18-1 1,358 6
6. Arkansas 18-1 1,293 5
7. Kentucky 16-3 1,170 9
8. Purdue 17-2 1,088 7
9. Louisville 16-2 1,074 12
10. Temple 13-2 1,072 10
11. U Mass. 13-2 997 8
12. Arizona 16-3 944 13
13. Michigan 13-4 799 15
14. Indiana 12-4 796 11
15. Syracuse 13-3 582 14
16. Wisconsin 13-3 540 16
17. Ala.-Birm. 13-2 502 20
18. St. Louis 16-1 361 23
19. California 16-1 338 —
20. Missouri 14-2 328 24
21. Maryland 12-4 313 18
22. Minnesota 14-6 305 17
23. New Mex. St. 16-1 204 25
24. Florida 16-3 188 —
25. Cincinnati 14-5 138 —
The Kansas women moved past Colorado after two victories last week. The Jayhawks face the Bufaloes Friday in Boulder.
rank team record pts. pr
| Record | Pts | Pv |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 1. Penn State (61) | 16-0 | 1,740 1 |
| 2. Tenn. (9) | 18-1 | 1,686 2 |
| 3. UNC | 17-1 | 1,546 5 |
| 4. Texas Tech | 16-2 | 1,485 6 |
| 5. Southern Cal | 15-1 | 1,409 8 |
| **6. Kansas** | **18-1** | **1,403 7** |
| 7. Colorado | 16-3 | 1,379 3 |
| 8. Iowa | 13-2 | 1,309 4 |
| 9. Connecticut | 15-2 | 1,112 11 |
| 10. Virginia | 15-2 | 1,057 12 |
| 11. Vanderbilt | 15-4 | 1,053 9 |
| 12. Purdue | 15-3 | 967 13 |
| 13. Louis, Tech | 13-3 | 891 14 |
| 14. Stanford | 11-5 | 810 10 |
| 15. Alabama | 15-3 | 785 15 |
| 16. Florida Int. | 15-1 | 709 16 |
| 17. Washington | 15-3 | 597 18 |
| 18. Seton Hall | 16-2 | 446 22 |
| 19. Rutgers | 16-3 | 288 25 |
| 20. Auburn | 13-5 | 272 23 |
| 21. Boise State | 15-3 | 245 21 |
| 22. Ohio State | 11-6 | 231 17 |
| 23. Montana | 15-1 | 199 20 |
| 24. S. Miss. | 15-1 | 198 — |
| 25. W. Kentucky | 13-5 | 164 24 |
Others receiving votes: Toledo 117;
Florida 98; Northwest 97; N. Illinois 80; Indiana 65; Brighton 60;
Texas 55; Mississippi 317; ULM 25;
Hawaii 17; Texas A&M 15; New Mexico St. 14; Oklahoma St. 14; UCLA 14;
Georgia 13; San Diego St. 9; SW Missouri St. 8; George Washington 7;
Notre Dame 7; NW Louisiana 6; Pittsburgh 5; Ala.-Birmingham 4; Oregon 3;
Minnesota 2; Oklahoma 2
Source: The Associated Press KANSAN
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KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Although several Big Eight teams have been slumping, the conference as a whole is punishing outsiders at a near-record clip.
The Associated Press
Tonight Naked Soul 25¢ draws
An 82-18 mark against non-Big Eight teams computes to a winning percentage of 82 percent, best in the nation going into last night's games. It's the second-best in conference annals, trailing only 1990-91 when the Big Eight was 97-13.
Wednesday Ricky Dean Sinatra Lonesome Hobos
But the irony is the surprisingly poor records of home teams. So far this season, road teams are 11-9. Last year, Big Eight teams were 18-38 away from home.
One team hoping desperately to continue this weird run by visitors is Nebraska. The Huskers (12-5, 2-3) are coming off a home loss to Oklahoma and haven't been shooting well anywhere, especially in their own arena.
"We're shooting the ball poorly from the 3-point line and from the field. That's the big statistic we see." coach
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Danny Nee said yesterday during the weekly Big Eight coaches 'teleconference.' "I have to hope it's a slump that we can turn around. We have to turn it around. We have to make that shot if we're going to be effective."
The Huskers are off until they visit Kansas on Sunday to begin a stretch where they play four of five away from home.
"We knew coming in this was the toughest part of the season, and we really put ourselves behind the eight ball." Nee said.
Oklahoma, on the other hand, feels as if it's docking after a lengthy sea voyage.
The Sooners are home for a while after a 41-day stretch in which they played in friendly Lloyd Noble Center only three times.
"We came through it with a good attitude and a bright outlook," coach Billy Tubbs said. "That was the whole key. The won-loss record is important. But our physical and mental state was more important."
"The biggest complaint I have is it's my life," he said. "It's the rest of the coaches' lives. It's extremely important to the players. Yet it just a hobby for the officials. If they would continue putting in time looking at their own tapes, it would help officiating a great deal. I hope they're taking it seriously enough to continue doing that."
No. 3 Kansas boarded the team bus to Columbia for yesterday's game against Missouri just as the Super Bowl started Sunday. Coach Roy Williams didn't care. He's a one-sport man since watching the New York Jets upset Baltimore in Super Bowl III.
But it soon became apparent his players weren't so uninterested. So a radio was produced.
Tubbs, who traditionally takes a back seat to no one in his zeal to correct officials, said: "Let me put it this way. I have not had any contact with our conference office, period. By phone, by letter, by anything, about officiating. And I will not even go into why I haven't."
"I've usually written a book by now." Missouri's Norm Stewart noted he wasn't allowed to comment.
On another topic, most of the coaches quickly passed on the opportunity even to say something positive about officiating in the league.
"We did find it on the radio and listened to most of it on the way over," Williams said.
"If you think about some of the things we can't comment on today, it really makes you wonder," Stewart said.
Big Eight coaches are strictly prohibited — under threat of fines — to criticize officials. But what's a guy to do when asked if he agrees officiating in the Big Eight is improving?
A couple took a swipe at a question they probably would love to expound
on in detail — if only it were allowed. "It's improving. I hope it continues to improve," Williams said.
league overall
Missouri 6 0 15 2
Kansas **4** 2 **19** 2
Oklahoma 3 2 11 2
Kansas St. 3 3 14 4
Oklahoma St. 2 3 13 6
Nebraska 2 3 12 5
Colorado 1 4 9 8
Iowa St. 0 5 9 6
| Kansas | 7 | 0 | 16 | 1 |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Colorado | 5 | 2 | 16 | 3 |
| Oklahoma St. | 4 | 3 | 12 | 5 |
| Oklahoma | 3 | 3 | 11 | 6 |
| Kansas St. | 3 | 4 | 9 | 8 |
| Nebraska | 2 | 4 | 11 | 9 |
| Missouri | 1 | 5 | 7 | 11 |
| Iowa State | 1 | 5 | 6 | 12 |
Men
Women
Big Eight standings
The Associated Press
Harding's name still on Olympic roster
PORTLAND, Ore. — Tonya Harding's name was on the U.S. Olympic roster sent to Norway yesterday, a day before her ex-husband was to plead guilty in the Nancy Kerrigan attack and a figure skating panel would meet to discuss Harding's role in it.
Jeff Gilleoly, Harding's live-in exhusband at the time of the Jan. 6 assault, will enter a plea and make a statement today, his lawyer said. A published report said Gilleoly told authorities that Harding approved of the plot from the start and helped carry it out.
by the U.S. Figure Skating Association to consider whether Harding should remain on the Olympic team meets for the first time today in Colorado Springs, Colo. A prosecutor indicated that the Harding investigation may not be completed before the final women's figure skating roster is set on Feb. 21.
Prosecutors said they would release portions of Harding's Jan. 18 interview with authorities in which she implicated Gillow, today.
Philip Knight, chief executive officer of Nike, announced that the athletic shoe and apparel company will contribute $25,000 to help Harding defend herself if the U.S. Olympic Committee attempts to remove her from the team before she is found guilty or innocent in the Kerrigan case.
"It could be days, it could be weeks," said Multnomah County deputy district attorney Norm Frink, "I'd put the emphasis on weeks."
The five-member panel appointed
"Nike's interests are the athletes' interests," he said. "Any time we have a situation where we have an athletic bureauracy against the athlete, we take the case of the athlete."
really proud if it let the justice system run its course and let Tonya Harding skate until proven guilty. "Knight said.
The attack was to have occurred in Kerrigan's room, according to the report, but that part of the plan fell
"I think the USOC would do itself
Knight said his company would take a stand even though Harding has no connection with Nike.
Gilooily said in his confession that Harding had obtained Kerrigan's room number at the hotel where the skaters were staying during the national championships in Detroit, the Oregonian said.
Harding, meanwhile, while training for the Winter Games, fell six times during practice.
through, and Kerrigan instead was struck on the right leg after a workout at an arena.
Harding, who has not been charged, has denied that she had anything to do with planning the attack. She said last week that she learned that those around her were involved in the assault only after she returned to Portland Jan. 10. She admitted that she did not tell authorities what she knew at first.
A source said that the Westin Hotel clerk who allegedly gave Harding the room number has been brought to Portland, where a grand jury is investigating the case.
said the USOC is "prepared under its constitutional procedures to initiate any action deemed appropriate relative to the conduct of any athlete now entered in the Games."
Harding's name was on the list of 12 figure skaters submitted by the U.S. Olympic Committee yesterday to the Lillehammer Olympic Organizing Committee, but a statement from executive director Harvey Schiller
The special panel appointed by the figure skating association to investigate whether Harding's membership in the association should be revoked, a prerequisite to removal from the Olympic team, is scheduled to meet today, Friday and Saturday.
Judy Snyder, law partner to Gillooly's attorney Ron Hoevet, said yesterday that Gillooly will plead guilty to one count of racketeering.
As part of a plea bargain, he reportedly will be sentenced to two years in prison, will be fined $100,000 and has been assured that no other charges will be filed. Snyder said Gillooilly will not be sentenced today.
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2SM, looking for 2SF who like to Mi bike ride. Must be good looking, athletic, fun living, spontaneous, intelligent, intelligent, independent, plus intellect, intelligent, independent, self-realistic, health conscious, and totally cool. Oh, yeah, and kinda likes Beavis and Butthead.耶,那你要是 all applicants will be considered. Respond with a description of your personality
110 Bus. Personals
Looking for significant Spring Break cash? Start up preventive health company out of NC looking to expand its reach. Visit our product locally on your own time. Please call 1-800-793-2800 or the prompt dial 7850 for more information.
Unique Sterling Silver Jewelry
Hoops, Pendants & More!
For Guy & Gals
The Jewelry
928 Mass. Downown
SpringBreak 1994
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 4:30am-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8:40am-4:30pm
KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services
Pharmacy Hour
Monday-Tuesday 8am-9pm
Saturday 8.30am-12.30pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
120 Announcements
COMMUTERS: Self Serve Car Pool Exchange,
Main Lobby, Kansas Union.
NEED A RIDE/RIDER? Use the Self Serve Car
Pool Exchange. Main Lobby, Kansas Union.
PREPARING FOR EXAMS WORKSHOP Time management, memory techniques, test-taking strategies
FREE!
Thursday, February 3, 7-9 pm
4034 Wescoe
Presented by the
Student Assistance Center
Win a trip to Cancun! Look for details and entry blanks in the coupon section of your new Universi-
sal library's museum. Deadline for entry is February 19th, 2014. Directories are available now at the KU Bookstores.
13th YEAR!
SPRING BREAK94
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND
NORTH PADRE/MUSTANG ISLAND
F-L-O-R-I-D-A
DAYTONA BEACH
PANAMA CITY BEACH
ORLANDO/MALT DISNEY WORLD
C-O-L-O-R-A-D-O
STEAMBOAT
VAIL/BEAVER CREek
BRECKENRIDGE/KEYSTONE
M-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
--specialized Rock Hopper Many x-tra. Must sell $360 Call Torry 821-618.
School of Education Students
Students who plan to teach TEACH the FAMILY will attend SUMMER STUDIO and must attend the student teacher meeting MEDICATE 7; a 13:30 pm in 363 Bailey. This meeting is mandatory. Preliminary information are available in 172
TUTORS. List your name with us. We refer
inquiries to you. Student Assistance Gen-
eral.
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
130 Entertainment
EL WATUSI DISCO-TECH
House Music, Telecom, Retro-Disco Classics.
Dance in the dark. Dancing to pm-
midnight. 18 to attend, third day. HOBRES,
181 NewHampshire.
BENCHWARMERS Tonight! $1.00 off all imports 45 imports
Men and Women
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
1994 EXPANSION
Part-time temporary and permanent openings.
Flexible schedule around class. $9-$10 to start.
Positions need to be filled by 2/1/94. Please call
8-831 for more info.
Adams Alumni Center needs banquet prep cook and salad person. Flexible shifts, position available immediately, apply in person no phone calls. 1286 Orcad Ave.
CAMP COUNSELORS - 12 yr. old, educational camp near Kansas City sees counselors (WSI helpup) for residential summer program for children 8-14. June 5 to August 8. Must be Sopromore or older. $160 plus room and board. For details, send inquiry before January 7, 1986 to Wendy Wooden.
CAMP SEQUELIA in New York's Catkill Mines, (89 nyc) has NYC渡考 job available. Cabin counselors, specialty instructors for sports, swimming, (WSI/LGT) tennis, Hockey, gymnastics, basketball, golf, swimming and Adventure Programs and more! Competitive salary, room, travel allowance and laundry facilities. Apply to the Kansas Union Bailroom on Ground Hog's Day, February 2nd. For more information call
Child care required in home 2-3 afternoons per week. Near K.I. U830-0191
Cooks (female) needed for beautiful summer camp in estes Park, Colorado. contract period 6/8 to 18.5. Contact Ruthman Holle, Cheley Colorado Camps, 303-588-4244.
WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 133强. Wanted recording of KU-OSUI game as heard on 90 J7KJH. Will Pay $831-901.
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
Cruise line, entry level, on-board positions available, great benefits. Summer or ear round (8).
Evening and weekend CNA's needed to work with clients in their homes. Reliable transportation necessary. Call Sharron at Douglas County Visiting Nurses 843-3788.
Have A Night Out On Us!
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 4-8 pm. No phone calls please.
816 W.24th
749-5750
NABI Biomedical Center Earn $15 each time you donate plasma. Up to $135 a month. New Donors Walk in today
KUCHOOL OF EDUCATION SEEKS: Program instructors (2) teach high school students in summer session in 1) Spanish and 2) biology/chemistry. (3) teach middle school students experience working with culturally diverse youth required. These two jobs are unclassified monthly position. Deadline: February 11, 1984. 9 p. Composition. (4) teach college-level English available from Chris Sykes, Uppoundward, University of Kansas, 609 Bayle Hall, Lawrence, KS, 65048. (913) 864-3441. The University of Kansas is equal opportunity/Affirmative Action employer.
Tennis Jobe-Sunshine Children's Campus-Northeast-Men and women with good tennis background can who teach children to play tennis. Good salary, room & board, travel allowance. Women call or write on campuses; men call or write on 02333 (617) 844-6536. Men call or write: Camp Wanadis, 225 Glades Rd., Suite 404E, Boca Raton, FL 32434 (007) 984-5500. We will be on campus in the Grades -1 and -2 campuses -upon #4/83 in the Grade and Relegation list.
United Child Development Center is accepting
10:30 am - Friday 13:50
2:30 am - 96 Vermont EOE
Looking for a few serious people interested in earning extra cash. Promote and sell a Lawrence real estate property.
KU SCHOOL OF EDUCATION SEKS: Residence Hall Supervisor (1) coordinate residence hall staff and live in residence hall during summer session; degree required. Tutor/Counselors (1) live in a residential hall, tutor, counsel, and supervise at least junior level status in college required. Bridge Counselor (1) live in a residential hall, tutor, counsel, and supervise recent high school graduates during summer session; degree required. All of the above jobs are student mentorship positions. Job description job description available from Chris Syles, Upward Bound, University of Kanaa, 490 Bellary Hall, Lawrence, KS, 86540. 863-3415. University of Kansas is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmation
Part-time employment. Apply at Alvarian Ravpark
from 10 am and 3 pm. 4180 Clinton Parkway
Part-time farm hand, some experience with farm
work. Must have a bachelor's degree, no
child-free. Must be until age 16.
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT (June 18th August) at Camp Lincoln/Camp Lake Habitat in Minnesota's lake country since 1909. Meet new friends, over 150 staff men and women, expand horizons, rewarding work with children, develop leadership skills, 30 online courses, participate in programs available at the University Placement Office, Burge Union. Sign up, in advance for a personal interview on campus Monday Feb 7th.
Students who are look to get ahead I am looking for 10 students who want the opportunity to make $8000 and get some great experience. Call for more info. hss-3702
Work in beautiful Colorado mountains this summer at Cheile Colorado Campas summer program. RNs; drivers; secretaries; wargladers; nanny; kitchens; song leaders; riding, hiking, backpacking; fitness classes; room and board; cash salary, travel allowance. Our 4th semester. Must be at least 19 to apply. Applicants will be notified of campus interview date. Apply to Cheile Colorado Campas 300-377-8100.
WORK STUDY POSITIONS AVAILABLE AT THE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS. ABOVE MINIMUM WAGE. APPLY ONLY IF WORK QUALIFIED. 385A OR CALL 684-1650.
Driver education offered through Midwest Driving School, servicing KU students for 20 yrs. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749.
English tuter: All English classes, proediting, reading
English tuter: All English classes, BS Education
BS Education-843-3133
For a confidential, caring friend, call us. We're here to listen and talk with you. Birthday#431-4821. Free pregnancy testing
225 Professional Services
DUI/MIP/Fake ID's
Office located right next to campus
Elizabeth Leach
Attorney at Law-Forever Prosecutor
414 W 14th 749-0087
DV-I 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 & forms. New Era Legal Services, 2021 Stagl, Canoga Park, CA
STUDY (818) 999-4425, Fax: (818) 882-9631.
MATH TUTOR, TEACHING EXPERIENCE,
EXCELLENT CREDENTIALS. $8/HOUR
842-932. Leave a Message.
BRAXTON B. COPLEY
Attorney at Law
General Practice
Traffic Tickets, Mideemenors,
Landlord/Tenant,
Personal Income Tax
719 Massachusetts 749-5333
Personal income tax
719 Massachusetts 749-5333
VIDEO EDITING AND PRODUCTION SERVICES A/B roll production with EDL 3D computer animation. Hit field production package. Award winning screen writer PRIMAL SCREEN ANIMATIONS 01-811-6451
T
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
For free consultation call
Rick Frydman,Attorney
823 Missouri 843-4023
235 Typing Services
For further consultation call
X
305 For Sale
1-der Women Word Processing. Former editor of the document into accurate pages of letter quality type. 845-2063
- Looking for a good type?
* *Papers, Applications, Spreadsheets, Charls*
* *Laser printing to WOW! your profs*
* *Grammar and spelling free*
* *18 years experience call Jack at*
* Makit' the Grade*
Words by Chris Wort Word Processing.
High quality papers and printing; spell check
Word processing.
**85 Grand Marquis $1.5K; $XEL U-1468B +**
(internal 192 bit uncompressed) modems $364;
ram units 248-bit, tactile feet 6-DOS, turbos Pascal 7, extended keyboard, compd 3-button mouse, Typing Tupter $5.5KB
25 MHz 486k microprocessor, VGA graphic card; individually or bidiard 42-847
300s Merchandise
Word processing, applications, term paper, dissertation. Help with job resumes. Rush jobs available. Masters Degree = 841-6254.
FOR SALE. Prowler With Dot Matrix Printer $100.00
$50.00 obo. $100.00. Large iguanas
Call 866-324-4844
GUIDARE - smooth Westside / 7/8 body slice, Flocked
base bells / 600, Ribbed base bells, Prefessional
Base bells / 500, Ribbed base bells love messages
*Bridgesite MH-6 mci* bike, Iguana green. X-
vent cond. Must sell. $450. Call W 814-7149.
ten cond. must sell; $40, call: 869-7149.
147 mobile home, 2 BDRM, i bath. Cent. a/c /c
& heat. Fenced yard w/ shed & deck. All Appls.
Great investment at $8000) Call 865-3641.
Black Audi 1500 1983, 188 Km miles. Excellent condi-
tion. Gasoline engine. Call 866-742-1230.
Black Audi 1500 1983, $4,000 DOD
Columbian Boa $200. Albino Corn Snake 100 obo
phone 843-3292.
Fisher: linear trouble, eqilr, riling gla wd stere case, $45 ea OBO. Sitlinc sit-up nbc-new$3, Mgmv consle vt W/ remote-AM-FR-case. Stere and turtle excel d16 BORO 842-7405.
850 XSIX 2.5, RAM 40, HD MONO, VGA-XA,
Kevin DOS 5.0, Windows 3.1 482-898
Kevin
For Sale-Portable Computer w/20GB hard disk
3-9 in. in floppy drive disk 8000 CALL 7681
www.mobilecomputercenter.com
340 Auto Sales
Queen size classic futon bed, solid maple w/ natural oil finish. $400 +188-714 to saher for Sherri
**85 Velvoy G4L, AUTO, cruise, sunroof, excellent condition, $50,000. Call 611-943-0438.**
Talk trash, walk trash: DEJA RECYCLED SHOES. Soakers, chukka, t-straps, more. Simple Goods, 768 Mass, M Sat, 10-8:30. The Tl will WANT TO SELL. 1 Brand New VCR I can’t use. GE w/remote, on-screen prog, etc. Best offer gets it. Call Bart 844-717-71
665 Chevy Corvair Moxa 2 door automatic, new
1997-03 Corvair 2 door dependable Transportation
750, Contact 624-3223
City Center, Austin, Dallas, Detroit, Miami
801-0465, new飞艇, new zetchip, C91-
841-0465.
74 DodgePU, 8 cyl., 3 speed, good cond. $750 Call
828-1844.
Dh81 Dalitan 5 spd, one owner. No A/C $9000. Call
141-9383 daytime.
Honda Accord 190 LX Coupe 5 spd. Full Pwr $9,680 &
Dual AWD 3rd Row 5 spd. Full Pwr $9,680 & damage
5 spd. Good Con. GOO00 ebp 00-813-2000
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
1 bdm apt available ASAP for submisc "Taig Aug.
3" bdm wet / food central 648-39-28
food center / food central 648-39-28
1 bedroom with wood floors available Mid Februr-
uary to March; the bus route water and
cell pad kbl 748-840 VIII
3 bedroom apt, brand new, sublease from May 15
8906mc, call 84-344-6444
www.8906mc.com
Available at West Hill Apts. Spaciosa 1 bed unfurnished apt. $29 per month. Water pdt. Great location near campus. 1012 Emery Rd. No pets. 841-3800, 542-3884.
Available Now: Newly renovated studio ap 1300
available from our entrance, window AC, segmented berm, $42/month.
Newer 1, 2 and 3 bedroom apartments available for August 1. Washer/dryer, dishwasher, microwave, private patio/balconies. Avoid the place your new place now! Call 784-1568 for details.
Trailridge Apartments
Now leasing for Summer and Fall
Studio, Apts. and Town Homes
KU Budweiser Stadium,
pocket乒球 Court 2, pool
Call Today for more information
843-733-2500 5. Wkth 68
Extra quiet and nice, 2 BR apartment. All appli-
cants installed. Cable tv, DVDs, no pets.
Zoysi5 Available immediately. 811-498-0000.
First month free 1 bedroom apartment.
Second month free Boardwalk Apartment.
Last month free 832-298-0.
For rent, 2 bdrm. furnished apt. on West 7th availble
Feb. 1. $480 each, month 841-3001.
For rest 1 room apartment Efficiency Apts. cure,
$850, for rest 2 rooms $750, available in March 74-
87. For rent $375.
For sublease. 1 bedroom apt avail. Mar. 1. Call Conn
at 865-2714
House for rent 2 bedroom no pets, newly remodeled call 844-903-9
Leasing for June and August. New 4 bedroom, 3 bedrooms suite on the ground floor gas fireplace, ceiling fans, cable-padded 1500 feet and covered parking avail. Early sign-up specials offered. For more information call Dau at 841-264-9728.
Rooms, apartments, and well kept, old homes available now. 841-STAR (7827)
meadowbrook FALL '94
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. Call Kathy or Shana at Meadowbrook
Kathy or Shana at Meadowbrook
842-4200
15th & Crestline
Mon - Fri 8-5:30
Sat 10-4
Sun 1-4
Sorry no pets
One bedroom, sublease to campus, off street parking, free rent for month of February.
Spacious i bedroom apt very close to campus. Furnished. Avail. immediately. Call 811-4218. Airdr.
Study公寓 now available close to campus.
Study公寓付. P955. 6 month lease available. Call
784-1568
Park25
PIONEER
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
Some Washer/Dryer Hookups
- Volleyball Court
* On KU Bus Route with
4 Stops on Property
*2 Laundry Rooms
*Some Washer/Drier
Also Leasing For Spring & Fall!
Hookups
Call or stop by today.
2401 W. 25th, 9A3
842-1455
(sorry no pets)
SouthPoint
Hospitality
Luxury
New appliances
New bath fixtures
Mini & vertical blinds
Walk-in closets
Water, heating of water
Bathroom facilities
Patio balconies available
Swimming pool and
Sand volleyball court
Small pets OK with deposit
Ample off-street parking
West of Iowa on 26th Street K.U. bus route
Location
GREATLOCATION!!!
Walk to shopping, banking Restaurants & six theaters Next to new Holcom Recreational Center Basketball, baseball, indoor Track, racquetball and Aerobics.
843-6446
SUB-LEASE 2 br. app. for lease, $730 per month.
Purchase a mobile paid. Very close to cam.
$159-$189 per month.
Sublease quiet room at 15th and Tennessee-wash/dry-rear-share kitchen, Bheap. Cheap, independent kitchen with month + utilities Apt.
Sublease: 1 idrmlm apt, w. study. Boardwalk Apts
844. mm. 043. mm. 045
430 Roommate Wanted
1 Space available in a bedroom house $180/month
2 Close to RU and pool in backyard
Cupil 181-9471
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
College-aged roommate needed now for BR Alive
marriage homes 11½m/ water pad. JA rest free
room.
Female roommate needed, own room, bath & study, WD, WG, garage w/open $99 usl. paid
Female needed for 3 bdm, 1 bath, $200 mo + ½ hr.
Call 823-0706.
Female, non-smoking, roommate needed, immediate
admission. Please contact: dresner@hcc.edu,
washer/dryer, $190 + $/utilities 823-6008
Female needed to bdmr a bdmr apt with W/$150
a mo. Stadium View Ace, Call 829-2888.
Looking for roommate start Feb. the first
mid-autumn, campus $295.00,ULL and cable paid but
not furnished.
How to schedule an ad:
- By phone: 664-4358
Male roommate needed through and of semester.
Pully furnished, near campus $4/mo. + 1/2 mi.
Applicants must be recent graduates.
One roommate to share 8-Br hour,
fenced in backyard $175/month. Call 835-
4338
Needed immed Jr., Sr, Gr, female omniskor for BDR 1881/mo. Call 843-2810.
Female roommate needed for a 2 bedroom 8 bath apartment per month *x/unit*
Calker Staten at 725-3811.
One roommate design for 2 birmingham $100
room, basement garage, AC, DW; DF*w/
d wkods. Call Bestell.
Have your own room, covered parking, private drive, fire place, dishwasher, etc...for only $170/mon + utils call 749-0373
*
Calculating Rates:
A photo may be in maybe to your MasterCard or VISA account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
* In advance: 119 Shuffle Film
Step by step the Kasaan 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
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansean offices. Or you may choose to have it billed by your MasterCard or Visa account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when canceled your expiration date.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansan 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. Rewards on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available.
Rates
not per line per day
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.
Beforeward
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 notification
165 personal
118 banknote personal
120 annuities
128 entitlement
Cost per line per day
1.9X 2-3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-23X 30+X
2.06 1.55 1.85 .85 .75 .90
1.99 1.15 .80 .70 .65 .45
1.85 1.05 .75 .65 .60 .48
1.75 .90 .65 .60 .60 .35
Classifications
140 test & found
265 hard unattended
280 help unattended
225 professional services
308 miscellaneous
235 typing services
ADS MUST FLOWL KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print
370 want to buy
465 for rent
430 roommate wanted
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
Address:_
Oteo ad begins: Total days in paper.
Total ad cost: Classification:
Method of Payment (Check one) ☐ Check enclosed ☐ MasterCard ☐ Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Daly Kansan)
Furnish the follow-up if you are charming your ad:
Expiration Date:
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
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Signature:
The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffart Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
CAROLYN ROBINSON
"Frank. ... Don't do that."
10
Tuesday, February 1, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Metropolis BBS
832-0041
Louisville's Medical Center Network BBS
Metropolis BBS
832-0041
Louisville's Main Street Entertainment HI
CLEOPATRA'S
CLOSET
a unique boutique
• Unique Clothing
• Hand Blown Art Glass
• Sterling Silver Jewelry
• Semi-precious Stones
• Cool Chokers and Belts
743 Mass. St. (913) 749-4664
CLEOPATRA'S
Camera America
ONE HOUR PHOTO
Lawrence's Largest Supplier of Darkroom Materials 1610 West 23rd Street 841-7205
JD's Baseball Cards &
Sports Nostalgia Shop
711 W. 23rd
842-1002
We buy back used baseball cards
Rentco USA
749-1605
Student Discount
Now Carrying Computers
1741 Massachusetts
Pancho's
MEXICAN RESTAURANT
Homestyle Mexican
Food
23rd & Louisiana
843-4044
CHAINS FIXED FAST
Kizer Cummings
jewelers
749-4333
833 Mass·Lawrence, KS
Mon.-Sun.
Buffet
Hours $2.99 lunch buffet 2630 Iowa
11:00-1:30 (add .70 for salad) 843-1474
Encouraging Words
Positive Therapy for Positive Change
Innovative Counseling • Psychotherapy • Hypnosis
Emphasizing creativity, this approach builds upon inner resources to help you deal with conflict, loss and change.
Marybeth Bethel MS CMH
842-5772 1645 Rhode Island
Emphasizing creativity, this approach builds upon inner resources to help you deal with conflict, loss and change.
Marybeth Bethel MS CMH
842-5772 1645 Rhode Island
THE NEWS in brief
First U.S. shuttle flight with Russian cosmonaut to blast off Thursday
NASA began the countdown yesterday to the first U.S. shuttle flight with a Russian cosmonaut, a seasoned spaceman who will share orbital duties with an older, yet less experienced American crew.
Sergei Krikalev smiled broadly as Discovery's pilot called him "a man of many talents."
"We're going to keep him busy on this flight," pilot Kenneth Reigltter Jr. promised after arriving at Kennedy Space Center with the rest of the six-member crew.
The eight-day science mission, due to begin Thursday morning, will be only the second time Americans and Russians have flown together in space. The first was the 1975 Apollo-Soyuz docking.
None of the five U.S. astronauts assigned to Discovery's flight, all of whom are in their 40s, has spent more than nine days at a time in space.
Krikalev, 35, already has spent 463 days in space, nine times longer than the rest of the shuttle crew combined. Only one other person, cosmonaut Musa Manarov, has logged more space time.
Krikalev has spacewalked seven times. None of the five Americans has spacewalked even once.
Krikalev also is a champion aerobatic pilot, mechanical engineer and computer whiz who showed commander Charles Bolden Jr. a better way to use the shuttle's lap-top
computers.
Bolden gave Krikalev the job of using Discovery's robot arm to retrieve a satellite to be deployed by the crew during the mission. Krikalev also will help conduct science experiments aboard Discovery.
The cosmonaut was a quick study. "You can tell the guy's flown a lot," flight director Chuck Shaw said. "He's very comfortable in operating equipment."
MOGADISHU, Somalia Marines involved in street shootout
In the worst shooting involving American troops in three months, U.S. Marines opened fire in a street crowded with Somali waiting for free food yesterday. At least five people died, and many were wounded.
A U.S. official said the 22 Marines shot in self-defense after their five-vehicle convoy, which was carrying two American diplomats, was fired on by at least two Somali snipers.
Somalian witnesses said no one shot at the Americans. They said they felt the Marines fired because they thought hundreds of Somalis standing in a street outside a food distribution center were trying to stop the convoy.
The commander of Bangladeshhi soldiers said his men did not see any sniper when the Marines opened fire, but he could not rule out that shots were fired at the Americans. U.S. officials said the shooting involved three Humvees and two cars carrying two unidentified American diplomats to a meeting to discuss clan violence with representatives of warlord Mohamed Farrah Aidid's coalition. The meeting was canceled after the shooting.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
Pig Out on $ .99 Pork Fritters
ers
Regular Price - $1.89 Pork served with mayonnaise, lettuce and tomato. For just a little more, top it off with cheese and bacon. Offer good for a limited time.
Vista DRIVE IN MANHATTAN·LAWRENCE·TOPEKA 1050 Wanamaker in Topeka
pork
Body
PORK PRODUCERS
KPPC
COUNCIL
Serving Since 1956
Boutique offers you Slimmer solution
We offer a wide variety of aerobics classes throughout the day
LAST CHANCE!
for Offer!!!
No joining fee!
$139.00 off
annual membership
average $20/month
exp. 2-5-94
!
10 Tans for $20
30 min. sessions Wolff Beds
749-2424
exp.2-5-94
925 Iowa
BODY BOUTIQUE
The Women's Fitness Facility
United Parcel Service Part time Jobs $8 Hour UPS UPS
ups
interviews will be held Wednesday, Feb. 2nd from 10 a.m-2p.m
ups
sign up in the placement center, 110 Burge Union
*Various shifts available *Immediate openings on the night shift-11:00PM-2:30AM
E/O/Em/f
FEATURES: Fans of the late Bob Marley can celebrate the star's birthday this weekend. Page 7.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.103,NO.94
KANSAS STATE
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA KS 66612
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 2,1994
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
Community stressed at celebration's open
Unity is key leaders say
Networking and reinvesting in the community is what will empower African-American organizations, a panel of three leaders said at the opening ceremonies of Black History Month last night.
By Denise Nell Kansan staff writer
Sherwood Thompson, director of the Office of Minority Affairs, introduces Ruby McDavis, the moderator of the event. From the left, panelists included John Butcher, founder of First Fridays; Sam Adams, associate professor of journalism; and Lisa Blair, coordinator for the Lawrence Alliance.
John Butcher, the founder of First Fridays in Kansas City, Kan.; Lisa Blair, coordinator for the Lawrence Alliance; and Sam Adams, associate professor of journalism, spoke to a crowd of about 30 people on the theme "Empowering Afro-American Organizations: Present and Future."
25.
Butcher, who started First Fridays — a network for African-American business leaders to help each other — said he thought that the power in an organization came from successful people helping others get where they were.
NEWS: 864-4810
Blair, who heads the Lawrence Alliance — an anti-racism organization — said that the African-American community needed to reinvest in African-American organizations.
"You need to look at what you have — what you've done for yourself, what you have done to progress and when you do get there, what you can do to reach back and pull somebody else up," he said.
"It was our blood, our sweat and our tears that made this nation, but we're the only group that doesn't have a foothold in the U.S. today," Blair said. "You can't forget your history. Your history is what put you where you are
today, and it's going to put you where you'll be tomorrow.
"A lot of what they said was true," he said. "We need to stop isolating ourselves and come together."
But Jeff Johnson, senior vice president for external affairs and membership development for the University of Kansas Alumni Association, said he didn't necessarily agree that empowering African-American organizations would solve problems of disunity.
"I don't believe you're doing something wrong if you go do your own thing," he said when the panel took questions at the meeting's end. "We have so many black organizations, we don't know what we stand for. When you're talking about empowerment, mainstreaming is not a bad idea." Brandon Sanders, Los Angeles senior, said he agreed with Butcher and Blair.
Lobbyist to address U.S. role in African crisis
Kansan staff report
As part of a national speaking tour for Black History Month, Green will speak on the current crisis in the democratization process in Zaire and
Deborah Green, a Washington lobbyist for African Democracy, will speak on "Building a U.S. Constituency for Africa" at 4 p.m. today at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
on the role of U.S. citizens in lobbying for pro-democratic U.S. foreign policy.
Zaire has been governed by a dictatorship under Mobutu Sese Seko for the last 20 years. In 1992, opposition leaders voted Etienne Tshisekedi prime minister to head a transitional government until the first free democratic elections in 26 years are held. Mobutu has refused to recognize Tshisekedi by appointing his own prime minister.
BLACK HISTORY MONTH
Upcoming events
Todav
**Lecture:** "Building a U.S. Constituency for Africa." 4:5-30 p.m. Adelson Auditorium, Kansas Union. Deborah Green, lobbyist for human rights in Africa, will discuss U.S. policy toward Africa.
**Lecture:** "Women of Color: Self Image." 7-9 tonight, Pine Room, Kansas Union. The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center will lead a discussion on self-esteem.
**Film:** "Menen II Society." 7 onight.
Kansas Union. $2.50 with KUIF. Kilm will be presented through Thursday.
*Thursday*
Forum: "The Black Church Today" 7 p.m., Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union
**Dialogue:** "Multiculturalism and Diversity; Bridging the Differences." 7 p.m., Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union.
**Fidav**
Women instructed in self-defense
Judo
■ Film: "Poetic Justice." 7 p.m., Kansas Union. $2.50 with KUID.
Fighting Back A Look at Violence in Lawrence
Leigh Livingston-Kashiwaya, Lawrence resident, throws Chris Jones, Lawrence junior, to the mat at the combative sports center in Rounson Center. Livingston-Kashiwaya is a black belt in KAIkido and is teaching a women's self-defense course.
By Denise Neil
Kansan staff writer
At least 2.5 million women are victims of violent crimes each year, a Justice Department study released Sunday said.
Of those women, 23 percent who resisted a rape, a robbery or an assault by fighting back said that self-protective behavior had not helped their situation.
John Gamble/KANSAN
Leigh Livingston-Kashiwaya, Lawrence resident, said that statistics such as these had inspired her to put her six years of training in the martial art Ki Akido into teaching a seven-week self-defense class, called Safe Women.
"Sometimes women in college seem to come from small towns, and since they are involved with college, they have other things on their minds," Livingston-Kashiwaya said. "They seem not to take safety or the possibility of assault as a high priority."
Livingston-Kashiwaya, who has a black belt in Ki Akikido, said her original plan had been to start teaching women the art of Ki Akikido as part of the Ki Society at the University. She approached Barbara Ballard, director of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, with the idea, and the two discussed the need for a women's self-defense course on campus.
Ballard said there had not been a course in women's self-defense offered at the University this year. She suggested to Livingston-Kashiwaya that she alter her program to teach women self-defense.
"Some people believe in defense," Ballard said. "Some don't. Some believe education is the key."
Livingston-Kashiwaya said she researched problems faced by women on college campuses. Acquaintance rape, she said, is one of the biggest problems faced by college-age women.
Cindy Alliss, the community education and media officer for the KU police, said that no rapes had been reported at the University in 1983 and that only one had been reported in 1992. But these low numbers
are not necessarily representative of what is happening, she said. Many rapes, especially those by acquaintances, go unreported.
The Justice Department study estimated an annual total of 133,000 rapes in the United States. It found that women attacked by someone they knew were injured 59 percent of the time. However, women attacked by strangers were injured 27 percent of the time.
The data in the report came from 400,000 individual interviews from 1987 to 1991 with a nationally representative sample of women in the Bureau of Justice Statistics' National Crime Victimization Survey.
Livingston-Kashiwaya said her course would focus on ways women could get themselves out of situations in which acquaintance rape may be a danger. She will demonstrate voice-control methods as well as some simple wrist locks and arm bars.
ingston-Kashiwaya said. "This starts early on when women are deciding 'Is this the type of person I want to be alone with or go out with?'
"I want to help women understand the nature of acquaintance rape so they know what they can do to help prevent that." Liv-
Livingston-Kashiwaya said that KI Aikido focused on gaining a spiritual and mental edge. The women in the course will be taught about what is going on around them, she said.
"Times are changing," she said. "Women want to know how they can be more in control of their own space."
Fighting back
What: Safe Women, a self-defense class for University women.
When: Sundays from 1 to 3 p.m. in the lobby of Olive Hall, starting sunday.
Where: Registration forms are at Oliver Hall.
How much: $30
Women enrolled in the course will be permitted to use the practice facilities of the Ki Akii club in Robinson Center.
The Associated Press contributed Information to this story.
INSIDE
KANSAN
Tough Blow
Punches are thrown at Robert Revere's place, but nobody calls the police. Young people go to the White Eagle Boxing Club to find self-discipline. Page 5.
Watkins bill delayed for consideration
Kansan staff report
The Watkins Memorial Health Center expansion bill probably will not be considered by the full Student Senate until its Feb. 16 meeting, said its sponsor.
Tonya Cole, Liberal Arts and Sciences senator and head of the Student Health Advisory Board, said she intended to make a motion to table the bill if it was placed on the agenda at tonight's meeting. The motion would have to be approved by a majority vote in the Senate.
GROUNDHOQ DAY
Six more weeks of winter?
Or is spring right around the corner?
The delay would allow Senate to consider a proposal to raise student fees to finance women's and non-revenue athletics, Cole said.
joe Harder/KANSAN
Phil's forecast
This meteorologist can predict six more weeks of winter or signs of a warm sun merely by looking at what he casts on the ground. The trouble is, he only makes his prediction once a year.
Fortunately for us, today is the day. Groundhog Day. Phil, a Punx-sutawney. Pa., groundhog, will pop his head out of his hole. If he
sees his shadow, legend has it that six more weeks of winter are ahead.
If today's forecast for Punx-sutawney holds up, a warmer sun surely will start to shine. It calls for cloudy weather most of the day, with a high of 10 degrees, according to the Punxsutawney Spirit.
State senators tell Regents to trim budgets
Legislators question requests for increases in faculty salaries
By Stephen Martino
Kansan staff writer
There might be a little fat in the Board of Regents system, and some state senators seemed to be reaching for their carving knives to take it out.
Higher-education leaders met before the Senate Ways and Means subcommittee on System-Wide Issues on Monday to discuss the Regents budget proposal for fiscal year 1995.
The Regents requested a total of $1.1 billion, but the governor's recommendation was $11.8 million less for the institutions. This still represents a 6.2 percent increase from last year's budget.
A key component of that budget is the Partnership for Excellence, a Regents-supported plan to increase faculty salaries to 100 percent of peer-school levels. The plan would increase tuition rates and increase state support from the general fund.
Chancellor Gene Budig and Jon Wefald, president of Kansas State University, were both present to advocate the partnership. They both said that Regents faculty worked harder for less and that the state ran the risk of missing outstanding faculty members if it did not increase its wages.
However, some senators pressed the Regents about its long-term mission and what had been done in the past to save money at the universities.
State Sen. August Bogina, R-Shawnee and head of the Ways and Means Committee, questioned Budig about what had happened to savings made through program review and why those savings were not transferred to increase faculty salaries.
Budig said that legislative leaders had asked Regents universities to be innovative and that program review worked toward that goal. He said that from 17 to 20 faculty positions would be transferred to other areas within the University.
Bogina asked why those positions were not eliminated and the savings given to increase faculty salaries.
Budig said that there were certain areas within the University that needed attention immediately — hence the transfers.
State Sen. Dave Kerr, R-Hutchinson, next in the line of questioning, asked if emphasis on higher education was really needed for future jobs. He cited a study from Charles Krider, University professor of business, that said only 28 to 30 percent of the future work force would need a college degree.
"Well, I certainly did not understand the program review process," Bogina said.
"I feel like we've done what you asked us to," Budig said.
Kerr said he wondered whether money spent on higher education would serve the state's best purpose.
"We are allocating more money to higher education when studies show only 20 percent of the future work force will need a college degree," he said.
State Sen. Robert Vancrum, R-Overland Park, said that the Regents might be more efficient with fewer members.
"Part of the problem is we have too many institutions in Kansas," Vancrum said. "If the Regents aren't going to take on the problem of too many universities, who is?"
Regent John Montgomery said that was a political question that the Legislature would have to address if it so decided.
Vancrum said that a task force might be needed to suggest changes to the Regents system.
2
Wednesday, February 2, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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SUNY
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 FintL汗, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
FRESHMEN & SOPHOMORES Lambda Sigma & Owl Honor Societies are now accepting applications.
Applications are available at:
*400 Kansas Union
*Nunemaker Center
Applications due March 4th
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ON CAMPUS
Ecumenical Christian Ministries will sponsor a University Forum, "Some Implications of Cheating in a Community of Learning," at 12 p.m. today. For more information, call Thad Holcolmbe 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 Gerry Vernon at 864-7317.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today at Danforth Chapel
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a Catholic student discussion group at 1:10 p.m. today after Mass at Danforth Chapel. For more information, call the center at 843-0357.
The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an informational meeting about study abroad in Great Britain at 4 p.m. today at 4011 Wesco Hall. For more information, call Nancy Mitchell at 864-3742.
Jayrunners will meet at 7 a.m. today at Anschutz Sports Pavilion to run. They will also meet at 5 p.m. at Allen Field House to run. For more information, call Kimberly Schober at 845-1607.
KU NORMI will meet at 5 p.m. today at the north end of the third level of the Kansas Union. For more information, call Chris Foster at 832-2167.
Anthropology Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at 633 Fraser Hall. For more information, call Destiny Crider at 832-1469.
KU Gamers and Roleplayers
Literary Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at Alcove B in the Kansas Union. For more information call Julie Munjak at 864-2589
will meet at 5:30 p.m. on the third floor of the Burge Union. For more information, call Alex Baker at 864-7316.
KU Environs 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 Equestriant team will meet at 6 p.m. today at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Kai Frederick at 841-3139.
KU Kempo Karate Club will sponsor karate and self-defense classes at 6 p.m. today at 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Mandana Eshradi 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 Anishsalin at 843-3099.
Native American Student Association will sponsor a potluck dinner at 6:30 p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. For more information, call Johnie Young at 864-4351.
Campus Girl Scouts will meet at 7 tonight in the lobby of the top level at the Burge Union. For more information, call Kate Irelan at 842-4789.
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.
WEATHER
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 39°/24°
Chicago: 28°/10°
Houston: 58°/29°
Miami: 51°/47°
Minneapolis: 17°/6°
Phoenix: 53°/13°
Salt Lake City: 40°/17°
Seattle: 51°/31°
Omaha: 31°/12°
LAWRENCE: 44°/15°
Kansas City: 37°/17°
St. Louis: 37°/20°
Wichita: 46°/18°
Tulsa: 50°/24°
TODAY
Tomorrow Friday
Warm with southwest winds and cloudy skies
High: 44°
Low: 22°
Cloudy and cold
High: 28°
Low: 15°
Cloudy and cold
High: 20°
Low: 9°
Cloudy
Cloudy
KANSAN
Source: Doug Landwehr, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
Two BB shots were fired Jan.
23 into the upstairs window of a house on the 2000 block of Palmer Street. The damage to the window was valued at $500, Lawrence police reported.
ON THE RECORD
If she says "No" it's rape.
There was a burglary Monday
No one deserves to be sexually assaulted.
Sexual Assault Prevention and Education Program a program of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center 115 Strong Hall. 864-3600
at a house in the 900 block of Alabama Street. Items taken included a leather, sheepskin jacket, a 22 caliber rifle, a gold ring and a coin collection. The total value of stolen goods was $1,971, Lawrence police reported.
Attention: JUNIORS,FIRST SEMESTER SENIORS
Mortar Board Senior
Students graduating in December 1994, May 1995, or August 1995 with a
Diploma to apply.
OAC office (Kansas Union).
Applications are available at:
Applications are available Student Assistance Center (133 Strong).
Nunemaker Honors Center
OAC office (Kansas Union)
Nunemaker Honors Center
Applications due by 5:00 pm
Friday. February 11, 1994
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optional
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CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, February 2, 1994
3
Costa Rica club shares culture
Group advises U.S. travelers
By Denise Nell Kansan staff writer
When Amy Turnbull, Lawrence freshman, decided to take a week-long trip to Costa Rica in October, she wanted to know where she should visit.
So she asked people who would know members of the Costa Rican Student Association.
Gustavo Alvarado, San Ramon, Costa Rica, junior and president of the group, said members had suggested to Turnbull their favorite tourist attractions, neighborhoods and restaurants.
UNITING TO BE HEARD
"They told me where to go and what to see," Turnbull said. "They really enhanced my understanding of the culture."
Alvarado said that he and five friends had formed the association almost a year ago. The group decided that an organization that informed people about the Costa Rican culture would be especially useful at the University of Kansas because the Office of Study Abroad sent from 40 to 50 students to Costa Rica each semester through an exchange program with the University of San Jose in Costa Rica.
"We really want to share our culture," Alvarado said. "So far, the best way we've found is to share with people who are going
The group has about 20 members who meet four times during the semester, Alvarado said.
to Costa Rica."
Martin Echandi, San Jose, Costa Rica, senior and the group's secretary, said that American students preparing to go to Costa Rica often asked him whether they should take a radio with batteries or whether it was safe to drink the water in Costa Rica. He said he thought that it was his responsibility to explain to them what his country was like.
"It makes me feel like I'm doing a good thing to show everyone how Costa Rica is," he said. "People start asking you questions, and you feel good answering them."
Alvarado described the group as informal. He said the meetings were like gatherings where students could get together and
talk.
In September, the group organized a picnic to celebrate Costa Rica's Independence Day. Alvarado said he also was working on bringing Nobel Peace Prizewinner and former Costa Rican president Oscar Arias to speak at the University. Arias, who developed a peace plan for Central America, won the prize in 1988. The group also has been trying to get a Spanish channel in Lawrence.
Turnbull, who became the group's fund raiser and the only non-Costa Rican on the board, said her career plans included working with women and children in Latin American and Hispanic communities. She said the members of the group had helped her develop her career plans.
"They're wonderful people," she said. "They helped me really think about what I want to do."
Women tap into bartending experience
Janet Cull, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, has been a bartender at the Red Lyon Tavern, 944 Massachusetts St., for six months. In her three years of bartending, she said, she sometimes had to call the police because of drunken and disorderly patrons.
Tom Leinger/KANSAN
Belligerent patrons bar safety concern female bartenders
By Angelina Lopez Kansan staff writer
Sara Kapfer, Lawrence junior, knew that the man sitting at the end of the bar calling for her was out of money.
Business had been slow Friday evening at the Red Lyon Tavern, 944 Massachusetts St., so Kapfer had played several games of pool with him. She said that he had been a bit strange but very polite and that she had been nice to him in the way that all bartenders were nice to patrons. When he only had a dollar to pay for the last $1.50 beer he ordered, she smiled and told him that she would take care of it.
When she walked toward him, he leaned across the bar and showed her a gun, she said.
"Sara, this is a robbery," he said.
Kapfer said she had given him the money in the drawer.
"My boyfriend said if he had been here he would have tackled him," Kapfer said. "The guys say things like, 'That wouldn't have happened if it had been on my shift.'"
Some female bartenders like the fact that they are shoulders to cry on.
Female bartenders in Lawrence rarely have guns pointed at them. But weekly they have to handle cocky under-age kids with fake IDs and belligerent drunks who slur phrases such as, "Hey baby." There are great advantages to being a female bartender, but there are also many concerns.
Vermont St. The reasoning is that at many bars most of the clientele age them, she said.
As a bartender, a woman can make more money than a male bartender, said Lisa Wilson, Lawrence senior and a bartender at Rick's Neighborhood Bar and Grill, 623
"Customers think you know everything, and they tell you their problems," Wilson said. "It's emotionally draining, but it also pumps you up."
Wilson also said she felt less vulnerable behind the bar.
"I feel cockier," Wilson said. "I don't let anyone get the upper hand."
When customers think that they can get the upper hand is when safety becomes a concern for female bartenders, Wilson said.
Sarah Blasdel, Leaword senior, was bartending alone one evening, working the 5-9 p.m. shift at Hockenbury's Tavern, 1016 Massachusetts St., when a male customer came into the empty bar, she said.
"He asked me my name," Blasdel said. "I told him and offered my hand. I always shake hands when I meet people."
She said that when he took her hand, he had pulled her toward him, making her lean against the bar, and that he had kissed her on the cheek — all without her permission.
"As much as the whole incident freaked me out, it pissed me off more." Blasiel said. "It's my bar and the place where I work, and I shouldn't be scared there."
"If I'm in an uncertain situation, I'll call a friend and ask them to check on me every five minutes," Veilleux said.
Wilson said the best way for a female bartender to deal with a belligerent or a scary patron was to hold her ground.
She also said that if a customer was belligerent she could rely on her regular patrons.
"If I'm trying to get some guy out of here, the patrons will back me up," Velleux said.
"When he sees 10 guys behind him, he's not apt to resist me," she said.
"When you're the bartender, you're the boss," Wilson said. "Be cautious, but feel confident. For the short time you're there, it's your bar."
shirring drugs Ken Audus, associate professor of pharmaceutical chemistry is researching a way to make some medicinal substances inhalable.
Sniffing drugs
$\textcircled{1}$ The substance could be attached to particles of starch and inhaled into the nasal passages.
$\textcircled{2}$ The starch soaks up moisture from cells, shrimping them to allow the passage of the substance into the blood stream.
physical chemistry
Joe Harder/KANSAN
Source: Ken Audus, associate professor of pharmaceutical chemistry
KU professor envisions drugs as nasal spray
By Roberta Johnson Kansan staff writer
Soon, patients may only have to inhale their medicine to be treated, thanks to the work of KU professors.
Ken Audus, associate professor of pharmaceutical chemistry, has taken nasal tissue from sheep to see whether peptides — strings of amino acids that are smaller than proteins — can pass through the barriers of the tissue cells.
Insulin — a peptide used by diabetics — has a difficult time getting into the bloodstream from the nasal passage because it is water soluble, Audus said.
Lauren Smith, director of research at the American Diabetes Association, said that researchers had been working on the possibility of inhalation of insulin for several years.
Currently, diabetics must inject insulin with a hypodermic needle or through a pump that is attached to the body 24 hours a day.
Audus said that insulin could be attached to dry, microsize particles of starch, which could be sprayed into the nose and could absorb moisture.
"Part of the starch absorbs water," he said. "The cells shrink as they take water out, and then the insulin can get in."
Audus said that this method was non-damaging because the cells regained water fairly quickly.
His study of the cell barrier between the bloodstream and the brain could lead to other medicinal possibilities, he said.
Audus and colleagues have isolated and replicated a single layer of the barrier cells and are trying to find out whether peptides can attach themselves to substances and still be accepted through the barrier.
Doctors already use a similar process with an anti-cancer drug on patients with inoperable brain tumors, he said. The drug attaches to amino acids and is carried into the brain.
"Some of the amino-acid carriers are promiscuous," he said. "If it looks like an amino acid, they will carry it."
Audus said that these amino acids were taken on a need-basis and that many cells had openings that were specific to certain amino acids or sugars, such as glucose.
Val Stella, professor of pharmaceutical chemistry, is working on a similar project, Audus said. Stella was not available for comment.
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4
Wednesday, February 2, 1994
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
KJHK no alternative after format changes
R. E.M. U2. Talking Heads. Each of these "alternative" music bands gained popularity through college radio. But with KJHK's format changes, other rising bands may not be heard. Ultimately, the big losers may be KU students.
Some of the changes may be for the better. For instance, daily jazz programming will be extended.
Also, 30 percent of the station's music playing time is used for listeners' requests. Listeners still can hear requests from their favorite vinyl albums.
But many of the format changes cut to the heart of the station's strengths. KJHK's collection of more than 300 compact discs it uses for regular rotation has been cut to 150.
Jay Berberick, KJHK's program manager, said the changes were made to get listeners more involved with the station. "Before, when our rotation was larger, we were playing songs that some people may never have heard before." Berberick said.
Another change KJHK has implemented is to categorize songs by tempo and mood. By telling DJs the order in which they must play songs, the station diminishes its purpose — that of a learning laboratory for students. The fewer choices DJs have in determining which songs to play, the less likely they are to learn.
But KJHK's purpose is to expose students to music they may not have heard on other stations. Though cutting the number of CDs on rotation does allow bands to be played more than once, it also cuts down on how many bands are played.
KJHK's strength always has been the diversity of its programming. It would be a shame for the station's format changes to diminish that strength.
NATHAN OLSON FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
FEMA needs reasonable budget,not extra money
The U.S. government should appropriate the Federal Emergency Management Agency more money each year, but not at the cost of increasing the budget deficit. That is why President Clinton should propose across-the-board cuts so that FEMA can get the money it needs to deal with this country's natural disasters.
"The Great Quake of 1994" was just one catastrophe in a long string of recent disasters FEMA could not afford. The government continually underfunds the agency, and the president must allocate specific monies when natural disasters occur. These allocations contribute to the budget deficit.
For instance, in 1992 President Bush requested an additional $2 billion for damage created by hurricanes Hugo and Andrew.
In 1993, additional funds were allocated for the Midwest flood. President Clinton initially had approved about $250 million for FEMA for fiscal year 1994 but since has asked for an additional $6.6 billion and may request more if California Governor Pete Wilson's $30 billion estimates on the quake's damage are accurate.
It appears that FEMA has been continuously underfinanced during the past few years so that Congress could lower the budget deficit. But reducing funds for an agency that continually needs more money will raise the deficit, not lower it.
If President Clinton is going to continue to tout that he has lowered the deficit, then he should plan to budget FEMA a few billion dollars more in 1995.
CHRISTOPHER LIVINGSTON AND BEN GROVE 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 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
Business Star
Campus sales mgr...Jason Ebery
Regional Sales mgr...Troy Tawer
National A & Co-op sales mgr...Robin Kring
Special Species mgr...Shelly McConnell
Production mgr...Laura Guth
Gretchen Koelterhutchin
Marketing director...Shannon Belly
Creative director...John Carton
Classified mgr...Kelly Connexys
Tearsheets 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. Authors should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be
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-Flint Hall.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
Friend's comment demonstrates ignorance about AIDS, victims
I recently saw the movie "Philadelphia."
It was a great film. It also was a real eye opener about the AIDS epidemic, not just in terms of the physical aspects of the disease but also in terms of the civil rights issue that accompanies any form of prejudice. But something I heard as I exited the theater really disturbed me.
A friend of mine said something to the effect that people needed to watch which kind they were sleeping with.
Which kind? What was that supposed to mean?
My first thought was one of disbelief. Did he honestly think gay people were the only group affected by this terrible disease? Then I got angry.
He then said, "Yeah, I mean you've got to feel bad for those people who get it through transfusions and stuff because it's not their fault, but..."
I told him, admittedly a bit harshly,
that anybody could get AIDS no matter who they were sleeping with and even if they weren't sleeping with anyone at all.
COLUMNIST
DANIELLE
RAYMOND
I think I cut him off before he got any further. But what? Do some people not deserve our sympathy because
That's not acceptable.
they're gay?
I was surprised at his comment, to say the least. For one thing, he's not an ignorant person. Why then, did he not know what goes on every day in this world?
The more I thought about it, the more I came to realize that there are countless others in this area alone who share my friend's line of thinking. And the more I thought about it, the angrier I got.
Don't these people know that AIDS is no longer just a "gay" disease? A 1992 World Health Organization study found that AIDS transmitted through heterosexual contact accounted for 90 percent of one million new cases reported in a nine-
month period. Doesn't sound like a "gav" disease to me.
I also thought about how so many people keep going through life oblivious to information like that. With all of the media attention and literature available about AIDS and HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, it seems to me that you would have to work pretty hard to avoid AIDS education – especially on this campus.
The earliest part of this is that all of us probably know someone who has HIV right at this very moment. Studies done by the national Centers for Disease Control and the American College Health Association found that one in 500 college undergraduates were infected with the HIV virus.
Theoretically, that means that there are approximately 54 people who are infected with HIV on this campus. Those people might not know they are infected because it can take six months to 10 years for any signs of an AIDS-related illness to appear.
We may be young, but we're definitely not immortal. And the "it-could-never-happen-to-me-because I'm-a-young-heterosexual" attitude is exactly what is going to get a person into trouble.
Which brings me back to my friend. I really tore into him the other night after the movie, but I don't feel bad about it. I know he probably thought I overreacted a bit about the whole thing. I don't think I did. I don't believe you can ever overreact to ignorance.
I doubt that my friend considers himself to be prejudiced.
But would he have felt as bad for Magic Johnson if he had contracted HIV by having unprotected sex with numerous men instead of women? Sadly, I doubt it.
Everyone who contracts AIDS is a victim. I don't care how the person got it, or from whom — nobody "deserves" to contract AIDS more than anybody else. Degrees of guilt for contracting a terminal illness do not vary with the victim's sexual preference.
The key to curbing the AIDS epidemic is education - not just listening, but learning.
AIDS can affect everybody. Gay straight, Black, white, young or old this epidemic knows no prejudice.
It's too bad people do.
Danielle Raymond is a Wilmette, Ill., junio
in Journalism.
C
THE CONGRESSIONAL SUPER BOWL
HEALTH CARE CRIME WELFARE REFORM
WILL THESE 'BILLS' FINALLY WIN?
HOOD
UDK
194
N
Common cold battlefield: Wal-Mart
Good Day, and welcome to "A Day in the Life," "starring Your Esteemed Writer. Today we're going to hear about how a sweet-tempered, overworked young girl (that's me) was violently, cruelly and most unexpectedly assaulted by that vile, loathsome creature, that insidious menace to human beings everywhere: The Common Cold.
Now, you must understand, CC and I had met before. He pursued me zealously through the winters of my life, but I was always cool and distant. My mother had warned me about him. "He's nothing but trouble," she told me. But I never thought he would actually do anything to me.
"Those other girls just didn't understand him, Mom. I'm taking vitamins; I know how to deal with him," "I reassured her. I thought we had reached an understanding, but last week CC stormed back into my life and cackled gleefully as he clogged my nasal passages and filled my lungs with fluid. I was helpless in the face of his unprovoked wrath; I crumbled in his fury like an overused Kleenex.
COLUMNIST ALISHA ARORA
I tried to resist him at first. I staggered to Wal-Mart in search of help, but fate was against me. The managers were in cahoots with CC, it seemed. On some evil whim, they had rearranged the aisles. I stumbled blindly in the direction of Cough and Cold only to find myself surrounded by tankfuls of Siamese fighting fish. Sensing that something wasn't quite right, I cautiously made my way to the front of the store.
On my way, I thought I spotted salvation. I experienced brief elation as I walked (literally) into a cold medicine display. But alas, it was merely another cruel joke engineered
by CC and his Wal-Mart lackeys, I was looking at a display of children's cold remedies. I looked around, expecting to see adult formulas nearby, but Wal-Mart had strategically placed the display in the foot care aisle as to disorient me even further. Maybe they were hoping I would mistake the antifungal foot spray for throat spray in my feverish haze. Maybe they were feeding off of my frustration. Still having the presence of mind to be indignant, I wiped the drool from the corner of my mouth and stubbornly staggered onward.
I passed more aisles of hygiene products until finally I collapsed in Pain Relievers. Lifting my burning eyeballs heavenward, I caught sight of a word that instantly eased my phlegmatic cough : Sudafed. But just as I reached for the coveted package, another box caught my eye : Drixoral. Next to that was Dimetapp, then Triamnic and Nyquil, too. I held my aching head in my hands and stared in anguish at the neat rows of colored packages stretching endlessly down the aisle. My trials had just begun.
The boxes beckoned me, all promised different things. One swore it would end my post-nasal drip. Another claimed it would soothe my aches and pains. Sure, they looked sincere, but which one could I really trust? I felt like I was being pulled in a dozen different directions at once! I agonized for a moment. Then'I grabbed the Sudafed I had first seen, and I fled. I didn't even want to think about my decision. I couldn't deal with the guilt of rejecting all of those boxes or the trauma of discovering that I had chosen the wrong one.
But I chose wisely, as I found out I sluggishly wondered why I had found CC so hard, as I lie in my Sudafed induced coma. Lying on my bed with my head tipped slightly so I could breathe, I was almost comfortable. The Sudafed had my room spilling lazily in front of my eyes, and I felt not unpleasantly floaty. In face I felt (legally) euphoric. CC, baby, I'm yours.
Allaish Arena is an Overland Park freshman in biology and English.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Public affection displays every couple's right
Is it not enough that the administration of this university spoonfeeds a group of people who are, by their choices to come to a university in the first place, assumed to be responsible enough to make their own choices?
The column you ran in Friday's Kansasan about "Public Displays of Affection" seemed to me to be another ploy by the University to force its own morals and ideas upon the faculty and student body, people who I believe would consider themselves individuals who are in the correct position to make decisions
themselves about how to lead their lives.
I do not know how things are in Ms. Raymond's neighborhood — the one she shares with Gene Budig and David Ambler, perhaps? But where I live, the students and professors not only value their freedom of choice in all matters of morality and personal conduct but also cherish the responsibility that comes with making those types of decisions.
Give me a break: I am registered for the draft and pay my own taxes. Can't I decide what to do with myself after I pay my tuition?
Chris Strong
Lawrence senior
Fans need to control actions at field house
I was nerved at KU's basketball game against K-State on Jan. 24. Not so much because we lost but more toward the continuing deterioration of the crowd, especially the student section. KU fans have been seen as some of the best in the nation, but that view may change if we do not. The last few games I have attended, there have been some things that do not seem typical of KU's crowd. Yelling at the referees "YOU SUCK REF" and "bulls*@#!" seems childish. The referees are not going to change the way they call fouls no matter what the crowd says.
Warren Smith
Another thing that I was disappointed with occurred at the Oklahoma game. One of the Oklahoma players said something to students sitting behind the north basket, and the crowd responded with a lot of booing, and one fan threw a Power Bar at him. I do not know what was said, but I do know that throwing things at players is not part of KU's tradition. I hope that Roy Williams does not get fed up with the poor quality of the crowd and start looking for another coaching job. Please fellow students, for the sake of tradition and pride of the basketball program, don't allow these disrespectful actions to continue.
Greensburg sophomore
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, February 2, 1994
5
typewriter
ave in james
Boxing is a fun way to keep fit and keep off the flab. Now, Lawrence has a new club where both men and women find themselves...
Edward "Eddie" Krueger, 11, practices four to five times a week for the Junior Olympics. "I like being in the ring," he said. "It is a lot of fun, and I like competing against other people."
Rolling with the punches
Dennis Blackwood knows how to take a punch, but now he wants to learn how to throw a few of his own.
"All I have is an interest, and all I want is to see where I can go," said the Haskell Indian Nations University sophomore. "I'd box even if I didn't go pro, just as a hobby to keep in shape."
Blackwood and other amateur boxers now have a new place to learn the techniques: White Eagle Boxing Club, 1910 Haskell Ave.
Robert "Slick" Revere, owner of White Eagle, began boxing at age 6 and spent the last 35 years in or near a boxing ring.
Revere said that he boxed, judged, refereed and promoted but that the role he found most satisfying was that of coach.
"I get a feeling of accomplishment when I see the boxers win or even lose," he said. "Boxing teaches them independence. I train and condition them, but when they step into the ring and the bell sounds, they know they're on their own."
Revere said he hoped to instill a sense of determination and self-discipline in his boxers, especially the younger ones.
LAWRENCE
"Boxing created idols for me when I was growing up," said Revere, who has a picture of Rocky Marciano — world heavyweight champion from 1952 to 1966 — sitting on his desk. "Kids today need someone they can look up to."
Payless Cashways Inc., 811 E. 23rd St., donated wood for the club's jump-rope platform because of Revere's commitment to the youth in the community, said Steve Warden, Payless Cashways manager.
He's doing something for the kids in the community." Warden said. "If it will keep them out of trouble and give them a place to go and have a good time, I'm all for it."
ناحي
ناحي
An annual fee of $25 covers an amateur boxer's insurance, mouth piece and hand wraps. Professional boxers work under contract.
Women also are allowed to compete for White Eagle, which is approved for female boxing by the National Golden Gloves of America. Though competitive female boxing is popular on the East and West coasts, only two clubs — Revere's and one in Kansas City, Kan. — offer female boxing in the Midwest, Revere said.
Amateurs compete against clubs from Kansas City, Topeka and at tournaments in Connecticut, Missouri, Nebraska and Oklahoma, Revere said.
Robert "Slick" Revere, owner of the White Eagle Boxing Club, 1910 Haskell Ave., corrects Eddie Krueger's left punch. Revere and Krueger have been training together for three years.
"Some boxing old-timers are chauvinistic, but women should be treated equally even in the boxing world," said Revere, whose wife judged fights for 20 years.
Revere said women would benefit from traditional training techniques such as jumping rope and hitting the heavy bags. He said hitting the bags was good not only for a cardiovascular workout but also for relieving stress.
The only difference between female and male competitive boxing is that women must wear a chest protector, Revere said.
Membership to the club costs non-competitors an initiation fee of $50 and an additional $25 a month. The club's three trainers develop workout schedules for those who are inexperienced boxers.
"My main qualifications for boxers are just a willingness and determination to train hard." Revere said. "If you train hard, rounds don't seem so long. In boxing, you can't slough off."
Revere said anyone with an interest in boxing should look into joining a boxing club.
Photos by Martin Altstaedten, Story by Cheryl Cadue
Safety is important in boxing. Almost all boxing gloves have about 10 ounces of padding that protect boxes from serious injuries.
MASSAGE THERAPY CLASS
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COST IS $20 ENROLL IN 208 ROBINSON 8 A.M. - 5 P.M. SPONSORED BY KU RECREATION SERVICES 864-3546
SPOTREEBOKSHOT
In conjunction with Schick Super Hoops on Feb.5th! Men's & Women's Divisions Available ENTRY DEADLINE:Wednesday, February 2nd 5:00 pm 208 Robinson
ENTRY FEE: FREE!
Tournament will be held February 5,1994 Details in Robinson! Available Room 208
Sponsoredby
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3 on 3 Basketball Tournament Men's & Women's Divisions Available ENTRY DEADLINE: Wednesday, February 2nd 6:00pm 208 Robinson
Tournament will be held February 5,1994 Details in Robinson! Available Room208 Sponsored by KU Rec Services
ENTRYFEE:FREE!
6
Wednesday, February 2, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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841-1800
2133 South Iowa St.
Blink R 4:25; 7:10, 9:40
Grumpy 2nd Man PG.13:42; 7:20, 9:50
Iron Miff PG.4:30; 7:00, 9:35
Shadowlands PG.35; 7:00, 9:45
Beetowenvs 2nd PG.15; 7:15, 9:35
Sister Act II PG.4:25; 7:10, 9:45
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ations for admission to:
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APPLICATION FORMS ARE NOW AVAILABLE IN 117 BAILEY HALL.
SEXUAL ASSAULT AWARENESS WEEK FEBRUARY1-8,1994
No one deserves to be sexually assaulted.
sponsored by the
Sexual Assault Prevention and Education Program a program of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center 115 Strong Hall,864-3600
Students seeking typewriters at Watson find selves in jams
Maintenance costs borne by students
JOHN C. TAYLOR
In a room at Watson Library, eight typewriters lie dissected on short metal desks.
By Heather Moore Kansan staff writer
Student Senate bought them so that students would have access to type-writers, but the machines have fallen into disarray.
"Of the eight typewriters, none have typing ribbons, and the reserve desk has ribbonss available for only five of them. The room is littered with typing paper and typewriter ribbon.
Travis Harrod, head of the Student Senate Executive Committee, said that he would like to get rid of the old, broken and damaged typewriters.
Valerie Bontrager / KANSAN
Harrod said Senate was unhappy with the $800-$900 a year it cost to maintain all eight of them.
"We could move out six typewriters, leave two good ones and replace them with computer positions," he said.
"The library won't be responsible for the room and the typewriters," he said. "The student body picks up the tab. The best avenue would be to have the library take a pro-active stance instead of a negligible one. We would like to have someone sit there and watch the room, but the library doesn't have the capacity to do that."
Jingping Chang, Shanghai, China, graduate student, attempts to type a letter on one of the typewriters in Watson Library. Chang was working yesterday on the only working typewriter in the room. Maintenance of the typewriters costs Student Senate $800-$900 a year.
Harrod said Watson needed a working typing room because the Computer Center was usually packed and most students researched in the library.
"It is a high-traffic area and a prime location, so students can work without walking to the Computer Center and bouncing for a computer." he said.
Mary Hawkins, assistant dean for public services at Watson, said that she was aware that some of the type-writers were not working.
"We're hoping to convert it to an information network and microcomputer facility that will be available for student use and library instruction," she said. "There will be student workers in the room or on call to help students."
Beth Russell, Lawrence graduate
student, said that she used the typing room at least once a week.
"Getting a working typewriter would be helpful," she said. "There is rarely one that works. You have to change the ribbon on the ones that do work."
Russell said that she had a computer at home but that she would rather do some things on typewriters.
❤
"I don't think student fees should be used to buy more computers, but it should be used for new typewriters," she said.
♥
Britannica 1987.
The Dating Game
❤
presented by
The Russ Johnson Show
---
♥
❤️
This Valentine’s Day Doesn’t Have To Be Spent Alone.
KJHK, the Sound Alternative, is giving you the chance to win an all expenses paid night out on the town. Why not let KJHK play matchmaker for the evening? Straight, Lesbian and Gay singles will be paired up for a night beginning with a romantic dinner, followed by a movie at Liberty Hall and then...who knows?
And, in the tradition of The Love Connection and Studs, you will have the chance to tell all of KU about your date...on KJHK’s Russ Johnson Show.
So tune in on February 11th and February 14th for The Dating Game
To enter: Place the entry form below in the drop box at the SUA office in the Kansas Union or at 2051A Dole by Tuesday, February 8 at 5:00PM. You must be available to be on air Friday, February 11th from 4:00-5:00PM and Monday the 14th (Valentine’s Day) from 4:00-5:00PM. You also must be able to go out on your date the weekend of the 11th.
Mr. Ms. First Last
Phone Age Gender Preference Major
Tell us about yourself:
The Russ Johnson Show
It’s not a "them" or "us" kind of show.
It’s an "our".
Weekdays 4-5
To enter: Place the entry form below in the drop box at the SUA office in the Kansas Union or at 2051A Dole by Tuesday, February 8 at 5:00PM. You must be available to be on air Friday, February 11th from 4:00-5:00PM and Monday the 14th (Valentine's Day) from 4:00-5:00PM. You also must be able to go out on your date the weekend of the 11th.
Mr. Ms. First Last
Phone Age Gender Preference Major
Tell us about yourself:
The Russ Johnson Show
It's not a "them" or "us" kind of show.
It's an "our".
Weekdays 4-5
A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence
Red Lyon Tavern
944 Mass. 832-8228
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Reggae celebration
This weekend, area clubs and bands remember Bob Marley, the father of reggae.
By Kevin Hoffmann Kansan staff writer
Bob Marley has long been considered the father of the reggae movement.
This weekend, fans of the Jamaican reggae musician who died in 1981 can celebrate the superstar's birthday.
The Granada Theater, 1020 Massachusetts St., will host a Bob Marley birthday celebration Sunday. Reggae bands Tony Bell & Kutchie and The New Riddims will pay tribute to Marley's legacy by bringing the sounds of Jamaican reggae to Lawrence.
The event, sponsored by Keenan Gentry of Heartbeat Productions in Kansas City, will provide Lawrence ragae fans the chance to celebrate the man who popularized Jamaican music.
Bob Marley gained a following in the 1960s as a singer for the Jamaican band "The Wailers." As a political activist and Rastafarian, Marley spent his career working to bring recognition to the music of his country. He died of cancer in 1981, shortly after being awarded Jamaica's merit of honor for outstanding citizenship.
Tom Ballew, Lawrence senior and special program director and deejay for KJHK, said Marley was the first to bring widespread popularity to reggae music, which is characterized by a steady, pulsing beat with an emphasis on percussion and exotic rhythms.
"Bob Marley was the most popular reggae musician ever," he said.
Ballew, who hosts a reggae show on Sunday afternoons, said a fair amount of people listened to reggae or reggae-inspired music in Lawrence, though some may not identify with reggae's roots.
"True reggae music has a message to it," Ballew said. "A lot of what you hear nowadays is dance hall music, and a lot of the people may not understand the spiritual part of it."
Ballew, who also is an agent for reggae musicians, said he hoped the celebration of Marley's music would broaden people's knowledge of what the music was about.
"I'd like to see people who listen to reggae music become aware of the roots and the message it tries to convey," he said. "The music came out of the suffering of the Jamaican people."
Boris Fagon, Toronto junior, was born in Jamaica and acquired a taste for reggae at an early age.
"I grew up listening to the music, so it has always been a part of my life," he said. "The sound is different. The language is different."
Fagan said reggae music was more than just the stereotypical bright colors and dreadlocks worn by those who play it.
"It's music that people express their feelings through," he said. "It's something listeners really have to listen closely to and see how it relates to them."
Reggae music is closely tied to the Rastafarian religion, which centers around peace, love and closeness to nature.
Mike Wilson, Lawrence resident and Rastafarian, said Bob Marley helped spread the religion of Rastafaria.
"Bob Marley certainly is a prophet for Rastafaria," he said. "He's the person sent down by God to bring Rasta to the masses."
Wilson said he hoped the Marley celebration would bring people closer to Marley's true message.
"The real message of Marley is to look at the real powers of the world: nature and clean living." Wilson said. "Marley was a guy who would come up and tell people how to live."
Wilson said he hoped people who came to the birthday celebration would catch on to Marley's "vibes."
"Bob Marley always brought people together," he said.
Photo by Adrian Boot
The Bob Marley birthday celebration will be at 7:30 p.m. Sunday at the Granada Theater. Tickets are $7 in advance and $10 at the door and can be bought at Love Garden, 936-1/2 Massachusetts St., Creation Station, 726 Massachusetts St., Full Moon Cafe, 803 Massachusetts St. and The Granada Theater.
people
Natural Ties forges friendships
By Cathleen Siechta Kansan staff writer
Social events often bring people together and create new friendships. A dance sponsored by the Natural Ties program next week may help some special friendships continue.
Natural Ties, founded in 1988 by the Kansas Alpha chapter of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity, is dedicated to integrating people with mental and physical disabilities into college life through campus organizations. Participating organizations and living groups sponsor a person with a disability, or "tie," who participates in activities with those organizations.
The Natural Ties program is sponsoring its second annual benefit dance at Liberty Hall on Thursday, Feb. 10. Bands performing at the dance will be Turquoise Sol, Mother Well, Mountain Clyde and Soul Shaker.
Money raised from the dance will help finance a Natural Ties retreat to be held in March. During the retreat, campus organization representatives and their ties will go fishing, canoeing and camping in Missouri.
(Natural ties) is a very dually positive thing. It makes us more comfortable around people with disabilities. We can learn from them, and it creates friendships. Natural Ties makes that interaction common on a day-to-day
common on a day-to-day level.
Carolyn Bare Social expansion coordinator for Natural Ties
Carolyn Bare, Oldahoma City senior and social expansion coordinator for Natural Ties, said the retreat would benefit both the students and their friends with disabilities.
"The retreat will allow the disabled people to do things they normally wouldn't have a chance to do." Bare said. "And the experience is just as rewarding for the students. It's a very dually positive thing. It makes us more comfortable around people with disabilities. We can learn from them, and it creates friendships. Natural Ties makes that interaction common on a day-to-day level."
Brian Platt, a former representative of Sigma Alpha Epsilon for Natural Ties, said people tended to label those with disabilities without giving them a chance.
"The ties come over to the fraternity house, and they are comfortable with us," said Platt, Minneapolis, Minn., senior. "We accept them, and they accept us, and we have fun together. That's enough reason for the program's existence."
Seventeen fraternities and sororites now sponsor ties through the program. Natural Ties hopes to expand to include groups other than Greek organizations.
"Natural Ties helps mainstream people with disabilities into the college setting." said Tim Barton, Annandale, Va, senior and four-year Natural Ties volunteer. "More groups need to get involved to help expand the program. It's worthwhile, and it builds lasting friendships within your group."
"Natural Ties has been a very good program for the residents at Cottonwood that have been a part of it," Baker said. "They are doing new and fun things with the ties. It is not a charitable program. It is mutually beneficial to all participants. The relationships are interdependent and equally satisfying. This is the kind of program that builds social acceptance of physical disability in community life."
Jill Baker, residential director of Cottonwood, Inc., a housing and employment organization for people with disabilities, said expanded participation in the program would be a positive step.
"Last year no one was dancing at first," he said. "Then all the ties got out on the dance floor, and everyone joined in. It was great."
Barton said that acceptance was visible at Natural Ties' first dance last year, which many of the ties attended.
The Natural Ties benefit dance will be held at 8:30 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 10 at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St. Admission is $5.
theater
Cartoon-inspired fun offered by Inge comedies
By Anne Sutherland
Special to the Kansan
The cast of the University Theatre's most recent productions, "Gammer Gurton's Needle" and "Ralph Roister Doister," burst through the entrance of the Inge Theater, laughing and full of excitement. They dispersed through the crowd, shaking hands, making jokes and welcoming everyone.
The two plays combined a unique blend of slapstick and pre-Shakespearean comedy, said director Bethany Larson, Lawrence graduate student.
Without a doubt, the performance had begun.
"I consider these plays to be in what people may best relate to as the comic tradition of cartoons," Larson said, as her cast and crew put the finishing touches on the comedies in their final dress rehearsal Wednesday.
"I think people will find familiar qualities in the play," she said as she listened to the soundtrack for the performance, a compilation of familiar music from Warner Bros. Inc. cartoons.
The two plays are the earliest existing English comedies. They combine modern references with Old English dialogue.
"There is a certain broad, comedic style which you can see in such modern comics as the 'Keystone Cops,' the Marx Brothers and maybe even Charlie Chaplin a little bit that is in these plays," Larson said.
The cartoon quality of the plays was evident in the costumes. During the performance, papier-mache masks were scattered across the stage of the small Inge Theater.
The masks were made by the cast members themselves. Larson said that the actors should be able to create the characters' masks to have a better feel for who they were playing.
"Most times the masks are made by the prop department, and the actors only get to use the masks for a few weeks," Larson said. "We've been working with the masks since the first few weeks of
See INGE, Page 8.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
FEBRUARY 2,1994 PAGE 7
KULife
Your guide to Entertainment in the Lawrence Area.
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 - Sculpture by Douglas Warnock,
Jan. 22-Feb. 10 at the Lawrence Arts Center,
200 W. Ninth St.
Exhibition - Sacred and Profane: Two Books In Black and White, Jan. 23-March 20 at the Spencer Museum of Art.
Program - "Women of Color: Self-Image" sponsored by The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, 7 tonight at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union.
Tour du Jour - Exhibition of Dennis Oppenheim Drawings and Selected Sculpture by
Michelle Robinson, National Endowment for the Arts Intern in European and American art. 12:15-12:45 p.m. tomorrow at the White Gallery in the Spencer Museum of Art.
Video - Goya, produced by the Museum Without Walls, on request at the Kress Gallery in the Spencer Museum of Art.
Lecture - A Slide Lecture by Sculptor Douglas Warnock, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Lawrence Arts Center, 200 W. Ninth St.
Tour of the month - "Classical Myths in Painting and Sculpture," 1 p.m. Sunday at the Spencer Museum of Art.
Hallmark Symposium - Henry Wolf, designer/photographer from New York, N.Y., 6 p.m. Monday at the Spencer Museum of Art. Program - "Dating and Violence" sponsored by The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, 7 p.m. Wednesday at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union.
PERFORMANCES
Lawrence Community Theater presents "Three Men on a Horse," 8 p.m. tomorrow, Friday and Saturday with a 2:30 p.m. matinee Sunday at the Theater, 1501 New Hampshire St. $10 public, $9 students and senior citizens tomorrow, Friday and Saturday; $8 public, $7 students and
$10 public, $9 students and senior citizens tomorrow, Friday and Saturday; $8 public, $7 students and
See CALENDAR, Page 8.
8
Wednesday, February 2, 1994
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Larson is studying acting pedagogy, the art of teaching acting. She is writing her doctoral thesis on the use of masks in theater. The comedies she is directing show strong input from her studies.
"Ralph Roister Doister" tells the exploits of the overly confident Ralph who falls in love with a widow, tries to woo her and has to face the grim reality that he is not completely irresistible.
Mihoko Kosaka, Lawrence senior, said, "We visualized what we thought the characters would look like, and then we sat down with the designer and described our ideas while he sketched."
INGE: Plays imitate cartoon styles
The first play, "Gammer Gurton's Needle," centers around the search for a lost sewing needle. Diccon, a mischievous prankster who knows the whereabouts of the needle, manipulates the searchers for comic results.
The plays currently are showing at 8 p.m. Feb. 1-5 at the Inge Theater in Murphy Hall. Tickets are available at the Murphy Hall box office. Tickets are $3 for students, $6 for the general public, and $5 for senior citizens
A different type of mask is used in each play. A primitive, full-face mask is used for "Gammer Gurtin" Neesenior citizens Sunday.
Kosaka plays three different characters in the two plays.
Continued from Page 7.
November."
Continued from Page 7.
The use of the masks combined with the physical comedy of the plays required special preparation, said Laura Zabel, Manhattan freshman.
The energy of the cast and crew can be seen easily in the high-spirited action and physical comedy of the plays. The cartoonish quality of the characters was a deliberate effort by the actors, Zabel said.
Calendar: more exhibitions, performances
We did a lot of work with just the masks, breathing exercises and things like that," she said.
dle." and a more polished half-face mask is used for "Ralph Roister Doister."
"We talked a lot about cartoons when we were prepared," she said.
senior citizens Sunday.
Seem to be Players Present:
River City Review Benefit, 8 p.m.
Saturday with a cocktail hour beforehand at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St.
Lawrence High School presents ATROCIOUS, 7:30 tomorrow, Friday. Saturday in the high school auditorium, 1901 Louisiana St. $4.50 public, $3.50 students, $3 students with IDs and $2.50 for children 12 and under.
Student Recital: Eric W.
Stomberg, bassoon, 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday at Swarthout Recital
Hall in Murphy Hall.
Faculty Recital: Phyllis Brill,
soprano, and John Stephens,
bass, 7:30 p.m. Monday at
Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy
Hall.
Swarthout Chamber Music Series presents the Ying String Quartet, 7 p.m. at the Lied Center, $12 and $10 public, $6 and $5 for KU, K-12 and Haskell Indian Nations University students, $11 and $9 for senior citizens and other students.
public, students and senior citizens.
Visiting Artists Series: Kate Hamilton, viola, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall.
Visiting Artists Series: Algirdas Budrys, clarinet, 7:30 tonight at Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall.
Inge Theater Series: "Grammer Gurton's Needle" by Mr. S., Master of Art, and "Ralph Roister Do尔斯," 8 p.m. tonight, tomorrow, Friday and Saturday at the Inge Theater in Murphy Hall. $6 public, $3 KU students, $5 senior citizens and other students.
Master's Concerto Recital: Lesley Chin-Ping Tay, plano, 2:30 p.m. Tuesday at Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall.
KU Theatre for Young People presents "The Reluctant Dragon," 1 p.m. Wednesday at the Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall. $3
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, February 2, 1994
9
'Hawks seek to regain confidence after upset
Brian Vandervliet / KANSAN
KANSAS
11
KANS
11
Kansas freshman center Scot Pollard fights for position against Missouri senior forward Jevon Curdup. The 'Hawks lost to the Tigers' 79-67 on Monday.
Tigers seize upper hand in Big Eight
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
Although Kansas coach Roy Williams likened the Big Eight Conference race to professional baseball's long 162-game season, he admitted Monday that Missouri had an advantage in the conference standings.
"They're really in the driver's seat now," Williams said of the Tigers. "But there still the second half of the season to play.
"They've got some tough games, and we've got some tough games. Hopefully our play will give us a chance in the end."
Kansas' 79-67 loss to Missouri on Monday gave the Tigers a two-game lead in the conference over the Jayhawks. Missouri improved to 15-2 and 6-0 in the conference, and Kansas dropped to 19-3 and 4-2.
Kansas senior forward Patrick Richey said that the battle was far from but that the Jayhawks did not improve upon their play. Kansas followed its 87-53 victory at Colorado on Saturday by shooting 38.3 percent from the field against Missouri.
Occasionally during the game, some Kansas players did not seem confident enough to shoot from the outside. After junior guard Calvin Rayford missed everything on a 14-footer, he only shot twice the rest of the game.
"We've got goals to accomplish top-to-bottom, and we took a step backward tonight," Richey said. "I don't care if it was against Missouri or anybody else, we didn't play well, and that's frustrating."
Kansas senior guard Steve Woodberry said Kansas needed to improve upon its play against Missouri. Woodberry led the team with 19 points.
Kansas freshman forward Jennifer Trapp shoots a jump shot that two Kansas State defenders attempt to block. Kansas beat K-State on Sundav at Allen Field House 77-50.
"Everybody needs to step up as a team and play with confidence," he said. "Obviously, Missouri is very good. They have the best record in the Big Eight."
Woodberry was named Big Eight Player of the Week after his buzzer-beater against Oklahoma State a
week ago. Because the Tigers focused their defense on Woodberry in the last three minutes, the Jayhawks forced a shot after using up a lot of time on the clock.
Richard Devinki / KANSAN
"They were playing me tight," Woodberry said. "Other teams have done that, too."
Missouri's defense helen senior forward Richard Scott, Kansas' second-leading scorer at 14.0 points, to six points. He was hampered by a nagging left shoulder injury, but Scott would not excuse his play on that.
One thing Kansas will need toward the end of the conference race is Scott, Williams said.
"Ican't do of things like I used to before I hurt it," Scott said. "But it's
not just my game. Missouri's got a very fine ball team."
"For the effort and pain he went through, he keeps going at it," he said. The Jayhawks have lost two conference games, but Williams was quick to defend his team.
"We're not a bad basketball team," he said. "We lost to a team that's first place in the league and is undefeated in the league. We don't have five guys that can score, and it is a problem. But we are 19-3, and we're all right."
51
Freshman gaining attention as intense front-court player
Women's forward attributes success to aggressiveness
By Matt Siegel
Kansan sportswriter
Picking out freshman forward Jennifer Trapp on the basketball court is not difficult. All one has to do is listen for the player who routinely screams, "Ball, ball, gimme the ball!"
Trapp, who starts for the No. 6 Kansas women's basketball team, said her intensity was a big reason for her success.
"I think I'm two different people," she said. "On the court I'm aggressive, and I work really hard. I think you have to demand a lot from yourself in order to be successful. Off the court I'm low key. I don't like going to parties, I just like hanging out with my teammates and family."
It is that kind of attitude that helped Trapp letter in volleyball, basketball and track and win four state championships at Lawrence High School. Her attitude helped her become the Kansas Gatorade Basketball Player of the Year and the Missouri Valley Association's most outstanding athlete in Kansas.
The combination of her abilities and attitude attracted schools such as Florida State, Southern Illinois, Southwest Missouri State and Colorado. In fact, she was convinced that she wanted to play for the Buffaloes until she went on a recruiting trip to Kansas, she said.
"It was almost like I couldn't leave," Trapp said. "Kansas has so much tradition that I couldn't go to another school like Colorado because it would be like I was a traitor or something."
Now at Kansas, Trapp has made her presence known immediately and has become a starting front-court player. The 6-foot-1 forward has produced 9 points and 4.2 rebounds a game while averaging 23.3 minutes of playing time. She has had a more difficult time in conference play, averaging 7.3 points and 3.1 rebounds. Junior forward Angela Aycock said it was all part of the growing process.
"She is going to have games where she is inconsistent or gets frustrated with herself," Aycock said. "As she matures, those types of games will disappear."
One thing that won't disappear is Trapp's work ethic. She said that when she was younger, basketball had not been stressed in her family and that she didn't start playing until the sixth grade. She worked on her game and gradually became an accomplished post player.
In college, Trapp has had to re-establish herself as a power player because she regularly gives up two or three inches to her opponent. Trapp said she used her other abilities, such as running the floor and passing, to try to wear down bigger opponents. She said she drew inspiration from a Kansas men's basketball player.
"Richard Scott is great at posting up," Trapp said. "He gives away a lot of bread but still gets the basket.
He's so strong. I like the way he plays a lot."
Trapp said that she would like to stay poised during games and play her role on the team as a supporting member. She said she was amazed that she was starting for Kansas.
Trapp said she would continue to do what she knew best and credited her success to hard work.
Above all, she said, she would like to become physically stronger so she could handle players such as Colorado senior forward Jamillah Lang for 40 minutes. Lang, who is averaging 19.7 points and 7.1 rebounds, is on all of the Jayhawks' minds because No. 7 Colorado and No. 6 Kansas play in Boulder, Colo. Although Trapp said that the game would be difficult, she issued a Joe Namath-like proclamation.
"We'll win," she said.
DOC
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Dr. Robert Hudson Chairman of History and Philosophy of Medicine at KU Med.
Feb.3,1994 7:00 Watkins Health Center 1st Floor
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Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office (664 ARTS); Murphy Hall Box Office (664-3982); or any Ticketmaster outlet (full price tickets only) (816 931-3300 and (913 234-4545, all seats reserved; KU student tickets available through the SUA office, Kansas University; phone orders can be made using VISA or MASTERCard.
Wednesday, February 16, 1994 Lewitzky Dance Company 8:00 p.m. One of the authentic voices of American modern dance!
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Ex-husband pleads guilty to racketeering
THE LION CENTER
Ice skater's role in attack is implicated
The Associated Press
PORTLAND, Ore. — Jeff Giloolly pleaded guilty to racketeering yesterday and struck a deal with prosecutors to testify that his ex-wife, Tony Harding, "gave the OK for the assault on Nancy Kerrigan."
In the deal, Gillooly will be exempt from any other charges, including those that may grow out of a federal investigation. He agreed to serve 24 months in prison and pay a $100,000 fine.
Gillooly's lawyer, Ron Hoevet, said his client hoped Harding would also admit her involvement in the plot.
"Jeff Gillooly's accusations appear to evidence a continued practice of abusive conduct intended to disrupt Tonya Harding's life and destroy her career," the statement said.
"Jeff has a message for Tonya," Hoevet said. "He hopes that she will now do what he has done and move quickly to resolve the charges that will surely be brought against her.
Her attorney, Robert Weaver Jr., angrily denounced the statements by Hoevet as "an inappropriate attempt to inflame public opinion against Tonya Harding."
"Denial is no longer plausible. The truth about this bizarre crime has now been revealed."
"It is my hope that charges will not be leveled against Tonya Harding, but bear in mind that there has been no
Harding, who is training for the Winter Olympics, which begin next week in Norway, issued a statement yesterday again denying "all media speculation and rumors that suggest that she was involved in the Kerrigan assault."
formal accusation at this point." Weaver said. "If there is, she intends to respond in the court of law, not the arena of public opinion, which as we have seen today, is easily manipulated and frequently uninformed."
Harding has said she did not learn until days after returning to Portland on Jan. 10 that people close to her were involved in the Jan. 6 assault on Kerrigan. Harding has not been charged.
"After the meeting, while driving toward home, Tonya approved the plan that had been discussed and gave the OK for the assault on Nancy Kerrigan. The final decision was hers to make." Hoevet said.
In court, a somber Gillooly spoke quietly and responded to Multnomah County Circuit Judge Donald Londer with short answers. He said he understood the charge against him.
"What is your plea?" Londer asked.
Harding won the national championship after Kerrigan was struck on the right leg, forcing her to withdraw. Both women were named to the Olympic team.
In a later statement to reporters, Hoevet said Gillooily had attended a Dec. 28 meeting with the three other men charged in the attack to discuss how to prevent Kerrigan from competing in the U.S. Figure Skating Championships in Detroit.
Hoevet was asked what words Gilloey said Harding had used to approve the plan, and he said, "As I understand the quote, it's 'OK, let's go for it,' or 'OK, let's do it.'"
"What is your plea?" Londer asked.
"Guilty," Gillooly said, nodding his head slightly.
Gilloooh, 26, confessed to seven crimes in the attack, including two counts that he said in court documents had involved Harding: conspiracy and perjury.
Gillooody said he had asked Harding's bodyguard, Shawn Eckardt, to send alleged hit man Shane Stant and alleged getaway driver Derrick Smith
Hoevet told the FBI had received an anonymous call implicating Harding, Gillooly, Eckardt and Smith while the skater was still in Detroit. When she and Gillooly returned to Portland, agents watched as they met with Eckardt to concoct a cover story, called Smith from public telephones and repeatedly drove by Eckardt's house in an attempt to monitor his interview with the FBI. Hoevet said.
to Detroit to club Kerrigan on the knee.
He said Harding personally had obtained Kerrigan's practice schedule, both in Boston and Detroit, and had provided a picture of her from a magazine.
Bill Hybl, the former U.S. Olympic Committee president who heads the panel, said the panel might have its recommendation sooner than its self-imposed Feb. 10 deadline.
She became irate when the attack had not taken place by New Year's Eve and demanded her $2,000 back from Eckardt, Hoevet said.
Meanwhile, a special figure skating panel met yesterday for the first time in Colorado Springs, Colo., to consider stripping Harding of her U.S. Figure Skating Association membership. That membership is needed for her to compete in the Olympics.
Prosecutors said Kerrigan and her family supported the plea bargain.
"A significant participant in this crime has now been brought to justice. That is gratifying. It is also gratifying that he is required to give truthful information," said Norm Frink, deputy district attorney in Multnomah County.
Mike Moran, representative for the U.S. Olympic Committee, said "it would be inappropriate for the USOC to comment on today's events."
The Games begin Feb. 12, but the roster can be changed as late as Feb. 21. The women's figure skating competition begins Feb. 23.
The Yacht Club Bar & Grill
Daily Drink Specials:
Wednesday
- Margaritas $1.25
- Draws $.50
- Big Beers $2.00
Thursday
• Draws $.75
• 2 Pitchers $6.50
Friday
- Busch, Busch Light,
Keystone Light $1.50
- OR 5 in a bucket $6.00
Saturday
- 5 House Shots $5.00
- Yacht Shots $1.00 (All well shots: watermelon, kamikazee, and sex-on-the-
Sunday
• Draws $.75
FREE TACO BAR Every Friday Night 5pm-???
THE YACHT CLUB
Дирексе К8
530 Wisconsin 842-9445
Sunday:Cheeseburger/Curly Fries/ Drawor Coke $2.50 (refills 75c)
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, February 2, 1994
11
Classified Directory
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
卫
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are subject to change.
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 (the "Fair Housing Act"), which requires limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to any such preference, limitation or disclosure.
100s Announcements
110 Bus. Personals
Looking for significant Spring Break cash* start a new business. Call us at 753-280-7580 or at the online call for more information on your own time. Please call-811-
Unique Sterling Silver Jewelry
Hoops, Penndits & More!
For Guys & Girls
Includes:
928 Mass. Downown
WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11:30am
Urgeg Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8:40am-3:00pm
**Pharmacy Hour**
Monday-Thursday 8am-4pm
Friday 8am-5pm
Saturday 8am-3pm
Sunday 11am-11pm
KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services
120 Announcements
COMMUTERS. Self Serve Car Pool Exchange.
Main Lobby, Kansas Union.
Guitarist looking for practice and/or band matches
Leave a message. 814-0466
HAVASU: America's New Spring Hot Spot, Lake Havasu, AZ, is throwing America's largest party - top-name Concerts, Comedians, and Actors. Lake Will Roar Will in '94! CALL 800-4145-HAVASU
NEED A RIDER/RIDER Use the Self Serv Car Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kanson Union.
School of Education Students
RESEARCH PAPER WRITING workbook. Learn where to start, what's next, when to get feedback and how to finish it. Wed, Feb 2, 7-4 p.m.; 6pm. Sponsored by the Student Assistance Center.
PREPARED FOR EXAMS Workshop. Time management, memory techniques, test-taking strategies. FREE! Thurs, Feb 3, 9 p.m. 404, Presented by the Student Assistance Center.
PREPARING FOR EXAMS WORKSHOP Time management, memory techniques, test-taking strategies
Students who plan to TEACH TEACH THE FALL
students to the student TEACHMENT on February
7, at 3:30 pm in 303 Bayle. This meeting is manda-
tary. Preliminary information is available 117 Bayle.
Thursday, February3, 7-9 pm 4034 Wescoe
FREE!
Presented by the Student Assistance Center
RESEARCH PAPER
WRITING WORKSHOP
Learn where to start, what's
next, when to get feedback
& how to finish
FREE!
Sponsored by the Student Assistance Center
13th YEAR!
SPRING BREAK 94
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND
NORTH PADRE/MUSTANG ISLAND
F-L-O-R-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
N·E·V·A·D·A
LAS VEGAS
fax preparation; Short Form $15, Long Form $72;
Form Filing; Bills $50, Loan Funds $81;
Bills $68.
S-O-U-T-H C-A-R-O-L-I-N-I
MILTON HEAD ISLAND
CALL JOAN FOR PAYMENT
DETAILS AND COLOR CHURCHURE
Call Joan at 865-5611
PUTOTS: List your name with us. We refer
inquiries to you. Student Assistance Center,
www.putotus.edu.
RESERVATIONS AVAILABLE NOW
CALL TOLL FREE FOR FULL
WANT TO HIRE A TUTORY See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 138强 Wanted recording of KU-OSU game as heard on 0.7 JK.KW. Will Pay $92-901.
Win a trip to Cancun! Look for details and entry blanks in the coupon section of your new Universi- tellephone directory. Delineate entry for inbox no. 10, 1994. Directions are available now at the KU Booksorters.
130 Entertainment
---
Make your ❤️
Valentine's Heart THROB Hot Tubs $7.00 per person per hour
Packages
3 visits ❤️ 2 people ❤️ $25
2 visits ❤️ 2 people ❤️ $35
VCR
Stereo
EUROPEAN
841. 6232
EL WATIST DISCO-TECH!
House Music, Techro. Retro-Disco Classics
DJ Jay Velasquez. Thursdays. Dining 10 pm
11am - 4pm in 11th to 21st. Drink HOMBRES
815 New Hampshire.
BENCHWARMERS 90210 & Melrose Place
Every Wed. night
at Benchwarmers
is Fox night.
$.50 Boulevard
Pale Ale Draws
$.50 Samuel Adams
Boston Ale Draws
$1.50 Domestic
Longneck Bottles
男 女
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
1994 EXPANSION
Part-time temporary and permanent openings.
Flexible schedules around class. $9-$10 to start.
Positions need to be filled by 2/1/94. Please call
842-8314 for more info.
Adams Alumni Center needs banquet prep cook and salad person. Flexible shifts, position available immediately, apply in person no phone calls. 1266 Oread Ave.
CAMP COUNSELORS - 12 yr. old educational camp near Kansas City seeks counselors (WSI helpup) for residential summer program for children 8-14 June to August 8. Must be Sophomore or Junior. No previous experience, sent inquiry before February 7, 2019 to Wildchild, 7095, W393b St., La Cayenne, KS 60040.
Cooks (female) needed for beautiful summer camp in Estes Park, Colorado. Contract period 6/8 to 1/5. Contact Ruthman Holle, Cheley Colorado Camps, 303-586-4244.
Child care required in 2-3 afternoons per
week. Near K. U 828-0911
**SCHOOL QUEMUA in New York's Catallus Mines.** (nine miles NU) has summer jobs available. Job candidates must be proficient in WS1/LGT), Tennis, Hockey, Gymnasia, Art, English Horseback Riding, Outdoor Education, Camping, Travel, Dental Salary, room, board travel and laundry. See us at The Summer Employment Fair in the Kansas Union Bailroom on Ground Gig 'D' Day. **SCHOOL QUEMUA 04/13/679-3291** for information call
Environmental firm needs executive assistant. Responsibilities include correspondence, record keeping, and scheduling for staff to misrate with skills or will train. Typing helpful. Send resume to: LMI, P. O. Box 465, Lawrence, KS.
GREEKS & CLUBS
EARN
$50 - $250
FOR YOURSELF
Counselors/Support Staff-Children's Camps/
Northeast-Total salary, MRD/BLDAU, dryland
allowance. Must have skill in one of the following
activities: archery, arts & crafts, baseball, bass-
ball, basketball, golf, gymnasium, field hockey,
bowling, football, golf, gymnastics, ice hockey,
horseback riding-hunt seat, karate,
lacrosse, mature, photography, piano, pioneering,
rocketry, rollerblading, ropes, sailing, scuba, soc-
ciety, swimming, track, video, water ski, WSI, wind surfing, wood
kitchen steward, cooks, bus drivers, maintenance,
nurses, secretaries. Call men or write:
Camp Windu for Boys. 2525 Glades Rd., Suite
103, Duxbury, MA 02469. Call women or call
write: Camp Vega for Girls, P.O. Box 1771,
Duxbury, MA 03232 (617) 934-8533. We will be on
campus in the student union from 11am-4pm on
03/63 in the Oread and Regional Rooms.
KU SCHOOL OF EDUCATION SEEKS. Program instructors (2) teach high school students in summer session in 1). Spanish and 2) biology/chemistry. Bachelor's degree, teaching experience and training required. These two jobs are unacclimated monthly positions. Deadline: February 11, 1994. 5.mm. Complete job description and application information University of Kansas, vascularity of Kansas, 499 Bedford Hall Lawrence, KS, 69046, 913) 864-3415. The University of Kansas is anEqual Opportunity/Affirmative Action employplus up to $200 for your club
This funnel includes a free one-week
call now and receive a free gift,
or enter a coupon code.
Henry A '8 Bar & Grill is now hiring experienced staff and cooks. Must be able to work some days. Accept applications Monday through Friday 2-4 pm. No phone calls please.
By donating your life saving blood plasma WALK-INS WELCOME!
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
$15 Today $30 This week
EARN CASH
ON THE SPOT
$15 Today $30 The...
Nannies Wanted. Positions nationwide, summer or yr-road, exp not great, pay good and bennie.
KU School of EDUCATION SEERS:
Residence Hall Supervisor (1) coordinate residence hall staff and live in residence hall during summer session; degree required. Tutor/Counselors (4) live in residential hall, tutor, counsel, and supervise at least junior level status in college required.
Bridge Counselor (1) live in a residential hall, tutor, counsel, and supervise recent high school graduates during夏季session, degrees earned, and positions. Deadline: February 11, 1984, 5 pm Complete job description available from Chris Sykes, UpwardBound, University of Kansas, 409 Bailley Hall, Lawrence KS, 60545, (913) 804-3415. The University of Alabama Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action employer
Part-time farm hand, some experience with farm machine and cattle. Wages & hours negotia
Personnel Manager: entry level position w/ 1 of KC's fastest growing companies. Send resume to Ace Personnel, #400 Glenwood, #309, Overland Park, KS 66202.
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT (June 18th August) at Camp Lincoln/Camp Lake Habitat in Minnesota's lake country since 1906. Meet new friends, over 150 staff men and women, expand horizons, rewarding work with children, develop leadership skill, 30 water/land activities. Specific job info & applications are available at the University Placement Office, Burge Union. Sign up, in advance for a peer tutor.
SEEKING PROFESSIONAL SALES REPRESENTATIVE EXCELLENT COMMISSION OPPORTUNITIES, ON CAMPUS, FLEXIBLE HOURS, CALL CHRIST AT USM (800) 351-2327.
SUMMER JOBS!! Camp Birchwood seeks college students, archery, backyard riding, windsurfing, cane tripping, sailing and dance. Guitar players needed. For an application call 1-800-431-5270.
United Child Development Center is accepting applications for rest aides on Sunday-Friday 12:30-5:30.
Week-long, part-time positions for Assistant Instructors in Summer workshops for Young Female Teachers (09-11-2016 to 09-17-2016) 887-59-90-00/week Contact Ruth Genrich, Public Education Department, 0292 Düse Hill, (103) 654-2872
WORK STUDY POSITIONS AVAILABLE AT
THE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS. ABOVE MINI-
MUM WAGE, APPLY ONLY IF WORK STUDY
QUALIFIED. 350R MAJOR (CA64 854-100)
Work in beautiful Colorado mountains this summer at Cheley Colorado Camps summer program. RNs; drivers; secretaries; wranglers; nanny; kitchen, song leaders; riding, hiking, backpacking. Work with students in Room and board, cash salary, welcome. Our 74th summer! Must be at least 19 to apply. Applicants will be notified of campus interview date. Apply to Cheley Colorado Camps, 303-377-8260.
Driver education offered through Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 yrs. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749.
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
For free consultation call
Rick Frydman,Attorney
823 Missouri 843-4023
English tutor All English classes, proffessing,
or any writing MA English, BS Education,
or foreign language.
For a confidential, caring friend, call us at 212-850-7244 to listen to news about births, birthdays or free pregnancy tests.
INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS
DV-1 grade program Sponsored by the U.S.
Immigration Administration resident status, Citizens of all countries are allowed to take part. Students, tourists, anyone may apply. For info and more. New Era Legal Services, 2021 Stag St., Canoga Park CA
Tel; (818) 996-4425, Fax; (818) 982-9638.
MATH TUTOR, TEACHING EXPERIENCE,
EXCELLENT CREDENTIALS. $9/HOUR
842-512. Leave Message.
BRAXTON B. COPLEY
Attorney at Law
General Practice
Traffic Tickets, Misdemeanors,
Landlord/Tenant
Personal Income Tax
19 Massachusetts 749-53
Personal Income Tax
719 Massachusetts
749-5333
305 For Sale
---
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
1. dérêt Bureau Word Pro-Creation. Power editor
1.derêt Bureau Word Pro-Creation. Power editor
1.derêt Bureau Word Pro-Creation. Power editor
VIDEO EDITING AND PRODUCTION SERVICES
A/B rollout video with EDL.
3D computer animation.
Hirfield field production package.
award winning screen writer.
PRIMAL SCREEN COMMUNICATIONS
235 Typing Services
300s Merchandise
Bridgestone BM-8 m-17. bicep. igluana Green. X-lent cond. Must sell. $460. Call 801-7149.
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
- Looking for a good type?
* Papers, Applications, Sheetlets, Charts
* Laser printing and QR-profs
* Grammar and spelling free
* 18 years experience
call Jacki at
Makin' the Grade
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake ID $ & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
`$85 Grand Marquis $1.5K; ZYXEL U-149B#R (internal 12.8kbps uncompressed) modems $345;MS-Works 3-DOS; Using MS-Works' WordPaper; using MS-PowerPoint; verifying a double-vertible 3-button mouse,Typing Tutor 5.20kS SIMM" Boards BOAOBR/F/X4 line SVGA GUI BBS,2mmMx85Mx microprocessor,VGA graphics card:
14:40 mobile home, 2 BDIM, 1 bath. Cent. u/c &
14:50 mobile home, 2 BDIM, 1 bath. Cent. u/c &
10.16.2.5 RAM, 40H, MONO-VGA, KK-PU124
PINTER, DOS, 8.0, Windows 8.1 4825-886R, 29Kevin
Larson, 38K miles. Excellent condition.
Lanugel Liquid Cooled engine. Call 695-1699
1699 after bursa. $49,000 BUD
**Compass Notebook 48.25MHZ**, Active Matrix Color
**Computer Hard Drive Hard Drive Barely Used** $229.
**Sacrifice #48.2644**
Desk, 60x30, $325. Computer desk, 60x20, $325.
Executive chair, $225. Call 914-6333.
Fisher: linear trangle, eqlair, riling wgl stereo
$45 am2 OBC, Inoclie sit-up bch-new $35,
Mgmx console tv W/wremote AM-MF-caset. Stereo
& tumble ceil档 $16 OBD 84-2485.
Word processing, applications, term papers, dissertations, resume, Editing, composition, rush
For Sale Portable Computer w/20MG hard disk drive-3 in. floppy drive $500.00 Call 784-3163
Words by Chris Words Processing
High quality words by spell check
spell check using
86-305-9090
86-305-9090
FOR SALE! Prowler Dot Matrix Printer $100.00
Antigua 600 Computer $250.00 large Iguane
480 Computer $250.00
FUTUCH TOU with endtails, mattress and
caps. Maple Call 864-7400 or
789-7454, Christine $275.00
HP 45 SX scientific expandable calculator with
memory and manual included very
lightly. 802.16b, 802.16d
Resumes
340 Auto Sales
*cover letters
*writing
Linda Morton, CPRW
TRANSCRIPTIONS
1012 MASS B 842-4619
SUITE 201-UPSTAIRS
85 Volve 740 GLE, Auto, cruise, sunroof, excellent
condition. $5,000. Call 814-0463.
- consultation
ada Morton CPRW
Nissan Senta, 3-door, black, half damage,
80,000 miles, new tires, new clutch, $119,000
Call
1686 Chevy Corvair Monza 2 door automatic, new tires Good Condition, Dependable Transportation
1988 Dahaitasu 5 spd. one owner. No A/C $2000. Call
184-1838桑德斯
Professional Association of Resume Writers
PA RW
House
FOR SALE: 1885 Honda. Runs well. Relieable. AMF
Road/Radio Cassette. Player $129, 843-728-172
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
1 bdmrt apt available ASAP for sublease 'tli Aug.
view/window' central air conditioner excellent
2 bedroom apt. brand new, sublease from May 13
2 bedroom apt. campus, housew/ dryer,
$600 mo; call 844-854-044
Available at West Hills Apt. Spacious 1 bed unfitted apt. $92 per month. Water pd. Great location near campus. 1012 Emery Rd. No pets. 841-3800. 542-3884
Trailrider Apartments
Now leasing for Winter and Fall
Studio, Ape, and Town Houses
KU Built In Schools
Tour Court 3, pool1!
Call Today for more information
843-7333 2500. Wkth 6
Sponacia a bedroom apt very close to campus. Purnished. Avail immediately. Call 841-1212. Ask about Coldwater flat 14.
Available Now. Newly renovated studio ap 1300 block Vermont private entrance, window AC, sepi-
First month free. 1 bedroom apartment.
2 bedroom apartment. Boardwalk Apartment.
Leave message. 833-268-988.
For rent i bedroom apt. Efficiency Apts. aide,
on bus parking room $270, available in March 740-
850.
Studio app, available ASAP for lease until Aug.
Less than two (blocks to KU) Water & gd pan. CD
For rent, 2 bdm. furnished ap on West 7th available Feb. 1. 84m. basis.月价. 841-3001.
For sublease. 1 bedroom apt avail. Mar. 1 Call Connie at 865-2714
Hanover Place Apt. for rent. Near Campus.
$370/MO. Call 841-1212.
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
House for rent 2 bedroom no pets, newly remodeled call 843-2003
TREE
VILLAGE SQUARE apartments
- Close to campus
• Spacious 2 bedroom
• Laundry facility
• Swimming Pool
• Waterbed allowed
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.
9th & Avalon 842-3040
Park25
We presently have available a select few 1 & 2 bedroom apartments for immediate occupancy.
MORNING STAR
Brews, appetizers and more
Leasing for June and August. New 4 bdroom, 3 bathrooms, gas fireplace, ceiling fans, cable-paid. 1500 sq. feet and covered parking avail. Early sign-up specials offered. For more information call Dave at 841-269-4750.
*2 Pools
apartments, and well kept, older homes available now. 841-StAR (7827)
One business park, free rent for month of February-move in, now leave message 865-0126
- Some Washer/Dryer
Hookups
- Volleyball Court
* On KU Bus Route with
4 Stops on Property
4 Stops on Property *2 Laundry Rooms
Hookups
meadowbrook FALL '94
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. Call Kathy or Shana at Meadowbrook
15th & Crestline
Mon - Fri 8-5:30
Sat 10-4
Sun 1-4
842-4200.
Call or stop by today
2401 W. 25th, 9A3
842-1455
(sorry no pets)
Sorry no pets
AvailableNow - 1 bdrm apt.
Live next to campus at:
Berkeley Flats
Call today. 843-2116
SUB-LEASE 2 Br. → for lease $95 per month.
Purchased, bank-safe账项. Very close to cam-
selling price.
Sublease 1 BIR in clean 28R apl thru July 31 $196
+ utilities 141 $104
Sublease quiet room at 15h and Tennessee/Wash/drive-share kitchen bath. Cheap, independent kitchen with utilities 823-692-4122
Sublease. I dbmr.apl w/ study. Boardwalk Apk 845 mo. 845-0145.
430 Roommate Wanted
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Looking for roommate Feb. the i.t. two
roommates will be installed and cable pas-
and not electricity. Call 911-835-1200.
Female needed for 3 bdm, 1 bath, $200 mo + ½
util. Call 823-9706.
Call 832-4706
Female needed to share 3 bcdm ant with W/D. B150
How to schedule an ad:
Female share 3 nice bn brise, 2 blkax $RU0+$001
Female share 2 nice bn brise, 1 yrling 1 old girl 3
hour/day (86-1475)
looking for roommate with app with W12 $750
looking for roommate for Bed. the lal
on Stadium View Appa. Call Her
Wait, I should check the whole text.
Looking for roommate for Bed. the lal
on Stadium View Appa. Call Her
Actually, it looks like:
Looking for roommate for Bed. the lal
on Stadium View Appa. Call Her
The prompt says "Maintain original document structure".
I will output the text as it appears.
Looking for roommate for Bed. the lal
on Stadium View Appa. Call Her
1 space available in a 4bedroom house $10/month
+ 1/2 utility. Close to FU and pool in backyard
Female, non-smoking room needed for quiet
room on lease. No house. Nolease. 812-50 -
utilies. 749-7971
Male roommate needed immediately for fully furnished 4 bdm, 2 bath apt. $207 Mo + 1/4 utils. 1 blk to campus. Call 841-6784
int, Lawrence, KS. 60045
One roommate needed for 2dbm townhouse $190
a monochrome computer, AC, DW, FP
a computer, Call Back Service
One roommate wanted to share 3-Br house.
Garage, fenced in back yard. $175/m Call 443-820-1968.
Ats phone in may be hired to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
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The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, lawrence, KS. 66445
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1994 FairWorks Inc. All rights reserved by Universal Press Syndicate
"You little softies! When I was your age, I had to crawl 14 inches to the surface and back! Every day! ... Through hardpan, by thunder!"
12
Wednesday, February 2, 1994
Metropolis BBS
832-0041
Briarcrest Mall Environment BA
TRAVEL CENTER
Break ForThe Beach
2
includes 7 night's lodging
Daytona Beach $119
Panama City $138
Padre $148
SKI
Keystone & Breckenridge
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
ro
Cancun
Includes
roundtrip airfare from KC.
7 night's hotel
airport/hotel transfers
March19-26
$439
per person
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Among the men with alcoholic fathers, the rates were 56 percent vs. 14 percent, and among the other men, the rates were 24 percent vs. 9 percent.
NATION/WORLD
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The 20 percent of men who had shown the least reaction to alcohol had a 43 percent rate of alcoholism, vs. 11 percent for the one-fifth of the men showing the greatest reaction.
NEW YORK — Young men who showed little effect from the equivalent of rapidly drinking three or five beers were much more likely to become alcoholics than men who felt very drunk, a study found.
The finding may help prevent alcoholism by persuading children of alcoholics to become abstainers if they can drink others under the table, said study author Mare Schuckit.
The Associated Press
Tolerance levels linked to alcoholism
The effect appeared not only among offspring of alcoholics, who are at increased risk of alcoholism, but also in other men.
Schuckit said men who were relatively resistant to the effects of alcohol might drink more to feel its effects and then progressively more as their bodies built up tolerance.
At the least, he said, it should warn them that if they drink until they feel like stopping, it may be too much. The finding carries the same message for people who are not children of alcoholics, although the relative insensitivity to alcohol appears to be less common in them, he said.
Schuckit said he had excluded women because of concerns that they might have different risk factors for alcoholism. But other smaller studies suggest a similar effect in women, he said.
The testing used two alcohol doses that produced the same blood-alcohol concentrations as drinking about three and five beers within 10 minutes. The larger dose would get somebody legally drunk in most states, Schuckit said.
The work is reported in the February issue of the "American Journal of Psychiatry." Schuckit is a psychiatry professor at the University of California, San Diego, Medical School and the director of the Alcohol Research Center of the San Diego Veterans Affairs Medical Center.
The finding carries the same mes-
A relative insensitivity to alcohol may be one inherited trait that puts children of alcoholics at heightened risk of alcoholism, he said.
By the time of the follow-up, 42 of the 124 men with alcoholic fathers and 13 of the 98 other men had become alcoholics. Men with alcoholic mothers had been excluded from the study.
The men's responses were assessed with some biological markers and two indicators used in the new analysis: body swaying and a questionnaire that asked men how much they felt high, intoxicated, sleepy, floating, nauseous and other sensations.
His study related the alcohol responses of 223 men, who were around 20 when tested, to their risk of alcoholism by the time they were recontacted an average of 9.3 years
later.
WASHINGTON
Conservatives pan Clinton's nominee for civil-rights post
President Clinton selected Deval Patrick, who rose from poverty to partner in a prestigious Boston law firm, to be the nation's chief civil-rights enforcer yesterday.
Patrick won immediate praise from rights activists and from members of the Congressional Black Caucus.
Conservatives, however, had opened fire on Patrick as a "stealth Guinier" even before Clinton announced the nomination at the White House.
They tried to link Patrick's views to those of Lani Guinier, Clinton's first nominee to the Justice Department post. Clinton withdrew her nomination in June after conservative criticism of her legal writings.
Patrick is known to believe that creation of election districts in which minorities have a voting majority is an appropriate remedy for voting-rights violations as long as certain conditions, such as long-term racially polarized voting, outlined in Supreme Court rulings are present.
THE NEWS in brief
But he believes that African-American voters can be fully represented by legislators of another race — a view Guinier appeared to challenge in her writings as a University of Pennsylvania law professor.
MOGADISHU, Somalia Clan leader criticizes killings
Mohamed Farrah Aidid's coalition condemned U.S. Marines for a shooting that killed at least eight civilians, but said yesterday its militiamen would not retaliate and violate their truce with U.N. forces.
"We have told our people to remain calm and uphold the 3-month-old cease-fire, but the Americans must stop killing innocent people," said Abdul Karim Ahmed Ali, secretary-general of the Somali National Alliance, a coalition of three factions in Mogadishu that back Aidid.
"The excuse the Americans are giving for killing our people is nonsense and baseless," he said.
In addition to the deaths, at least 24 Somalis were wounded Monday when Marines escorted two American diplomats opened fire on a street jammed with hundreds of civilians waiting for free food. One of those killed was identified as one of Somalia's many tribal leaders, Sabrire Alale Barise.
U. S. officials said the 22 Marines had begun shooting machine guns and grenade launchers after two snipers had fired at the three Humvees and two passenger cars in the convoy. They said other Somali had pulled out guns and had joined the shootout after it began.
But many Somali witnesses said the Marines had opened fire after they saw the crowd outside a food
N. America
S. America
E. Europe
W. Africa
S. Asia
O. Oceania
distribution center and mistook them for demonstrators trying to block the convoy.
In Washington, a representative at the Pentagon said that the incident was being investigated but that early indications were the Marines had shot in self-defense.
WASHINGTON Senate seeks protection for Korea
The Senate prodded the administration yesterday to take a more aggressive stance toward North Korea by seeking international trade sanctions and deploying Patriot missile batteries in South Korea.
In a non-binding voice vote, the Senate also said the United States should go ahead with joint military exercises with South Korea to show its strong commitment to the South's defense.
Sen. John McCain, Arizona Republican and author of the bill, said North Korean leaders were intimidating the United States with nuclear weapons designs because of a "failure of nerve" on the part of the administration.
The Senate was closing out more than a week of debate on the bill, which authorizes more than $12 billion in spending for the State Department and related agencies in 1994 and 1995.
The "sense of Congress" statement is an amendment to the State Department authorization bill.
Darts
Compiled from The Associated Press.
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DATING and VIOLENCE
Violence in dating relationships is common and often takes the form of emotional, physical, and/or sexual abuse. It can range from put-downs and slapping to battering and rape. Violence is NOT a normal part of healthy relationships.
To learn more about dating violence, join us.
DATING and VIOLENCE
Wednesday, February 9, 1994
Pine Room, Kansas Union
7:00 p.m.- 9:00 p.m.
Facilitator:
Susan Hickman, Graduate Assistant
Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center
Sponsored by The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, 115 Strong Hall.
For more information, contact Susan Hickman at 864-3552.
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
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Friday, March 18 to Saturday, March 26
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KU Final Four Party
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FEATURES: Area clubs and disc jockeys are staging an effort to revive the Lawrence dance scene. Page 6.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.103,NO.95
KANSAS STATE
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA KS 66612
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1994
(USPS 650-640)
Senate tables bill for Day on the Hill
SUA had requested $5,000 for the event
NEWS:864-4810
By Heather Moore Kansan staff writer
Student Union Activities' signature event of the year, Day on the Hill, may have to be downscaled if sponsors aren't found.
Last night, Student Senate voted 22 to 20 not to hear a bill requesting $5,000 to fund the event. The bill still could be put on the agenda in the future if Senate chooses to hear it.
When Paul Wolters, engineering senator, moved to hear the bill, Eric Medill,
Student Senate Finance Committee chair
objected. Medill said he objected because
the bill had gone through the committee
system and had failed by a legitimate vote.
SUA had presented the bill to the finance committee on Jan. 26 to pay for the stage and security, but it was voted down.
Senators said during the meeting that because Senate's budget was tight, they could not justify spending $5,000 for entertainment purposes.
Jeremy Haas, Senate treasurer, said Senate had given SUA $16,235 last year.
"Senate has given them money for good things, like concerts and movies, but we need to limit the amount we spend on entertainment," he said.
At the time of the vote, Senate had a total of $3,716 in its unallocated account. On Jan. 26, Senate had $9,460.
Shannon Morford, vice chair of the finance committee, said that she supported the bill.
"Not many students know what we do even though we support good programs," she said. "Our name gets out, and that's a good thing. Day on the Hill is a good program."
"Music is something that students have in common," he said. "The SUA has a wide selection of music that will appeal to all tastes. It has the highest student turnout of any other event."
Ken Martin, Association of University Residence Halls senator, said that this bill would affect a majority of students.
Desey Tziortzis, live music coordinator, said that SUA was looking for sponsors for the event.
"We will talk to other campus organizations to sponsor Day on the Hill," she said. "It's too early to tell who will sponsor the event."
Tziortzis said that the production could be downsized if there weren't enough sponsors.
"Theoretically, SUA only has a certain amount it can spend," she said. "If we downsize, it wouldn't be as large of a production. The level of talent won't be as high, which would mean less people and less security."
Tziortzis said that bands hadn't been chosen for the event.
Consensual relations conflicts discussed
A. J. K.
SenEx head says next step for policy is implementation
T. P. Srinivasan, head of the University Senate Executive Committee, and Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor, discuss the importance of the new consensual relations policy. The two spoke at the SenEx meeting yesterday afternoon.
By Jamie Munn
Kansan staff writer
KU's new consensual relations policy and its evolution brought an awareness of the problem to the campus, said Ed Meven, executive vice chancellor.
Speaking to the University Senate Executive Committee yesterday, Meyen said the policy was the type of policy that popped up every decade or so and broke new ground.
The policy waspassed at last week's University Council meeting, where the vote sparked nearly an hour and a half of debate. The meeting escalated to a heated discussion between Emil Tonkovich, former professor of law, and Robert Friauf, head of Council.
But Meyen said the debates and discussions before the approval vote had been essential to the process.
"It's one that we think reflects sensitivity for privacy in concern to the faculty, is fair to the students and is in the best interest of the institution."
"We're not saying for a moment that the policy we have is one that will be with us for many years," Meyen said. "But it's one that was necessary."
Meyen said he was pleased with the amount of time and consideration given to the issue because he had heard many concerns, especially from students, about the policy.
He has not seen any issue draw so much articulate criticism in the time he has been
at the University. Meyen said.
He also said the University had an obligation as a public institution to set an example for similar policies at other universities.
T. P. Srinivasan, head of SenEx, said the University must now concentrate on enforcing the new policy.
"What counts is how you're going to
operate, how you're going to implement it," he said.
Srinivasan said educating and sensitizing the campus to the new policy was a concern in making the policy work.
After Meyen's speech, SenEx members addressed the heated debate at last week's Council meeting. Tonkovich had been allowed to speak a majority of
the Council passed a motion in his favor.
"Actually, with Tonkovich, there was absolutely no reason for him to speak." said Wl Linkugel, member of SenEx. "He was not invited there. He showed up."
Linkukel and Srinivasan both told SenEx that Tonkovich should not have been allowed to speak because he was no longer a member of the faculty.
Uneasy feelings delay passage of death penalty
By Stephen Martino Kansan staff writer
Death penalty opponents may have given capital-punishment legislation a stay from enactment in the Kansas Legislature. But the wheels already are turning to get the bill to the floor of the House soon.
On Jan. 27, the House Federal and State Affairs Committee voted 14 to nine to table a bill that would return the death penalty to Kansas for the first time since 1972, when the U.S. Supreme Court struck down all death penalty laws in the nation.
State Rep. Robert Krehbiel, D-Pretree Prairie and ranking minority member of the committee, said that too many committee members had trouble with some provisions of the legislation.
In particular, committee members were uneasy about legalizing the execution of 16- and 17-year-olds and supporting the felony-murder provision, he said. This provision would make it possible for prosecutors to seek the death penalty for people involved in a crime that resulted in someone's death, even if that person did not actually kill the person.
However, State Rep. Clyde Graeber, R-Leavenworth and head of the committee, said that numerous attempts had been made to modify the bill in the committee but that they all had failed.
Graeber said amendments to remove the felony-murder provision and to increase the execution age to 18 had been presented but not supported by the same people who had wanted the bill drawn more narrowly.
"These people did not want to make the bill more restrictive in hopes that if it is voted on by the House, enough people won't be able to support it," he said.
Krehbiel said the delay, coupled with testimony from supporters and opponents, might cause some people to reconsider their positions.
"It was very powerful testimony, and you can't listen to those kind of stories and not be impacted by it," he said.
Through two days of hearings before the vote, witnesses — many of whom had experienced crime first-hand — testified to the possible merits of capital punishment. But they also spoke of the possible unfairness in sentencing based on race and on evidence that capital punishment did not serve as a deterrent to crime.
"A great weight of the testimony says the death penalty will increase crime in Kansas, and it is three times as expensive to kill someone as keep them in prison," said Krebiel, an opponent of the legislation. "Why would you vote for that?"
the bill's author, State Rep. Greg Packer, R-Topeka, said that although he was disappointed with the delay, he was confident the Legislature would address the death penalty this session.
"We will vote on the death penalty on the floor of the House some time, some way," Packer said. "I believe in our legislative system, but some legislators have lost sight of what people in our districts want."
GROUNDHOG DAY?
Six more weeks of winter?
Or is spring right around the corner?
More to come...
Kansan staff report
KU students should not plan to trade their parkas and earmuffs for shades and shorts just yet.
Phil, the Punxsutawney, Pa,
groundhog, came out of hibernation yesterday just long enough to
Popular belief has it that because Phil saw his shadow on Groundhog Day, people across the country will have to suffer through six more weeks of winter.
greet the sunrise — and see his shadow.
INSIDE
Fighting Racism
Lisa Blair heads the Lawrence Alliance, an anti-racism group, and involves herself in both civic and campus causes.
A. R. Hampson
Page 3.
Valerie Bontrager / KANSAN
PALYA JEWELLE
Lobbyist calls for a democratic Africa
BLACK HISTORY MONTH
By Cheryl Cadue Kansan staff writer
Deborah Green, a lobbyist for democracy in Africa, said yesterday that the United States and the nation of Zaire had something in common: Both were undemocratic.
Deborah Green, a lobbyist for democracy in Africa, speaks on building U.S. support for democracy in Africa Green gave the speech yesterday at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
"Our county is profoundly undemocratic." Green said to an audience at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union. "Moreover, our country promotes undemocratic regimes around the world. The world would be a better place all around if we could somehow make our country, the United States, more democratic."
Green, who is part of a national speaking tour for Black History Month, spoke on the crisis in the democratization process in Zaire and on the need for U.S. citizens to lobby for a pro-democratic foreign policy.
Zaire has been governed by a dictatorship under Mobutu Sese Seko since 1965, Green said. Mobutu who established his power through a military coup, said in 1990 that he would allow the country to have a multiparty system. However, he abandoned that promise when opposition leaders voted Etienne Tshisekedi into the position of prime minister. Tshisekedi was to head the transitional government for two years until free democratic elections could be held.
Green said that the presence of an African constituency in the United States would force the administration to support democratic Third World nations. But she said the current system of foreign policy would have to change if Zaire's situation was to improve.
"President Clinton, who took office promising that his administration would support the efforts of African Democrats, did nothing to support the democratic transitional government," she said. "It
was a win for African dictatorship and a defeat for African democracy aided and abetted by our own U.S. foreign policy."
Green, who began her political career lobbying for the rights of independent presidential candidates, said that the only way to change U.S. foreign policy was to change the nation's entire political scene.
"When 20 million Americans voted for Ross Perot and other independent candidates in 1992, I believe they were helping the cause of African democracy," she said. "Those voters made a concrete decision to reject the two major parties. This voter revolt is important because it destabilized the bipartisan social establishment that makes foreign policy and which so tightly controls the political process in Africa."
Upcoming events
Today
Forum: "The Black Church Today." 7 p.m., Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union.
**Dialogue:** "Multiculturalism and Diversity: Bridging the Differences." Tapes 2, 5. Jayhawk Room, Kansas
Film: "Menace II Society," 7 p.m., Kansas Union $2.50 with KUID.
Music: "Jazz in the Key of 'A'" 7 p.m., Frontier Room.
Burpee Union.
**Film:** "Poetic Justice." 7 p.m., Kansas Union. $2.50 with KUID.
KANSAN
2
Thursday, February 3, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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The University Daily Kanaan (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-Flint Hall, Lawrence, KA, 66045.
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ON CAMPUS
Jayrunners will meet at 7 a.m. today at Anschutz Sports Pavilion to run. They also will meet at 5 p.m. today at Allen Field House to run. For more information, call Kimberly Schober at 864-1507.
Canterbury House (Episcopal/Anglican) will celebrate Holy Eucharist at noon today at Danforth Chapel. For more information, call the Rev.Joseph Alford at 843-8202.
Student Senate will sponsor a Center for Community Outreach meeting at 6 p.m. today at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Julie Harris or Shanda Vangas at 864-3710.
- Spencer Museum of Art will sponsor a "Tour du jour" at 12:15 p.m. today at the White Gallery in the Spencer Museum of Art. For more information, call Sally Hayden at 864-4710.
KU Karate Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Brad Bernet at 832-2157.
Society of Women Engineers will meet at 6 p.m. today at 2009 Learned Hall. For more information, call Charity Hastings at 832-8994.
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.
at 6:30 p.m. today at Parlors A, B and C in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Erik Lindsley at 841-4585.
KU Champions Club will meet
The Student Assistance Center will sponsor a workshop, "Preparing for Exams," at 7 tonight in 4034 Wescoe Hall. For more information, call the center at 864-4064.
Jayhawker Campus Fellowship will meet at 8 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call John Dale at 864-1115.
Amnesty International will sponsor a letter-writing session at 8tonight at the Glass Onion, 624 W. 12th St.
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.
WEATHER
- Spencer Museum of Art will sponsor a film on request today at the Kress Gallery in the Spencer Museum of Art. For more information, call Sally Hayden at 864-4710.
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"
Michita: 35'/24"
TODAY
Tomorrow Saturday
Cloudy
Partly cloudy. winds
Light morning snow, becoming party
cloudy, winds 10 mph
Partly cloudy, winds 5 mph
High: 32° Low: 20° High: 27° Low: 20° Source: Dan Coash, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
Sunny
Partly cloudy, winds 5 mph
High: 26'
Low: 14'
S.A. Moore/KANBAN
CORRECTIONS
In the calendar on Page 7 of yesterday's Kansan, some incorrect information appeared. The KU Theater for Young People's production of "The Reluctant Dragon" will be performed for the public at
7 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 12. Also, the visiting artist's recital by Kate Hamilton and the faculty recital by Phyllis Brill and John Stephens have been canceled.
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Celebration of Chinese New Year
春
International students from China, Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan have planned a series of activities - Lion Dance, Ribbon Dance, Chinese Classical Music, Story of Chinese Zodiac, Americans sing Chinese Songs, Chinese Opera, Comic Play, Dinner, Dance Body, Exhibition, to celebrate Lunar New Year.
STUDENT
SENATE
sincerely invite you to join us, experiencing Chinese customs and relishing Chinese hospitality.
WHEN: 4pm February 12
WHERE: The Lied Center
WHERE: The Lied Center
Tickets are available at the SUA Box Office
$10 (bc*re Feb. 7) for performance and dinner
$10 (afh- Feb. 7) for performance and dinner
$3 for performance only
n
CLOSET
CLEOPATRA'S
a unique boutique
749-4664
743 Mass.
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-up sessions:
Thursday, February 10th at 7:00 p.m., assigned alcoves
Thursday, February, 17th at 7:00 p.m., assigned alcoves
Thursday, February 24th at 7:00 p.m., 100 Smith Hall
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 Weick at 864-4720 or Sherill Robinson at 864-3552
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Step 2: Set up an appointment with the representative on February 22nd through February 25th. On these dates representatives will be in the Union Tech Center to evaluated your old machine.
Step 3: Receive a voucher for the amount of money your system is worth as determined by the representative, good toward any Macintosh system offered by the Union Tech Center.
Step 4: Bring your voucher in to the Union Tech Center before March 31st, 1994 and use it toward the purchase of any new Macintosh Computer.
So take advantage of this great deal and treat yourself to a new powerful Macintosh at the Union Technology Center, because a deals like this don't get any better and your old Mac isn't getting any younger.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, February 3, 1994
Taize worship offers service without a sermon
Many faiths congregate at chapel ceremonies
By David Wilson
Special to the Kansan
A cluster of candles flickered in the slightly darkened Danforth Chapel. The worshippers sat cross-legged on the floor while the musicians reviewed their sheet music.
But one thing was noticeably absent from what appeared to be the beginning of a traditional worship service — the minister.
Participants in the Christian worship ceremony Taize, pronounced "TUH-ay," say the absence of a minister is part of the point. They want to break down the barriers between different Christian denominations and focus on worshiping Jesus Christ, said Leah Peck, Prairie Village senior.
Breaking down those barriers included making sure that Taize services are open to everyone, Peck said.
"We wanted to focus on the ecumenicalism of it." she said.
A Taize service alternates between music and silent meditation. The worshippers read prayers, but there is no central sermon.
Peck said that while traditional worship services tended to bolster the beliefs of a specific denomination, Taize was intended to introduce Christian spirituality to anyone interested.
Taize also attracts students who are unsure of what they believe, said Peck.
"There's no theological doctrine," she said. "It really does attract people from all different backgrounds."
Thol Holcombe, a campus pastor for Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Acre Ave., agreed
"We've got a Lutheran on the organ, two Catholics on guitar, two Presbyterians on strings and an Episcopian on flute." he said.
Holcombe said that meditative traditions such as Taize always had been in the Christian church but that many worship services did not reflect them.
Taize takes its name from a monastic community headquartered in a town outside of Paris called Taise. Peck said.
"It picks up on traditions common to some
strands of Christianity and centers them," he said. "it's contrary to what we're used to doing."
The movement began shortly after World War II and eventually spread throughout Europe, Africa and North America.
"I'd been interested in coming for a while," she said. "It's very relaxing, very peaceful."
Rosalind Mitchell of Baldwin said Taize was not a religion but a style of worship.
Valerie Garver, Omaha, Neb., senior, said she first had heard of Talze while studying in the Netherlands.
Brian Trigg, Lea's Summit junior, said Taize was the closest hegot to going to church.
10
"It's a peaceful time," he said. "I enjoy hearing the cantor."
The Taize worshippers at the University have been meeting regularly since the middle of November. The services are 8:30 p.m. Tuesdays in Damforth Chapel.
The image shows two individuals seated in front of a projection screen displaying an image of Jesus on the cross. The scene appears to be an indoor setting, possibly a church or a hall, with a dark background and a white projection screen. There are no visible texts or other discernible elements in the image.
People of various Christian faiths observe a moment of silence at Danforth Chapel. The services, called Taize, are at 8:30 p.m. Tuesdays.
10:35
James Wilcox / KANSAN
Kids in the hall
Two hundred students from Noble Prentis Elementary School in Kansas City, Kan., break for lunch in the tunnel connecting Memorial Stadium's parking lot and the Kansas Union. The children visited the Museum of Natural History yesterday.
Conference to explore Asian-American culture
By Denise Nell Kansan staff writer
Asian-American high-school students will learn to explore their identities and fight stereotypes tomorrow at the first leadership conference for Asian Americans at the University.
"There have been leadership conferences for other minorities on campus, but there has never been one for Asian Americans," said Arthur Chiu, Joplin, Mo., senior and president of the Asian American Student Union. "In the Midwest, where there's not as many Asian Americans as in the West, there may be a sense of a loss of identity."
About 200 students from high schools across Kansas and Missouri will participate in a day of events at the Kansas Union, which will include speeches and group discussions. The theme of the conference, "Breaking the Silence," was chosen to represent the continuing struggles of Asian Americans against negative stereotypes, Chiu said.
"We just want them to be able to be proud of their heritage, but at the same time, they shouldn't feel constrained as individuals to stereotypes." Chin said.
Chiu said two types of stereotypes existed about Asian Americans. The old stereotype is what people see in movies — characters that are either sinister or completely naive, Chiu said.
But a new stereotype in which Asian Americans are portrayed as "model minorities" is emerging, Chiu said.
"The model-minority stereotype basically says that Asian Americans are better off than other minorities," he said. "It's simply not true."
Teresa Hu, Gladstone, Mo., senior and external vice president of the group, agreed that the model-minority stereotype was an obstacle for Asian Americans.
"It negates all the needs we have," she said. "If we are the model minority, we don't have any needs."
Students who attend the conference will focus on three topics: developing leadership skills, preparing for college and professional careers and exploding stereotypes and labels through individualism and learning Asian-American culture.
The day's events will include a tour of campus. During the tour, students will receive information from various schools and departments.
Chiu said the conference would be an opportunity to interest high-school students in choosing the University.
"Not only do we want to enlighten them on a personal level, but we also want to show them a quality atmosphere for a quality education," he said.
Alliance leader promotes awareness of diversity
Lisa Blair, coordinator
Lisa B. coordinator of the Lawrence Alliance, an anti-racism group, works to educate the city and the University about racism and diversity.
Bv Susan White
By Susan White Kansan staff writer
After moving from Los Angeles, Lisa Blair found herself in Lawrence without a job—but with a goal in mind.
"I found myself in need of employment, wanted to make a change and had always been interested in civil and human rights," said Blair, coordinator of the Lawrence Alliance, an antiracism group in the city.
Blair moved from Southern California to Lawrence four years ago with her family hoping to get a job at the University of Kansas, but no positions were available.
"I found myself in a part-time position with Downtown Lawrence Inc., becoming something of an advocate for the downtown community, which was in one respect my indoctrination into life in Lawrence," Blair said. "I'd also probably call it my inauguration into the world of civil rights and human rights and community rights."
Blair said that shortly after she came to Lawrence, she and another woman
BLACK HISTORY MONTH
formed an organization for African-American women.
"The name of it was ISIS, meaning Integral Sisters in Society," she said. "It was an opportunity for us to just bring a diverse population of women of color together to talk about issues and concerns."
The longer she worked for Downtown Lawrence, Blair said, the more opportunities she had to sit on diversity advisory boards and to join a few civic organizations.
"I think that all of those things combined led me to where I am now," she said. "There's a sincere dedication to not only verbalize that changes need to be made, but to act in a way in which those changes can be made."
Blair said that she did not think that
changes in attitudes toward diversity should end with Lawrence and the alliance. However, she said, it was a good place to start.
"I think that the entire nation needs this kind of service badly," she said. "But what I've found, and I'm optimistic because of it, is that people are willing to speak up about discrimination and discrepancies that they used to hide under the carpet."
The alliance's primary goal was to make the public more knowledgeable about diversity and to help eliminate racism and discrimination, Blair said.
"Our attention this year is to become more involved in providing educational information about situations that could be eased with public communication," she said.
Blair said she worked with the KU Coalition Against Racism and Discrimination and KU police in addition to the alliance and Downtown Lawrence.
Sherwood Thompson, director of the Office of Minority Affairs, said that Blair worked with the office to create a
better understanding about racial issues on campus and in Lawrence. Her optimism about their work makes the program positive, he said.
"She is truly an individual who makes a difference," Thompson said. "She believes that if we all roll up our sleeves and work together, we can make a change."
Richard Orr, professional development specialist for human resources at the University, said he and Blair were in charge of the Diversity Network, a program for multiculturalism awareness in the community.
"She is an excellent trainer and motivator for diversity," he said. "She is willing to enable others to do the work rather than doing it all herself. I think that is the thing that makes a strong administrator."
Most of Blair's free time, which is not much, is spent with her family.
"They haven't seen me many nights in the last three weeks," she said. "They're not too sure who I am when I to the house right now!"
Mrs. R. L. Gorilla
Amy Solt / KANSAN
Lisa Blair, coordinator of Lawrence Alliance, works with the KU Coalition Against Racism and Discrimination and other organizations to combat racism.
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Thursday, February 3, 1994
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Three-time offenders should be struck out
From cans of mace to pocket alarm systems, people all over the country have looked for their own solutions to violent crime. President Clinton answered the 911 call of America by encouraging the adoption of "three strikes, you're out" legislation for convicted violent felons. The policy should be adopted.
Opponents of the policy point to overcrowded prisons. But the cost of crime is broad and outweighs the cost of increased incarceration.
The threat of life imprisonment will not necessarily decrease crime. But it will lessen the opportunities violent felons have now to commit more crimes, to back up courts and to destroy lives.
Judges complain that their leeway in sentencing will be eliminated, thus diminishing their power. They do, however, have two chances to get the message to felons.
Clinton has shown a deeper understanding of the crime problem than have previous presidents. By taking a pro-active stand with his views on assault rifles and teen-age crime, Clinton has opened the doors to understanding and commitment to solutions.
The president asks us not to point our fingers at the young when their role models are active criminals. He recognizes the need to get criminals and heavy ammunition off the streets now. He also knows that this short-term fix cannot stand alone.
DAN JANOUSEK FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Ruling could infringe upon right to protest
The Supreme Court's interpretation of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations, or RICO, Act is a reasonable decision, but extreme caution should be taken.
The Court's decision regarding the RICO Act, in essence, allows businesses, such as abortion clinics, to sue groups that engage in a pattern of racketering against the businesses. A pattern is established when groups violate two of a number of state and Federal laws.
Some anti-abortion protesters have challenged the spirit of the right to protest by threatening, hurting and even killing physicians who perform abortions. The right to protest does not translate into a right to violate laws.
But regardless of whether or not people agree with anti-abortion views, people have a right to protest. This fundamental Constitutional right is important to our nation as a democracy and a place where ideas are freely exchanged.
Though this right has not been breached yet, current trends are critically close to doing so. With a Florida law creating a buffer zone protecting physicians from protesters, and the Supreme Court's ruling on the RICO Act, more and more regulations are being imposed on protesters.
As Justice David H. Souter cautioned in a concurring opinion with Anthony M. Kennedy, "I think it prudent to notice that RICO actions could deter protected advocacy and to caution courts applying RICO to bear in mind the First Amendment interests that could be at stake."
The Supreme Court decision to apply the act to protesting is a good decision, but First Amendment rights must remain a top priority.
DAVID ZIMMERMAN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Englishman vexed in attempts to translate cultural differences
"I detect an accent. Where are you
"London, England."
This short conversation has dogged me in the four years I have lived in the United States. I don't resent the curiosity of the questioner, at least until the next set of questions arises.
"Oh, you're from England. I've a friend from England. Billy Thomas." A pregnant pause follows while the person with a friend from England hopes for me to reply, "Not Billy Thomas, he's a good friend of mine. He lived two doors down from me."
COLUMNIST
JACK
FISHER
If I'm unlucky enough to encounter someone who has just come back from England, he will undoubtedly want me to ask him how it was. I don't because I know how it was. I used to live there, remember?
Then there are the "my ancestors are from England" crowd. Members of this group tell me which small hamlet their ancestors left in the 17th century, hoping that I not only will know the place but also know someone with
the same last name as themselves. This is kind of like asking lifelong residents of the Midwest if they know Hugoton, Kansas.
The hardest question to answer is also the most frequently asked. What are the differences between the United States and England? OK, here goes, for the last time now.
We drink more tea than any other nation in the world, but not only at 4 p.m. and rarely with scones or crumpets. No, I don't know whether the Queen will abdicate, nor do I know, "What's up with Charles and Di?" And
no, Ross Perot is not buying the Crown jewels.
Yes, the average "Brits" are pretty stoic but will listen to the loud, talkative American tourist sitting on the bus, but only because they are too polite to tell the Yank to shut up. Don't call us "bud"; it's "mate", as in, "Give us a pint, bartender. Cheers, mate." And we really don't think that you saved us from German invasion in World War II but rather that you showed up late for the show, old boy.
We are a crowded nation: 60 million people squeeze into an area only 13 percent bigger than Kansas. We don't have crack houses or drive-by shootings, but our soccer violence is just as legendary. We have a 99 percent literacy rate.
We are not a very active people. Our university sports look like hobbies compared to the NCAA. We don't play basketball, but we are beginning to play your football — don't worry, however, about the London Monarchs appearing in a Super Bowl anytime soon. Our most popular sport is fishing, not soccer, and we are keen sailors. We like to play by or on water, not in it. Too cold. Generally we don't hunt. It's more of an upper-class pursuit, and frankly, there's not much to hunt. Our wildlife really isn't.
We don't have all-night diners; in fact, our pubs close at 11 p.m. every night, and our TV has four channels. But I hear cable is spreading throughout the country, bringing MTV Europe. There goes the literacy rate.
We don't celebrate Thanksgiving or the Fourth of July (think about it), and we have boxing day after Christmas Day, but it's not a pugilist holiday. And we drink WARTER not WARDER. Despite all these differences, I like it here, and you'd probably like it there. Encourage you to go. Just don't talk to anyone.
Jack Flasher is a London, England, senioblre
journalism.
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Violence erodes solutions to abuse
Many American women reacted to the acquittal of Lorena Bobbitt with a collective touchdown dance. At least two female friends of mine were ecstatic, saying in effect, "Hack away!" These were not celebrations about Bobbitt's success in beating the rap with an insanity plea. Her supporters think that she should have done what she did no matter what her state of mind.
Was Bobbitt justified in castrating her abusive husband? No. To understand why, you should first note that there were several Lorena Bobbitts on trial.
There was Bobbitt the Defendant, a woman accused of a crime. On this level, the question of justification is futile. By acquitting Bobbitt on the grounds of temporary insanity, the court did not condone her act. On the contrary, a verdict of this sort assumes that the defendant could not distinguish right from wrong, clearly implicating that the act was wrong. Bobbitt may not have been responsible for her behavior in a strict legal
COLUMNIST
BRIAN
DIRCK
sense, but that is not a legal or a moral vindication.
There was also Bobbitt the Symbol of Womanhood. In this sense, she is a voice for all the women who throughout the centuries have suffered sexual exploitation by abusive men. Some say that Bobbitt should be lionized because her trial focused public attention on the problem of marital sexual violence.
Maybe more Americans are talking about these issues lately, which is good. But that is no justification for her act. Not guilty by reason of symbolic value? Come on. And what
exactly has been achieved by this trial and the media circus surrounding it? Network television will enrich itself with several lurid movies about the affair, and men will wince collectively every time the name "Bobbitt" is mentioned. But we are no closer to solving the complex and difficult problem of sexual violence. Making an example of one reprobate like John Bobbitt is at best cold comfort for battered wives.
At still a third level there is Lorena Bobbitt the Vigilante. She is a person who took matters into her own hands and effected a bloody solution to her problems in the time-honored American spirit of Judge Roy Bean and John Dillinger. This was frontier justice, 1990s style.
Those who defend Bobbitt think that they are talking about Bobbitt the Defendant or Bobbitt the Symbol of Womanhood when in fact they are talking about Bobbitt the Vigilante. At bottom, all the cheers and high-fives for her acquittal are nothing more
than another example of the fascination with violence that is such an endemic part of American life. Americans have long had a love affair with violent solutions to difficult problems, from the mobs who beat British tax collectors, to the castration and lynching of southern African-American men, to the content of modern gangster rap. The reaction of Bobbitt's supporters is only another episode in this sorry history.
Do not be misled by those who claim that this is a simple matter of justice for a woman victimized by her spouse. When you remove the cloak of gender equality that has been draped over the Bobbitt affair, you find only the savage mutilation of one human being by another, nothing more and nothing less. Do not taint the worthy goal of combating sexual violence by associating it with Lorena Bobbitt's sad tale.
Brian Dirck is a Conway, Ark., graduate
student in history.
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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 university reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas newroom, 111 Staircase Flint Hall.
K-State debate not at 'lower level' than KU
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
In your Jan. 20 article, "Debate Squad in Line for Title," Scott Harris, assistant professor of speech and director of forensics, says, "K-State gets a tremendous amount of publicity for its success at a lower level. Their championships are comparable to winning the NAIA tournament..but we compete against the tough teams." Harris is a nice person and a good coach, but this opinion, that the National Debate Tournament is superior to the Cross-Examination Debate Association, is inaccurate.
Harris points out that the University of Kansas competes against tournament teams from Harvard, Dartmouth, Northwestern, Texas and Michigan. True, and all are fine teams. K-State competes against
CEDA teams from Cornell, Notre Dame, California, Clemson, Duke, Illinois, Michigan State, Wisconsin, UCLA. Well, the list is 294 colleges and universities long this year, approximately three times longer than the list of NDT programs. Which of these are the "lower-level NAIA" programs?
Any college can field a debate team against the best competition in the country as long as it has adequate resources and coaching. For example, the first NDT champion was Southeastern Oklahoma. A member of that team later coached the first association champion, from Macalester College. In Kansas, former tournament champion Wichita State and tournament "sweet-sixteen" programs at Southwestern College and Emporia State now accomplish the same feats in the CEDA.
NDT debate still features outstanding programs and teams, and the University is one of the very best. That is what I tell our students and what I tell high school debaters who are deciding between KU and KSU. The differences are that the NDT debates one resolution each year and the CEDA debates two. NDT debates only policy resolutions, whereas the CEDA debates resolutions of policy, of value or of fact. The NDT is an older tournament than CEDA championship, but to value age absent any other rationale would justify choosing the NIT over the NCAA tournament — another flawed, athletic analogy.
In our six-state tournament District III, there are at most 20 programs in NDT debate, and that's only if all of the small colleges and community colleges in Texas and Oklahoma that are on the list have active NDT programs. There are 67 active CEDA programs in the same six-state area, including community colleges, small colleges, and large universities. In Kansas and Missouri, only the University, Washburn, and Johnson County Community College continue NDT debate.
Next month KU will play host to a large national tournament. If the recent trend holds, KU's own tournament will feature more talented CEDA than NDT teams. I wonder what the CEDA teams would think of Harris' comments. He will need to explain to them what his criteria were for drawing those conclusions.
John Burtsis, associate professor of speech and director of forensics, Kansas State University.
NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, February 3, 1994
5
Deaths blamed on poor coordination
The Associated Press
MOGADISHU, Somalia — Evidence is emerging that the deaths of eight Somalis in a shootout involving U.S. Marines might not have happened except for the poor coordination among the 25,000 foreign soldiers in Somalia.
The Marines say their convoy was returning fire from snipers when it drove around a corner and encountered an unexpected crowd of people waiting for a food handout. They say some of those Somalis had rifles and also began firing.
Somali witnesses offered a different version of Monday's shooting. They said there had been no snipers and that the Marines had not fired until they came upon the crowd and panicked after mistaking the people for a
mob trying to waylay the convoy. They said some Somalis then had shot in self-defense.
U. S. officials said the Marines had not known Saudi peacekeepers had been at an aid center handing out food, an event sure to draw a crowd in Somalia's war-wrecked capital. The convoy could have taken a different route through the area, which the Americans consider one of the most dangerous in Mogadishu.
Despite criticism from relief workers and other U.N. troops, Saudi soldiers often distribute free food without notifying the U.N. commander or relief agencies, said Ul Ili Schmid, a supply officer for the World Food Program.
That is what happened Monday, when hundreds of people lined up on the street outside a distribution center waiting to get flour, sugar and dates.
"We've never had any problem doing this before, and I have never heard any complaints," he said in an interview.
The commander of Saudi Arabian troops in Somalia, Col. Al Alghamdi, conceded yesterday that a crowd had jammed the street outside the food center. But he scoffed at the idea that the Saudis should warn other peacekeepers before giving out food.
Alghamdi also disputed reports from some Somali witnesses that armed men guarding the Saudi food trucks had joined in the shooting after the Marines began firing machine guns and grenade launchers. He said none of his soldiers or their Somali guards had fired any shots.
THE NEWS in brief
Leaders of Pakistan Turkey voice support for Bosnia's Muslims
As Serbs fired from surrounding hills, Benazir Bhutto and Tansu Ciller — women who beat the odds to lead Muslim nations — came to Sarajevo yesterday to comfort its besieged residents.
After a brief visit to the capital defended by Muslim-led forces, prime ministers Bhutto of Pakistan and Ciller of Turkey appealed to the world to act decisively in the 21-month-old war.
Turkey and Pakistan have been among the strongest backers of Bosnia's Muslim-led government, whose troops are fighting a desperate battle against better-armed Bosnian Serbs and Bosnian Croats.
"We who live in peace take life and peace for granted," Bhutto said later. "In Sarajevo, we saw shattered people, a shattered city and shattered lives."
"Rarely in the annals of human history has a nation been subjected to such merciless savagery in the full view of the world," Bhutu and Ciller said in a joint statement.
Elsewhere in the city, at least five people were killed yesterday by Serb shelling.
Bhutto later called for air strikes against Bosnian Serbs and exempting the Slavic Muslim-led government from a U.N. arms embargo imposed on former Yugoslavia. She spoke in Zagreb, Croatia.
Bosnia's Muslim president, AliaJ iztebegovic, said the two premiers were ready to give "material and other help to our country. I thank them for that." He was not specific.
The visit was welcomed by most Sarajevans, regardless of religion or nationality. Many Bosnian Croats and Serbs remain loyal to the Muslim-led government.
Sporadic gunfire sounded from the Serb-held hillsides surrounding the city when Bhutto and Ciller arrived at the downtown Bosnian presidency building. A crowd of about 150 braved the dangers of the open street to cheer the two
premiers and shout "Bosnia, Bosnia!"
"Two women burst into tears as they tried to get close to the entrance of the presidency building. "I'm crying because I'm hungry, I'm on the street, I'm cold and all I want is peace," said RABIA Basic.
Bhutto said the four-hour stay had been "cruel" and had left the leaders "emotionally exhausted."
WASHINGTON
PLO seeks confederation with Jordan
PLO Chairman Yasser Arafat now is seeking a confederation with Jordan rather than a separate Palestinian state on the West Bank, Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres said yesterday.
Peres also said that he had proposed early municipal elections among the Palestinians who live on the land Israel captured in the 1967 Six-Day war but that Israel also was agreeable to general elections there.
In either case, "elections may take years," Peres said in an account of his negotiations with Arafat last week in Geneva on implementing the agreement to establish Palestinian self-rule on the West Bank and in Gaza.
Jordan controlled the West Bank and East Jerusalem from 1948 until 1967. Though several Israeli governments have considered returning at least part of the territory, but not Jerusalem, King Hussein has said the Palestinians and the PLO should determine the area's future.
However, Peres said, some details still must be resolved, though he said most of them would have no significance within two or three years.
The first stage of the agreement calls for Israel to turn over control of Gaza and Jerocho to the Palestinians. The rest of the West Bank would be put under Palestinian selfrule in a second stage.
Meanwhile, Arafat told ABC-TV "the delay of the implementation of what had been agreed upon will reflect negatively on the credibility of the peace process and not only against the Palestinians, but against the Israelis, against the co-sponsors."
The United States and Russia are co-sponsors of the negotiations, which began 27 months ago.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
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To schedule a Protect-A-Sweatheart presentation or display table for your organization or organized living group contact the Center for Sexual Health Education at 864-9570.
-- A good time to remember to show concern for your sweetheart and for yourself. Communication and caring in relationships can help to reduce the incidence of STDs and unplanned pregnancy. And remember that the use of alcohol and other drugs is strongly associated with failure to communicate effectively and to use preventive measures.
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"B.F.A.?
B.F.D.
I'm through
with the whole
wank-a-rama."
PETER WILSON
Brian Egan
REALITY BITES
A COMEDY ABOUT
LOVE IN THE '90s.
COMING
SOON
PG-13
Where have all the dance clubs gone?
Area clubs strive to revive Lawrence's languishing dance scene.
sho mo V rea dan "Ir
Lawrence, well known for its music scene, has become barron of clubs that are tailored to a progressive dance crowd.
By Kevin Hoffmann Kansan staff writer
That trend alarmed Ray Velasmo
"My wife was amazed when she first got here that nobody was dancing," said the Lawrence disc jockey. "She would go to parties, and everybody was sitting around drinking beer."
veiasquez's wife, Vanessa, comes from Brazil, a country in which dancing is common.
"There are so many kids at KU who come from someplace else who might not be into country music, or cover bands, or 'grunge' bands,"
bands, or 'grunge' bands," Velasonez said.
Rita Heneghan, Glennview, Ill., junior, described the Lawrence dance scene as restricted.
"The bars are basically for just sitting and socializing," she said. "You can really have a good time unless you go with a group of people."
Heneghan said dancing made it easier to socialize.
"Dancing says a lot about a person," she said. "People who dance can be more social."
Velasquez said he could not pinpoint a reason for the decrease in the area dance scene.
"In the 70s, everybody was dancing," he
my developed which caused a riff between rock and dance music."
The DJ said another reason for the anemic progressive dance scene was mainstream Americans' fear of expressing themselves emotionally.
"Americans, especially white males, were not raised to express themselves emotionally," he said. "It's not a racist thing, but whites were just not raised to show emotion. Dancing is a way of bringing
ion. Dancing is a way of bringing out emotions."
Velasquez said he hoped he could become a catalyst for the revival of underground, experimental and progressive dance
HOOD tal and progressive dance music in Lawrence.
"I'm hoping I can open up the opportunity to get more people out there integrated into the alternative dance scene," he said.
To accomplish his goal, Velasquez is constantly in contact with area club owners, setting up dance nights and promos. So far, Velasquez has been moderately
tuesday night is "Mondo
Disco" night at the Granada Theater,
1020 Massachusetts SL., where
Velasquez plays a collection of tech-
no-rave, alternative and retro-mod-
ern dance music.
successful.
Each Thursday night is house, techno and retro night at Dos Homes Restaurante, 815 New Hampshire St.
Velasquez described house, techno and retro music, which is not usually heard on the radio, as American "club" music.
Both dance nights are open to an 18-and-older crowd and cost $3.
Troy Kuglin, general manager of Dos Hombres, said his restaurant's dance night had started by accident.
"It started out just for fun at a party for our employees, and it went well with them," he said. "So we did a New Year's prom and just decided to keep it going."
Stacy Elwell, manager of the Granada, said she started "Mondo Disco" night to give Lawrence a place to dance.
"When I was going to school here, there was never any place to go dance," she said.
Velasquez said that by bringing the progressive dance scene back to Lawrence he hoped to do more than just provide additional opportunities to dance.
Hood
"One reason I do what I do, is that it really gives people a chance to hang up their stress in a positive way," he said.
"I hope it will integrate different cultures and add a new taste to Lawrence," he said.
Velasquez also said dancing could be a form of relaxation.
Since his beginnings at the University, Velasquez has spum records and played compact discs in the nightclubs of cities such as Chicago, Miami and New York. Lawrence, however, have become the current area of concentration for the nationally known DJ.
"This is home to me," the music lover said. "Lawrence will always have a place in my heart."
Velasquez began working as a DJ 15 years ago by playing records for fellow residents at Oliver Hall. He now spends Sunday nights as host of a progressive dance show on 105.9 the Lazer.
Velasquez said he had devoted most of his life to music, everything from spinning records at weddings to organizing dance nights at area clubs.
Why doesn't Velasquez move to a city more conducive to his style? The 39-year-old DJ, who was voted "Best DJ in Kansas City" by Pitch Weekly magazine readers, has an easy answer.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
If you had been blinded as a child, forced to spend your teenage and adult years in complete darkness, then miraculously regain your sight 25 years later after a breakthrough surgical procedure, what would be the very first thing you would want to see?
'Blink' delivers thrills
Okay, I've got a question for you. Sludge. "Shoot."
"Ooh wait! I know! You know that Keystone commercial that geekbag has that magic spray that turns everybody into Rachael Hunter? Yeah, that's what I'd wanna see...except with better beer."
"Wow, Matt, that's a toughie. Gimme a sec."
Personally, I think that I'd want to see the people of the world join hands in a symbolic gesture of hope for a future of global peace.
Emma Brody (Madeline Stowe), a blind violinist in a Chicago folk band, begins to recover her vision after a corneal transplant. She does not, however, have full use of her vision and suffers from "retroactive vision," a condition that causes a lag between the time her eyes absorb an image and the time her brain actually "sees it." So when she sees her neighbor's murderer in the hallway of their apartment building, it doesn't register on the next day. The image haunts her throughout the film.
That was my next choice. Anyway, this is the premise behind our movie of the week, "Blink."
This is most of the fun in "Blink." While Emma continues to see the killer's face everywhere through her distorted vision, we're never sure whether the face is real or simply a hallucination. Director Michael Apted has plenty of fun milking our fears of not being able to see what we're scared of, using computer-enhanced blurring and disconcerting camera angles. Of course, the police are skeptical because she can hardly make out a mug shot or a lineup, but one detective (Aidan Quinn) sticks by her, partly because he believes her and partly because he begins to fall in love with her.
"The way that guy's knarly head kept popping up, that was freaky. Then that loopy music would go 'Bwooooszch!' and scare the snot out of you."
"I thought he was a knob. Wasn't he Mikhall Barvshnikov?"
Uh, no. Sludge, that was Quinn. I agree with
Matt & SLUDGE
AT THE MOVIES
by Matt Gowen
Good thing he controlled himself. Though Barysh.er.. I mean, Quinn remained one-dimensional, Stowe turned in the intelligent, aggressive and sexy performance that has become her trademark. She turns Emma into a damsel who is not in much distress after all. "Blink" owes most of its tense momentum to Stowe. The script, though occasionally languishing in trite exchanges, manages enough cleverness and wit to prod the story along at a decent pace. The suspense is maintained through the unsettling nature of Emma's condition, and there are enough good scares to satisfy even the most skeptical moviegoer.
you, though. His portrayal of the formula rough-edged thriller cop who slurps coffee and chomps doughnuts was only mildly interesting and barely escaped being cliche.
"Well, it sure looked like Mikhail. I kept thinking he was going to break out the leotard and start leaning around."
"Those goobs who brought shovels for their popcorn and waited "tl every quiet minute in the movie to glob in a load and snack it around."
"C'mon people, work with me. Twenty kernel limit a shovelful, please. And chew with your dang mouth shut. You sound like my dog licking cheese off the floor." I ask them to post a sign. What did you
They were annoying, weren't they? Maybe they hadn't eaten for a few days.
I'll ask them to post a sign. What did you think of the movie, Sludge, on the whole?
"Only one problem. What's that Sludge?
What's that, Sludge?
Ok, ohay. I get it. Hey, Sludge, I think "Schindler's Lst" is coming on Friday.
About what? What do you mean?
"What about "Ace Ventura: Pet Detective?"
PAGE 6
"I mean, good flick!"
We'll flip a coin.
Preservation society seeks to revive '70s with music collections
By JIM PATTERSON
Associated Press Writer
It seems just as fast as something falls out of fashion, along comes a format change or nostalgia fad that gives it new commercial life.
NEW YORK (AP) — Selling the same old thing in a shiny new package works for beer and detergent — and definitely pop music.
Finding legal life stifling, they quit law practice and found refuge in The 70s Preservation Society, a tongue-in-cheek organization with the serious goal of selling compilations of silly 1970s hits such as "Having My Baby," "Seasons in the Sun" and "Billy Don't Bea Hero."
Just ask Craig Balsam and Cliff Chenfeld, two afflicted New York lawyers who are partners at Razor & Tie Music.
"We had a strong sense that 1970s music was going to come back," said Chenfeld, citing the 20-year nostalgia cycle that made the '50s popular in the '70s, and the '60s a rage in the '80s.
Their first compilation sold about 100,000 copies through humorous late-night television commercials featuring Balsam as a guy stuck in the decade of polyester.
"You know, all these people who are getting to our age (early 30s) and a little bit older are beginning to lose touch with pop culture and getting a little nostalgic for when they were kids," he said.
Chenfeld said the duo thought of "70s music as fun and frivolous. "And we thought there would be a lot of younger people who would hook into sort of that pre-AIDS, pre-crack kind of disco, top-40, more innocent-sounding kind of stuff," he said.
Technology played a major part as well. The originals came out on vinyl records, cassettes or even 8-tracks.
Much of the material had been deemed unworthy of compact disc release by the big record companies because the songs came from one and two-hit wonders instead of superstars.
Even Rhino and Rykodic—leaders in the compact disc reissue field—tend to stay with well-known artists (David Bowie, Frank Zappa and Elvis Costello, in Rykodic's case) or compilations of more exotic musical genres.
Razor & Tie has since marketed follow-up compilations focusing on such '70s niches as "Disco Fever," "Those Rockin' '70s" and "Easy' '70s."
Disco fans can groove to songs like "Ring My Bell,""A Fifth of Beethoven"
and "Y.M.C.A." Sentimental types can get dewey-eyed on "Easy '70s" with David Soul's "Don't Give Up on Us" or Engelbert Humperdinck's "After the Lovin'" Air-guitarists will prefer "Those Rockin' '70s," with stuff like "Cat Scratch Fever" and "Takin' Care of Business."
"We have five (albums) out, and each one sells every week. In fact Arista (Records) has a very good attitude toward this," he said. "They have the 'Greatest Hits' out, so they are with us."
Chenfeld cites The Partridge Family catalogue as a Razor & The success story.
In each case, more than 40 songs are spread over two compact disks — one-stop shopping for your 1970s music needs.
Razor & Tie also has albums out by Ian Hunter, Elliot Murphy, the Knack, Jules Shear and Rick Springfield. And they're thinking even further ahead, to a future where technology bypasses retail — and television mail order — altogether.
February 3,1994
KULife
Your guide to Entertainment in the Lawrence Area.
calendar
NIGHTLIFE
Benchwarmers Sports Bar and Grill 1601 W. 23rd St.
The Lonesome Hounddogs, 10 tonight,$4
Lie Awake, 10 p.m. tomorrow,$3
Soul Food Cafe, 10 p.m. Saturday,$3
Stone Culture, 10 p.m.Feb.10,$4
The Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire St.
731 New Hampshire St.
WTCF Benefit with Kill Creek and Slackjaw, 10
tonight, $5 (18 and over)
Lee Dixie and The Subs, 10 p.m. Saturday, $4
Ben Vaughn and Alex Chilton, 10 p.m. Tuesday,
$7 (18 and over)
12th and Oread streets
The Crossing
The Eudoras, 9 tonight, cover charge
Easy Reader, 9 p.m. tomorrow, cover charge
Frank Zappa, 9 p.m. Saturday, $15 advanced tickets
Pet Fetish, 9 p.m. Feb. 10, cover charge
Full Moon Cafe
803 Massachusetts St.
Tim Cross Jazz Group, 9:30 tonight, free East West Fusion, Ry Brown, Clark Jamison, 9:30 p.m. tomorrow, free
The Young Johnny Carson Story, 9:30 p.m.
Saturday,free
1777 Brunch. noon Sunday. free
Jazz brunch, on Sunday, free
Tom's Tuesday Thing, 7 p.m. Tuesday, free
Acoustic Juice, 9 p.m. Wednesday, free
Tim Cross Jazz Group, 9 p.m. Feb. 10, free
The Jazzhaus
9261/2 Massachusetts St.
Whittle, 9:30 tonight, tomorrow and Saturday,
cover charge
Poetry Slam, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, cover charge
Dah-Veed, 9:30 p.m. Feb.10, cover charge
Hockenbury's Tavern
1016 Massachusetts St.
Walking on Einstein, 10:30 tonight, $3
Walking on Einstein, 10:30 tonight, $3
L.A. Ramblers, 10:30 p.m. tomorrow, $4
Ricky Dean and The Eudoras, 10:30 p.m. Saturday, $4
Open Mic Night, 10:30 p.m. Sunday, free Itals, 10:30 p.m. Monday, $6 advanced tickets
Blues Revenge and the Spicey Urchins, 10:30 p.m. Wednesday, free
The Keepers, 10:30 p.m. Feb. 10; $3
---
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, February 3, 1994
7
Fast swimmer fought upstream battle
Proposition 48 limited her time in Kansas pool
By Andrew Gilman Kansan sportswriter
You would never know what junior swimmer Ronda Lusty has been through by looking at her performances.
The 1992 All-American spinter has posted the Jayhawks' best times in both the 50- and 100-yard freestyle events this season and is coming off two victories Saturday in Ames, Iowa, including a season's best 23.94 seconds in the 50-yard freestyle.
She was a Proposition 48 case from Pendleton High School in Oregon and was forced to sit out of competition her freshman year. That wasn't easy for the six-time high-school state champion.
It wasn't easy.
Proposition 48 affects high-school student athletes who are entering college but do not get a score of at least 17 on the ACT or 700 on the SAT. Under NCAA rules, Proposition 48 athletes are not able to compete or practice with the team, but they are allowed to attend universities and nav their own way.
"It's hard to just sit and watch," Lusty said. "I wasn't able to swim or compete, and that was frustrating."
Because of an NCAA rule change in 1993, Lusty was able to regain her lost year of eligibility.
Even though she sat out a year, Lusty knew that Kansas was the place for her.
"Gary was interested in me coming here," she said of swimming coach Gary Kempf. "He made me feel like an athlete, an athlete that could contribute to the team. That was important to me."
She said all the coaches had wanted her to go to a junior college. But that's not what she wanted to do.
Lusty also was recruited by Southern Methodist University, Tennessee and South Carolina.
I will be there to help you.
Proposition 48 was not the only problem for her, either.
"Gary said for me to come on out and swim here," she said. "He kept on encouraging me, and that's what made me want to come here."
"My roommate, Marsh Trachi, who is also from Oregon, knew what I was going through," Lusty said. "She stood by me and knew I was hurting. That was helpful."
"When I got to the University, I was overwhelmed," she said. "I felt uncomfortable, plus I had the ACT telling me I wasn't going to make it. Besides that, I found out that I had a reading disability."
Fortunately, she had the support of her roommate and the rest of the team to help overcome her problems, even if she wasn't competing or practicing with them.
"The team accepted me before I started swimming with them, and that also helped me become more comfortable."
"It's hard to just sit and watch.I wasn't able to swim or compete and that was frustrating."
Martin Altstaedten / KANSAN
Lusty has made great strides since the trou.
Junior swimmer Ronda Lusty has posted the best times for the Jayhawks this season in both the 50- and 100-vard freestyle events.
Ronda Lusty Kansas junior swimmer
bles of her freshman year.
I meet like I've grown," she said. "Mentally I've also gotten stronger, and now I'm saying, I can do this."
Her coach, Gary Kempf, also believes in her. "Ronda is a talented, hard-working, motivated young lady," he said. "I attribute that to her work ethic and her desire."
That work ethic and desire have led Lusty to set some high goals.
"I've got my own mind set," she said. "I know what I need. NCAA's are definitely a goal."
A swimmer must swim 23.30 seconds to qualify for the women's 50-yard freestyle in the NCAA meet. Lusty has to cut just 64 hundredths of a second to qualify.
She and her coach have confidence that she will be able to do it.
"My times are starting to decline," she said.
"By the end of the season, I'll be ready to
explode"
Kempf also agreed.
"Her starts, turns and technique have gotten better," he said. "I'd like to see her repeat as an All-American."
With the worst behind her, Lusty looks back and realizes that she would not have wanted to go anywhere else.
"If I had to choose again, it would be here."
she said. "The coaches gave me the opportunity and encouragement that I needed.
"I feel like I've grown, and I feel more relaxed."
But the most important thing to Lusty is the team.
"It's like a family here," she said. "Unity. That's what's important."
Rayford may be small, but stands tall in steals
WSAS 10
Big opponents are favorite prey of junior guard
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
Some people may think that Kansas junior guard Calvin Rayford's 5-foot-6 frame more closely resembles a midget from the "Wizard of Oz" as a Javahawk basketball player.
But if opposing guards make that connection, their first impressions will disappear as quickly as the basketballs from their hands.
Rayford said he enjoyed guarding someone who was taller than him.
Kansas junior guard Calvin Rayford goes for a layup against Colorado junior forward Ted Allen, Kansas defeated Colorado 87-53 on Saturday.
"I watch the way he dribbles the ball," he said. "If I think someone's dribbling really high. I play with him."
in describing his craft, Rayford sounds like a boxer analyzing his opponent.
"I move one way to see how he reacts," he said. "When you know his weakness, then you've got him."
Rayford has played against some of the top guards in the nation, including preseason All-American sophomore Jason Kidd of California, Kansas State senior Anthony Beane and Indiana senior Damon Bailey.
KANSAN FILE PHOTO
"Jason Kidd was tough," Rayford said. "He's sneaky, and he's got a lot of moves."
During that Nov. 19 game, Rayford had two assists, two steals and no turnovers as Kansas defeated then-No. 6 California 73-56.
As a sophomore, Rayford had 30 steals in limited playing time. He played behind Adonis Jordan, who led the team with 70 steals. But Jordan played more than three times as many minutes as Rayford.
It may be surprising that Rayford feels this way. He came to Kansas in 1991 as the state high-school player of the year in Wisconsin. In his senior year at Washington High School in Milwaukee, he averaged 16 points and 7.3 assists a game. But Vaughn has started in all the games this season.
"I'm happy with my role," he said. "I think when the time comes, I will be able to step up."
When Vaughn first arrived at Kansas, he said he had no preconceived ideas about Rayford.
"I never underestimate someone's abilities," Vaughn said. "I knew he would be a challenge. I thought he would be the quickest player that I have to guard. He will definitely challenge me day in and day out, which he has."
"It doesn't bother me," he said. "Some games, I know that he's going to do well, and some games I'm going to do well."
Rayford is second on the team with 80 assists for the season, compared to Vaughn's team-high 104 assists. This is impressive, considering Vaughn has played 154 more minutes. Rayford insists that the two guards have a good relationship.
Despite playing in front of Rayford as a freshman, Vaughn said the two were friends.
In Kansas' relentless style of play this season, guards are depended on to pressure the opposing point guard and push the ball on offense. Kansas coach Roy Williams said the two guards played the game the way he expected.
"We're friends on the court as well as off the court," he said. "It just makes both of us better players."
"Calvin and Jacque are similar in that they both push the ball up the floor," he said. "Calvin creates a little more havoc than Jacue. I tell you what, if the other guy's
Possibly the best individual battles that go on in Allen Field House do not happen with 15,800 people watching. Vaughn said practice time was when he and Rayford were naturally paired against each other.
point guard isn't dog-tired, I am not going to be too happy. They both have the ability to get after you."
we both thrive on our defense, pressuring the ball," Vaughn said. "Sometimes practices can be intense. But after practice, we go back to the locker room. I guess it's just another day's work."
By Matt Siegel
Kansan sportswriter
"Traveling with the Jayhawks" would be an appropriate theme for the No. 6 Kansas women's basketball team this month.
The team has five road games during February. The Jayhawks will for Colorado for their first road game of the month at 5 a.m. today from Kansas City International Airport. After the game against No. 7 Colorado tomorrow, the Jayhawks will fly back home. Saturday morning, they will ride a bus to Columbia, Mo. to face the Tigers.
Women's teams use a different traveling system than men's teams. Each women's team has a traveling partner, and all the women's teams usually play Fridays and Sundays.
Kansas' partner is Kansas State, who is at Missouri on Friday. Then the two teams will trade places: Kansas plays at Missouri, and KState plays at Colorado on Sunday.
Washington said the reason that traveling partners were created had been to eliminate any competition between the men and the women and to bring more exposure to the women's games. Although traveling partners may have looked good on paper, some coaches are exasperated with the system.
"We will go down and play our hearts out at Oldhoma and lose by one or something." Nebraska coach Angela Beck said. "Then we will have to travel all day Saturday and play
Oklahoma State, who had an easier game against our partner, Iowa State, and didn't have to expend the energy and effort that we did."
Beck said the traveling-partners system, which was started last year in the Big Eight, was set up geographically. She said it had been difficult to prepare a team to play with in a 24-hour period, especially after traveling most of the day.
Washington said she had devised a system with her assistant coaches in which one coach prepared for the Friday game and another assistant coach prepared for the Sunday game.
Washington said she thought that the Colorado game would be emotional because it pitted the two top teams in the conference and because both are ranked in the top ten. She said she thought that the way her team had handled the road had been remarkable.
"We have been able to come right back after an emotional high and still found enough to win ball games," she said. "The players have done a nice job of enjoying it for a few moments and then tucking it away and getting refocused."
So far this season, Kansas is 6-1 on the road and 16-1 overall. The Jayhawks 7-0 in the Big Eight Conference, are ranked nationally and have won eleven consecutive games.
"I think some teams have a lot of potential but they don't understand what it takes to be successful, and they are up and down," Washington said. "We don't get caught up in things like who starts or who scores the most. Those are things that separate your players and put the "I" in team that should never exist."
Battle of rivals to decide king of college basketball
The Associated Press
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. — Just what a Duke-North Carolina game needs, something to make it a little bigger.
When they meet tonight in another edition of one of the best rivalries in all of sports, it will also be a matchup of college basketball's top-ranked teams.
No. 1 Duke, 15-1, took over the top spot this week, the fifth team in as many polls to hold the honor. North Carolina, 17-3, was the preseason No. 1 and held the spot for two weeks during the season.
The schools, just eight miles apart, have won the last three national championships. North Carolina ended Duke's two-year reign in 1993.
It's the first matchup of No. 1 and 2 since top-ranked UNLV beat Arkansas 112-105 on Feb. 10, 1991. It's also for first place in the Atlantic Coast Conference. Duke is 6-1 in the league, and North Carolina is 5-2.
"If North Carolina is completely healthy, they're probably as talented a team as there is in the United States," Duke coach Mike Krzyewski said. "They have kids who last year won the national championship."
The depth of the Tar Heels will again be a big factor with the continued absence of shooting guard Donald Williams, their leading scorer at 16.2 points a game. He missed three games early in the season with tendinitis in his left foot and then badly bruised and slightly separated his left
shoulder two weeks ago against Virginia. Williams was not expected to play, but Tar Heels coach Dean Smith left the door open just a bit.
"If Donald did play against Duke, it probably wouldn't be very much because of his conditioning," Smith said. "The first time he came back, we felt he was ready to move right back in. This time, he's been out so long that he wouldn't be able to move back in for more than four-minute stretches."
The attention should be in the middle where North Carolina has 7-footer Eric Montross, averaging 14.5 points and 8.4 rebounds. Duke has 6-11 Cherokee Parks, who is averaging 16.3 and 9.6.
"Eric is just a great team player, and he does what he has to do to make Carolina a winner," Krzyzewski said. "He's very mobile for a big guy.
"When you drive, he can move and take up even more of the lane. He's a huge presence for North Carolina, the way Grant Hill is for you. You know Eric Montross is there. They know it, the opposition knows it, and it's always good for Carolina.
"Cherokee has gotten better, and I think he's stronger. He has ability to go outside more. Strength-wise. Cherokee has improved and he might be able to play better post defense, but you can't guard Eric alone. There will be so many good players on the court, it won't be like a 1-on-1 matchup."
No.it's 1 against 2.
8
Thursday, February 3, 1994
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Beethoven's 2nd Pg 41:55; 7:15,9:35
Sister Act Pg 41:55; 7:10,9:45
3 Primetime Show (1) Hearing Dalby
Serenity, Giligan Aimee 1 Imagine Silversea
Crown Cinema
BEFORE & PM. ADULTS $1.00
(LIVED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
CHAINS FIXED FAST
Kizer Cummings
jewelers
749-4333
833 Mass • Lawrence, KS
VARSITY
1079 MASSASUETTS 841-5191
Pelican Brief PG-13 5:00.8:00
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:
U1700 WA4 5L5181
$1.25
Jurassic Park PG-13 5.00,
7.28, 9.45
Good Son R 5.00,
7.30, 9.45
SHORTTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY
SUA FILMS
TUESDAY, FEB. 1 - SUNDAY, FEB. 6
MENACE II SOCIETY
TUES. & THURS. 7:00PM
TUES. & WED. 9:30PM
INCIDENT AT OGLALA
WED. 7:00PM
THURS. 9:30PM
POETIC JUSTICE
FRI. & SAT. 7:00 & 9:30PM
ALL SHOWS IN KANSAS UNION
TICKETS $2.50, MIDNIGHTS $3.00
FREE WITH SUA MOVIE CARD.
CALL 864-3-BOW FORE MORE INFO
FRESHMEN & SOPHOMORES
Lambda Sigma & Owl Honor Societies are now accepting applications.
Applications are available at:
*400 Kansas Union
*Nunemaker Center
Applications due March 4th
KANSAS CITY TO LAWRENCE. TOLL FREE.
With PageNet Nationwide, anyone in the U.S. can reach you toll free, no matter where your busy schedule takes you. Hometown friends and family, as well as fellow students, will always be able to contact you on your numeric pager, to tell of important news or make weekend plans. Just what today's college student needs.
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
08074913627
Call PageNet today to find out just how simple, inexpensive, and useful PageNet Nationwide can be for you.
Call and ask about the KU student special!
1 (800) 710-1342
PAGENET NATIONWIDE
Kerrigan earns clearing; Harding may face hearing
The Associated Press
DENNIS, Mass. — A panel of figure skatingjudges yesterday pronounced Nancy Kerrigan physically and mentally fit for the Olympics, despite an attack in January that knocked her out of the national championships.
Although Kerrigan could not skate at the championships in Detroit after the Jan. 6 attack in which her right leg was smashed with a collapsible baton, she was named with Harding to the U.S. Olympic team anyway — contingent upon yesterday's evaluation of her skating.
"If there were any doubt or any questions about Nancy Kerrigan's skating condition, she answered them for us
this afternoon," said Chuck Foster, secretary to the U.S. Olympic Committee and one of the four judges who watched Kerrigan perform at her practice rink. "We expect that she is going to do very well in Norway."
In Portland, Ore., Jeff Gilooly, the ex-husband of skating champion Tonya Harding, met with investigators yesterday at the FBI office one day after he pleaded guilty to racketeering in the attack on Kerrigan.
Under the plea bargain, Gillooly will be exempt from further charges in exchange for serving two years in prison, paying a $100,000 fine and giving further testimony in the case.
A special committee of the U.S. Figure Skating Association began meeting Tuesday in Colorado Springs, Colo., to decide whether Harding must face a disciplinary hearing for violating the group's code of ethics. The finding would be a first step toward possibly removing Harding from the Olympic team.
Committee chair Bill Hybl, the former president of the U.S. Olympic Committee, said the panel should have a recommendation on Harding by the end of the week.
Her possible replacement, Michelle Kwan of Torrance, Calif., was given permission yesterday to go to Norway to be ready to compete in the Olympics, the U.S. Figure Skating Association announced in Colorado Springs.
Harding hype helps speed skaters
The Associated Press
LILLEHAMMER, Norway — The first American athletes to arrive for the Winter Olympics said they could benefit from the courtroom drama swirling around teammates Tonya Harding and Nancy Kerrigan.
Fifteen athletes and three staff members of the men's and women's speed-skating team, the first part of a 276-member U.S. delegation to the Winter Games, arrived in Oslo yesterday. They said the attention on the rival figure skaters would lessen the pressure on even the best-known members of their crew.
"I think it's the best thing that can happen to Bonnie (Blair) and Dan
(Jansen)," said Nathaniel Mills, a 1,500-meter racer from Evanston, Ill. "Everything's Tonya and Nancy, and it will probably stay that way."
Normally, Blair and Jansen would have been expected to be the focus of Olympic attention.
If Blair sweeps the 500 and 1,000, as she did in Albertville, France, two years ago, she would have five gold medals, the most of any U.S. woman in Olympic history. That would be one more than swimmer Janet Evans, diver Pat McCormick and spinner Evelyn Ashford.
became a worldwide event in 1988 when he slipped and fell in both the 500 and 1,000, trying desperately to win a gold medal in memory of his sister, who died just before his first race.
Jansen is in his fourth Winter Games and still is searching for his first gold medal, the one championship in speed skating to elude him. His quest
Peter Mueller, the team's coach,
sent Jansen to Norway a day early to
try to gain an edge in preparations for
the 500, held Feb. 14, the third day of
the Winter Games.
He agreed that the focus on the Harding-Kerrigan saga could help his stars concentrate on skating.
Mills said opinions among the speed skaters on whether Harding, who has been linked to the plot by former husband Jeff Gillooily, should remain on the Olympic team "are as varied as in the public at large."
Pancho's
MEXICAN RESTAURANT
Come join the fiesta!
711 W 23rd 843-4044
in the Malls Shopping Center
Pancho's
Henry T's Bar & Grill
Karaoke after 9pm Presented by Michael Beers
9$^{95}$ 3 doz wings
&
A Pitcher of
Bud or Bud Light
(After 6 pm)
75¢ Draws
$1^{75}$ Imports
749-2999
6th & Kasold
SUA Spring Break 94
Destination:
Panama
City
Beach
FLORIDA
Presented by:
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF SANABAR
SUA Spring Break 94
Destination:
Panama City Beach
FLORIDA
Presented by:
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
Friday, March 18 to Saturday, March 26
ONLY $190
Trip includes:
Beach Front Condos
Two Bar-B-Ques
Volleyball Tournaments
KU Final Four Party
All Kinds Of Fun!
Sign Up Now! Call 864-3477
PanamaCity
The only place to be for Spring Break 94!
Sign Up Now! Call 864-3477
PanamaCity
The only place to be for Spring Break 94!
Jayhawk Bookstore "Your Book Professionals"
"At the top of Naismith Hill"
Hrs: 8-7 M-Th., 9-5 Fri., 9-5 Sat, 12-4 Sun. 843-3826
MAZZIOS PIZZA
Mon.-Sun.
Buffet
Hours $2.99 lunch buffet 2630 Iowa
11:00-1:30 (add .70 for salad) 843-1474
SUNFLOWER
Annual
Winter Sale
Now until the end of February
Woolrich Coats...up to 30% off
Turtle Necks...58
Womens Clothing...20% off
Men's Clothing...20% off
Sweaters...20% off
199 Bicycles...Closeout Prices
Winter Cycling Wear...20% off
Selected Boots...Closeout Prices
843-5000 804 Massachusetts
MEET
Discuss his positions on:
Bob Eye,
Independent Candidate for Governor of Kansas, in front of the Union today. Noon to 1:00 p.m.
1) Moving to renewable energy;
2) Providing universal health care;
3) Eliminating crime's root causes;
4) Eliminating the property tax.
Classified Directory
100s
Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business
Eventual
120 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
200s Employment
Help Wanted
Professional Services
Tyring Services
235 Typing Services
Classified Policy
The Kansan will have the right to accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, gender, or other characteristics not will 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, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, national origin, or an intention; to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination." Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs are advertised in this newspaper.
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
100s Announcements
- Kansan Classified: 864-4358
105 Personals
SEX & ZEN (NC-17) Midnight Friday and Saturday: Liberty Hall Cinema. Movie Line 749-1912
110 Bus, Personals
Looking for significant Spring Break cash? Start up preventative health company out of KC looking for highly motivated individuals to market our product locally on your own time. Please call 1-800-763-2800 at the prompt dial 7630 for more information.
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
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, February 3, 1994
9
SAVEwith your Kansan Card TODAY!
Unique Sterling Silver Jewelry
Hoops, Pendants & More!
For Guy & Gals
288 Mau. Downriver
988 Mau. Downtown
SpringBreak1994
CANCUN from $439 SOUTH PADRE from $159 Other destinations available Lowest price guaranteed
Call865-1352
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 8am-4:30pm
Sunday 8am-4:30pm
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Friday 8am-6pm
Saturday 8:30am-12:30pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
UID with Current Registration Stick
13th YEAR!
SPRING BREAK94
SOUTH 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·A·D·O
STEAMBOAT
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK
BRECKENRDGE/KEYSTONE
N·E·V·A·D·A
LAS VEGAS
B·O·U·T·H·C·A·R·O·L·I·N·A
HUTTON NEAD ISLAND
RESERVATIONS AVAILABLE NOW
CALL TOLL FREE FOR FULL
DETAILS AND COLOR BROCHURE!
Call Joan at 865-5611
120 Announcements
CALCULUS Workshop. Learn skills for success in Math 115 & 116. FREE! No registration required. 7-9 pm, Feb 7, 405 Weson. Presented by the Student Assistance Center.
COMMUTERS: Self serve Car Pool Exchange
Main Lobby, Kansas Union
Guitarist looking for practice and/or band mates.
Leave a message. 814-0486.
School of Education Students
PREPARED FOR EXAMS Workshop. Time management, memory techniques, test-taking strategies. FREE! Thurs. Feb 3. 9:40, ppm. Presented by the Student Assistance Center.
HAVASU: America's New Spring Hot Spot, Lake Havasu, AZ, is throwing America's largest party! Top-name Concerts, Comedians, and Actors Will Lake Warrill Roar in '94! CALL 800-814V-HAVASU
NEEB A/RIDER/ RIDERE Use the Self Serv Car Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union
WANT TO HAVE A TUTOR? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 138 Strong.
Tax preparation. Short Form $15, Long Form $27
Firmalization Filing $20, Refund Laundry Call $68
2766
TUTORS: List your name with us. We refer students to you. Student Assistance Center 135 Sage Street, New York, NY 10024
Students who plan to STUDENT TEACH the FALL semester will meet with Dr. Hammond on the student teacher meeting on Monday, February 7 at 3:30 in 303 Hall. This meeting is manda by Preliminary information is available in 117 Hall.
PREPARING FOR EXAMS WORKSHOP Time management, memory techniques, test-taking strategies
FREE!
Thursday, February 3, 7-9 pm
4034 Wescoe
Presented by the
Student Assistance Center
Spring Break Alternatives
Wanted recording of KU-OSU game as board on 9.0 JKH. Will Pay 823-9010.
London $395*
Paris $389*
Madrid $389*
- Call for other destinations including the Caribbean islands are rounding from Chicago and subject to change. Travel not included, restrictions apply.*
Council Travel
1-800-475-5070
1634 Orrington Ave Evanston, IL 60001
Call for a FREE Student Travel magazine
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65. 66. 67. 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76. 77. 78. 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85. 86. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94. 95. 96. 97. 98. 99. 100.
CALCULUS WORKSHOP
Learn skills for success in
Math 115 & 116
FREE!
Monday, February 7,
7-9 pm
4035 Wescoe
Presented by the Student
Assistance Center
130 Entertainment
EL WATUSI DISCO-TECH!
House Music, Techro. Retro-Disco Classics.
DJ RAY Velasquez. Thunders. Dancing 10 pm-
midnight. 18 to enter 21 to drink. DOS HOMBRES,
185 New Hampshire.
SEX & EEN (NC-11) Midnight Friday and Saturday,
Liberty Hall Cinema. Movie Number 749-1912.
BENCHWARMERS
Thursday
Lonesome
Houndogs
$.25 draws
Friday
Lie Awake
$2.00 teas
$1.00 shot of the day
Saturday
Soul Food Cafe
2 for 1wells
$1.00 shot of the day
Make your
Valentine's
Heart
THROB
Hot Tubs
$7.00
per person per hour
Packages
3 visits ❤ 2 people ❤ $25 ❤
5 visits ❤ 2 people ❤ $35 ❤
VCR
Stereo
Shower
EUROPEAN
TAN. HEALTH & HAIR SALON
23rd& Ousdahl
140 Lost & Found
Found a necklace near Wakintis Health Center. Call me to identify. 842-3411.
LOST: A Sharp Electronic Organizer. If found call 841-4771
Men and Women
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Part-time temporary and permanent openings.
Flexible schedules around class. $4910 to start.
Positions need to be filled by 2/1/94. Please call
842-831 for more info.
Fortune 500 sporting goods distributor in Lenexa, KS has an immediate opening for in-house Computer Graphic Artist. This full time position requires a Master's degree or equivalent in Graphic Design, QuarkXPress, Adobe Illustrator and Photoshop.
Adams Alumni Center needs banquet prep cook and salad person. Flexible shifts, position available immediately, apply in person no phone calls. 1266 Orcad Ave.
994 EXPANSION
CAMP COUNSELORS - 12 yr. old educational camp near Kansas City says counselors (WSI helpul) for residential summer program for children 8-14. June 5 to August 8. Must be Sophomore or older. $400 plus room and board. For details, visit www.campcounselors.org. Good Center, 708. W398. St., Laurence, KS 60400.
Requires knowledge of 1- through 4-color design/layout/keyline packaging, catalogs and more. Excellent organizational and detailed oriented skills with administrative office skills also required for day-to-day routine duties. Must be able to understand and/or overview several projects at the same time. Required in college degree and/or work experience equivalent required.
COMPUTER GRAPHIC ARTIST
Environmental firm needs executive assistant.
Assistant with client meetings, keeping, special events and projects. Salary commensurate with skills or will train. Typing helptel. Send resume to: LMI, P.O. Box 465, LAWRENCE, KS
If your qualifications meet these requirements, please submit your resume with salary history and references.
Portions will be accepted Monday-Friday.
8:00am to 4:30pm. NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE.
Cruise line, entry level, on-board positions avail.
benefits. Summer. Costs year round (818)
229-6478.
Patthee Gilliano
Nelson/Weather-Rite, Inc.
14760 Santa Fe Trail Drive
Kansas, KS 58215 9000
Henry's *A* Kitchen & Grill in 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.
Paulette Galiano
14760 Santa Fe Trail Drive
Lenexa. KS 66215-2001
SEEKING PROFESSIONAL SALES REPRESENTATIVE EXCELLENT COMMISSION OPPORTUNITIES, ON CAMPUS, FLEXIBLE HOURS, CALL CHRIS ATRSM (800) 351-2927.
Names Wanted. Positions nationwide, summer
great pay and bonne,
free travel. (913) 624-8900.
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
United Child Development Center is accepting
Children for Tuesday-Friday 12:30-
14:00 April 9th Vermont EOE
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT (June thru august) at Camp Lincoln/Camp Lake Hubert in Minnesota's lake country since 1909. Meet new friends, over 150 staff men and women, expand horizons, rewarding hands-on experience with water/land activities. Specify job info & applications are available at the University Placement Office, Burge Union. Sign up, in advance for a personal interview on campus Monday feb 7th.
SUMMER JOBS!!Camp Birchwood seeks college students to work as counselors and instructors in summer programs offered by the campus tripring, sailing and dance. Guitar players needed. For an application call 1-800-641-5270.
Tennis Jobs-Summer Children's Campus-Northeast-Men and women with good tennis background can teach children to play tennis. Good salary, room & board, travel allowance. Women call or visit camp. Students must register online (20333) (611) 934-8535. Men call or write: Camp Winstad, 2853 Glades Rd, Suite 406E, Boca Raton, FL. 31431) (407) 904-5000. We will be on campus in the student union from 1-4pm on 6/31 in the Guest Room. Call 800-641-5270.
United Child Development Center accepting applications for rest aides Monday-Friday 12:30
Have A Night Out On Us!
NABI Biomedical Center Earn $15 each time you donate plasma. Up to $135 a month. New Donors Walk in today
Week-long, part-time positions for Assistant Instructors in Summer Workshops for Young People. KU Natural History Museum. June-19. Aug. 67.50-9.00 week. contact Ruth Gernuth, Public Education Director, 662J Dyche Hall, (913) 864-4173. An equal opportunity employer.
816 W.24th
749-5750
WORK STUDY POSITIONS AVAILABLE AT THE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ABOVE MINIMUM WAGE. APPLY ONLY IF WORK STUDY QUALIFIED. RM5340 OR CALL 844-4500.
225 Professional Services
Driver education offered through Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 yrs. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749.
TRAFFIC-DUET'S
Fake ID & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
Donald G. Strobe Sally G. Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
English taster - All English classes, profeading,
any anying - Ma English, BS Education
Arth. 3143, 2018.
DONALD DG STROLE
For a confidential, caring friend, call us. We are here to listen and talk you about your health testing with
`$8 Grand Marquies $1.5K, 2yXEL U-498B +`
(`internal 10 kbps unmsmods) modems $84+`
(`MS-Workers DOS, "Using MS-Works" WordPer`
(`ent version 3-button mouse, Typing Tutor $5,256`
(`SIMM4, RoboBOARD/FX 4 line SVGA GUI BUFS,`
`Mhri 848x6 microprocessor) GW graphics`
BRAXTON B.COPLEY
BRAXTON B. COPLE
Attorney at Law
General Practice
Traffic Tickets, Misdemeanors,
Landlord/Tenant,
Property Income Tax
Massachusetts
749-5
INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS IN
DVI-1
Immigration Dept. Green cards provide
national resident status; Citizens of almost all
countries are allowed to take part. Students, tourists,
anyone may apply. Info & forms: New Era
Legal Services, 2021 Staggs, Canoga Park, CA.
Tel: (818) 962-4425; Fax: (818) 828-9631
MATH TUTOR, TEACHING EXPERIENCE,
EXCELLENT CREDENTIALS $&/HOUR.
820-5182. Leave a Message.
719 Massachusetts 749-5333
Computer Notebook 486 25 MIZ, Active Mairix
4GB RAM 8MB Drive Darely Save
Computer Notebook 486 25 MIZ, Active Mairix
4GB RAM 8MB Drive Darely Save
Black Audit 1000, 1983, 38K miles. Excellent condi-
tion. Compatible with Enginco engine. Call 888-1
699 am 4, 840 OBQ OBO
886 SX12, 3.5 RAM, 40, MON-VOA, KX1P-II24
Printer, DOS 5.0, Windows 9.3, 1.482$85.489, Kevin
78 VW Super Belle convertible $4500, good condi-
tion 080 OBI cruise tickets for two the Bahamas.
$500
Rick Frydman, Attorney
823 Missouri 843-4023
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
91 Bridgestone MP-6 ml, bike, Ignuma green, X-
80壁桥Must. still Mk4, Call WLB, #84709
J
Linear ternier, triangular, riling gls/w sdtere case, 648 ea OB. Incline sit bch-nnew-333. Mgrvx console w/T remote-AM-PF-mac. Stere & tterminal ceck end 6156 OB. 942-7485.
1-der Women Word Processing. Former editor
transforms scribbles into accurate pages of let-
ters.
X
Desktop, 60x30, $325. Computer desk, 66x20, $325.
Executive chair, $225. Call 841-6341.
VIDEO EDITING AND
PRODUCTION SERVICES
A/B rollout program for EDL
3D computer animation.
Hi8 field production package.
Award winning screen writer.
PRIMAL SCREEN COMMUNICATIONS
For Sale-Portable Computer @70MG hard disk
In a floppy drive $500. Drive Call 748-236-9168
235 Typing Services
Words by Chris Wise Processing:
High quality papers and printing; spell check
tips; proofreading.
sound carpet. Call 861-4771
FUTON Couch with end tables, mattress and cover, makes into double bed. Maple. Call 864-4760 or 749-7435. Christine. $275.00.
Looking for a good type
*Paper Arts, Art supplies, Charts
*Laser printing to WOW! your profs
*Grammar and spelling free
*18 years experience
call Jekia st
mark the Grade
85-2853
HP 48 SX scientific expandable calculator with
hardware and manual included Very
light use lille use 300-950-1040
WANT TO SELL: 1. Brand New VCR I can’t use.
Gift coupon, encreg probe, best offer Gift boxes
VCR coupon
340 Auto Sales
MACINTOSH Computer. Complete system including printer only $500. Call Christ at 892-389-5685.
FOR SALE: Dorm Room Carrot. Call 841-4771
Word processing, applications, term papers, dissertations, resumes. Editing, composition, rush projects.
1966 Chevy Corvair Monza. 2 door automatic, new tires. Good, Good. Dependable Transportation.
1986 Black Honda Spree, excellent condition, well kept, new tires, tune and battery. Call mornings
300s Merchandise
1988 Dahaius 5 spd. one owner A/N C/$2000. Call
841-9383 daytime.
305 For Sale
7F-81 Graphing Calculator, like new. 515 - 1273.
484. Please leave a message if not home.
86 Mazda RX7 KXL Sumr,wpf win,cd wl, spp. 5pd,
new many parts, quite fun, $4,000 paul. Ba4 82
491,000 pts.
be a Rock N' Roll Star! I mo old Fender P-Bass Lyte w/active picks and gold hardward $25. Besser bassman 60 amp w/r/removable wheels $175. Better drum player a rival everybody needs a bass player! Paul 94-8985.
H
FOR SALE! 1983 Honda. Runs well. Relatable AM
Radio/Cassette Player $1000,842-728
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
1 dbmr apt available ASAP for sublease 'til Aug.
Less than 18 dbm from campman, Excellent
speed. No damage.
Available at West Hills Apth. Spacious 1 bed unfurnished apt. $295 per month. Water pd. Great location near campus. 1012 Emery Rd. No pets. 841-3800, 542-3884.
Feb rent free! Getting married, sublease i bdrm
Feb rent free! Grystos Asps. On bus route. Quiet, clean
Feb rent free!
First month free 1 bedroom apartment.
Second month free 2 bedroom Boardwalk Apartment.
Leave message 659-288-2000.
For rent, 2.bmrd. furnished apt. on West 7th available Feb. 1. $486 a month; 941-300.
For rent i bedroom apt. Efficiency Apts, a little,
parked on busway $270, available in March 749-
688.
For sublease. 1 bedroom apt avail. Mar. 1. Call Connie at b85-2714
Furnished room for rent with shared kitchen and
bathroom. 841-5900. Off arrest parking.
No pets. Bldg #1-850.
Hanover Place Ap. for rent. Near Campus.
8370/MO. Call 841-1212
House for rent 2 bedroom no pets, newly remodeled call 848-903-2831
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
VILLAGE SQUARE apartments
- Close to campus
•Spacious 2 bedroom
•Laundry facility
•Swimming Pool
•Waterbed allowed
9th & Avalon 842-3040
Huge 18R avail. now, AC dishwasher, balcony over pool, walk 10m to campus or bus rite. Pay electric. Free stuff. $330/00. month negotiable. Call TJ at 841-4829. Rest on machine.
Leasing for June and August. New 4 bedroom, new 2-bedroom apartment, gas fireplace, ceiling fans, cable-paid 1900 sqft, and covered parking avail. Early sign-up specials offered. For more information call Dave at 841-367-5000.
Rooms, apartments well kept, older
apartment, apartments 84A-372 (7922)
MORNING STAR
Spacitions i bedroom appi to campus. Purchased viii room immediately. Call 841-1212. Ask
Studio apt. available ASAP for lease until Aug.
2 two blocks to KU. Water & gas pd. Call
925-8970
meadowbrook FALL '94
Trailridge Apartments
new leasing for Summer and Fall
Studies, Apa, and Town Homes
KU BT Home, Dillen, Blackhall,
Call Today for more information
843-7333 2500 W.6th
You remember the time spent, the frustrations, the hassles. Do It Now. How? Glay you asked. Call 842-4200 & we'll send our complete pro
We presently have available a select few 1 & 2 bedroom apartments for immediate occupancy
gram to you immediately. Can Kathy or Shana at Meadowbrook 423 at Meadowbrook
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
- 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)
15th & Crestline Mon - Fri 8-5:30 Sat 10-4 Sun 1-4 Sorry no pets
*2 Pools
Available Now - 1 bdrm apt.
Live next to campus at:
Berkeley Flats
Call today. 843-2116
SUB-LEASE 2 Bc am. for lease, $790 per month. Pursuit, barnic-cable paid. Very close to campus. Call 843-7009
Sublease 1 BR in clean 2 BR apt. thru July 31, $196
+ /u! utilities 941-1183
Subluease quiet room at 16th and Tennessee
Wash/dryer-share kitchen, Chapel. Independent
room with private bath.
430 Roommate Wanted
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Female, non-smoking roommate needed for quiet room in a house. Need, $125.00 + /-
uplays, 749.79
emale needed to share 3 bdm apt with W/D $150 a mo. Stadium View Apt. Call 832-2868.
How to schedule an ad:
Looking for roommate Feb. Feb. the last 12
weeks with the following: cable paid and
paid but not electricity. Call 911-853-1268.
Female share 2 mhare 3 hr her, 2 Nbk 2 RCU $200 *
Female share 1 baby babiaby baby 1 old girl age 3
hours/day. 86/147%
Female roommate needed immediately on 1300 block on corner, hermann street, hardwood floors. Phone: (747) 282-6922; fax: (747) 282-6925.
Male roommate needed immediately for full-turn
up dorm room. apt $707 + Mo = \upharpoonright\ utils \upharpoonright\
in campus. Call Mali Ras.
Studios. non-smoking roommate wanted to share house with 16 good students. Own room and bath, own bathroom.
Male roommate needed through end of semester
maily furnished, near campus | 4/mo. + 1/2 tilt
Roommates are welcome.
One roommate wanted to share a B-30 house.
Garage, fenced in backyard. $175/mo. Call 983-425-6700.
One roommate required for 2dbm townhouse. $190
a month + $9i private. Private AC, DW, HP
and WiFi.
Ads phone is may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
Make sure you check the instructions below.
Calculating Rates
Stay by the Kasaa 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
by mom! I would sell Print, LawnFitters, RU, owned
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas offices. Or you may choose to be billed in 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.
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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
118 business personalis
129 announcementeet
129 entertainment
148 host & based
285 help needed
225 professional services
225 jyoles service
Cost per hour per day
1.2X 1-3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-28X 30+X
2.08 1.55 1.95 .86 .75 .90
1.90 1.15 1.85 .70 .65 .45
1.85 1.05 .75 .65 .60 .40
1.75 .90 .65 .60 .60 .35
379 want to buy
485 for rent
438 roommate wanted
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THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
2-4
"Come on, Johnny — don't be chicken. .. After it's over, we'll all be strawbrothers."
10
V
Thursday, February 3, 1994
The Etc. Shop 928 Mass.Downtown
Parking in the rear
NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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841-3775
Being drunk is not a license to rape.
No one deserves to be sexually assaulted.
Sexual Assault Prevention and Education Program a program of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center 115 Strong Hall, 864-3600
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Police find 19 children living in filth
Six relatives face neglect charges after drug raid
The Associated Press
CHICAGO — Police barged into an inner-city apartment before dawn yesterday looking for drugs. What they found was far more horrific.
"The only remorse they showed was they didn't want to be arrested," said Maggie Gutierrez, one of the first police officers on the scene.
In four rooms littered with feces and crawling with cockroaches were 19 children — the youngest 6 months old, the oldest 14. Five children slept in their underwear on a bare floor, and others fought with a German shepherd dog for food scattered on the floor.
Six adult relatives of the children — four mothers, a father and an uncle — were charged with contributing to child neglect, a misdemeanor. Another mother of some of the children was in custody but had not been charged.
Police raided the West Side apartment after watching suspected drug dealers do business outside the building through the night. Instead of drugs they found, as one officer put it, "babies everywhere."
"The apartment was cold, the apartment was filthy," police officer Linda Burns said. "I'm talking feces, garbage, food on the floor. I don't even know how to describe it—it was just filth."
"The they were eating food off the floor out bowls the dogs were eating out of," said police Lt. Fred Bosse. "The remaining food that was on the floor was being fought over by the dogs and the children."
One of the children, a 4-year-old, was hospitalized in fair condition; the others were taken to a shelter for neglected children after being examined at hospitals. One child had cigarette burns, cuts and bruises, raising the possibility of abuse, police Sgt. Russell Mueller said.
Three of the families had been investigated previously by the state's child-welfare agency, the Department of Children and Family Services, said representative Scott Hamilton. Inves
tigators looked into drug problems; inadequate supervision of the children and, in one family's case, possible child abuse.
The case was the latest in a series of appalling child-neglect and abandon cases in Chicago. Earlier this week, a mother was charged with murder in the starvation death of her 3-month-old daughter. Last month, three children under the age of 6 were found in their family's apartment after being left alone for three days.
The earlier cases have brought a barrage of criticism for the state agency, whose workers have been accused of repeatedly failing to intervene upon finding abused children. In the latest case, Mayor Richard Daley questioned why no one else reported conditions in the apartment.
"You wonder first of all about their parents," Daley said. "But how about their neighbors, how about family members? Where are they? Why didn't they come forward a week ago or two weeks ago?"
A child-abuse expert said poverty, ignorance, alcohol and illegal drugs all played some part in most such cases.
"There are chronic problems among people who grow up in violent, poor disintegrating communities," said Anne Cohn Donnelly, executive director of the Chicago-based National Committee for Prevention of Child Abuse. "Young parents who grew up in these situations never really learned that there is an alternative way to behave."
As many as five families and their children lived in the first-floor apartment where the youngsters were found, neighbors said, and drug dealers were a common sight in the area.
"I heard screaming — like the kids being bad," said Tony Jackson, who lives upstairs. "But I didn't hear nobody whipping nobody."
Six hours after police whisked the children to shelters and hospitals, neighbors milled outside the building. A front window was broken, and a cold wind whipped orange blankets covering the windows.
Inside the apartment, furnished only with two mattresses and a few tables, dirty clothes and diapers lay in haphazard pillars. A rusted stove with a broken door stood in the kitchen across from the mold-stained sink.
HIRE YOUR EMPLOYER NOW!
AS YOU BEGIN INTERVIEWING, LOOK CLOSELY AT YOUR POTENTIAL EMPLOYERS. WHAT DO THEY OFFER YOU?
DEMAND THE FOLLOWING:
1. EXECUTIVE TRAINING
C. ရဲ့ခွင်း YOU EACH YEAR FOR YOUR LAST TWO YEARS AT KU
3. A STARTING SALARY OF AT LEAST $25,000
5. 30 DAYS VACATION WITH PAY FOR THE FIRST AND EVERY YEAR
4. ANNUAL PAY RAISES UP TO AT LEAST $37,000 IN 4 YEARS
6. 8 FREE MEDICAL AND DENTAL CARE
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TO SATISFY THESE DEMANDS, CALL CAPT GENTRY OR CAPT WICKS AT 864-4676
AIR FORCE
ROTC
POLICE DEPT.
Pre-Med Club
Dr. Robert Hudson Chairman of History and Philosophy of Medicine at KU Med.
Lecturing on the "Meaning of Kevorkian- Physician Assisted Suicide"
Feb.3,1994 7:00 Watkins Health Center 1st Floor
Thursday Friday, Saturday, Sunday--February 3.4, 5.6
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CAMPUS/AREA: KU struggles to recruit and retain African-American students. Page 3.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.103.NO.96
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
KANSAS STATE
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA KS 66612
FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 4, 1994
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
Melissa Lacev / KANSAM
KU strives to provide access
PENGUIN
Checking Blake Hall for accessibility to disabled students, Susan Keetle, Raiston, Neb., junior, left, and Laura Bernardi, Kansas City, Kan., senior, measure the spout height on a water fountain. As part of an HDFL 437 assignment, the students took measurements to see if codes set by the American Disabilities Act were met.
Assistance to disabled prioritized by demand
NEWS:864-4810
By Susan White
Kansan staff writer
IfKim Morrow, Overland Park graduate student, had a research paper due and her computer broke down, she would not have any place on campus to go where she could type it.
"I operate my computer with a voice synthesizer," she said. "But the school does not have any computers like this. A school of this size should have at least one computer accessible for the blind. If one of our computers breaks down, we're stuck."
However, Morrow said she had few complaints about the University's accessibility for disabled students.
"My experience at KU has been very positive. The people here have a good attitude and are really open. I've enjoyed it immensely," she said. "I am a GTA for the German department, and they have just been super. They have done everything to make the department accessible for me."
Every year the University resurvey the accessibility of the campus for these students to see if the buildings meet codes set by the American Disabilities Act, Shuttic said.
Mike Shuttle, assistant director of the Student Assistance Center, said that the center knew of 383 self-identified KU students with disabilities but that there were probably several hundred more.
"We then use the information from the survey to prioritize for what projects need to be done right away," he said. "We also base this information on the complaints we receive from students."
Students from HDFL 437 helped the Student Assistance Center evaluate some of the buildings for the reassessment project, he said. The students measured and checked doors, light switches, thermostats, stairwells and fire alarms. Shuttle said.
Susan Keetle, Ralston, Neb., junior.
said the project was a real eye opener.
"I learned that I take a lot of things> for granted, like light switches and thermostats," she said. "They cannot be reached by some people in some of the buildings."
Randi Flinn, Honolulu senior, said she thought accessibility was necessary to make life easier for everyone.
"The campus is really inaccessible," she said.
Bob Turvey, chair of the architectural barriers committee, said that after the University finished assessing the campus, it would send a priority list of projects to the Board of Regents to get a budget for the fiscal
year.
"We prioritize by individuals who need the most immediate assistance," he said. "Most of the projects are complaint-driven. We ask students if the campus is accessible enough for basic functions, like using the bathroom.
"We have to deal with the reality that the campus is not totally accessible," he said. "We would like to update some of the restrooms, install curved ramps and have more braille signage in the halls and by the elevators."
helped students or faculty who felt discriminated against because of their disabilities.
Tom Berger, associate chair of the University's Americans with Disabilities Act committee, said that he
"The purpose of ADA is to mainstream people we have kept outside because of emotional or physical differences," he said. "Once a year, the office sends out forms to student employees and faculty asking them to list their disabilities, and if they want reasonable accommodation."
Berger said that most importantly, people should remember that there are people with emotional disabilities as well as physical disabilities.
"We have to be sensitive to their feelings too," he said.
Guest policy gives privacy, problems
Different halls; different rules
By Frank McCleary Kansan staff writer
Inconvenience is weighed against privacy for some students in Gertrude Sellars Pearson-Corbin Hall.
The Department of Student Housing has a visitation policy that defines when students in residence halls are allowed to have visitors of the same or opposite sex.
But instead of one policy that covers all, there are variations between the single-sex and coed residence halls. There also are variations between the women's halls.
Lewis Hall has a policy that allows male visitors anytime as long as they are escorted by a resident.
However, GSP-Corbin's policy restricts male visitors to Wednesday nights between 6 p.m. and midnight and from noon Friday until midnight Sunday. The roommate's consent is required at both Lewis and GSP-Corbin.
Some GSP-Corbin residents feel the policy is an inconvenience but not that big of a deal.
Tricia Costello, Leawood freshman, said she was used to the policy.
"It does not bother me that much," she said. "You have more privacy."
But it was a hassle when a resident had to walk her boyfriend downstairs to go to the bathroom because of the policy, she said.
Kristie Englemeyer, Watertown,
S. D., freshman, said the policy was an inconvenience for out-of-town guests who had nowhere else to stay, but she also said she liked the privacy that came with the policy.
"You do not have to worry about what you look like when you are walking around the hall," she said.
Alenna Keaton, Overland Park freshman, said she liked the policy because it gave her more privacy.
"You do not have to worry about guys being in the hall," she said. "You do not have to worry about your roommate always having a guy in the room."
Fred McEhenie, associate director of student housing, said the policy for GSP-Corbin was designed to provide students with a choice in their living environment.
"We did not want all vanilla ice cream," he said. "We know not all people like vanilla ice cream."
McElhenny said the policy was a reflection of an attitude that some women did not always want men around.
"In many ways it reflected the idea that the residents wanted to decide when guys could be there," he said.
In the past, some GSP-Corbin residents have tried to have the restrictions eased, McElhenie said. Students living in the halls during the 1992-93 school year voted to ease the restrictions, he said.
As a result, a new visitation policy will be in place this fall for GSP-Corbin residents.
Residents will be allowed to have male visitors on floor lounges or in their rooms between 5 and 11 p.m. Monday through Thursday and continuously from noon Friday until midnight Sunday.
'Rubber' checks put writers at risk
By David Stewart Kansan staff writer
Ralph Smith showed some faith in his customers last semester.
So Smith gave it a shot. He began accepting checks.
"I try to listen to the customers to give them what they want," said Smith, owner of Joe's Bakery, 616 W. Ninth St."Some wanted to use checks to pay."
It lasted two months
Check it out
Service fees for returned checks may vary. Under Kansas law, businesses may charge customers no more than $30 for a returned check if the fee notice is posted in the store and $10 if the fee notice is not posted.
The service fee charged by banks for returned checks also may vary. Bank officials said it could range from $15 to $20, depending on the bank.
The damages a merchant could receive from a customer who knowingly passes a bad check are limited to three times the amount of the check or $500, according to state statute.
KANSAN
After receiving more bad checks than expected, Smith returned to his original practice. For the past 13 years, he has accepted only cash from his individual customers.
Smith's solution was the extreme. The University of Kansas and businesses throughout Lawrence have other options to deal with bad check writers.
"Many of my orders are less than five bucks," Smith said. "It's pretty hard for me to go after the people who pass bad checks. You could spend a lot of time going after five dollars."
The result of writing a bad check to the University may be a nominal charge or suspension of check-writing privileges for a semester.
Merchants now seek other methods then criminal court for getting payment on a bad check, said Phyllis Paine, check investigator for the Douglas County office of the district
These penalties could account for the steady decrease in bad-check writing prosecuted by Douglas County in the past five years, from 364 cases in 1980 to 198 in 1993.
The result of bouncing a check outside campus may be a letter demanding restitution or even a night in jail.
attorney.
Many merchants consider court a last resort. Businesses that turn to the courts prefer civil courts where they can get more money, Paine said.
Paine said bad-check writing traditionally had been one of the most prosecuted misdemeanors in Douglas County.
The University takes a different approach. If a KU student gets caught attempting to pass a bad check for tuition, housing or health fees, the office of the comptroller will place a message saying "No checks" on that student's accounts, said Kathe Shiham, university comptroller.
"Being a university town, we might have a higher volume of bad checks," Paine said. "But we also might be more lenient and make sure people take care of those checks."
"After four months, we have someone review the account, to see if the student has maintained payments," Shinhan said. "If the students have been making those payments, we take the 'No checks' message off the
However, she said, being in a college town such as Lawrence would not necessarily mean a dramatic increase in the number of bad checks.
account."
Shinham said the office of the comptroller had received 1,089 bad checks for the 1992-93 school year.
"Considering how many chews we get total, it's not an unexpected amount," Shinham said. "I don't think there are a lot of students who write bad checks, but I don't think students are trying for good citizen awards either."
Milstead said writing a check gave customer proof of purchase as well as an option to stop payment. While Milstead said some larger Lawrence stores have habitually received bad checks, the check payment system has worked well for many downtown Lawrence businesses.
Services such as check validation have found their place because of customers' preferences for check writing, said Jean Milstead, senior vice president of Douglas County Bank.
"The popularity of checks continues to increase," Milstead said. "One part of its popularity will never go away. People can float a check."
"A lot of merchants downtown have never gotten a bad check," Milstead said. "They're just really trusting."
How the bad check bounces
VOID
1. che.
2. Me.
check.
3. Bank returns check to merchant after specified number of attempts to cash.
4. Merchant contacts customer for repayment.
5. Merchant may contact collection agency, —or—
6. Merchant may resort to arresting customer, usually as a last resort.
BAD CHECK
SALE OPEN SA
MERCHANT
BANK
SUBPOENA
DISTRICT ATTORNEY/
COLLECTION AGENCY
SALE OPEN SA as a last resort.
MERCHANT 2 3 5
SUBPOKEA
BANK
DISTRICT ATTORNEY/
COLLECTION AGENCY
SUBPOENA
Micah Laaker/KANSAN
INSIDE
Over the top
ALEXANDER KANE
Kansas senior pole vaulter John Bazzoni prepares for the Kansas track team's meets this weekend. The Jayhawks compete today at Anschutz Pavilion.
Page 7.
Uniform evaluations policy earns low marks
SexEx head suspects policy is impractical
A new policy to standardize students' faculty evaluations among the Board of Regents universities may get little support from the University of Kansas.
By Jamie Munn Kansan staff writer
T. P. Srinivasan, head of University Senate Executive council, said KU should not be lumped into the pool of other Kansas schools for this type of comparison.
The proposed evaluations would probably create a uniform method for students to critique their professors, said Regent Frank Sabatini.
Regent John Hiebert, who is chair of the Regents Academic Affairs task force, will
probably introduce a policy in March, Sabatini said.
"Right now it's still in the preliminary stages," Sabatiin said.
No official proposals had been introduced to the Regents, Sabatini said. But he said he thought Hiebert's task force had been winding down its studies.
However, the proposal could have some obstacles to pass before it gains approval from KU faculty.
Srinivasan said the Regents universities could not be looked at as a whole in this instance. He said he was not sure if Hlebert understood how complicated this issue might be.
"KU is KU and should be treated as KU," Srinivasan said. "You can't put all institutions in one league for everthing."
Srinivasan said he would not support the new evaluations because the missions and
"There are so many ways to evaluate," he said. "Not all of them reduce to numerical quantification."
"This just would not be a yardstick to measure performance level," he said.
expectations of all the Regents institutions were so varied.
Srinivasan said there have been a wide variety of responses from student evaluations which would make any state-wide comparison impractical. The range of opinions varied from large freshman classes to specialized graduate courses, he said.
Srinivasan also said some faculty performances were more tangible than others. Factors like quality of research, time devoted to student advising and service to the campus as a whole added to the basic role of teaching and probably wouldn't be recognized in the Regents' proposed plan.
Srinivasan also said he wanted to emphasize the higher standards that KU had for its faculty. He said comparing them to other institutions' faculty would not be an effective analysis because KU has a larger campus, a larger student body and a longer history in education.
"You can't reduce an institution to the lowest common denominator," he said.
Srinivasaan said he hoped the University Council would be able to discuss the proposed uniform evaluations at its first meeting in March. The Council would then take its concerns to the Regents meeting later that month.
The Regents universities are Emporia State University, Fori Hays State University, Kansas State University, Pittsburg State University, the University of Kansas and Wichita State University.
2
Friday, February 4,1994
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/Fint-Hall, Lawrence, K6045.
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Jayrunners will meet to run at 7 a.m. today at Anschutz Sports Pavilion. They also will meet to run at 5 p.m. today at Allen Field House. For more information, call Kimberly Schober at 864-1507.
The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an information table from 9 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. today at Wescoe Terrace.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today in Danforth Chapel
Women's Student Union will meet at 5 p.m. today at Alcove D in the Kansas Union. For more information, call 864-7337.
KU Fencing Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Jen Snuder at 841-6445.
KU Ballroom Dancing Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Sunita Yaday at 843-8271.
Alpha Phi Alpha will sponsor a Jazz Concert Seminar at 7 onight at the Frontier Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Marmel Jordan at 865-0788.
KU Gamers and Roleplayers will meet at 11 a.m. Saturday at the
Students Tutoring for Literacy will have a training workshop for tutors from 10 a.m. - 3:30 p.m. Saturday at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread. For more information, call Cris Silva at 864-8085.
Kansas Union. For more information, call John Whitmer at 749-3855.
- Spencer Museum of Art will sponsor Tours of the Month at 1 p.m. Sunday at the central court in the Spencer Museum of Art. For more information, call Sally Hayden at 864-4710.
SUFI ORDER will sponsor a Universal Worship service at 7 p.m. Sunday in Danforth Chapel. For more information, call 594-3880.
Kansas Water Polo Club will meet at 7 p.m. Sunday at the natatorium in Robinson Center. For more information, call David Reynolds at 841-6745 or Nick Pivonka at 841-6197.
Astronomy Associates of Lawrence will meet to star gaze at 8p.m. on every clear Sunday on the top floor of Lindley Hall. For more information, call Corey Zirlin at 842-2225.
CORRECTION
Tuesday night killed a bill that requested money to finance this year's Day on the Hill.
Weather around the country:
A headline on page 1 of yesterday's Kansan contained incorrect information. Student Senate on
WEATHER
Atlanta: 61'/34'
Chicago: 23'/10'
Houston: 67'/50'
Miami: 78'/60'
Minneapolis: 10'/-10'
Phoenix: 61'/48'
Salt Lake City: 37'/20'
Seattle: 46'/33'
Omaha: 31°/7'
LAWRENCE: 35°/20' Kansas City: 34°/20'
St. Louis: 39°/31'
Wichita: 45°/24'
Tulsa: 50°/34'
TODAY
Tomorrow Sunday
Sunny and breezy
High: 35'
Low: 20'
Partly cloudy and breezy
High: 35'
Low: 22'
Sunny day
Source: Mick Delfelder, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
High: 35° Low: 24°
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A Kansas license tag valued at $30 was stolen from a vehicle at 6 p.m. Tuesday from lot 90, located behind Robinson Center, KU police reported.
Someone smashed three windows and slashed the tires of a car Tuesday in the lower level of the parking lot east of Jayhawker Towers. The damage is estimated at $600, KU police reported.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, February 4, 1994
3
KU tries to increase minority enrollment
However, percentage of non-white students remains consistent
By Roberta Johnson Kansan staff writer
Despite efforts made by the University of Kansas, the African-American population has remained less than 3 percent of the student population since 1986.
Robert Sanders, associate vice chancellor for research, graduate students and public service, said he would give the minority recruitment process on all levels a "B."
"The University is bigger, but the percentage is the same," he said.
Sanders said that several factors affect minority enrollment, one of them being economics.
Across the nation, African Americans receive lower salaries than white Americans.
The chart below represents the percentage of black students at the University. These statistics represent figures from the Office of Institutional Research and Planning.
Sanders said that although the application fee waiver may help, tuition and other fees affected potential students more.
The chart below represents the percentage of black students at the University. These statistics represent figures from the Office of Institutional Research and Planning.
Percent of Student Body
1982 1984 1986 1988 1990 1992 1994
Year
Deborah Castrop, director of admissions, said that a fund had been established to pay for application fees for qualifying students in Kansas and the Kansas City area. The students have to meet the following qualifications: a 2.0 grade point average, qualification for such government programs as free lunch, and a recommendation from a high school counselor.
"Often minority students are students with a difficult time," she said.
"Also some majority students have a hard time meeting the fees."
"Would your family pay $2,000 a year for tuition if they only made $18,000?" he asked.
Micah Laaker/KANSAN
A disturbing statistic
There are a number of minority-specific scholarships and fellowships available through the state and Unihave a larger base of different ethnic groups."
Cedric Lockett first-year law student, said that since the University offered him a variety of financial aid, he had thought that the minority population at the University would be larger.
"It bothers me," he said. "I think it's important to
Life within the University community may be threatening to minority students, said Enrique Torres, assistant director of minority affairs.
"They're trying to adjust to a new environment that's not saying 'Come on in, let's be friends'." he said.
Tara Glens, Junction City sophomore, agreed with Torres.
"It's like only African Studies classes have African-American students," she said. "In other classes it's like you're the only one in there, and around campus you hardly see them around."
Derrick Wallace, St. Louis sophomore, said that this problem caused a lot of students to only attend the University for only one or two semesters.
Jocelyn Freeman, graduate teaching assistant in human development and family life, said that many of the African Americans she knew went to Kansas City for entertainment because of lack of options here.
Financial need is not the only concern. Terry Bell, president of the Black Student Union, said that the Lawrence and University communities do not benefit the African-American student population.
"There's not a unity here," he said. "People come here and do their own thing, instead of trying to unite the
"In a white world,it's hard to be Black, period."
Dorrick Wallace
St. Louis sophomore
black community."
However, student groups such as the Black Student Union are trying to promote unity, Wallace said.
Programs such as the Step program, a mentorship program for new minority students, are also helping minorities adjust to the University.
Because of the efforts of the Opportunity at Iowa program, the percentage of minority students has nearly reached the University of Iowa's goal of 8.5 percent of students, which was set in 1987.
Other universities are also working on recruitment and retainment of minorities as a whole.
"We believe the message comes from the top," said Rusty Barcelo, director of Opportunity at Iowa. "They're responsible for the overall
BLACK HISTORY MONTH
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KANSAN
coordination for under represented groups."
The program includes curriculum reform, cultural programs and automatic minority scholarships based on grades and ACT scores.
David Amble, vice chancellor of student affairs, said few institutions pulled all resources together. He said that the Blueprint for Diversity program was beginning to coordinate the programs at the University.
"It's very easy for African-American students to feel very alone in the classroom," said Maurice Bryan, director of Affirmative Action. "One student said, 'If you look at the culture you don't get a sense of diversity.'"
Wallace agreed that there was not much diversity. He said that he had been pushed to attend a black university but chose to attend KU.
"In a white world, it's hard to be black, period," he said. "If I come here and keep unity with the black race, I could learn to deal with the problems I would have to deal with later in life as a black male."
Pick a number; buy a lottery ticket; Kansas is the winner
By Stephen Martino Kansan staff writer
When people buy a lottery ticket, they do a lot of hoping and praying. But when they do, they help answer the hopes and prayers of the state of Kansas — they give it money.
The sale of lottery tickets within the state has turned into a multimillion dollar profitable operation, providing the state with money it would not have to finance areas of operation. The amount the lottery raises has exploded during the past two years.
Lottery sales were $77.1 million during fiscal year 1992 and $114.1 million during fiscal year 1993. The governor's budget, released last month, predicted sales at $125.4 million for fiscal year 1994.
For every dollar generated by lottery sales, 30 cents is returned to the state and spent on a variety of projects, such as job training and retraining, post-secondary vocational school training and maintenance of prison buildings. Much smaller amounts go public broadcasting and support of the arts. About 13 percent is spent on administration of the lottery, and the rest goes to prizes.
Gloria Timmer, director of the budget for Gov. Joan Finney, said the $45 million projected to be generated by lotteries in 1994 would represent about 1 percent of the
state general fund, a significant amount from one source.
"The lottery department has developed new and exciting ways of generating revenue," she said. "The amount of money is very important because without it we would have less of a resource to finance some of these programs. It would have to be made up from money in general fund, and it is very busy as everyone knows."
State lotteries and part-mutuel betting, such as dog and horse tracks, were passed by a constitutional amendment approved by Kansas voters in 1986.
Two specific areas of the lottery have led to the boom in sales Club Keno and Powerball.
Keno's sales have increased by 882 percent from 1992 to 1994, and Powerball sales have increased by 57 percent in the same time period.
Keno is a game that is played every five minutes from more than 1,000 locations across the state. Players can pick up to 10 numbers between one and 80. Then 20 numbers are chosen and players can win varying amounts of money, up to $100,000, based on the amount of their wager and number of correct choices they make.
Powerball is a national lottery conducted in 14 states and the District of Columbia. Contestants choose five numbers plus an additional "powerball." Jackpots in the
Lottery Sales
(In thousands)
■ Pick 3
1992: $35,633.1
192: $2,758.7
1993: Games:
4,401.2
1992: $33,033.4
1994: $4,324.5
1993
■ Cash Lotto $37,442.9
1994: $13,845.3
1993: $15,637.3
1993
■ Pull Tab:
13,302.8
1992: $2,092.6
1994: $13,565.4
1993
■ Powerball $2,119.5
1994: $21,683.3
1992: $2,030.4
1994: Net Sales (games)
30,520.7
1992: $77,039.7
1994: 34,182.6
1992: $77,039.7
■ Keno:
1992: $114,106.6
1992: $3,626.1
1994: $125,373.3
1993: $26,195.5
KANSAN
past couple of years have exceeded more than $100 million at times creating rushes to buy tickets. States have to return 50 percent of revenue to the Powerball organization for prizes and get to keep the rest.
Greg Ziemak, executive director of the Kansas Lottery, said increased ticket sales represented of the people's interest in the lottery.
Mary
Early Spring
Suzy Sturm, Evergreen, Colo. junior, studies Spanish in front of Strong Hall. Sturm was studying yesterday in spring-like weather.
Valerie Bontrager / KANSAN
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4
Friday February 4,1994
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
New dating policy fair sets acceptable limits
After debating since September, University governance has come up with a reasonable policy concerning consensual relations between faculty and students.
The decision affects the entire University population. It states that faculty and students may date each other as long as the faculty member involved does not have the student in class or does not hold a position of authority over them.
The policy gives a clear definition of conduct in which students and faculty may involve themselves. If a previous relationship exists when a student signs up for a class, the teacher must designate someone else to grade the student's work or the student must switch to another section.
The policy limits situations in which a teacher or a student can make accusations about the other concerning the distribution of poor or good grades on the basis of a relationship that the two share. If the situation does occur, it will not be the University's fault for not clearly outlining the proper code of conduct that should have been followed.
The criticisms of the decision aren't particularly strong. The most vehement opposition is from those who ask why adults cannot conduct themselves as they like. The answer is simple. The policy doesn't dictate how adults live their lives. It only requires that they wait a semester to pursue a romantic interest. Those who can't wait four months can transfer to another section or drop the class.
We need criteria to prevent circumstances that would allow faculty members or students to abuse their positions on either side of a relationship. This policy is one that meets that criteria.
CARSON ELROD FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Lifting trade embargo could heal war wounds
The Clinton administration lifted the 19-year trade embargo on Vietnam yesterday. The decision was a wise one.
When it comes to healing wounds left by war, mixed feelings exist about how to behave toward former enemies. Families of prisoners of war and of soldiers missing in action, for instance, sharply oppose any loosening in the commercial and diplomatic sanctions against Vietnam until Hanoi accounts for all Americans who still are missing from the war.
The families say Vietnam is withholding information about POWs and MIAs. Last week, however, American teams ended a three-week search — the biggest ever — praising Vietnamese cooperation.
Indeed, if anything was to be done to find missing Americans, it certainly was not accomplished by maintaining diplomatic alienation and commercial sanctions. Permanent resentment doesn't bring concrete results.
On the other hand, families cannot be charged with unthoughtful stubbornness or lack of good will. Only those who still are crying for a missing dad, brother or son can tell us how they need a lot of good will and thoughtful stubbornness to keep their lives going.
Notwithstanding the families' pain, the war itself taught us that in order to advance, sometimes it is better to retreat. If veterans and families of POWs and MIAs think that more progress can be made in the search for their relatives and friends, they should back the administration's decision to declare the end of the embargo.
GERALDO SAMOR FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Enrollment Center's message: Follow rules, nobody gets hurt
People always come up to me and say, "Scott, your columns are so intriguing and informative that I routinely set my drink on them during class." Though I'm flattered by this kind of talk, there are also hard-nosed students who want me to "go after" the Parking Department, Enrollment Center, residence halls, etc.
Now I'll admit that the Parking Department is probably directly financed by the National Association for Taking All of Your Disposable Income and Spending it on "Patrol Bicycles," but I can't understand people's lack of tolerance for the Enrollment Center.
It could be that these disgruntled people are not playing "by the rules." Everyone in this world has to play by the rules, and if you don't, you'll get left behind.
It occurs to me that some may not be familiar with Enrollment Center procedures. so to fill everyone in, I'll use a friend of mine as an example of what happens when you ignore the rules.
My friend's problem started when she forgot to show up and sign for her
COLUMNIST
SCOTT
AGIN
loan check on Jan. 7 or 10. Immediately we have a violation of Rule One: NEVER FORGET ANYTHING.
You would be surprised how many people have violated this rule during their lifetimes. The only time it would be acceptable to forget something is if you are testifying at the Iran-Contra hearing, in which case you will instantly become a National Hero.
So my friend, having failed to pay her fees, had her enrollment canceled. When something like this happens, many people think that the proper procedure is to stand in the middle of Strong Hall and say in a very loud voice, "What the !!#%%& are they
If this happens, you should go immediately to the Finance Department, where they'll inform you of Rule Two: YOU ARE IN THE WRONG LINE.
TALKING ABOUT?"
Somehow, standing in lines at the University is nothing like standing in line for, say, Space Mountain. Here, the fact that you are in the wrong line is directly correlated to Rule Three: THIS IS NOT HER DEPARTMENT.
My friend then became tangled in a comical mess of red tape, wherein the Enrollment Center claimed that in order to obtain a schedule, she would have to pay all her fees, whereas the Fee Payment Center claimed that in order to receive a check, she had to produce a copy of her schedule.
Again, many people would unwittingly violate another rule here by trying to make a clear argument to these two departments. This is also wrong. If you try to iron out a mess like this in a logical and orderly manner, these people will stare at you as if you just walked in wearing miniature neon-green ceramic figurines of Rocky and Bullwinkle on your ears.
Which brings us to Rule Four:
MAKE NO-SENSE WHATSOEVER.
The more unintelligible you are, the better.
YOU: Excuse me ma'am, but I believe the annotated entailment fund on this reciprocated revenue balance has been exacerbated to my full druthers. Might I procure a modest recompense?
CLERK: Of course. Here, take my car keys, too.
After informing her of these rules, my friend has a better appreciation of how our Enrollment Center operates and has since had the pleasure of having her teachers stare at her strangely when she requests closed-class openers for classes she is already in.
I sincerely hope that this helps dismiss these notions everybody has about enrollment being "evil." After all, they're only trying to get their jobs done, just like the rest of us. Which reminds me of Rule Five: GET YOUR DRINK OFF THIS COLUMN.
Scott Agin a Topeka sophomore in journalism.
REJECTED PEACE PROPOSALS FOR BOSNIA
HOOD UDK
KU police should halt their hiding
COLUMNIST
SCOTT
TITTRINGTON
I've had just about enough of the activity—or should I say inactivity—of some members of the KU police. I'm talking about those officers who spend their evenings hiding along Naismith Drive in an attempt to nab unsuspecting drivers for speeding.
On any given night, one can drive on Naismith and find a cop hidden in the Murphy Hall parking lot, the entrance to Oliver Hall or any other driveway or intersection in-between. Why are the students of this University paying fees to support a police department whose members feel they have nothing better to do than sit on the side of the road and develop "trigger finger?"
I have absolutely no problem with being held responsible for the financial support of a police department that would follow its purpose: to protect and serve the students, faculty and employees of the University. However, it doesn't take a bachelor's degree in economics to realize that a
large number of speeding tickets, written by one cop in one location during a short period of time, results in a financial bonanza for the KU police.
I'd like to see my money go to officers who are serving this University in different ways. One such way would be implementing more night patrol on campus by bicycle and foot. By placing on patrol those cops who normally sit in a dark parking lot doing nothing, chances are that the University
would see a decrease in crimes committed on campus after dark.
For example, let's say a student is walking on campus, away from routes patrolled by officers in vehicles. If this person falls victim to criminal activity, a cop sitting in the Oliver Hall parking lot is not going to be of much use. However, one cop placed on foot patrol may be able to respond to the situation quickly and in a helpful manner.
If the KU police feel that increasing foot and bicycle patrol is not an option, then another improvement they might make is having the inactive cops patrol the streets in their cars. Sure, they are not going to nab each and every person who drives down Naismith at two miles per hour above the speed limit like they do now, but they will be much more effective in their attempts to curtail traffic violations. I know I'm a great deal more
careful if I notice a cop behind me when I'm driving.
When I'm on the road, I respect the officers I see out on patrol, doing their best to protect and serve the members of the community. I was raised to understand that cops were members of society who should be given respect for the sacrifices they make to ensure the well-being of the community. But I find it difficult to respect those officers who choose to hide and crack down on college students.
By stepping up and making some changes, the KU police will not only provide for a more stable University environment but might also earn a more favorable reputation in the eyes of the students. Until then, the KU police will never receive the support or respect usually reserved for members of law enforcement.
Scott Titlington is a Poway, Calif., sophomore in exercise science and journalism.
BEN GROVE, Editor
LISA COSMILLO, Managing editor
TOM EBLEN, General manager, news adviser
BILL SKEET, Technology coordinator
KANSANSTAFF
Asistant Managing Editor .Dan England
Asistant to the editor .J.R. Clairborne
News .Kristi Fogler, Katie Greenwald, Tedd Selfenbock
Business Manager .Colleen McCain, Jesse Delavern
Campus .Mae Delavern
Sports .David Dorsey
Photo .Doug Hasse
Features .Sara Bonnett
Wien Airport .William Lipert
Freelance .Christine Laue
Editors
Assistant Editors
Associate campus...Carlos Tojada
Assistant campus / planning...Brian James
Rockville Campus...Robin Chang
Katie Greenwald ... Matt Hydeman
Serah Nasi
Reporters
Copy Editors
Reporters
Cheryl Cadue ... Liz Chadwick
Gerry Fay ... Andrew Gillman
Kevin Hoffmann ... Roberta Johnson
Angelina Lopez ... Stephen Martino
Frank McCleary ... Heather Moore
Jennie Munn ... Janae
Ashley Schultz ... Matt Siegel
Cathleen Slecha ... David Stewart
Gennifer Trail ... Susan White
Jacob Arnold ... Sara Bennett
Courtney Bloomquel ... Jerry Breaux
Angle Cunningham ... Jack Fisher
Christin Rowlinson ... Kent Rainbow
Donella Haime ... Kent Holford
Tiffany Hurt ... Brian James
Liz Klinger ... Jay Koester
Denise Morris ... Kathy Paton
Vipatt Peterson ... Coleen Byerton
Sanaka Samaralani ... Shan Schwartz
Dave Campbell...Will Gunderman
Joe Hender...Micha Lasker
B. Moore
Photographers
William Alx .. Martin Altadeenet
Valerie Bontrager .. Richard Devinkl
John Gamble .. Melissa Lacey
Tom Leininger .. Heather Loffin
Amy Soft .. Brian Vandervliet
James Wilcox .. Jenny Zeiner
Kip Chin Kristi Fogler
Joe Harder Todd Selffert
Kimberly Crabtree...Teresa Veazey
JUSTIN GARBERG
Business manager
JENNIFER BLOWEY
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
BILL THOMAS
Production
PAT BOYLE
Business coordinator
Business Staff
Sales manager ... Jason Eberly
Regional sales manager ... Troy Tarvater
National & Co-op sales manager ... Robin Kring
Production manager ... Dennis Gretchen Koetterleinch
Marketing director ... Shannon Reilly
Creative director ... John Cartell
Classified manager ... Kelly Connessy
Special sections manager ... Shelly McConnell
Transaction manager ... Thomas Mackenzie
Retail assistant ... Marcel Blotnick
Creative assistant (photozagran) ... Andrew Arnone
Zone Managers
Chris Butler Jennifer Carr
Cameron Death Dean Nolan
Ben Kovel
Retail Account Executives
Brigg Bloomquist ... Holly Boren
Lora Cornell ... Jason Culbertson
John Edwards ... Justin Frosolone
Emily Gibson ... Meredith Hening
Elaine Joseph ... Kristin Kavolak
Amy Matheson ... Carrie Meeks
Mellea Muttack ... Dan Oades
Regan Overy ... Martin Ropp
Andrew Shriver ... Alan Stiglic
Todd Winters ... Janel Zellers
Campus Account Executives
Shelly Falevita ...Michelle Jacobs
Anne Looper ...Mark Mastro
...Erin Wigga
Regional Account Executive
Aaron Kirby...Alex Kolb
Jackie Nigro...Brian Platt
Ed Connelysly...Jamie Kaasher
Jacquelyn Pang...Michael Robinson
Anne Marie Sandortlin
1
.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
Friday, February 4, 1994
Regents Center students feel MBA program unfair
Work experience should be credited
By Gennifer Trail
Kansan staff writer
Certain students at the Regents Center in Overland Park feel that the Center's MBA program should take their work experience into consideration.
But some professors and students at the center differ on how or whether to solve this problem.
In Lawrence, 90 percent of those in the MBA program are full-time students but at the center, 90 to 95 percent of the MBA students work full time in a business environment, said Dave Collins, associate director of business administration.
"The Regents center MBA is designed for people working full time in the Kansas City area. That's the target market," Collins said.
The MBA program at both institutions differs only in the one-credit-hour class required in the Lawrence MBA, called,"MBA foundation skills," which teaches students to how to write resumes and find jobs. However, the same professors teach at both institutions.
"Most of us here at the Regents Center already work in the business world," said Rob Kinder, Kansas City, Mo., graduate MBA student at the center. "We work in teams every day. We don't need more teamwork exercises. There should be a difference between the MBA here and Lawrence."
Douglas Houston, professor of business, agreed.
"I understand that team exercises can be a real drain on time and effort
because the students at the Regents center work 40 hours a week and often have problems meeting," he said. "I believe a lot of the criticism is time constraint. It's a real issue."
However, Russell Hanna, Lenexa graduate MBA student at the center, said that learning teamwork in class was valuable.
"Most adults think they know how to work in teams, but they don't," he said. "Usually working in teams is geared toward cutting the amount of work."
Daniel Spencer, associate professor of business, said he was also a supporter of teamwork.
"I'm tailoring the learning environment more to the professional student at the Regents center, but I happen to be a believer that there's a lot to learn in groups there — as much as in Lawrence," he said. "I teach organizational behavior, so I feel very strongly about this."
Murray Levin, associate professor of business, explained why teamwork has become a more prevalent part of the education.
"In the past few years we have increased the number of teamwork projects by request of employers in the area," he said. "They said that they needed better-adapted team workers. As faculty, we struggle with the question of what we can do to meet the needs of professional students."
"There should be some recognition that we have work experience. Sometimes I think we're given busy work, as if we're not responsible," she said.
"You don't always have to turn in an assignment to be evaluated."
Jan Francis, Mission Hills graduate MBA student at the center, said that some of its courses were not suited to the needs of the students.
"I would like to see instructors
slightly modify the instruction by considering that we can understand the concept faster because we do have work experience," she said. "People would like to see a more accelerated program."
Jack Gaummitz, professor of business, agreed with Francis.
He said that the center's MBA should be different than the MBA in Lawrence in order to meet the needs of the non-traditional students. "You can cover more material and move faster because they have a better understanding."
Marilyn Taylor, director of graduate programs in business said the experience of the students at the center should have an impact on the way professors teach.
"I do feel strongly that the two programs can be differentiated, not in content, but in the transmission of knowledge," she said. "The students at the Regents Center don't need quite as much help. They're older. They're very self-disciplined."
Hanna said that he thought there should be a way to accommodate the differing backgrounds of students such as setting up a remedial course system. For example, if someone goes into the program with little experience in financial accounting, he or she should be required to take the class, instead of requiring all MBA students to take it.
Taylor, who is also a professor of business, said that the school of business was in the process of forming an MBA executive advisory council that plans to answer these questions and other issues.
"You get professors who will teach a little here and a little there to accommodate all students, but no one really learns," Hanna said.
STATE BRIEF
Emporia State students at odds with proposal
The Associated Press
TOPEKA, Kan. — Student leaders at Emporia State University said they don't like Gov. Joan Finney's Partnership For Excellence proposal.
At a news conference on Wednesday, Dan Hubert, a student senator at Emporia State, said Mrs. Finney is blackmailing the Legislature by tying the partnership plan together with her proposal to take Washburn University into the Board of Regents' system.
"University and faculty members would love to have
their salaries increased," Hubert said. They opposed the Washburn proposal until Finney packaged it with the partnership plan, which would increase faculty salaries by up to 8 percent.
To pay for the salary raise, Regents would increase tuition.
"The students of ESU recognize the need for faculty salary enhancements," said Brad Barron, director of the Associated Students of Kansas. "However, we do not believe that it is our responsibility to subsidize these positions."
Winner of the 1993 Numburgh Chamber Music Award, the Yings make every performance sound extraordinary!
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts • Lied Center Presents
A Swarthout Chamber Music Series Event
America's hottest new string quartet!
7:00 p.m.
Sunday • February 6 • 1994
Lied Center
Timothy Ying • violin
Janet Ying • violin
Phillip Ying • viola
David Ying • cello
Ying
Quartet
Ying Quartet
Partially funded by the Kansas Arts Commission, KU Student Senate Activity Fee. Friends of the Lied Sister and the Kansas University Endowment Association. Special thanks to this year's Very Important Partners: Hallmarkards, Inc., KK's Audio Learning, Inc. and The Children's Music Project.
Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office (648-A1P75), Murray Hall Box Office (664-3892); or any Ticketmaster outlet (816) 931-3300 or (813) 324-4545; all seats reserved, public $12 and $10, KU, Haskell and K-12 students $6 and $5, senior citizens and other students $11 and $9. KU student tickets available through the SUA office, Kansas Union; phone orders can be made using VISA or MasterCard.
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--a U.S. liaison office, presumably in Hanoi. Vietnam is one of the few countries in the world with which the United States does not have diplomatic relations.
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NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Clinton lifts trade embargo to aid work with Vietnam
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Rejecting appeals from veterans groups, President Clinton yesterday lifted the 19-year trade embargo against Vietnam.
"Iam absolutely convinced it offers the best way to resolve the fate of those who remain missing and about those about whom we are not sure," Clinton said.
The issue is an emotional legacy from the divisive war that Clinton himself opposed as a college student.
Clinton made the announcement after meeting with representatives of the families of soldiers still missing in action. Many veterans groups preferred that he keep the embargo in place to encourage continued Vietnamese cooperation accounting for missing servicemen.
Clinton also said he would establish
"I want to be clear. These actions do not constitute a normalization of our relationship," Clinton said. "We must have more progress, more cooperation and more answers."
The action was made easier by last Friday's 62-38 Senate vote supporting a lifting of the ban.
Clinton said his decision was guided by progress in four key areas:
n Recovery of remains of American soldiers in Vietnam. Clinton said that since last July, remains of 39 American servicemen had been recovered.
n Resolution of "discrepancy cases" in which there was reason to believe people could have survived. Clinton said that since July, the number of
such cases had been reduced from 135 to 73.
n Release of any documents from Vietnam that could shed light on the fate of those still missing. Clinton said that since July, important documents had been released from the Vietnamese archives.
n Further assistance from Vietnam and Laos in conducting searches along their common border. The first such investigation took place in December and located new remains and crash sites, Clinton said.
In terms of ability to generate emotions, few issues can match the one involving the missing servicemen. There is a strong suspicion among many MIA family members and veterans groups that some of the missing are still alive, but the administration has said there is no credible evidence of that.
Paperwork delays military's homosexual conduct policy
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Pentagon will delay implementing new regulations banning homosexual conduct in the military because of a crush of paperwork in aligning the policy for the various services, a spokesman said Thursday.
The new regulations, which were to go into effect Feb. 5, were supposed to be given to commanders in the field so they would have precise definitions of homosexual conduct and conditions that would prompt an investigation that could lead to a service member being removed from the military.
The Department of Defense issued the guidelines in late December, and each of the service branches was required to revise their regulations to comply.Pentagon representative Dennis Boxx said officials had underestimated the amount of work needed to
make sure the new regulations "are consistent across the board."
Boxx described the changes as "minor, not substantial," and said they would not change the overall policy of "don't ask, don't tell, don't pursue."
He said he expected that the paperwork on the new regulations may be ready by the end of the month.
The delay comes as Senate Republicans have complained that the regulations are not compatible with the law governing the discharge of homosexuals approved last year by Congress.
Under the guidelines proposed in December, members of the military may be investigated for handholding, kissing or even carrying a certain type of placard in a gay-rights parade.
Military commanders are advised not to conduct "witch hunts" to ferret out suspected homosexuals.
FBI studies papers linked to Harding
The Associated Press
PORTLAND, Ore. — The FBI is examining scraps of paper found in a restaurant trash bin that could back up Jeff Gilloooh's claim that ex-wife Tonya Harding took part in the plot to hobble Nancy Kerrigan.
Restaurateur Kathy Peterson turned over to the FBI an envelope addressed to Gillooly and note paper scribbled with doodles and the words "Tunee Can Arena, Cape Cod" on one page and "Tony Kent Arena, Cape Cod" on another. Peterson said the scraps came from the trash outside her Portland restaurant.
N
Gillooly has told investigators that Harding made telephone calls to pin down Kerrigan's practice schedule at Tony Kent Arena in Massachusetts, where an earlier attempt to attack Kerrigan was aborted. Gillooly said Harding had trouble understanding the name of the rink in a message left by a free-lance reporter on Harding's answering machine.
FBI spokesman Bart Gori told New York Newsday that investigators were examining Peterson's find.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, February 4, 1994
7
Kansas recruits include top in-state talent
Defense gains key players to fill vacancies
By Andrew Gilman Kansan sportswriter
The University of Kansas signed 24 players for the 1994 football season, including eight from Kansas.
"The best part about our class is our Kansas players," said recruiting coordinator R.D. Helt. "They're not just strong within the state, but they're strong overall."
Highlighting the in-state talent is running back Eric Vann, who is from El Dorado.
The signing period began Wednesday. Kansas coach Glen Mason had a last minute engagement and was unavailable for comment.
Vann was named to Superprep magazine's preseason All-American team. He rushed for more than 1,600 yards during his senior season and scored 22 touchdowns.
Vann chose Kansas instead of Texas, Oklahoma and Michigan.
But one of the reasons he chose to play for the Jayhawks was his interest in baseball.
He batted .390 during his senior year as an outfielder on the El Dorado baseball team.
"Coach Dave Bingham did an excellent job of helping to get him here," Helt said. "If there's a guy who can handle two sports, it would be him."
But perhaps the Jayhawks made the biggest strides on the defensive side of the team. Kansas signed 13 players to play defense next season, including linebacker Steve Bratten.
Bratten, who is from Arvada, Colo., averaged 10 tackles a game during his senior season. He was named all-state in both his junior and senior years.
Other defensive signees include Lawrence standout Jason Thoren and Garden City defensive lineman Brett McGraw.
"He only knows one speed, and that's full," Helt said. "He dominated even as a junior, and we're sure he'll be a good player."
Although Thoren rushed for more than 1,200 yards as if fullback, he will be used as a linebacker.
"He's a tough football player," Helt said. "He's very solid. We're in a position where you can never have enough linebackers."
Overall, Helt said he was impressed by the linebackers.
"This group of linebackers is probably the best we've ever been able to get."
McGraw should help replace a defensive line that lost NFL-bound Chris Maumalanga.
McGraw was named Kansas Sports Magazine's defensive player of the year among 6-A schools.
"He's got everything you need to make it at the college level," said his high school coach Dave Meadows. "He's strong, powerful and quick."
Gray passed for 1,200 yards and ran for another 700 yards his senior season and led Liberty to a 29-5 record in
Junior college transfer Mark Williams, who attended Diablo Valley College, in Concord, Calif., passed for 1,923 yards and 13 touchdowns in 1993. He will be joined by Brian Gray, from Liberty High School in Liberty, Mo.
The offensive additions were also impressive, Helt said. Two quarterbacks were signed as well.
three years.
Kansas coach Glen Mason, who coached at Kent State University in Ohio, returned to familiar ground and picked two players from the area.
Running back Patrick Brown, from Columbus, Ohio, attended Westerville North High School. It is the same school that produced former Kansas quarterback Chip Hilleary, and fullback Monte Cozzens. Brown rushed for 1,000 yards in two consecutive seasons, and was named as one of the top 15 running back prospects in the Big 10 Conference region.
Lamar Sharpe, an outside linebacker, attended Akron East High School in Akron, Ohio. Sharpe is a cousin of Green Bay Packers' wide receiver Sterling Sharpe and the Denver Broncos'tight end Shannon Sharpe. Both Sterling and Shannon were named All-Pros this season. Lamar was named to the all-city team his senior season.
Helt said this year's class could go down as one of the best in the school's history.
"Two years from now we'll look back and say that 1994 was a great class," Helt said.
kuF
1994 Kansas football recruiting class
Joe Austin 5-9 168 WR Lynwood, Calif.
Steve Bratten 6-1 213 LB Arvada, Colo. (Pomona)
Patrick Brown 5-11 181 RB Columbus, Ohio (Westerville North)
Julius Bruce 5-9 178 RB Olathe North
Dan Dercher 6-6 230 DBI Bishop Meige
Brian Gray 6-4 205 QB Liberty, Mo.
Troy Harper 6-4 275 LD Okeechobee, Fla. (Taft, Calif., C.C.)
Jamie Harris 5-10 175 DB Olathe North
Jason Harris 6-1 175 DB Fort Worth, Texas (Dunbar)
Dewey Houston 6-5 215 TE Cahokia, Ill.
Andre Johnson 6-2 170 WR Los Angeles (John C. Fremont)
J.J. Johnson 6-3 200 LB Los Angeles (Jefferson)
Rob Lindsey 6-2 200 LB Tampa, Fla. (Gaither)
Jonathan Macklin 5-11 205 FB Kansas City, Mo. (Rockhurst)
Brett McGraw 6-1 260 DL Garden City
Alani Pahuul 6-5 280 Euless, Texas (Ricks College/Trinity)
Cleve Roberts 6-6 265 OL Buhler
Lamar Sharpe 6-5 230 OB Akron, Ohio (East)
Jason Thoren 6-2 215 LB Lawrence
Shawn Vang 6-2 250 DL Wichita (Northwest)
Eric Vann 5-9 190 RB El Dorado
Doug Weaver 6-3 295 DL Starkville, Miss. (E. Miss, JC)
Mark Williams 6-2 175 QB Concord, Calif. (Diablo Valley College)
Tim Willis 6-2 175 LB Aliquipa, Pa.
SANTA MARIA, FLORIDA
Vaulter strives for milestone
By Andrew Gilman Kansan sportswriter
John Bazzoni would not have had it any other way.
The senior pole vaulter from North Manchester High School in Indiana always knew he would come to Kansas.
"I wouldn't have wanted to go anywhere else," Bazzoni said. "I've always considered Kansas one of the best vaulting schools."
And that's fortunate for the Jayhawks. Bazzoni is one of the top vaulters in the Big Eight Conference and is expected to win the conference championship this year.
He won the indoor championship last year, put together three consecutive victories this season and is steadily improving. He'll try to improve again when the Jayhaws compete at home this weekend.
"His technique is as good as I've ever seen it, and that's exciting," said assistant track coach Rick Attig.
Bazzoni, however, still is not confident that he has shown his best effort.
Senior pole vaulter John Bazzoni has jumped to three consecutive victories this season. Bazzoni won the indoor Big Eight championships last year. The Jayhawks compete today and tomorrow at Anschutz Pavilion.
"The vault coaches here are the best in the country," Bazoni said. He said the coaches' national experience helped the vaulters tremendously.
"I've been pleased overall," he said. "But I haven't peaked yet. But I'm glad that I have been consistent."
Part of the reason he was so successful, he said, was the excellent coaching he had received.
The coaches also benefit because of him.
"He's dedicated." Attig said. "He's always been a hard worker. He's put up with a lot of pain and frustration."
But that frustration has paid off, and Bazzoni could put himself into the record books.
"If he could jump 18 feet," Attig said, "Kansas will be the only school to have seven vaulters jump 18 feet or better."
Currently Kansas and Baylor have had six vaulters accomplish that task. "I really think he'll do it," Attig said. "He's aggressive, has good speed, and that's how he holds him together."
"He's aggressive, has good speed, and that's what's held him together."
Bazzoni also has the confidence of his teammates.
Those words could lead to bigger and higher things in the future for John Bazzoni. He has cleared 17-23/4, but he said he was confident that he could do better.
"He's a great guy to work with," said junior pole vaulter Bart Peters. "Not only by his example, but by his words."
This weekend he will be alming to do just that when Bazzoni and the rest of the Kansas team plays host to Missouri and Kansas State in the Jayhawk Invitational today and tomorrow at Anschutz Sports Pavilion.
"I'm still hoping for that big jump," he said.
Bazzoni, who won at the Kansas State/Coors Invitational on Saturday, made a more important leap. He provisionally qualified for the NCAA meet to be held in March.
just be trying to beat K-State and Missouri. It will be a great spectator meet."
Bazzoni is not guaranteed a spot to compete, but he is in a position where someone has to beat his jump for him not to go.
"I'm hoping that our guys will make him jump 18," Attig said. "I think our guys will push him. We have the capability to go one, two, three this year in the Big Eight. He would have jumped
Although the conference might not provide much competition, Bazzoni will receive plenty from his team members.
"I'm confident." Bazzoni said about this weekend. "Missouri and K-State don't have much."
18 last year, but he didn't have the competition."
Peters agreed.
"Unless he bombs, John will win the Big Eight." Peters said.
Overall, Bazzoni said he was happy at Kansas.
"I love my teammates and the atmosphere here," he said. "We have some of the nicest people here. It's like an athletic fraternity."
Injured frontcourt a problem for Kansas
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
Times have changed for the Jayhawks.
The No. 3 Kansas men's basketball team may have looked forward to playing conference rival Nebraska earlier this season. Without a dominant inside player for the Cornhuskers, the Jayhawks could have utilized their height in the middle.
But that was before injuries hampered some of Kansas' frontcourt players. A strained shoulder has bothered senior forward Richard Scott for two games, and freshman forward Nick Proud's sore knee has forced him to miss two weeks of practice.
When Nebraska takes the court at 12:30 p.m. Sunday in Allen Field
House, it will start a team without a true center. Nebraska is 12-5 overall and 2-3 in the Big Eight Conference, while No. 3 Kansas is 19-3 and 4-2.
Kansas coach Roy Williams said a team such as Nebrask a could play well without a center. "I think you can, especially if those
season despite, sore ankle from earlier in the season, a mild concussion from the Kansas State game and a left shoulder injury from practice.
Scott was listed as a probable starter against Nebraska, but Williams said he wasn't up to his full playing ability yet.
Although Kansas will have a height advantage Sunday, it may play without Scott in the starting lineup in future games. Scott has played in all 125 games during his four-year career.
"There were a lot of games we really played well with Eric being our only post man," Williams said. "Chubick or Best may be a little better from that 12- to 15-foot range, which is what Eric was."
"I talked to him about it yesterday and said, 'Are we better off with you 70 percent or are we better with someone else in?" Williams said. "They said he needs three weeks of complete rest and they're still not sure if that would be right. If they'd have said after three weeks off he would be 100 percent, we would have done that."
"It's frustrating.I think if I'm not 100 percent,I'm kind of hurting the team."
Scott said everything he did was difficult because of his injury.
Williams said that the Cornhuskers used an offense similar to what Kansas did offensively last season with former center Eric Pauley. Nebraska senior forwards Bruce Chubick and Tom Best are two of the Cornhusker's tallest players at 6-foot-8 and 6-9.
Richard Scott Kansas senior forward
other guys can do a lot of different things," Williams said. "It boils down to, 'is your guy better inside than their player is outside?' If I had my choices of five Michael Jordans, I wouldn't care what center you had. It just depends on how good they are."
"I can't really dribble with my left
He has started in every game this
hand," Scott said. "It's frustrating, I think if I'm not 100 percent, I'm kind of hurting the team. B.J. Williams right now is playing the best basketball of his life. He's getting his confidence."
During the Missouri and Oklahoma State games, Scott said he got hit occasionally in the
left shoulder, but it was something he expected.
"I'm banging with guys 260 and 270 pounds," he said. "After a while, it takes its toll. If I was on the other team, I would hit a guy in the shoulder as well."
At the halfway point in the conference season, Missouri is first at 6-0 and two games ahead of Kansas. However, Williams said he was not panicking.
"Missouri definitely has a huge advantage," Williams said. "A two-game lead and three road wins, both of which are extremely important. There's still some games to be played."
Kansas freshman Jacque Vaughn said every conference game would be important from now until the end of the season.
"We definitely need to win," he said of the Nebraska game. "I think if we are mentally prepared at both ends of the court, we won't have to worry about stopping Nebraska. Each game is definitely a must-win situation."
NBA star comes close to record contract, still negotiating
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Derrick Coleman's lawyer thought the deal was all but done — a nine-year, $90 million contract that would have made the all-star forward the NBA's highest paid player.
The Associated Press
Harold MacDonald, Coleman's lawyer, yesterday said that he felt he had reached an understanding with Nets general manager Willis Reed and that approval from the team's ownership was all that was needed.
The New Jersey Netsthought otherwise.
Reed said that was never the case and that details still needed to be worked out. He said reports of a deal might have hindered negotiations.
"Do we still want to sign Derrick Coleman? Yes!" Reed said. "Will we still try? Yes."
Coleman, who is averaging team highs of 20.8 points and 11.5 rebounds, refused to comment.
The negotiations between the two sides heated up last week when Reed said he wanted to either sign Coleman or trade the 28-year-old, four-year veteran by the league's Feb. 24 trading deadline.
Coleman, who turned down a then-record $60 million offer before the start of the season, will become a restricted free agent once the season ends. The Nets could then either match any offer or sign him to a qualifying offer, which would pay him $4.2 million next season and make him an
unrestricted free agent after the 1994-95 season.
The Nets need to either trade or sign Coleman. Otherwise, they get no return on their investment.
"This is one of the biggest decisions
New Jersey isn't locked into the Feb. 24 deadline. It could also try to trade or sign him after the season ends.
the new Jersey Nets have to make," Reed said. "It's got to be everyone on the same page. It hasn't reached that vet."
1
The $69 million contract Coleman rejected had $56 million guaranteed for the first eight years with the Nets holding a $13 million option on a ninth season.
8
Friday, February 4, 1994
THE
HARBOUR LIGHTS
HARBOUR LIGHTS has after 07 years
of township Indianton
1031 Massachusetts
Downtown
JD's Baseball Cards &
Sports Nostalgia Shop
711 W.23rd
842-1002
We buy back used baseball cards
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Pancho's
MEXICAN RESTAURANT
Homestyle Mexican
Food
23rd & Louisiana
843-4044
fifi's 925 IOWA
841-7226
Lunch & Dinner
Great Food
Live
5:30 pm Sat 2/5
Young
Johnny Carson
Story
will play & sing for you!!
(free)
LOVE
GARDEN
936½ Mass. 843-1551
*New Green Day on LP
next week!
Open 7 days In the heart of downtown
--large crowd was not going to hurt them. In fact, it might actually help them.
Sunday
50¢
bowling
Not just for
bowling
any more!
Jaybowl
864-3545
Jaybowl
Not just for bowing any more!
Heaven for Lounge Lizards
Futon Couches Starting at $119
BLUE HERON
Futons & Home Furnishings
937 Mass.. 841-9443
$5 Off
Hair Design
Not valid with any other offer
EXPIRES 3/31/94
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841-6886
Hair Experts D
Colorado seeks revenge
Kansas faces tough road test
By Matt Siegel
Kansas sportswriter
Last season, Kansas and Colorado met at the women's Big Eight Conference Tournament. The two teams struggled through two overtimes before Kansas prevailed. 81-78.
This season, the Jayhawks and Buffaloes played another game down to the wire, with almost the same ending. Kansas pulled out a 59-57 victory in front of a record crowd of 13,532 in Allen Field House, the largest ever in the conference.
The record-breaking crowd and how the Jayhawks fed off its energy was all anybody talked about.
Colorado hasn't forgotten.
"I think our crowd is going to be a major factor," Colorado sophomore guard Amy Palmer said. "We have dropped behind Kansas in the conference race and now in the AP poll, so we want to show our crowd that we are capable of beating Kansas."
The No. 6 Kansas women's basketball team faces No. 7 Colorado at 7 tonight in Boulder, Colo.
Helping the Buffaloes' cause will be a big crowd of their own. Colorado officials confirmed that 8,000 tickets had been sold.
It's more than just a match-up of national rankings. It's No. 1 against No. 2 in the conference. Colorado is second place with a record of 5-2, while Kansas is 7-0. A Kansas victory would give the Jayhawks a three-game lead in the conference standings.
However, Kansas players said that a
"We like crowds," senior center Lisa Tate said. "The more they boo us, the better we play. We like being the underdog."
But Kansas coach Marian Washington said she had a different perspective on the game.
"I feel personally that the pressure is on them," Washington said. "They're the ones who are behind two games. We want to beat Colorado, but if we don't it's not going to be the end. We're going to have to try to handle their pressure — the pressure of the home court advantage, the pressure of a lot of people who aren't necessarily going to be supporting us. We've got nothing to lose."
UTILIUM
Heather Lofflin/KANSAN
Tate said that the team wasn't nervous about the game. Freshman forward Jennifer Trapp said that a Jayhawk victory was guaranteed. The Jayhawks have won 11 consecutive games.
Kansas senior guard Ericka Muncy guards Colorado's Sheliy Sheetz during the teams' last game in Allen Field House. Kansas plays at Colorado tonight.
To keep that winning streak alive, Kansas is going to have to contain Colorado's junior guard Shelley Sheetz and junior forward Jamillah Lang. Sheetz, a preseason All-American, is averaging 12.7 points and 4 assists a game. Likewise, Lang has been a force down low, averaging points 19.7 points and 7.1 rebounds a game.
“It’s going to be one of our toughest games of the year,” Trapp said. “Neither of us want to lose a spot in the top ten. If you let up on their players, then players like Shelley Sheetz will drill a three or Jamillah Lang or talented freshman Erin Scholz will take over.”
season.
Colorado is coming off an overtime loss to Oklahoma State. The Buffaloes haven't lost back-to-back games or a home game since the 1991
Also, the Buffaloos have had a tendency to build a big lead by halftime and force the other team to play catch-up. Colorado is 14-1 when leading at halftime.
tion surrounding the game, the more disciplined team would win.
Palmer said that despite the emo-
"Both Kansas and Colorado are runway freight trains, steamrolling over opponents," Palmer said. "The key is going to be who maintains their composure and who stays under control."
Let Us Be Your Cupid
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FREE DELIVERY on Feb. 14th
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Orders must be placed by February 12th.
Delivery restricted to successive houses.
Sale ends January 26, 2017.
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We Offer a Full Range of Services Including Court-Ordered Evaluations & OUI School. City, County & State Certified • Confidential Within Close Walking Distance to KU. Immediate Appointments 749.2626
CROSSBRIDGE
PAT GREEN, LCSW, NCAC II, DIRECTOR
700 West 19th Street, Suite 4, Lawrence, KS 66044
-
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▶ Confidential
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▶ Free pregnancy tests
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▶ Sliding fee scale
▶ STD screening
Planned Parenthood Quality reproductive health care for men and women Now Open in Lawrence 1420CKasold Drive (Orchards Corners) 832-0281
HIRE YOUR EMPLOYER NOW!
HIRE YOUR EMPLOYER NOW
AS YOU BEGIN INTERVIEWING, LOOK CLOSELY AT YOUR
POTENTIAL EMPLOYERS. WHAT DO THEY OFFER YOU?
DEMAND THE FOLLOWING:
1. EXECUTIVE TRAINING
2. $2.900 EACH YEAR FOR YOUR LAST TWO YEARS AT KU
3. A STARTING SALARY OF AT LEAST $25,000
4. ANNUAL PAY RAISES UP TO AT LEAST $37,000 IN 4 YEARS
5. 30 DAYS VACATION WITH PAY FOR THE FIRST AND EVERY YEAR
6. FREE MEDICAL AND DENTAL CARE
7. A NON-CONTINUITY RETIREMENT PROGRAM THAT ALLOWS YOU TO RETIRE AT 40% OF PAY FAIR AFTER ONLY 20 YEARS
TO RETIRE AT 40% OF PAY AFTER ONLY 20 YEARS
8. THE OPPORTUNITY TO TRAVEL
9. ADVANCED EDUCATION
TO SATISFY THESE DEMANDS, CALL CAPT GENTRY OR CAPT WICKS AT 864-4676
AIRFORCE ROTC
1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, February 4, 1994
9
Advertise in The Daily Kansan for Quick Results
Classified Directory
100s
Announcement
105 Personal
110 Business
Annualized
120 Announcement
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
200s Employment
Help Wanted
Professional Services
Typing Services
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 Kansas regulation or
400s Real Estate
408 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise any preferential race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or distime temporary and permanent openings.
Time temporary and permanent openings need to be filled by 21/04. Please call
Positions need to be filled by 21/04. Please call
100s Announcements
110 Bus. Personals
I
Looking for significant Break Cash? Start with looking at our phone number for highly motivated individuals to market our product locally on your own time. Please call 1-800-725-2800 or dial the dial key 725 for more information.
SEX & ZEN (NC-17) Midnight Friday and Saturday.
Liberty Hall Cinema. Movie 749-1912
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available.
CANCUN from $439
105 Personals
SpringBreak1994
SOUTH PADRE from $159 Other destinations available Lowest priceguaranteed
-Kansan Classified:864-4358-
Call 865-1352
WATKINS
HEALTH CENTER
864-9500
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11:30am
Unique Sterling Silver Jewelry
Hoes, Pendants & More!
For Guy & Gals
The 928 Mass. Downown
300s
Merchandise
308 For Sale
304 Auto Sales
306 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30pm-4:30pm
Sunday 8:40am-9:30am
CALCULUS Workshop. Learn skills for success in Math 115 & 116. FREE! No registration required. 7-9 pm, Mon, Feb 7, 4035 Wesley. Presented by the Student Assistance Center.
KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services
Pharmacy Hours
Monday Tuesday 8am-9pm
Saturday 8am-12pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
120 Announcements
COMMUTERS: Self Serve Car Pool Exchange.
Main Lobby, Kansas Union
School of Education Students
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
Guitaritlook for practice and/or band mates
Leave a message. 814-0466
EARN CASH
ON THE SPOT
HAVASU: America's New Spring Break Hot Spot, Lake Havasu, AZ, is throwing America's biggest party. Grand opening and Celebrities, "The Lake Wheel Will Rear in '91" CALL; 800-HAVASU
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND
NORTH PADRE/MUSTANG ISLAND
T-L-O-R-I-D-A
DAYTONA BEACH
PANAMA CITY BEACH
13th YEAR!
SPRING BREAK 94
still hot!
ORLANDO/WALT DISNEY WORLD
C·O·L·O·R·A·D·O
STEAMBOAT
NEEP A RIDE/RIDEN Use the Self Serve Car Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union.
RESERVATIONS AVAILABLE NOW
CALL TOLL FREE FOR FULL
Students who plan to teach TEACH the FALL
weeks on Monday, February 7, at 3:30 p.m in 303 Bailey. This meeting is mandated.
Preliminary information are available in 117
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK
BRECKENRIDGE/KEYSTONE
$15 Today $30 This week
S-O-U-T-N C-A-R-O-L-I-N-A
HILTON MEAD ISLAND
CALE TOLL FREE FOR PULL
DETAILS AND COLOR BROCHURES
Call Joan at 865-5611
Tax preparation & bank services for Business &
Technology firms
Tax preparation & bank services for Business &
Technology firms
FUTORS List your name with us. We refer student inquiries to you. Student Assistance Center
WANT TO HIRE A TUITION See our list of ava.
able tutors. Assistance Center, 138.School
130 Entertainment
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, baseball, basketball field hockey, football, golf, guitar, gymnastics ice-hockey, horseback riding-hunt seat, karate, lacrosse, mature, photography, piano, pioneering, rocketry, rollerblading, ropes, sailing, sacu, sports team, tennis, theater, technicians, track, video games, kitchen stewed, cooks, bus drivers, maintenance, nurses, secretaries. Men call or write: Camp Windua For Boys, 2255 Gladius Rd., Suite 406E, Boca Raton, FL 53431 (407) 994-5500. Women Call Windua For Girls, 2255 Gladius Rd., Suite 406E, Boca Raton, FL 53431 (407) 994-5500. We will be on campus in the student union from 11am-4pm on 03/03 in the Oread and Regional Rooms.
SEX & ZEN (NC-17) Midnight Friday and Saturday. Library Hall Cinema. Movie Lung 749-192.
BENCHWARMERS
Friday
Lie Awake
$2.00 teas
$1.00 shot of the day
Saturdav
Soul Food Cafe
2 for 1 wells
$1.00 shot of the day
Protect Yourself Against Attackers
Witha
130 DECIBEL PersonalAlarm
- Fits in the palm of your hand
- Available for only $24.50,
postage pd.
Send check or money order with name and mailing address to:
Mom's House PO Box 1837 Lawrence, Ks 660440-8837
Allow 3 weeks if paying by check, 2 if paying by M.O.
140 Lost & Found
Found a necklace near Walkins Health Center Call me to identify 842-3411.
205 Help Wanted
200s Employment
男女厕所
Adams Alumni Center needs banquet prep cook and salad person. Flexible shifts, position available immediately, apply in person no phone calls. 1266 Grace Ave.
Fortune 500 sporting goods distributor in Lenaea, KS has an immediate opening for in-house Computer Graphic Artist. This full time position requires a Bachelor's degree and experience with QuarkXpress, Adobe Illustrator and Photoshop.
Requires knowledge of 1- through 4-color design/layout/keyline packaging, catalogs and more. Excellent organizational and detailed oriented skills with administrative office skills also required for day-to-day routine duties. Must be able to handle and/or oversee several projects at time and work overtime. Graphic Arts college degree and or work experience equivalent required.
1994 EXPANSION
COMPUTER GRAPHIC ARTIST
Portfolio will be accepted Monday-Friday,
8:00 am to 4:30 pm. NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE
* entry level, on-board positions available,
great benefits, summer. Fare or round (813)
229-5478
Pacific Nelson/Weather-Rite, inc. 14760 Santa Fe Trail Drive Lenexa, KS 62512-2001
If your qualifications meet these requirements, you submit your resume with a salary history and an employment history.
Paulette Galiano
Nelson/Western Digital
Have A Night OutOn Us!
NABI Biomedical Center Earn $15 each time you donate plasma. Up to $135 a month. New Donors Walk in today
Environmental firm needs assistant, assistant,
leadership, and mentoring to keep,
keeping, special events and projects. Salary
commensurate with skills or will train. Typing help.
Send resume to LMI, P.O. Box 468, Lawrence KS
816 W.24th 749-5750
Nannies Wanted. Positions nationwide, summer or yr-road, exp. not reqt. Great pay and benne.
Looking for mature and caring college female to watch two boys age 7-4 F-M 3:30 to 8:30.
River City Market Restaurants, located lower城 the Riverfront Plaza Mall, has openings for
- Front counter MWF lunch hours
Sax player wanted for working H&B variety band.
Jeff at a41-1555 or 841-9797
SEEKING PROPESSIONAL SALES REPRESENTATIVE EXCELENT COMMISSION OPPORTUNITIES, ON CAMPUS, FLEXIBLE HOURS, CALL CHRIS AT USM (800) 351-2297
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT (June thru August) at Camp Lincoln/Camp Lake Hubert in Minnesota's lake country since 1990. Meet new friends, over 150 staff men and women, expand horizons, reward work with children, develop leadership skill, 30 summer classes, and learn computer applications are available at the University Placement Office, Burge Union. Sign up, in advance for a personal interview on campus Monday Feb. 7th
235 Typing Services
-wait staff MWF or T/H-Daytime apply in person 9AM-6PM Daily
Tennis Jobs-Summer Children's Gamps-Northeast-Men and women with good tennis background who can teach children to play tennis. Good salary, room & board, travel allowance. Women call or work with children. Phone number: (203) 8233(617) (617) 943-8563. Men call or write: Camp Winsburg, 255 Glades Rd. Suite 400E, Boca Raton, FL 34331 (497) 995-5000. We will be on campus in the garden and Registrationist on m/b 8/13 in the Oread and Regionalist rooms.
Week-long, part-time positions for Assistant Instructors in Summer Workshops for Young People. KU Natural History Museum. June-13, Aug. 87.50-$9.00/week. Contact Ruth Genrich, Public Education Director, 802J CYH Hall, (913) 864-4173. An equal opportunity employer.
United Child Development Center is accepting
sessions on Friday-12:30-
12:45, April 8th EPOCH EORTC
WORK STUDY POSITIONS AVAILABLE AT
THE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS. ABOVE MIN-
MUM WAGE, APPLY ONLY IF WORK STUDUO-
ALIFIED. MR 350A OR CALL 864-5000.
1040EZ-F $10; 140- $15 plus extra fee for other forms to be filled with 109. State returns $-$15 Will pick up and deliver. Call Brian at 252-287. Driver education offered through Midwest Diving School, serving KU students for 20 yrs. Drivers' license, transportation provided. 841-7749.
Word processing, applications, term papers, dissertations, resumes, Editing, composition, rush
225 Professional Services
Looking for a good type?
*Papers, Applications, Sheetsheets, Charts
*Laser printing to QWL your profs
*Grade and gift free
*18 years experience
call Jack at
Makin' the Grade
online
INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS
DV-1 Gift card Program Sponsored by the U.S.
Immigration Immigrant Center of Milwaukee
nent resident students, Citizens of almost all countries are allowed to take part. Students, tourists, anyone may apply. For info & forms: New Era Legal Services, 2021 Stagg L, Canoga Park, CA
$$ Premiere Tax Service $$
X
For a confidential, caring friend, call us.
We're here to listen and talk with you.
Birthright 843-4821. Free pregnancy testing
TRAFFIC-DUTS
Fake ID & alcoholoffenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
Donald G. Strobe
16 East 13th
Sally G. Kelsey
842-1133
1-der Women Word Processing. Former editor transforms scribbles into accurate pages of letter paper.
English tutor! All English classes, proofreading,
writing, English, BS Education,
Arthur B41-3313 evening
INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS! We transfer
ideas from US mode to your system or from your
country. We offer online training and mailing
World-Wide Video Transfer, Piano,
Oklahoma, KS 60079, Call 1-242-9853 or 1-800-006-9853
305 For Sale
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Tel; (818) 998-4425; Fax; (818) 882-9681
Words by Chris Words Processing.
High quality papers and printing; spell check
technique.
300s Merchandise
INSTRUCTIONS 1960-2008.
YES, your very own EXPERIENCED,
PROFESSIONAL, CAN-DO secretary!
OF COURSE, laser printing, grammar and
Computerized music scores available tool.
Could you ask for more?
Go nhead, DESKTOP DOCUMENTS,
EATH TUTOR. TEACHING EXPERIENCE.
EXCELLENT CERTIFICATIONS %/HOUR.
BRAXTON B. COPLEY
Attorney at Law
General Practice
Traffic Ticket, Meademeore,
Landlord/Tenant,
Personal Income Tax
719 Masson Blvd. 740-633
93. Bridgestone M8-6 ml-7. bike. iguana Green. Xent cond. Must sell. $450. Call 861-749-6149.
886 SX71. 16.2 RAM 40, HD; MONO-VGA KX-PI324
PROTIS, DOS 5.0, Windows 11. 843 858-2967, Kevin
78 WS Super Beetle convertible. 44550, good condi-
tion. 98 WS Maxi convertible for two the Bahamas.
200 OBO. Call 843-6035.
Black Audit 1990, 1983, 383 miles. Excellent condition.
Loved by hardworking Gasoline engineer. Call 865-724-9200.
VIDEO EDITING AND
PRODUCTION SERVICES
A/B roll video editing edit using with EDL
H18 field production package.
Award winning screen writer.
PRIDAL SCREEN COMMUNICATIONS
913-841-6000
Compaq Mobile 468 25MZ. MHz | Color Matrix Grid 200 MB Hard Drive Dareleve $2200 Sarcophile
Desktop, 60x30, 525. Computer desk, 66x20, $325.
Executive chair, $225. Call 841-6913.
& insert tmr device to equil. fil银 glsd wus tmr case.
& insert tmr device to remote AM-FM-case.
Magnavox cosv TV w/remote AM-FM-case.
FUTON Couch with end-tables, mattress and cushions. Draughting space. Maple 884-4760 or 7640, Christy House, 2315 New York Ave.
or 794-7633, Christine. $275.00
MACINTOSH Computer. MACINTOSH computer includes:
Macintosh computers
Miyake Elevation 400 mmt bike, 16" LX Comp. mitegreen CV-3Rm 2 bottle bags, mint cond.
Seven month membership to Body Boutique
must sell. Call today for more information.
SPEAKERS-custom built, never used, 2-way,
must hear, $25. Call Chad at 832-2741.
walk, walk, walk, DEJA RECVLED
SHOPS SHOPS, walk, walk, walk
善 goods, 753 Mass, M-Sat, 10-30, T3r 11.80
71-81 Graphing Calculator. Like new. $55. 1-275.
Please leave a message if not ready.
WANT TO SELL. I Brand New VCR I can use.
I have a 45 inch proleg, pre-bet. Best offers beet.
Ball Curt Bail 687-217-8300
WEDDING DRESS--never worn, nz. 8; blush pink
train length, train length $450; offer Call
Shawn at 639-6490
340 Auto Sales
1966 Chevy Corvair Monza 2 door automatic, new tires; dependable Transportation Car
1986 Black Honda Spree, excellent condition, well
shelved, tune and battery. Call mornings:
+0131 953 4290
1968 Dahatabus 5 spd. one owner. No A/C $2000 Call 841-8438 1039 daytime
86 `Mazda RX7 GXL SunrFw wincd win, cd P 5, spd,
many new parts, quite fum $4,000 paul P 842
5,500 paul P 10800 paul P 34800 paul P 69600 paul P
Be a Rock N' Roll Star! 1 mo old Fender P-Bass Lyte w/active pickups and gold brdward $25. Fender bassman w/amp /removable wheels $175. Bass player! Paul A.242-9598 needs a bass player! Paul A#242-9598
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
For rent 1 bedroom apt. Efficiency Apts., cute,
parking room rate $70, available March 28-
March 31. 4-bedroom apt. Rate $159.
Reb rent free! Move married, sublease 1 bbmr
$200. Greystone Apt. on bus route. Quiet, clean.
$200/mah.
Furnished room for rent with shared kitchen and bath. Two short blacks from KU. Off street parked.
For sublease. 1 bedroom apt avail. Mar. 1. Call Connie at 865-2714
House for rent 2 bedroom no pets, newly remodeled call
Hanover Place Apt. for rent. Near Campus.
$370/MO Call 841-1212
Huge IBR avail. now, AC dishwasher, balcony over pool, walk 10m to campus or bus rte. Pay electric. Free stuff. $330.00 month negotiable. Call TJ 841-8239. Rest on床机 call
843-7333 2500 W.6th
Training Apartmentments
Now Open Fall
Sauget, Apa, and
KUBus Road, Dillons, Basketwork,
Call Today for more information
Leasing for June and August. New b bedroom, new basement, fire alarm system, gas fireplace, ceiling fans, cable-paid 1800 sq ft, and covered parking avail. Early sign-up specials offered. For more information call Dave at 841-396-7253.
Trailridge Apartments
Rooms, apartments, and well kept, older homes available. @VSTA (2022)
MORNING STAR
**SUB-LEASE 2 Br. apt for lease $100 per month.**
Purchased, bancable-cash paid. Very close to camera.
Spacations 1 bedroom apt very close to campus. Purchased. Avail immediately. Call 812-1421. Ask
Studio apt. available ASAP for unit leau Aug.
Less than two blocks to KU Water & gas pd Cell
We present have available a select few 1 & 2 bedroom apartments for immediate occupancy.
---
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
*On KU Bus Route with 4 Stops on Property
*Some Washer/Dryer
Hookups
*Volleyball Court
4 Stops on Property
*2 Laundry Rooms
ana at Meadowbrook
842-4200.
meadowbrook FALL '94
*2Pools
15th & Crestline
Mon - Fri 8-5:30
Sat 10-4
Sun 1-4
Sorry no pets
Call or stop by today.
2401 W. 25th, 9A3
842-1455
(sorry pets)
AvailableNow - 1 brm apt.
Live next to campus at:
Berkeley Flats
Call today. 843-2116
Female, non-smoking room needed for quiet
room. No parking. No lease. $168.90 •
utilities. 749-7971
Female 2 sherries 3 bse 1 bkke 3 KU $$$+00+
or exchange for babysitting 1 old girl 3
KU $$$+00+
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Female needed to share 1 bdmr apt with W. $150 a.m. Stadium view Ace. Call 832-2898.
Looking for roommate starting Fob. Ib, the cable paid two
electricity. Fob C13-39-80.
How to schedule an ad:
Male roommate needed immediately for fully
turned in. Call 807-360-1918 or tlb 1
Campa Call 801-6784
- Byphone: 864-4358
roommate need immediately on 1806
and roommate need larger bed, hardwood floors.
Bldg/car Call (435) 297-5200.
One roommate needed for 2 bdm townhouse. $100
a month + $10 private,宅管房, AD, DW, FF
or BF.
Male roommate needed through end of semester.
Pully furnished, near campus $14/mo. + 1/2 wk.
No phone calls.
One roommate wanted to share 3-Br house.
Garage, secured in backyard. $175/mo. Call 843-269-0160.
Studious, non-smoking roommate wanted to share house with 8 grad students. Own room and bath, study area, kitchen.
Ads phone in may be inbilled to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
• In person: 119 Stairway Flint
Stop by the Kaiser offices between 8. s. m. and 5 p. m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or Visa.
Roommate Wanted M/F /kbrm townhouse, W/D;
Fireplace, dishwasher, 786-0992.
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 it 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 ad by 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.
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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
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118 business personalis
129 announcements
129 entertainment
Cold per mile per day
1X 2X 4-7X 8-14X 15-23X 20+X
2.65 1.55 1.95 .85 .75 .95
1.90 1.15 .80 .70 .65
1.85 1.95 .75 .85 .65 .45
1.75 .60 .65 .80 .55 .25
148 land & found
205 busy wanted
225 professional services
225 transient services
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378 want to buy
485 for rent
433 roommate wanted
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The University Daily Kansas, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66445
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1989 Farmer's Inc. Class by University Press Syndicate
The rooster stared back at me, his power and confidence almost overwhelming. Down below, a female paused warily at the coop's entrance. I kept the camera running. They were beautiful, these "Chickens in the Mist."
1
10
Friday, February 4, 1994
Camera America
ONE HOUR PHOTO
Lawrence's Largest Supplier of Darkroom Materials 1610 West 23rd Street 841-7205
Treat Your Sweetie on Valentine's Day
Heart and cupid jewelry:
earrings, pins
gold and silver 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
心
Bucky's
Bocky's
9th & Iowa • 842-2930
Milk Shakes
(Choc, Straw, Van)
Only $1^{38}
Double Cheeseburger
offer good thru Tues., Feb. 8.
CORNER STREET BAR
The University of Kansas Theatre for Young People Presents
Directed by Paul Meier
Adapted by Mary Hall Surface
From the book by Kenneth Grahame
Commissioned by the John F. Kennedy Center
for the Performing Arts and
the Seattle Children's Theatre.
7 p.m.
Saturday, February 12, 1994
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Murphy Hall
RESERVED SEAT TICKETS ARE AVAILABLE
THROUGH THE KU BOX OFFICES:
MURPHY HALL: 913.864.3982,
LIED CENTER: 913.864.ARTS.
All tickets are $3 REGARDLESS OF AGE.
AND MASTERCARD
ORDERS.
Activity Fee.
THE UNIVERSITY
TREATURE
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
No.1 falls again as Tar Heels beat Duke
The Associated Press
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. —The first half lived up to the hype. The result was true to form.
Second-ranked North Carolina beat No. 1 Duke 89-76 last night, the fifth consecutive week the country's top-ranked team has lost.
The Tar Heels, 18-3 overall and 6-2 in the Atlantic Coast Conference, broke the game open in the second half with a 15-3 run that gave them a 59-48 lead with 12:35 to play.
Duke, 15-2 overall and 5-2 in conference play, never recovered and couldn't get closer than six points the rest of the way.
Arkansas 112-105 on Feb. 10, 1991.
This was the first time this rivalry had a No. 1 vs. No. 2 matchup, but the final margin shouldn't have been shocking. The last four times these teams have met, the result has been a 10-point victory for the home team.
It was the first No. 1-No. 2 matchup since top-ranked UNLV beat
The first half ended with Duke taking a 50-48 lead into the locker room. Duke managed the two-point halftime lead when guard Chris Collins made two 3-pointers in the final 1:38 between a 3-pointer by North Carolina guard Derrick Phelps.
Except for the Blue Devils' 8-2 run to open the game, neither team was able to take more than a three-point lead. There were eight lead changes and six ties in the opening 20 minutes.
the first-half shooting percentages — Duke was 64 percent at 16-for-25 and North Carolina was 55 percent at 18-for-33 — belied the excellent defense that was being played. Of the 15 players who played in the first half, all but forward Kevin Salvadori of the Tail Heels scored.
Duke started the second half as it ended the first half with Collins hitting a 3-pointer, his third in a row.
But the Tar Heels continued their
torrid shooting while the Blue Devils tapered off.
At one point Duke went 4:10 without a field goal. When guard Grant Hill finally hit a baseline jumper with 8:03 to play, it cut North Carolina's lead to 68-57 — but by then the sellout crowd of 21,572 was as loud as it has ever been at the Smith Center.
Phelps led the Tar Heels with 18 points, while center Eric Montross had 16 and forward Rasheed Wallace had 14. North Carolina played without high-scoring guard Donald Williams, who missed his fourth straight game because of a separated left shoulder.
Hill topped the Blue Devils with 20 points and Collins finished with 15.
This was the 33rd meeting between Duke and North Carolina since 1981, and it was the 12th time one of them has been ranked No. 1.
The rematch will be on March 5 in Cameron Indoor Stadium at Duke.
Phoenix Cardinals hire Oilers' Ryan
The Associated Press
ner.
TEMPE, Ariz. — The punch is past, and Buddy's back as a boss in the NFL.
A month after slugging a coaching colleague during Houston's final regular-season game, Buddy Ryan was hired yesterday as coach and general manager of the Phoenix Cardinals.
"You've got a winner in town," said Ryan, the Oilers defensive coordinator last season. "We're looking forward to winning. So today we start."
Ryan, who coached the Philadelphia Eagles from 1986-90 and led them to the playoffs three times, signed a four-year contract. He replaces Joe Bugel, who was fired Jan. 24 after a 7-9 season in which he failed to deliver on an ultimatum by owner Bill Bidwill to produce a win-
The hiring comes as something of a surprise given that Ryan's stock was believed to have dropped considerably after he punched offensive coordinator Kevin Gilbride during a nationally televised game.
But Bidwill was undeterred by this latest run-in with a colleague and gave him the additional job of general manager, the first time the Cardinals have put one man in the dual role. The Cardinals had been without a general manager since Larry Wilson resigned Dec. 14.
"I have said we want to reach the next level," said Bidwil, who met with Ryan for two days before striking a deal. "Buddy Ryan has been to the next level. I anticipate he will take us there."
Ryan, who turns 60 this month, is
entering his 25th year as an NFL coach. He takes over a team that has not been to the playoffs in a non-strike year since 1975 and has not won a playoff game since 1947.
"If there are any real good football players here, they're going to want to play for Buddy Ryan," Ryan said.
In his first stint as a head coach, Ryan led the Eagles to three consecutive playoff berths, but the team never made it beyond its first post-season game.
The Cardinals have not won a playoff game since 1947.
Ryan apparently became the Cardinals' top choice after the Washington Redskins hired Dallas offensive coordinator Norv Turner, who reportedly was offered the Phoenix job of coach and general manager for $700,000 a year.
BULL SOX!
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS J.A.VICKERS SR. MEMORIAL LECTURE SERIES
"THE BUSINESS ASPECTS OF BASEBALL AND BASKETBALL: A COMPARISON"
JERRY M. REINSDORF CHAIRMAN, CHICAGO WHITE SOX & CHICAGO BULLS
8 P.M.
MONDAY
FEBRUARY 7,1994
THE LIED CENTER
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FREE TO THE PUBLIC
Hosted by the KU School of Business
He’s the best there is!
(Actually, he’s the only one there is.)
ACE VENTURA
PET DETECTIVE
To serve
and protect
...Your pets!
JAMES G ROBINSON MORGAN CREEK ALE VENTURA PET DETECTIVE
JIM CARREY STAN YOUNG COHRENFEY COX TONE FOL DAN MARING BOB ISRAEL DON ZIMMERMAN
JUDI MACAL WILLIAM ELLIOTT GARY BARBER JACK BERNSTEIN
JACK BERNSTEIN TOM SHAYAL JIM CARREY JAMES G ROBINSON TOM SHADYAC
COMING FEBRUARY 4
SPORTS: Jerry Reinsdorf, head of the Chicago Bulls and White Sox, discussed business in sports in a lecture last night. Page 10.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.103,NO.96
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KAN
KANSAS STATE
HISTORTCAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA KS 66612
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1994
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
Heritage celebration finds roots in history
Founded by a historian in 1926, the observation has evolved, expanded By Denise Neil Kansan staff writer
Carter G. Woodson, considered by many to be the father of African-American history, did not live to see the weeklong observation of African-American history he began in 1926 evolve into a monthlong celebration fifty years later.
Woodson may have been surprised by the observation's extension.
"You'd have to see Carter G. Woodson in the context of his time," said Ralph Crowder, professor of African-American studies at Purdue University and former KU assistant instructor of history. "He lived from 1875 to 1950. It was a time when the very humanity of Blacks was in question. There was a significant amount of hostility not only to Blacks, but to immigrants."
BLACK HISTORY MONTH
Woodson's parents were former slaves. He was unable to enter high school until he was 19-years-old, and he graduated less than two years later. He received his doctorate in history from Harvard University in 1912.
1915 as a way to promote the study of Black history in schools and to promote racial harmony. He hoped that a special week set aside to observe Black history would help him achieve these goals.
Woodson, who founded the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History Inc., announced in February 1926 the founding of what was then called "Negro History Week."
Woodson had founded the association in
"He was really trying for a better understanding of Black folks in America and also to see how it could be a part of school curriculum," said Jacob Gordon, associate professor of African-American studies and executive director for the Institute for Black Leadership Development and Research.
Leaving a mark
During the bicentennial celebration of the week in 1976, the association, which in 1972 had changed its name to the Association for the Study of Afro-American Life and History Inc., expanded the week's celebration to include all of February. February was chosen since it included the birthdays of Abraham Lincoln and Frederick Douglass, a 19th-century abolitionist.
These are just a few of the inventions by African. Americans used in everyday life.
Elevator
Alexander Miles
Typewriter
Burridge and Marshman
Jazz
A combination of slave worksongs, blues and gospel music.
Refrigerator
J. Standard
Subway
Granville Woods
A Feb. 1, 1976 issue of the Kansan said that a group of African-American students from Ellsworth Hall had decided a few years earlier to observe the week at KU in conjunction with the national observance. By 1978, KU was participating in the monthlong observance.
Source: Many Races Foundation
William Alix / KANSAK
Gunderman/MANBAN
William Alix / KANSAM Members of the Marquee Jordan Quintet told the audience about jazz history between their pieces Friday night at the Burge Union.
Marshall Jackson, administrative assistant for the Student Assistance Center, said the event had been observed in some form for all of the 20 years he had been at KU. It had begun as a project coordinated by the Black Student Union and the Office of Minority Affairs, he said. But over the years, it had expanded to include different departments and organizations on campus.
"I'm like a lot of people who hope some day we don't have to have one month set aside," Jackson said. "African Americans have contributed to the growth of this country from the very beginning."
Upcoming events
Tonight's lecture "When is a Black Man truly a Success?" by Ron Chilens, editor for Ebony Man Publications, has been canceled
Wednesday, Feb. 9
Reception: "Onny to Onny," for students and faculty, sponsored by the Association of African-American Graduate Students. 5:30-7:30 p.m., English Room, Kansas Union. Admission is free.
Thursday, Feb. 10
Lecture: "Creating Families: A New Look," by
Bernice Duncan.
7 p.m., Ecumenical Christian Ministries,
1204 Ave. Admission is free.
Thursday, Feb. 10
Students juggle jobs with academics
Working to pay tuition hard on attendance
ALEXANDER CAFE
By Angelina Lopez Kansan staff writer
Hoping for a sympathetic ear, LaCherl Bolle, Kansas City.
KU student Kirk Wagner, Omaha, Neb., senior, studies for his Hitler and Nazi Germany class during a break at Schlotzsky's Sand-wich Shop, 2233 Louisiana St. Wagner works the evening shift at Schlotzsky's and studies whenever he has a chance.
Hoping for a symp
Rollie, Kansas City,
Mo., senior, went to
her professor to
explain her excessive absences.
Rollie's roommate had moved out unexpectedly during the middle of the semester, and Rol-
Help! Professors and local business managers say they are doing their best to accommodate students and their busy lifestyles. Page 5.
James Wilcox / KAHBAN
lie was left with all the bills. She already was working 22 hours a week at the Office of the University Registrar as well as taking 18 hours of classes, but she had to get another job in the evening to pay for the increase in bills. She said the extra work had led to many late nights and made it difficult for her to attend her 8:30 a.m. class.
Her professor didn't need to hear her explanations. Regardless of her C average on exams, he told her that she would fail the class due to lack of attendance, she said.
Many University of Kansas students must work to afford to attend the University. Some feel that their professors are unsympathetic to their situation. Strict attendance policies, readings on reserve that are many times unavailable and fear of communicating their problems to their professors make an already difficult balancing act even harder for working students.
"Once you're old enough to go to college, it seems you should be old enough to decide for yourself whether you should go to class or not. Rollie said."
She said she had difficulty understanding an attendance policy that would have caused her to fall a course that she technically was passing. She said she also could not understand how an attendance policy could have been put into effect when she had paid for the course.
Adam Webb, Russell junior, said his main problem this semester had been
obtaining the extensive readings on reserve assigned by three of his professors.
Webb, who works 26 hours a week as a teaching counselor for Community Living Opportunities, 2113 Delaware St., and takes 15 hours of classes, said he only had one opportunity a week to go to Watson Library. But all three readings were never available at the same time, he said, so he had to drop one of the courses.
"It sometimes seems like professors think students only have work to do in their classes." Webb said.
Though she's never had the difficulties of Rolle or Web, Kim Trevithick, Overland Park junior and employee at Burger King, 1107 W. Sixth St., said that if she would have had problems balancing work and school), she probably would not have approached her professors about them.
"I think they'd have the attitude that I'm in school, and I have to deal with it," she said. "It would be really awkward."
Gina Schellman, Lawrence sophomore and employee at the enrollment center, said she had felt comfortable approaching her professors.
"They don't want to flunk you," she said.
"Falling their class is a bad reflection on them."
Where to get help
Students bogged down with classes and jobs can help get at these locations:
Time-management and budget-management service are available through:
Student Assistance Center, 133 Strong Hall, 864-4064
Office of Student Financial Aid, 50 Strong Hall, 864-4700
Tutoring services are available through:
■ University Information Center, 864-3506
■ Supportive Educational Services, 864-3971
Many of the individual departments
KANSAN
Death bill supporters win round
Republican majority sends capital punishment proposal to House by narrow margin
By Stephen Martino Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — After a weekend of arm twisting by death penalty supporters, State Rep. Rand Rock cast the deciding vote that sent a capital-punishment bill out of committee yesterday and to the floor of the House of Representatives.
Rock, D-Akansas City, was strongly courted by death penalty supporters during the weekend after it seemed certain his vote would make or break the legislation.
"I don't see this as a Republican or Democrat issue," he said. "My support was not a change in my position on this issue. I've always supported it."
However, in exchange for his support, Rock was able to force the House Federal and State Affairs Committee to adopt several changes to the bill. These changes made the bill's application of the death penalty more narrow.
Rock proposed, and the committee accepted, provisions that raised the age of execution to 18 and removed the broad felony murder provision. This provision would allow prosecutors to seek the death penalty for people involved in a crime that resulted in someone's death, even if the accused did not kill the victim. Several exceptions were added the bill to replace the felony murder portion.
Rock said the death penalty could be sought against a defendant if he or she killed someone during a violent sexual crime or kidnapping or if the victim was a law enforcement officer or a prison inmate. Premeditated murder was already covered under the legislation, and it was not changed.
The vote sending the bill to the House floor was as close as it could be. It basically followed party lines with 11 of 12 Republicans for it and 10 of 11 Democrats opposed. Rock was the lone Democrat to vote for the bill, and State Rep. Thomas Robinett, R-Overland Park, was the only member of the Grand Old Party to oppose it.
Early in the committee meeting, an amendment by State Rep. Kathleen Sebelius, D-Topeka, to remove death penalty by lethal injection and replace it with death by imprisonment failed. Soon after that, the committee voted to recommend the bill to the entire House.
State Rep. Phil Kline, R-Shawnee, an early supporter of the legislation, said he was pleased with the bill that made it out of committee, even with the amendments.
"I think this provides for a strong bill, but that doesn't mean it can't be strengthened on the floor," he said.
Speaker Robert Miller, R-Wellington, has set 10 a.m. Thursday for the beginning of floor speeches on the matter, said his chief of staff, Roger Aeschliman.
"It's not going to last less than three hours, and I wouldn't be surprised if 10 hours later people are still debating the issue," he said.
State Reps, Barbara Ballard and Forrest Swall, both D-Lawrence, said they would vote against the legislation.
Swall said that the death penalty was based on revenge, rage and retribution no matter how impassioned the support for it was.
"The death penalty fundamentally is one of the most barbaric throwbacks to the Middle Ages that we do in this country," he said. "In a civilized society, we need to be governed by rational law. The death penalty moves us out of the realm of rational rules."
Swall said that this legislation represented society's strongest outrage against premeditated murder, but if the Legislature passed it, the Legislature would be engaging in premeditated murder itself.
"I will stand up and speak against the legislation," he said. "I may not change many minds, but I will be able to live with my emotions. No matter how you look at it, we are opening the door to state-sanctioned, premeditated murder, and everyone in the Legislature will be a party to it."
INSIDE
A voice for change
Black Student Union celebrates 25 years of representing African-American students at KU. Page7.
10
By Jamie Munn
Kansan staff writer
Not many KU graduates can say they have their own flag flown on U.S. Navy ships. But they now have an example to follow.
Kansan staff writer
Secretary of Defense Les Aspin nominated Michael Sullivan, a 1967 graduate originally from Leavenworth, for promotion to rear admiral Wednesday.
"Anybody that gets promoted to admiral is surprised," Sullivan said. "But I was more pleased than surprised."
Sullivan graduated from KU with a degree in business administration and received his commission from Navy ROTC.
One of the keys to his success was the diversity of his background, Sullivan said. Even though he had spent much of his time in Washington, D.C., Sullivan said, he thought the variety of his experiences were essential to his selection.
Commander John Jones, executive officer of KU's Navy ROTC unit, said the selection for a flag rank position distinguished Sullivan as one of the Navy's top leaders.
"To be selected, he'd have to have done an extremely good job," Jones said. "This is a recognition of that achievement."
Jones said that from now on, when Sullivan boarded a Navy ship, a personalized flag would be flown in his honor.
Jones said the promotion was special
because Sullivan was one of only two Navy supply corps officers selected this year to wear the one star of a rear admiral. Because the military is being cut back this year the Navy has not promoted as many supply officers as in the past, Jones said.
After Sullivan received his Navy ROTC commission, he attended the Navy Supply School in Athens, Ga. But one of his most challenging assignments later was commanding the Navy supply center in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, from 1990 to 1992.
Jones said Sullivan's duties there probably ranged from overseeing personnel payroll to making sure there would be enough food for all the ships. As commander of that center, Sullivan supplied most of the U.S. bases in the Pacific Ocean, Jones said.
Jones said Sullivan's current duties included handling much of the bidding and potential bidders for the department.
Sullivan currently serves as the Deputy Commander for Contracts at the Naval Sea Systems Command Headquarters in Washington.
But in the future, Sullivan may not be the only KU grad with the rear admiral honor.
Jones said some of KU's Navy ROTC students were studying to follow the same path Sullivan took. He said one such student was Andrew Darnell, a business administration graduate who currently was attending the Navy Supply School.
"His future has the possibility of being just as successful," Jones said.
2
Tuesday, February 8, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
CAUTION:
DANGEROUSLY
LOW PRICES!
COUPON STRIP
CAUTION:
DANGEROUSLY
LOW PRICES!
COUPON STRIP
Walgreens
DRUG STORES
PEPSI PRODUCTS
69¢
6th and Kasold Good Thru 2-12-44
23rd and Louisiana
Liter/Limit 2
HotTubs
$7
VCR/Cable TV
3 Visits
2 People
$25
Valentine's Specials
SINCE 1865
EUROPEAN
TAN, HEALTH & HAIR SALON
23rd & Ousdahl
(Behind Arby's)
841-6232
TANS
10 for $25
15 for $35
20 for $45
2 FREE
with any of above packages.
Walgreens DRUG STORES
PEPSI PRODUCTS
69¢
6th and Kasold Good Thru 2-12-94 28rd and Louisiana
2 Liters/Limit 2
Walgreens
DRUG STORES
PEPSI PRODUCTS
69¢
6th and Kasold Good Thru 2:12:44 23rd and Louisiana 3 Liters/Limit 2
HotTubs
$7
VCR-Cable TV
3 Visits
2 People
$25
Valentine's Specials
Since 1883
EUROPEAN
TAN, HEALTH & HAIR SALON
23rd & Ousdahl
(Behind Arby's)
841-6232
TANS
10 for $25
15 for $35
20 for $45
2 FREE
with any of above packages
HotTubs
$7
VCR•CableTV
3 Visits
2 People
$25
HotTubs
$7
VCR-Cable TV
3 Visits
2 People
$25
Valentine's Specials
EUROPEAN
TAN, HEALTH & HAIR SALON
23rd & Oursdahl
(Behind Arby's)
841-6232
TANS
10 for $25
15 for $35
20 for $45
2 FREE
with any of above
packages
Valentine's Specials
Since 1982
EUROPEAN
TAN, HEALTH & HAIR SALON
23rd & Ousdahl
(Behind Arby's)
841-6232
TANS
10 for $25
15 for $35
20 for $45
2 FREE
with any of above
packages.
25%offw/coupon
Not valid with any other offer (expires February 13, 1994)
KIEF'S
CDS/TAPES
240th & Town St, P.O. Box 2, Lawrence, KS, 86014
CDS/TAPES - MUSIC ADMINISTRATION
913-842-1544 913-842-1811 913-842-1438
GOOD FOR A
FREE
limit one cookie per coupon
(with sub or pasta purchase)
expires 21/5/04
EXTRA LARGE
CHOCOLATE
CHIP
COOKIE
BREAST MILK CHEESE BUNNY
MR. GOODGENTS
15th & Kasold
Orchard Corners
Shopping Center
Lawrence, KS
841-8444
WE DELIVER!
OPEN DAILY 10:30 a.m.- 11:00 p.m.
--a unique boutique
743 Massachusetts
CLEOPATRA'S CLOSET
Bring Coupon in and Receive 20% OFF Any Body Care Products *Offer Expires 2-15-94
VALENTINE'S SPECIAL
UN CAMPUS
Free Keys!
1832 Mass.
843-2981
Buy one key get one free! $
Cottin's
Coast to Coast
O
EXPIRES: Feb., 28, 1994
Locally owned, Nationally Known
OAKS—Non-Traditional Students Organization, will have a brown bag lunch at 11:30 a.m. today at the Rock Chalk Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Gerry Vernon at 864 7317.
Pasta Dinner only $2^{49}
pasta, homemade marinara sauce, garlic toast
Blooms
Garden
12th & Oread
(above Yellow Sub)
Jayrunners will meet to run at 5 p.m. today at Allen Field House. For more information, call Kimberly Schober at 864-1507.
International Studies will sponsor a world view lecture, "U.S.-China Economic and Trade Relations: Where Are We Now?" at noon today at Alcove A in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Cathy McClure at 864-4141.
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.
KU Karate Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Brad Bernet at 832-2157.
1 offer/coupon/customer.Coupon expires 2/22/94
*Inspirational Gospel Voices will meet for choir rehearsal at 6 p.m. today at 328 Murphy Hall. For more information, call Kim at 749-3819.*
Yello Sub for Lunch?
Monday-Friday Lunch Special!
Any 6" sub only
$2.49 with purchase of drink
(Lup to $64 value)
With this coupon, I am to 2 pm only. Not valid with other offers.
I offer/coupon/person. Coupon expires on 3/22/94
1814 W. 25rd
19th and Indiana
With coupon only. Not valid w/ other offers
1 offer/coupon/customer. Expiration 2/22/94
KU Pro-Choice Coalition will meet at 6 p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread. For more information, call Stephanie Gabriel at 842-6894.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a House/Hall Contacts meeting at 6:30 p.m. today at the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call
KANSAN
Yello Sub
1814 W. 23rd
12th and Indiana
High: 18 Low: 9*
"Windblown," the student organization sponsored by Mustard Seed Christian Fellowship, will meet at 7:30 tonight at Alcove F in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Hugh Wentz at 841-2647.
KU Fencing Club will meet at 7:30 tonight at 130 Robinson. For more information, call Jen Snyder at 841-6445.
KU Dr. Seuss Club will meet at 7:30 tonight at Alcove G in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Jessica Perinchief at 841-2558.
20% off complete pair of prescription glasses(frame & lenses)
KU Triathlon and Swim Club will practice at 7:30 tonight at Robinson Natatorium in Robinson Center. For more information, call Sean Roland at 865-2731.
KU Water Polo Club will meet at 7 tonight at Robinson Natatorium in Robinson Center. For more information, call David Reynolds at 841-6475 or Nick Pivonka at 841-6197.
Cloudy with morning flurries.
Cloudy
842-0880
737 Massachusetts
(Enpires 12-31-94)
KU Pre-Physical Therapy Club will meet at 7 tonight at the second floor conference room in Watkins Hospital. For more information, call Matt Klein at 841-6726.
Public Relations Student Society of America will meet at 7 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Michael Sullivan at 841-7514.
BRADY PTICAL
Native American Student Association will meet at 7 tonight at 3012 Haworth. For more information, call Johnnie Young at 864-4351.
Wendy Dovle at 843-0357
Atlanta: 69'/57'
Chicago: 16'/11'
Houston: 80'/68'
Miami: 82'/72'
Minneapolis: 2'/6'
Phoenix: 64'/46'
Salt Lake City: 43'/15'
Seattle: 36'/28'
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WEATHER
LAWRENCE: 24'/10' Kansas City: 19'/10'
Freezing rain likely, sleet and/or snow possible.
St. Louis: 34'/27'
High: 21*
Low: 11*
TODAY
Omaha: 5" x 1"
Enjoy the Jayhawks with superb vision
50 percent chance of snow.
High: 24'
Low: 10'
Wichita: 28'/18'
●
Tulsa: 47'/28'
雨
Tomorrow Thursday
Source: Doug Landweir, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
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CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAS
Tuesday, February 8, 1994
3
FACES
Newspapers delivered with a smile
AH
Mel Smith, Lawrence resident, has been delivering The University Daily Kansan for 12 years. His said his route took two to three hours to complete.
A.
Mel Smith uses colorful green van as delivery cart
"People think I am crazy when they see me in shorts. I wear them because I get hot."
Towards the end of his route, the bundles Mel Smith delivers become smaller. "I can really fly with a small stack," he said. He runs to most places where he drops off papers. Smith wears shorts until the temperature dips below 30 degrees. A time exposure shows him running through the Ellsworth Hall lobby.
By Ashley Schultz Kansan staff writer
Mol Smith Printing Services' deliverer
Photos by Tom Leininger
Fifteen years ago, Mel Smith went cold turkey. After 10 years of classes at the University of Kansas, he achieved academic ineligibility by neither dropping nor attending his classes.
"Instead of dropping my classes, I just quit going because I knew that one of these days, I would try to come back, and if I failed everything, then they wouldn't let me back," Smith said. "That was my plan, which worked, actually."
But Smith still comes to campus faithfully every weekday — for his job.
Smith delivered this paper and about 13,500 others today. He does the same most Thursdays and Fridays and delivers about 15,500 issues Mondays and Wednesdays.
Smith inherited the route 12 years ago from the woman he had been helping to deliver the papers.
He usually wakes up around 7 a.m.
and gets to Printing Services, 2425
W. 15th St., at about 7:50 a.m., Smith said. He tries to leave for campus by 8:10 a.m.
His route involves about 40 stops, Smith said.
About 70 percent of the papers are dropped off along Jayhawk Boulevard before he heads down Sunnyside Avenue. After hitting the residence halls, he crosses over to deliver to West Campus. The process takes about two and one-half hours, including one trip back to Printing Services to reload, Smith said.
If the job isn't interesting enough, his van certainly is.
"It doesn't take long enough to get boring," he said.
One of his most harrowing experiences on the route, Smith said, happened seven years ago when a gas leak in the Ford he was driving caused the engine to catch fire in front of Strong Hall. He put the fire out with an extinguisher from the building and still managed to deliver the papers.
The 1976 Chevy Malibu he uses underwent some cosmetic changes at the hands of a friend about three weeks ago, Smith said. The pea-green exterior was enhanced with colorful designs of classical and modern Greek shadow puppets.
Smith also keeps busy after the route.
He has a stepdaughter, Cary, 21,
and a daughter, Misha, 13.
Every Monday, Smith practices with the other four members of Acme Jazz. He has played drums for 12 years and the tabla, an Indian drum, for 11 years.
About four years ago, Smith spent a year in Japan with his family.
where his ex-wife taught English as a second language. He would like to live overseas again, perhaps by the year 2000.
"What we found in Japan is the world is really a big place, and there are a lot of places to live in the world that are really pretty wonderful," he said.
Smith said he also had practiced the philosophy of alikido, a Japanese form of self-defense, for 12 years.
"Probably the best thing that you can do is to live your life the best way that you can, and that'll change their world enough to make it a better place," Smith said.
"I'm famous for three hours, then I dip back down into obscurity." Mol Smith Printing Services' deliverer
CAROLYN WILLIAMS
Hazardous waste site considered
KU student involvement has helped,member says
By Ashley Schultz Kansan staff writer
If things go its way, the Lawrence/Douglas County Household Hazardous Waste Committee could make the disposal of household products easier and safer by the end of this spring.
The facility received its operating permit about two weeks ago after making a few adjustments to its original proposal, said Patricia Marvin, city recycling coordinator.
The Household Hazardous Waste Task Force is considering opening the facility for about four hours one Saturday a month, with each date being sponsored by a community organization.
The next step is to solicit proposals from the six certified contractors who are candidates for waste disposal, Marvin said.
The Committee has asked that contractors reply to the request within three weeks, Schulte said. He said he expected the county to approve a contractor around the end of February. Then the Kansas Department of Health and Environment would be called on to give the facility a final inspection before operations begin.
"Getting the permit taken care of was a big hurdle to overcome, so the rest of it, I hope, is going to fall in place in fairly short order," Schulte said.
Schulte said that KU student involvement with the task force had been invaluable.
Interns have focused on educational projects. Fall interns put out a coloring book for area elementary schools.
Lysa Bridges, Charleston, S.C., senior, is an industrial design major working to enhance a prototype of an interactive display for children originally designed by Hallmark Cards Inc. Children insert cards with pictures of household products into one of three slots: recycle, landfill or hazardous waste collection. When inserted into the correct slot, magnetic sensors set off bells and lights, Bridges said. The backs of the cards describe environmental alternatives to hazardous products.
Alternatives are an important part of the task force's message, Marvin said.
"The purchase, the use of chemicals has gone up tenfold," Marvin said. "We need to be aware of what we're buying."
She said that although household hazardous waste accounts for only about 1 to 2 percent of trash, it represents about 80 percent of the crisis potential for groundwater, air and soil.
Household hazards
Household hazardous wastes are either toxic, corrosive, flammable or explosive. The following products often qualify: Motor oil, antifreeze, brake fluid, house paint, paint thinner, stains, adhesives, pesticides, weed killer, fertilizer, cleaners, degreasers, ammonia, bleaches, cosmetics and hobby and craft supplies.
Source: The Earl Slick HHW Coloring Book created by the City of Lawrence Recycling Office, Lawrence/Douglas County HHW Committee
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Tuesday, February 8, 1994
OPINION
---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Industry self-regulation makes sense for media
The decision by cable and broadcast networks to police themselves for violence is the ideal outcome in the recent debate over violent programming on television.
Industry self-regulation is preferable to federal legislation, as it probably will be more efficient and keep the government out of the sticky business of deciding what programming should be available to whom. In addition, the networks' proposals contain workable solutions to the dilemma parents face when monitoring family television viewing.
Particularly commendable is the cable networks' agreement to rate programs for violence and to support technology that would allow individual households to block violent shows from appearing on their TVs. Both of these would help parents be better informed about what is available for their children to watch and prevent their children from watching excessivelyviolent shows
Some would argue that any restriction on or regulation of television programming smacks of censorship. It is not censorship but good parenting when adults take an interest in what their children see and hear. Parents should be able to withhold what they feel is unhealthy or potentially harmful.
Frustrated by a disturbing level of violence on television, a parent might decide to toss out the television entirely. Would that be attacked as censorship?
If the networks follow through on their promises, the result would not be censorship but a better informed public and parents who are able to act in what they see as their children's best interests.
MARGARET BECK FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Harding's deceit calls for dismissal from team
The United States Figure Skating Association's call Saturday for a disciplinary hearing against Tonya Harding represents the latest chapter in a bizarre story. Regardless of any part Harding had in the attack on Nancy Kerrigan, her actions to this point justify her disqualification from the Olympic team.
The USFSA, in calling for the disciplinary action, found it was reasonable to believe that Harding "committed an act to carry out a plan and/or was involved in a plan to injure Nancy Kerrigan; or made false statements about her knowledge concerning it."
While some may argue that her character has nothing to do with her ability to skate, it does reflect on her as a U.S. ambassador, which is ultimately what our team members are.
For the U.S. team to include a figure skater who has lied about her involvement in a vicious attack on her rival teammate would be detrimental to our team's credibility and to its spirit.
Olympic hopefuls spend most, if not all, of their lives concentrating on being good athletes and good citizens. Although Harding is a great skater, others may feel cheated that she was able to make the Olympic team while violating the principles of sportsmanship.
Apart from her conduct, Harding is still under investigation by the authorities. There is even speculation that her arrest may be drawing closer as investigators uncover new evidence.
What image would the U.S. team project if the FBI showed up in Lillehammer to cart off one of its skaters for assaulting her rival? Certainly not the image of fairness and sportsmanship for which U.S. citizens strive.
DONELLA HEARNE FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
BEN GROVE. Editor
LISACOSMILLO, Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
TOM FRIEN
JUSTIN GARBERG Business manager
BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator
JENNIFER BLOWEY Retail sales manager
Editors
Asset Managing Editor...Dan England
Assistant to the editor...J.R. Clairborne
News...Kristi Fogler, Katie Greenwald
Todd Seffert
Editorial...Colleen McCain
Nathan Oleson
Campus...Jess DeHaven
Sports...David Dorsey
Photo...Doug Hesse
Features...Sara Bennett
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
Campus sales mgr ..Jason Eberly
Regional Sales mgr ..Troy Tervetra
National & Coop sales mgr ..Robin King
Special Sessions mgr ..Shelly McConnell
Production mgr ..Laura Guth
Gretchen Kottenherlindt
Marketing director ..Shannon Reilly
Creative director ..John Cartton
Classified mgr ..Kelly Conneally
Teaheatsa mgt ..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 Texas at Austin must include their institution's logo.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
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-Fint Hall.
Sex in the '90s:Virtual reality no substitute for the real thing
I'd be the first person to admit I'm nearly computer illiterate. It takes all of my knowledge just to get my columns typed into the computer system each week. And in this day and age, when nearly everything is controlled by computer, not knowing how to operate one can be a serious problem. Let's face it. Nowadays you can not only write papers on your personal computer, but with the correct equipment you can send electronic mail, pay the bills, obtain information about the stock market, have sex...
Are you shocked by the last example, like I was when I first heard about it? Well, don't be. In the near future, people are going to be able to have sex through their computers. Welcome to the world of cyberspace, better known to the public as virtual reality.
I first came across the idea in my Sociology 104 class this semester. Now, like I said, I'm not very knowledgeable about computers, so I'm not about to attempt to explain the details of virtual reality. But I must say, I find
COLUMNIST
SCOTT
TYTRINGTON
the concept of virtual reality sex quite unnerving
The idea that sexual activity should be an act used solely for procreation has passed most of us by, and many of us look for sex anywhere we can get it. But computers?
work. Sexual relationships constantly pose new challenges. These challenges are lost with the ability to press a few buttons, flip a couple switches and instantly fulfill sexual desire.
For many people, sex can be a challenge. Before two people have sex, they must develop some sort of communication, even if it's only something like, "Hi, I find you attractive. Do you want to have sex?" This communication, and many times, the relationships which follow, take some
I also have a problem with a comment that my sociology professor made regarding the concept of virtual reality sex. My professor suggested that this type of activity may appeal to those people who have religious beliefs, which forbid premarital sex. Since the two persons participating in virtual reality sex are not actually involved in intimate contact with one another, truthfully, no sexual act is taking place. Therefore, these people can have sex through a computer without rebelling against their religious ideologies.
The truth is, the reason many religious sects forbid sex before marriage is their belief that sex should be used solely for procreation and for no other purposes. So I'm sure most religious affiliations would be against the
idea of any sexual activity, even if it is occurring within the confines of a computer-generated environment.
But the biggest problem I have with the whole concept is that virtual reality sex just isn't natural. Whether a recreational activity or one meant to create offspring, sex should be an act in which two people express love for one another. The physical bond and affection shared by two people making love are lost when sexual acts are carried out through a computer.
If you've gotten the impression that I'm against the entire computer revolution, you're wrong. I feel the computers of today serve many useful purposes and should be used to the best of their capabilities. Like I said, without them I wouldn't be able to bring you my opinions each and every week. But in the future, I want condoms and birth control pills — not an on-off switch — to continue providing sexual protection.
Scott Titlington is a Poway, Calif. sophomore in exercise science and journalism.
MIKEELY Chicago Tribune
HI THERE! WE'RE DOING ANOTHER SPECIAL ON VIOLENCE IN AMERICA—AS A PUBLIC SERVICE, OF COURSE...
Computers make life more efficient?
People often say to me: "Dave, as a professional columnist, you have a job that requires you to process large quantities of information on a timely basis. Why don't you get a real hair-cut?"
What these people are REALLY asking, of course, is: How am I able to produce columns with such a high degree of accuracy, day in and day out, 52 weeks a year?
COLUMNIST
The answer is: I use a computer. This enables me to be highly efficient. Suppose, for example, that I need to fill up column space by writing BOOGER BOOGER BOOGER BOOGER BOOGER TO accomplish this in the old pre-computer days, I would have had to type "BOOGER" five times manually. But now all I have to do is type it once, then simply hold the left-hand "mouse" button down while "dragging" the "mouse" so that the "cursor" moves over the text that I wish to "select;" then release the left-hand "mouse" button and position the "cursor" over the "Edit" heading on the "menu bar;" then click the left-hand "mouse" button to reveal the "edit menu;" then position the "cursor" over the "Copy" command; then click the left-hand "mouse" button; then move the "cursor" to the point where I wish to insert the "selected" text; then click the left-hand "mouse" button; then position the "cursor" over the "Edit" heading on the "menu bar" again; then click
DAVE BARRY
the left-hand "mouse" button to reveal the "edit menu"; then position the "cursor" over the "Paste" command; then click the left-hand "mouse" button four times; and then, as the French say, "voil! (Translation: 'My hand hurts!')"
If you need this kind of efficiency in your life, you should get a computer. I recommend the kind I have, which is a "DOS" computer. The other major kind of computer is the "Apple," which I do not recommend because it is a wuss-o-rama New-Age computer that you basically just plug in and use. This means you don't get to participate in the most entertaining aspect of computer-owning, which is trying to get the computer to work. This is where "DOS" really shines.
It was invented by Bill Gates. He is now one of the wealthiest individuals on Earth, wealthier, even, than some people who fix our car transmissions. Why? Because he's the only person in the world who understands "DOS."
Every day he gets frantic phone calls like this:
BUSINESS EXECUTIVE: Our entire worldwide corporate accounting system is paralyzed, and no matter what we type into the computer, it replies, "WHO WANTS TO KNOW? (signed) DOS."
BILL GATES Ha-ha! I mean, sounds pretty serious.
BUSINESS EXECUTIVE. We'll give
BILL GATES: OK. Press the "NUM
LOCK" key.
My current computer, in addition to "DOS," has "Windows," which is another invention of Bill Gates, designed as a security measure to thwart those users who are somehow able to get past "DOS." You have to be a real stud cybermuffin to handle "Windows." I have personally, with my bare hands, changed my "WIN.INT" and "CONFIG.SYS" settings. This may not mean much to you, but trust me, it is a major accomplishment. Albert Einstein died without ever doing it. (WAIT a minute! Weren't his last words, "It erased my equation! It was E equals something!)
I am not the only person who uses his computer mainly for the purpose of diddling with his computer. There are millions of others. I know this, because I encounter them on the Internet, which is a giant international network of intelligent, informed
computer enthusiasts, by which I mean, "necobole without lives."
We don't care. We have each other. While you are destroying your mind watching the worthless, brain-rotting drivel on TV("Dave's World." Monday nights, CBS, check your local listings), we on the Internet are exchanging, freely and openly, the most uninhibited, intimate and, yes, shocking details about our "CONFIG.SYS" settings.
You would not believe how wrought up we get about this type of thing on the Internet. I regularly connect with a computer group that has a heated debate going on about — I am not making this up — the timing of Hewlett-Packard's decision to upgrade from a 386 to a 486 microprocessor in its Omnibook computer. This has aroused enormous passion. People are sending snide, angry, sometimes furious messages to each other. I'm sure that some participants, even as we speak, are trying to figure out a way to alter their CONF. FIG.SYS settings so that they can electronically punch their opponents in the mouth. This debate has been raging, soap-opera-like, for months now. I tune in every day. You probably think this is weird, but I don't care. I am a happy nerd in cyberspace, where nobody can see my haircut.
Dave Barry is a syndicated columnist for the Miami Herald.
Nudism is respectable, growing in popularity
This letter is in response to Jacob Arnold's article that mentioned a little about the positive aspects of nudity. I thought this would be an opportune time to inform people about one of the fastest-growing social phenomena in America: social nudism.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
The American Sunbathing Association (ASA) was founded more than 60 years ago to promote all the aspects of social nudism in Canada and the United States. There are more than 200 nudist clubs that are members of the organization. Most
have swimming and hot tub facilities, volleyball courts, various other sports, restaurants and playgrounds for the kids.
Other organizations include the Naturist Society and the International Naturist Federation (INF). These groups, along with the ASA, are very politically active to ensure that nudists' rights are not violated. The ASA is continually on guard to make sure that some obscure law is not passed that would interrupt the legal protection members enjoy while on ASA grounds. These are the same laws that let you go nude in your own home or skinny-dipping in an appropriate place on national park property.
Nudists are sensitive to others' personal space. Touching is kept appropriate, and behavior is expected to be "without excuse." A family atmosphere is maintained.
Nudists believe in the essential wholeness of the human body. We also believe that nude is not lewd. Every part of the human is natural, wholly devoid of any vulgarity or obscenity. We believe that children raised in the nudist philosophy will be healthier of mind than non-nudist children. Nudism will teach them moral and physical cleanness and will permit them to grow up with a natural acceptance of themselves and others as human beings, not objects.
Most clubs have several rudist etiquette rules, such as limited use of cameras. Also, anonymity is kept in order to not jeopardize some people's careers.
Organized family recreational nudism is not far from Lawrence. One nudist camp is less than 45 minutes away. Kansas City has a nonlanded nudist club that does lots of fun activities. Those interested in more information should write to the ASA at 1703 N. Main St., Kissimmee, FL. 34744-9988.
My advice is: Try social nudism, and most of the questions will answer themselves.
St. Louis graduate student
O
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The prompt says "Preserve the text exactly as it appears."
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
---
Tuesday. February 8. 1994
5
Lawrence businesses try to accommodate students
By Cheryl Cadue Kansan staff writer
Many Lawrence business owners and managers say they are doing their best to keep their stores open and cater to the hours kept by KU students.
Leslie Johnson, owner of The Loft, 742 Massachusetts St., said even though her store closes at 5:30 p.m. like most downtown stores, she received a large amount of student business. The Loft is open from 9:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. everyday except Thursday, when it is open until 8 p.m., and Sunday, when it is open from 1 to 5 p.m.
"I know our hours are not handy for those students who work after 3 p.m." Johnson said. "I'd be willing to stay open longer until about 6 or 7 p.m. if more downtown businesses did. So many businesses close at 5:30, and there's not enough stores open to bring people downtown."
Janice Toebben, senior vice president in the office of retail banking for Mercantile Bank, 900 Massachusetts St., said the bank was working on extending hours for customers. The bank is open from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday-Friday and from 8:30 a.m. to noon on Saturday.
"I would like to be open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. because availability is awful important, especially in Lawrence," Toeben said. "Here we have people who commute to work and students who might not get to the bank before it closes."
Teresa Smith, branch manager for Bank IV, 900 Ohio St., said Bank IV's hours were accommodating to customers because the
bank's drive-thru did the bulk of its business, and 24-hour automated teller machines were available to people after the lobby closed. The bank is open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday-Friday and from 9 a.m. to noon on Saturday.
"We have to close at some point for security reasons, and we have better hours than, I think, anywhere else," Smith said. "We could be open 24 hours a day, and that still wouldn't be long enough for some people."
Bill Reynolds, postmaster, said the post office accommodated a majority of its customers. The post office is open from 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday-Friday and from 9 a.m. to noon Saturday.
"The post office offers the best combination of maximum availability of hours while still meeting operating standards." Reynolds said.
Reynolds said contract stations in places like the Kansas Union also can better accommodate students who might not get to the main post office before it closed.
Phil Bappie, assistant manger of Wal-Mart Discount Cities, 3300 Iowa St., said Wal-Mart had increased the store's hours to accommodate students and other customers. Wal-Mart is open from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday-Saturday and from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Sunday.
"The store always seems to be busy with students from when we open until we close, and we do appreciate their business." Bapke said. "In any university town, Wal-Mart tries to accommodate students and stay open later."
Bappie said Wal-Mart could increasestore hours in the future if competition increased in its area.
Students' daily lives clash with office hours
Some sympathetic instructors adjust scheduled meetings
By Angelina Lopez Kansan staff writer
When Isidro Rivera was a working college student, his biggest hassle was making it to his professors' offices during their office hours.
"I'd run to their offices during the short breaks I would have, but there would always be two students in line in front of me," he said.
Now as an assistant professor of Spanish, Rivera said he tried to keep his office hours flexible for those students whose other commitments, like work, made his regular office hours difficult to attend.
Professors realize that the happy-go-lucky college student is an image of the past. Students in the '90s are working to avoid huge college loan debts and pay for rent and other living expenses. Many professors are making adjustments to help students deal with this reality.
"It's up to a student to keep me informed when he or she is having a problem," Rivera said. "If they come to me in advance, we can work things out."
Laura Morgan, assistant director of the Student Assistance Center, said that the earlier a student would inform a teacher of difficulties that might arise because of his or her work schedule, the more understanding the professor would be when a problem arises.
"A student's fear of explaining his situation to a professor leads to avoidance, which only hurts the student in the long run." Morgan said.
Kirk McClure, associate professor of urban planning, said working students who had needed help had approached him with different attitudes.
"Some act as if we are obligated to accommodate them," he said. "Others are simply seeking assistance. They run the gamut."
Marilyn Carlson, coordinator of the Kansas Algebra Program, said that if a student came to her with a crisis, she would listen and try to be fair.
"But if a person chooses to be a student and chooses to be an employee, they have to meet the expectations of both roles," she said.
Carlson said one of her expectations for Math 101 students was that they attend class.
"If you mislead students by allowing them to believe class attendance isn't required, then you're setting them up for failure," she said.
In the fall of 1989, when the math department had no attendance policy for Math 101 students, Carlson said only 6 percent of students in Math 101 made an A, and 36 percent failed or withdrew. In the fall of 1993, with more structured classes and required homework assignments, 19 percent of students received an A, and 21 percent withdrew or failed.
Tom Tuozzo, assistant professor of philosophy, said that once his students had made a commitment to coming to class, he could be more flexible in other areas. For example, he said he understood that working students didn't always have access to readings on reserve. He said he made the readings available in his office, which would allow students to photocopy the readings and avoid long lines at Watson Library.
---
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Sexual Assault Prevention and Education Program a program of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center 115 Strong Hall, 864-3600
Free Legal Seminars
Consuming Alcohol?
Hosting A Party?
Leasing An Apartment?
If your living group or campus organization would like to schedule a presentation contact Jo Hardesty or J.R. Clairborne.
STUDENT SENATE
Legal Services for Students
148 Burge • 864-5665
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 864-4676.
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The Associated Press
U.S. deputy general leaves Somalia
"It's time to get out," said Maj. Gen. Thomas Montgomery, who stepped down as U.N. deputy commander but remained as the commander of the diminishing number of U.S. forces.
MOGADISHU, Somalia — Unceremoniously removing his blue beret, the American deputy commander of U.N. forces in Somalia left his post yesterday, marking an end to direct U.S. involvement in the U.N. peace-keeping mission.
It was a humanitarian mission credited with saving more than 100,000 Somalis from dying of hunger. But
clashes between U.N. troops and faction fighters left 33 Americans dead as well as hundreds of Somali, including many non-combatants.
President Clinton ordered the withdrawal of all U.S. forces from the Horn of Africa nation by March 31 after 18 Americans were killed in a botched raid in October.
Currently, about 4,500 U.S. troops remain on the ground in Somalia, down from more than 20,000 a year ago. Their withdrawal will escalate rapidly in the next few weeks.
Although no longer under U.N. command, the withdrawing American
The American withdrawal — accompanied by the pullout of eight other nations, including France, Belgium, Italy and Germany — has given rise to fears among some relief groups and others that Somalia will descend again into anarchy.
force will continue to provide a shield for remaining U.N. troops, Montgomery said.
Although about 22,000 soldiers from Third World nations will stay behind, the gradual withdrawal of Western military forces already has brought a marked increase in banditry and attacks on civilian aid agencies.
CAIRO. Egypt
THE NEWS in brief
Peace talks take place between Arafat, Peres about removing troops
PLO leader Yasser Arafat and Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres began discussions yesterday on the start of the long-delayed withdrawal of Israel's troops from the Gaza Strip and Jericho.
The decision to renew the stalled negotiations came after more than a week of bickering and strenuous mediation by Egypt that apparently included a series of phone calls yesterday morning.
At midmorning, officials at PLO headquarters in Tunis said Arafat would not be meeting Peres, but they later said the PLO leader had reversed his decision.
Peres said before departing from Tel Aviv that Israel wanted to move forward in the peace talks, but has not changed its position.
Neither Israeli nor Palestinian officials predicted an immediate agreement from yesterday's meeting — a contrast to the optimism over the two men's last discussions in Davos, Switzerland, a little more than a week ago.
In Jerusalem, Gad Ben-Ari, spokesman for Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, said yesterday's meeting was not expected to produce a signed agreement.
Under the Israeli-PLO accord signed Sept. 13 in Washington, Israeli troops were to begin withdrawing in mid-December to turn over day-to-day running of Gaza and Jericho to Arafat's Palestine Liberation Organization.
Saeed Kamal, the PLO envoy to Egypt, said the two leaders probably would meet again today but added it would take longer to iron out disagreements over Israel's withdrawal from Gaza and the West Bank town of Jericho.
But in the negotiations since October, the two sides could not agree on who would guard borders from the Palestinian areas to Jordan and Egypt, the size of the Jericho area and how to protect Jewish settlers remaining in Gaza.
LORAIN, Ohio
Olympic ice dancer's brother denies guilt
The brother of Olympic ice dancer Elizabeth Punsalan pleaded not guilty yesterday to aggravated murder in the stabbing of his father.
Ricardo Punsalan, 20, was allowed to meet briefly with family members before the hearing, at which he waived a preliminary hearing. Municipal Judge Gustalo Nunez ordered him held without bond while a grand jury hears evidence against him.
Elizabeth Punsalan was not in the courtroom.
Thomas Schmidt, Sheffield Lake police chief, said Ernesto Punsalan, 57, was sleeping Friday night at the family's home 20 miles west of Cleveland when his son stabbed him twice in his chest with a large knife.
Schmidt said the son admitted the slaying after his mother, Theresa Punsalan, called police. Schmidt wouldn't comment on a motive.
Elizabeth Punsalan said Sunday that her brother had been mentally ill for a long time, and a recent change in his medication could have caused a violent reaction.
Punsalan, 23, said she still planned to be in the Olympic ice-dancing competition with her husband and partner, 27-year-old Jerod Swallow.
The Dating Game
Compiled from The Associated Press.
presented by The Russ Johnson Show
This Valentine's Day Doesn't Have To Be Spent Alone.
KJHK, the Sound Alternative, is giving you the chance to win an all expenses paid night out on the town. Why not let KJHK play matchmaker for the evening? Straight, Lesbian and Gay singles will be paired up for a night beginning with a romantic dinner, followed by a movie at Liberty Hall and then...who knows? And, in the tradition of The Love Connection and Studs, you will have the chance to tell all of KU about your date...on KJHK's Russ Johnson Show.
So tune in on February 11th and February 14th for The Dating Game
ENTRY DEADLINE IS TODAY
Place the entry form below the drop box at the SUA office in the Kansas Union or at 2051A Dole. You must be available to be on air Friday, February 11th from 4:00 - 5:00PM and Monday the 14th (Valentine's Day) from 4:00-5:00PM.
Mr. Ms. First Last
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Tell us about yourself:
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It's not a "them" or "us" kind of show.
It's an "our".
Weekday's 4-5
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It's not a "them" or "us" kind of show.
It's an "our".
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CORNUCCOPIA
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Photo courtesy of University Archives
One of the Black Student Union's first accomplishments was crowning its own homecoming queen at KU's 1969 homecoming. During halftime of the football game, BSU queen Lorene Brown, right, rode with her attendants behind the University's homecoming motorcade. The three raised clenched fists, the symbol for "Black Power" and for BSU.
BSU at 25
KU's Black Student Union was formed in the turbulent
1960s to combat discrimination on campus. Twenty-five years later,BSU is still a voice for KU's
African-American students.
By Cathleen Siechta Kansan staff writer
The Black Student Union at the University of Kansas was formed in September 1968, a time when racial tensions ran high and civil rights movements created turbulent atmospheres on campuses across the nation.
Twenty-five years ago, the social unrest caused by racial inequalities inspired African-American students at the University to unite. Then, BSU's primary aim was to fight for the rights of African Americans with protests, sit-ins and demands to the chancellor for more respect for African Americans on campus.
Today, as the organization celebrates its 25th anniversary, BSU still is striving to be a voice for African-American students at KU.
"When BSU started, its main concern was to integrate more Black faculty and recruit more Black students," said Marshall Jackson, administrative associate of student assistance. Marshall was a charter member of BSU.
"There was a major thrust for more Black representation on campus," he said.
Jackson said African Americans felt alienated at KU in the '60s and '70s because discrimination was a problem in Lawrence and across the nation.
The need for Black Student Union was first recognized after the Negro Student Association, a group which organized protests in the '50s, became inactive in the '60s.
"The 60s were a time of frustration for Blacks," he said. "But we fought for what we needed."
African-American students still saw the need for a representative organization, and BSU was established. One of the organization's immediate goals was to address Black representation in the University's
Some of the BSU's first accomplishments were the successful recruitment of KU's first African-American pompon girl and a BSU homecoming ceremony. Though the University only would allow the organization a five-minute crowning ceremony before the football game, the BSU homecoming royalty followed the University's official homecoming queen's motorcade at halftime, waving clenched fists, symbolizing "Black Power."
"You have to keep in mind that, at that time, homecoming queens were a fairly big affair," Jackson said. "In the whole scheme of things it may seem like a small accomplishment, but at that time and location, it sent a message to students, alumni and faculty. It let everyone know that we wanted to participate and to be recognized.
administration and activities.
BSU became inactive in 1975, and was reborn in 1978. Milton Scott, assistant director of student housing, was a member of BSU in the '80s. He said the organization had to make up for lost time when it rebuilt in the '80s.
"There were several battlefields and several strategies in our movement. That strategy was important for that time, that day and our goal," Jackson said.
In recent years, BSU has managed to make progress without resorting to the radical struggles of the past. However, some think those struggles may be
"The interest and energy that died off in the late '70s is back now," Scott said. "In the '80s we were backtracking to where we had left off, when we were just getting started and getting things rolling. But the issues from the '70s are the same issues that BSU talks about today. The difference is that today BSU sets time frames along with their goals rather than just talking about their goals," Scott said.
most effective at bringing about change.
In the words of current BSU president Terry Bell, "No struggle, no involvement."
"Everyone seems to just be content with where we are," the Tampa, Fla., senior said. "Too many Black students have fallen through the cracks because of lack of knowledge of the organization and lack of interest."
Jackson said that although BSU had made progress, the University recently has been losing African-American students and faculty. He said better recruitment and scholarships for African-American students would combat declining Black enrollment.
"The issues on the forefront of the '90s are very similar to what they were in the '60s," he said. "Sometimes they're so similar it's scary. Protests have their place, but it's time that students learn to get political. The work has been done, and now we need to exert pressure to implement the recommendations," Jackson said.
Bell said he thought that much could be accomplished if students would work together but that he was worried about the drop in African-American enrollment at the University. He said last semester's African-American enrollment of 769 was 400 to 500 students fewer than in the '70s.
Recruitment of African-American students will be one topic discussed at the 17th annual BSU Big Eight conference, which will be held at the University of Missouri in Columbia Feb. 18-19.
Bell said he hoped for a large turnout at the conference, which was held at KU last year. He said the conference and other BSU-sponsored activities could benefit the shrinking African-American population at the University.
"BSU can create a better sense of community for Black students," Bell said.
Monthly bills cause stress for some students
Kansanstaff writer
By Kevin Hoffmann
Amy Kautter sat at the dining room table punching buttons on her calculator. She wiped her brow and checked her calculations.
Kautter, Kansas City, Mo., junior, wasn't working on a difficult calculus problem or trying to solve a physics calculation. She was sorting out her monthly bills.
Kautter is not alone. Like many KU students, Kautter faces the task of making sure she and her roommates pay the bills on time.
And the bills mount quickly. Electric, gas, water, cable and phone bills seem to bombard students faster than it takes previous payments to reach the bank.
The process can be stressful, frustrating and sometimes heartbreaking, Kautter said.
Some students encounter financial stress because of lack of organization. Kautter, who has four roommates, said she had developed a system that took some of the stress out of paying bills.
"I don't know anyone who likes paying bills," Kautter said. "If they do, they must have a weird sense of enjoyment."
"As soon as a bill comes, I open it and see how much it is," she said. "Then I divide it by five and write what we each one the envelope, and put it on the corner of the table so we all can see it."
Some students are not as fortunate as Kautter. Doug McIntyre, Overland Park senior, said it took two jobs to pay his bills. McIntyre, who works as a bartender and at a local bakery, said that working long hours while going to school often left him tired but that it also was satisfying to be able to pay his bills without help from others.
"Sometimes one of us is late getting our checks in the envelope," she said. "Then the others feel like a nag when we have to remind that person."
Kautter said that making sure each roommate had a bill in her name helped even out financial responsibilities.
"It makes it a little easier, but it still makes you mad when you see how much money goes for bills each month." she said.
But Kautter said problems still occurred in spite of her efforts.
Kautter said she and her roommates also got financial help from their parents.
"It can be rewarding knowing that you can survive independently," he said
"Sometimes students don't have steady incomes and rely on scholarships and other ways to pay bills," he said. "If they get into a tight spot and call us, we're usually understanding and can help out in some way."
Students may think utility companies and other bill collectors are out to drain their pocketbooks, but many companies actually are willing to work with students.
Todd Ronnau, customer service representative for Southwestern Bell, said he sympathized with students who have trouble paving their hills.
Ronmau said it was difficult to determine if college students were late in payments more often than other customers because utility companies didn't keep track of which customers are students.
Even the University understands how stressful bill-paying can be. Diane Del Buono, director of Student Financial Aid, said that monthly bills were considered when the financial aid department calculated how much financial aid to make available to students.
No matter what kind of help is available, sooner or later everybody has to deal with paying bills, McIntyre said.
college or after college, paying bills is something you have to learn, "he said. "The quicker you learn to do it, the better off you'll be."
Whether you learn it before college. in
Paying without pain
Paying your bills can be made easier by following certain tips.
1. Have an organized system for paying bills each month. Stress often is caused because of misplaced bills or miscommunication among co-workers.
2. Check with utility companies for special payment plans. Many utility companies have a plan that allows them to automatically draft a check from a student's checking account. Most utility companies also have an average payment plan that allows for equal payments throughout the year to avoid high bills during peak usage.
3. Southwestern Bell has a plan for individual billings of long distance charges. This helps eliminate confusion over who made what long distance phone calls.
4. Do not wait until a bill is past due to pay it.
This only adds additional charges to the next month's bill
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
FEBRUARY 8,1994
PAGE 7
KULife
People and places at the University of Kansas.
WEIRD
COPY CAT CRIMES
KANSAN
--Recently released Department of Energy records noted in U.S. News and World Report state that the amount of plutonium now in the U.S. stockpile was declassified and made public, but the amount of plutonium in the stockpile 10 years ago remains classified.
While the Lorena Bobbitt trial was making news during December and January, at least five instances of assaults on men's genitals were reported. A 55-year-old man in Arcadia, Fla., removed their own penises (with a knife and an electric saw respectively) because of dissatisfaction with their gender. A Toronto woman shredded her husband with a pair of scissors during a domestic fight. In Los Angeles, a man reconciled with his wife a month after she was charged with cutting off his testicles in a domestic fight. And in Jefferson, Ga., a 35-year-old woman was charged with ripping the skin off her ex-boyfriend's testicles with her bare hands in a domestic brawl.
-The protection against discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation in Cincinnati's new human rights ordinance has the nation's only provision forbidding discrimination against "Appalachian Americans."
-According to a recent note in the British medical journal, the Lancet, a man attempting suicide in England was rescued after he had spent more than an hour inhaling automobile exhaust fumes. Doctors attributed his survival to the relatively low carbon monoxide content of the exhaust - because of new catalytic-converter standards in the European Community.
--The Austin American-Statesman reported in December that Texas Treasurer Martha Whitehead had hired a psychologist for $1,000 to counsel several employees of her office who were despondent about Whitehead's recommendation to abolish her agency.
-A December Associated Press dispatch from Australia reported that members of Parliament traditionally addressed each other more aggressively than members of Congress did in the United States. Among the names recently overheard on the floor of Parliament: perfumed gigolos, brain-damaged harlot, sleazebag, scumbag, mental patient and dog's vomit.
GOVERNMENT IN ACTION
-A Philadelphia Inquirer analysis in December questioned military rulings that suicide was the cause of at least 40 recent deaths of U.S. servicemen. The newspaper quoted former military investigators who said they were "stunned" or "astonished" at how shoddy some of the 40 investigations were and how the military often calls hard-to-solve cases suicides just to close them out. In one case, a military policeman's death was ruled a suicide two days after he was found shot to death in the head with his hat stuffed in his mouth, his handcuffs attached to his wrists, his holster wrapped around his ankles and a car-radio cable tied around his neck.
-In December, FBI agent John Wellman was fined about $1,000 for an October incident in which he
See WEIRD, Page 8.
8
Tuesday, February 8, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
642 LIBERTY HALL 749-
Mass 1912
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Grumpy Old Men PG-13 4:20', 7:20; 9:50
Shadowtiew PG-4 5:05', 7:00; 9:45
Schindler's Lite RG-4:0; 8:00
**Primetime Show (1)** *Weeping, Daily*
*Senior Citizen Anime* *Imperial Stereo*
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA FILMS
Tuesday Feb 8 Thursday Feb 10
MY BEAUTIFUL LAUNDRETT
Tuesday 7:00 pm
Wednesday 9:30 pm
MARGOLD AND MAUDE
Tuesday 9:30 pm
Thursday 7:00 pm
MANHATTAN
Wednesday 7:00 pm
Thursday 9:30 pm
ALL SHOWS IN KANSAS UNION
TICKETS $2.50, MIDNIGHTS $3.00
FREE WITH MOVIE CARDI
CALL 864-5HOW FOR MOREINFO.
Crown Cinema
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Intersection R 7.30, 8.39
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Tombstone R 7.20, 8.45
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Philadelphia PG-13 4.40
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Good Son R 5:00, 7:30, 9:45
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The University of Kansas Theatre for Young People Presents
Directed by Paul Meier
Adapted by Mary Hall Surface
From the book by Kenneth Grahame
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THE UNIVERSITY
TROUARE
WEIRD: religion gets deadly
Continued from Page 7.
was charged with disobeying traffic signs in Keokuk County, Iowa. While trying to locate a man in an investigation, Wellman ignored the directions of a construction crew to drive along the shoulder of the road and instead circumvented barricades and continued to drive on the pavement. Minutes later, he drove his car into six inches of freshly poured cement set out to resurface the road, resulting in a $70,000 expense to the state.
--The North Carolina legislature recently voted to spend $170,000 for a Swine Odor Task Force, whose members will report back in 1995 with recommendations on reducing the smell of pig farms. A task force paper rejected making measurements by machine, claiming "the human nose is the primary element in most attempts to gauge odor."
-In October, for the second time, the Air Force revealed that an $18 million F-16 fighter plane had crashed because the pilot was unable to control the aircraft while using his "piddle pack" during in-flight urination. The previous F-16 crash was in March 1991. Both pilots ejected safely.
THE WEIRDOAMERICAN COMMUNITY
-Diana Brook Smith 37, who pleaded guilty in the death of a man in 1990 in Kinsey, Ala., was charged in December with tampering with the man's grave. Allegedly, she had started to dig up the casket in order to open it and prove that the man was not really dead.
LEAST COMPETENT PERSON
--In Labouchere Bay, Alaska, in November, Cairl Cothren, 50, accidentally shot himself in the shoulder with the shotgun he was holding beneath his knees in the cab of a truck when he leaned over to spit tobacco juice into a can on the floor.
LEAST JUSTIFIABLE HOMICIDE
'Checkbook journalism' topic of film
Jacqueline Clinton, 29, was found guilty of manslaughter in Toledo, Ohio, in January intheshooting of her boyfriend. According to her, the shooting occurred during an argument over differing interpretations of the Bible.
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — Despite the title, Michael Jackson is not at the heart of the documentary "Tabloid Truth: The Michael Jackson Scandal."
The film, airing on PBS "Frontline" series, uses the Jackson case to reveal the workings of tabloid journalism and its impact on mainstream media.
The issue of checkbook journalism — the tabloid's practice of paying for news — is key in "Tabloid Truth," said producer Thomas Lennon.
"If the film has a governing idea, it's probably that when every story is bought and sold, what you find is that you're not completely sure of any information," Lennon said.
"Tableloid Truth" starts with the frenzied rush last November to uncover details of a police raid on Jackson's Encino home and claims of child sexual abuse.
Lennon and reporter Richard Ben Cramer were poised to track British and U.S. reporters and get the story-behind-getting-the-Jackson-story.
In January, Jackson's attorneys agreed to an undisclosed - reportedly multimillion-dollar - settlement of a civil suit brought by the boy, now 14, who alleged that the performer molested him.
They were alert, said Lennon, because the documentary had been proposed to PBS before the Jackson case broke. The idea of using a major story to examine the growing influence of tabloid reporting was born out of another high-profile case, the William Kennedy Smith rape trial in 1991.
Lennon suggested to "Frontline" executive producer David Fanning that they wait for the next big media frenzy and jump on it.
"But let's not film what everyone else is filming," he told Fanning, "let's film the people who are chasing the story."
The filmmakers documented how tabloid reporters bounded ahead of the traditional press on the story by using paid sources, an existing network of informants and skills honed by years of digging for celebrity dirt.
The Jackson story broke within days, clearly offering all the elements "for the full orgy of press coverage to occur: it's celebrity, it's sex, it's children, it's crime, it's everything," Lennon said.
"We wanted to show the chase at work," Lemon said. "How efficient it is, how rapid it is, how brutally tough it is.
"One thing you can say about money
journalism is it gets the information flowing fast so within two days, basically, the outline of the facts was out."
In ensuing days, as people attracted by the scent of cash offer their stories, information becomes less trustworthy, Lennon said.
Practitioners of such reporting are unapologetic.
"Anybody who doesn't pay money, it's like cavalry running into machine-gun fire. It's anachronistic," Stewart White, a writer for the British weekly News of the World, said in the film.
The tabloids can pull mainstream news organizations along on their wild ride.
A clip in "Tablaid Truth" shows the Jackson story leading an edition of the "NBC Nightly News with Tom Brokaw." That same night, Lennon said, there were developments concerning U.S. troops deployed in Somalia.
"I ran into lots of friends on this story, people who care a lot about what they do and who were very ambivalent about chasing this story," he says.
Letting the tablebolds set the news agenda is a matter of concern for the mainstream media, said Lennon, who worked for ABC for nearly nine years.
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SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, February 8, 1994
9
Jordan courts a career on the diamond
Bulls legend signs contract for Sox tryout
By Matt Siegel
Kansan sportswriter
As spring training approaches, one new, highly-recognizable face will be among the hopefuls trying to make the Chicago White Sox's roster. Yesterday, Michael Jordan announced that he had signed a contract with the White Sox's Triple A affiliate, the
Nashville Sounds.
Jerry Reinsdorf, head of the Chicago Bulls and the White Sox, met with a group of reporters yesterday before speaking last night at the Lied Center. He spoke about the business aspects of baseball in as part of the J.A. Vickers Sr. Memorial Lecture series.
"Michael likes challenges," Reinsdorf said. "He likes to do what people say he can't do. He had run out of challenges. Winning three championships in a row hadn't been done in 25 years. Winning a fourth championship wasn't another plateau, and he felt that he could win another scoring title in his sleep."
But how will a player who has not played competitive baseball since high school fight against major-league
pitching? Reinsdorf said that although it was highly unlikely that Jordan would make the team, it simply would come down to whether Jordan was better than who he was competing against.
Reinsdorf said that Jordan would report to spring-training camp in Sarasota, Fla., next week to handle the media onslaught. Jordan would take a few days off once the team reports to let other players have the spotlight, he said.
The spotlight was something that Jordan grew accustomed to during his career with the Bulls. He led the Bulls to three consecutive NBA titles and led the league in scoring for seven consecutive seasons.
Reinsdorf, who called Jordan the
Babe Ruth of basketball and later had said that perhaps Babe Ruth was the Michael Jordan of baseball, said that Jordan signing a minor-league contract wasn't a publicity stunt.
"What kind of marketability or ticket sales would you generate by having a player who can't play?" Reinsdorf said. "If he is going to come up and hit .100, nobody is going to watch him play. The only special consideration was giving a guy a chance who hadn't played in 13 years. It's unlikely that anybody else could call up and say, 'Hey I played high-school baseball, and I'm 31-years-old now, and I'd like to play.'"
And although Jordan faces a difficult task in making the White Sox roster, Reinord said if anybody could
pull it off,it would be Jordan.
"He has unbelievable physical skills," Reinsdorf said. "But what sets him apart is his tremendous will to win. You have to kill him to stop him. It's a long shot for him to make the club, but then again, he's Michael Jordan."
Reindorf said that Jordan's presence would not be a major disturbance during tryouts because most of the White Sox players are familiar with Jordan, who took batting practice in Comiskey Park in 1991. Jordan's tryout also would not be a problem because of his leadership capabilities, he said.
"Last spring in the NBA finals we were up on Phoenix 2-0 and coming back to our place," Reinsdorf said.
"We expected to wrap it up, but instead we lost two out of three on our floor. Now we're getting ready to go back to Phoenix, and everybody's heads are dragging because it's really hard to win an NBA championship on the other guy's court.
"The charter is getting ready to leave, and here comes Michael smoking a big cigar. I asked him what the cigar was for. He said it was a victory cigar, and he was smoking it early."
Reindorf laughed while recalling the memory and then continued.
Scott uncertain after reinjuring his left shoulder
"The plane took off, and I watched Michael," Reinsdorf said. "He spent 10 minutes with each player and then got a card game going. By the time we landed in Phoenix, the Suns never had a chance."
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
'One play in the Kansas game against Nebraska on Sunday looked innocent enough, but it may have put Kansas senior forward Richard Scott's consecutive game streak in jeopardy.
In the first half of the Jayhawks 94-87 victory, Scott was working for position under the basket against Nebraska freshman forward Mikkil
Moore. Then Moore brought his right arm down on Scott's outstretched left arm. The blow reinjured the arm, which Scott had injured on Jan. 24 during practice, and forced Scott out of the game
(4)
"The guy hit me pretty good," Scott said. "But it's all part of the game."
Kansas coach Roy Williams said he had no choice but to take Scott out of the game.
"It was tough for me," Williams said. "Here's a guy that's been busting his tail for a long time. I asked him, 'Are you all right?' and he said yes. Then I made the decision that he was fibbing. I can read him, and I saw the pain."
Scott has played in 126 consecutive games in his college career. Only nine other Kansas players have played in more games, but Williams said there may come a time when he would have to sit Scott on the bench.
In Scott's absence at forward, freshman B.J. Williams and sophomore Sean Pearson were asked to step in. B.J. Williams had eight points and four rebounds, while Pearson had 13 points and two rebounds.
"Richard and I had sat down ourselves and talked about it," Williams said. "We asked, 'Is 75 percent of Richard Scott better than B.J. or Sean
in the lineup?"
Scott was averaging 14.3 points and 4.9 rebounds a game before playing the Cornhuskers. Pearson said he and B.J. Williams could not play as physically as Scott did underneath.
"When we go in there, we're not as strong as Richard," Pearson said. "We just have to use the speed we have. It might be a little bit of a disadvantage on defense, but hopefully we'll have the advantage on offense."
Junior center Greg Ostertag said Scott always wanted to be in the game.
"It's going to be hard to get Richard out of the game," Ostertag said. "He's going to have to get a broken leg or something."
Scott said he would get rest and work this week on rehabilitation, but rest did not mean sitting out of practice. He said he still would run to stay in shape.
Although Scott is reluctant to leave any game, he said he knew what was best for the team.
"I don't want to get out there playing 70 or 75 percent when B.J. Williams is playing 100 percent," Scott said, "B.J. is playing the best basketball of his life right now. If I'm going to hurt the team, I'm not going to play."
Even though Scott said he was hopeful about his recovery, Roy Williams said the team now knew the seriousness of the injury.
"I think right now it's settled in on them that Richard is not going to come back from this thing easily," Roy Williams said. "I really believe that until today they thought he'd be okay. Watching him come off there and knowing his shoulder is hurting was tough for me and tough for the kids."
With Scott trying new rehabilitation exercises, Roy Williams said, this week will be important.
"Hopefully it will continue to improve," he said. "But there will come that point when he'll have to sit out."
AP Top 25
The Kansas men dropped from No. 3 to No. 5 after losing at Missouri last month and defeating Nebraska Sunday, North Carolina, which defeated Duke last week at home, reached the No. 1 ranking for the second time this season.
| | Record | Pts | K什 | Pts |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 1. North Carolina (60) | 19-3 | 1,617 | 1 | 2 |
| 2. Duke (3) | 16-2 | 1,486 | 1 | 4 |
| 3. Kentucky | 15-2 | 1,481 | 1 | 4 |
| 4. Kentucky | 18-3 | 1,369 | 7 | 1 |
| 5. Kansas | 20-3 | 1,270 | 3 | 1 |
| 6. Connecticut | 19-2 | 1,259 | 5 | 5 |
| 7. Louisville | 18-2 | 1,251 | 9 | 1 |
| 8. Temple (1) | 16-2 | 1,205 | 10 | 1 |
| 9. Tennessee | 15-2 | 1,067 | 8 | 1 |
| 10. Purdue | 18-3 | 955 | 8 | 1 |
| 11. Michigan | 15-4 | 955 | 13 | 1 |
| 12. Indiana | 14-4 | 938 | 14 | 1 |
| 13. Massachusetts | 17-4 | 903 | 11 | 1 |
| 14. Syracuse | 15-3 | 795 | 15 | 1 |
| 15. Missouri | 16-2 | 689 | 20 | 1 |
| 16. Missouri | 16-2 | 629 | 19 | 1 |
| 17. St. Louis | 18-1 | 584 | 18 | 1 |
| 18. California | 14-4 | 518 | 19 | 1 |
| 19. Ala.-Birmingham | 17-3 | 459 | 17 | 2 |
| 20. Florida | 18-3 | 436 | 14 | 2 |
| 21. Wisconsin | 14-4 | 364 | 16 | 1 |
| 22. Marquette | 15-5 | 268 | 11 | 2 |
| 23. Miami | 15-7 | 105 | 11 | 2 |
| 24. Illinois | 12-5 | 105 | 11 | 2 |
| 25. Xavier, Ohio | 16-3 | 71 | — | — |
Other receiving votes: Cincinnati 48, New Mexico St. 46, Maryland St. 41, Boston College St. 31, Ohio State St. 31, Georgia Tech 29, Pennsylvania St. 18, Pittsburgh 12, Virginia 10, Wearington 10, New Mexico B. Deaf 7, Mississippi 7, Stanford 7, Brigham Young 5, Alamea 4, Bradley 4, Wentzky 4, Evansville 5, Washington St. 3, Murray St. 2, Nebraska 2, Florida St. 1.
AP Top 25
| | Record | Pts. | Pv. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 1. Penn State (62) | 18.0 | 176 | 1 |
| 2. Tennessee (9) | 20.1 | 1,711 | 2 |
| 3. North Carolina | 19.1 | 1,605 | 3 |
| 4. Southern Cal | 16.1 | 1,541 | 5 |
| 5. Colorado | 18.3 | 1,459 | 7 |
| 6. Connecticut | 18.2 | 1,298 | 9 |
| 7. Texas Tech | 17.2 | 1,260 | 4 |
| 8. Georgia | 14.3 | 1,277 | 8 |
| 9. Virginia | 18.2 | 1,255 | 10 |
| 10. Kansas | 18.3 | 1,087 | 6 |
| 11. Purdue | 17.3 | 1,046 | 12 |
| 12. Vanderbilt | 17.3 | 1,033 | 11 |
| 13. Louisiana Tech | 17.3 | 970 | 13 |
| 14. Stanford | 13.5 | 845 | 14 |
| 15. Washington | 15.3 | 729 | 17 |
| 16. Florida international | 15.3 | 716 | 16 |
| 17. Rutgers | 14.3 | 557 | 19 |
| 18. Seton Hall | 14.3 | 476 | 18 |
| 19. Auburn | 15.5 | 408 | 20 |
| 20. Albany | 15.5 | 385 | 21 |
| 21. Boise State | 15.3 | 368 | 22 |
| 22. Montana | 16.3 | 237 | 23 |
| 23. Toledo | 16.1 | 252 | — |
| 24. Western Kentucky | 15.5 | 144 | 25 |
| 25. Texas A&M | 15.5 | 123 | — |
The Kansas women dropped four spots in the poll to No. 10 after losing two games on the road in a span of three days. The Jahwahhs lost Friday at Colorado and Sunday at Missouri.
Source: The Associated Press
Others received votes: City St. 118; Southern Mats. u7; LNJ V. 45; Nilion 43; Pondre 39; Mississippi 73; Texas 77; MSW 80; San 38; San DL 31; West昌 22; Georgia 15; Oregon 14; Indiana 12; Minnesota 12; Boiling Green 13; Clemenon 10; Nemo Dam 10; Midtn. 18; Pittston 8; Santa Crea 8; NW Louisiana 7; Alambringham 8; Maryland 5; Stephen F. Austin 4; George Washington 3; Daltonia St. 3; Creighton 2; Siena 2; Arkansas 1; Joseph 8.
Source: The Associated Press
HAN
Kansas senior catcher Kent Mahon prepares to throw the ball during last night's practice. The team will open the season Friday against North Carolina State in the Olive Garden Classic in Kissimmee, Fla.
Jennie Zeiner/ KANSAN
Baseball team steps to plate
By Andrew Gilman Kansan sportswriter
The year is 1994, but the goals for the Kansas baseball team haven't changed.
"Our goals have always been the same," said senior designated hitter Kent Mahon. "To win the Big Eight Conference and to win the College World Series. We didn't meet those goals last year, but they're the same this year."
The Jayhawks will try to return to the College World Series when they open their season Friday against North Carolina State and Tennessee at the Olive Garden Classic in Kissimmee. Fla.
Kansas also will play Central Florida on Saturday. The Jayhawks then will play in either the consolation game or the final on Sunday.
The other three teams all played in the NCAA tournament last year, and both Central Florida and Tennessee won their respective conferences.
The four-team tournament boasts some quality competition.
"I want to put a competitive team out there," Bingham said.
But KU coach Dave Bingham said he was more concerned with his own club's performance.
Igou had a .345 batting percentage last year in 60 games and knocked in 54 runs. Monroe is a career .343 hitter during his three-year career at Kansas, and Oelschlager hit .388 as a freshman at Arizona but suffered through an injury-plagued year in 1992.
The Jayhawks will boast a strong hitting team, anchored by three returning outfielders; seniors Darryl Monroe and Ron Oelschlager, and junior Josh Igou.
"It's going to be a lot of fun in the outfield," Igou said. "We all understand and know what each of us can do. We know each other real well."
"If there's one part of the team that could anchor the rest, it would be the outfield," Bingham said. "Those three guys give us something that we can base our team on."
Although he put up some impressive numbers, Igou said he would be looking to help the team, and not himself, this season.
"My concern is to win the College World Series," igou said. "I don't like setting individual goals. The team is more important. The day players start playing for themselves is the day they start hurting the team."
The Jayhawks have been practicing for more
than three weeks and are ready to get the season under way.
Mahon, who spent time last year as catcher and designated hitter, only will be hitting this year. Mahon returns after coming off of a successful rehabilitation of a torn anterior cruciate ligament in his right knee.
"This week everyone is ready to go," Mahon said. "Everyone was upbeat the first week of practice, but we got restless during that second week. We just want to go out and play our best game."
"As of yesterday the doctors said I was ready to go," Mahon said. "I think now I'll be able to concentrate on my hitting."
The Jayhawks will use this weekend's tournament to gauge how good the team is.
"Winning is not everything." Igou said in reference to this weekend. "I think we play very good. Win or lose, I don't know. We'll do what we can do."
Bingham also was confident in the team.
Bingham also was confident in the team.
"I think anytime you put us on the field, we play the type of game that will allow us to win, Bingham said. 'We'll use this weekend to see where we're at, but we're planning on winning.'"
Tigers stalk first place in conference
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — No. 5 Kansas may have the higher ranking in the polls, but there's a quiet little team in Columbia, Mo., that has risen above its humiliation in Arkansas earlier this season.
The No. 15 Missouri Tigers, blown out by the Razorbacks when Arkansas was No. 2, won on the road in Oklahoma Saturday — their fourth league road victory in a 7-0 conference start.
Guard Melvin Booker and center
Jevon Crudup finally seem to be playing up to potential. Barring a total collapse, venableable coach Norm Stewart will have another Big Eight trophy to put behind glass at the Hearnes Center.
Missouri beat Oklahoma 104-94 Saturday.
Missouri has a three-point shooter to give Booker a choice between distributing the ball inside or outside. Guard Mark Atkins hit seven three-pointers and scored 24 points for Missouri, 16-2 overall.
Atkins' biggest 3-pointer came with
Crudup scored 25 points and had 15 rebounds.
Kansas State, 14-6 overall and 3-5 in
2:09 to play and the score tied at 89. He worked off a screen and hit the long jumper to give the Tigers the lead for good, 92-89, and was fouled on the play. He missed the free throw, but Crudup came down with the rebound and Missouri stretched its lead to five.
In other games Saturday, Colorado gave the bewildered Kansas State Wildcats a 67-11 loss, and Oklahoma State defeated Iowa State 79-66.
the conference, is foundering. The Wildcats blew a 12-point lead to Colorado on Saturday, prompting some intense internal discussions.
Colorado, 10-9 overall and 2-5 in conference play, was led by guard Donnie Boyce, who had been suspended for Tuesday's game at Iowa State for skipping class. Boyce returned to score 30 points, including 19 in the second half.
In Ames, Iowa State dropped into last place in the conference with its loss to Oklahoma State.
10
Tuesday, February 8, 1994
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By Liz Chadwick Kansan staff writer
J. W. Hammond
Jerry Reindschof is a man with a mission, and that mission is to get baseball back in the black.
The fact that basketball superstar Michael Jordan signed up for the White Sox farm team may aid him in this endeavor. Reinsdorf said however, that obstacles in the form of sportswriters and the baseball player's union helped keep baseball in
Reinsdorf, head of the NBA's Chicago Bulls and Major League Baseball's Chicago White Sox, spoke to a nearly full house at the Lied Center last night about the frustrations of trying to make baseball profitable.
"A free press is a high price to pay for democracy," Reinsdorf said. "When the first amendment was developed, there was no sports page, so the constitution is not extended to sports-writers."
Jerry Reinsdorf, head of the Chicago Bulls and White Sox, speaks on the business of sports at the Lied Center. Reinsdorf spoke last night as a part of the J.A. Vickers Sr. Memorial Lecture series.
John Gamble / KANSAN
He said that sportswriters had told him how to run his business but that they were not accountable for the advice they had tried to dole out.
Reindorf said the baseball players' unions were as outmoded as old-fashioned trade unions for steel and automobile workers.
However, unlike any other industry, he said the player's union didn't negotiate salaries: It only negotiated benefits.
"The union leaders are not responsible to the rank and file," Reinsdorf said. "Ten percent of the players earned 60 percent of the salaries paid to the teams."
There have been some changes in baseball that Reinsdorf said could help the sport make more money. He said there was a new arrangement with ABC and NBC television that would broadcast almost all ballgames at night.
One of the main differences between the profitability of basketball and baseball, Reinsdorf said, was the farm system of developing baseball players as opposed to recruiting basketball players from college teams.
"Virtually all baseball players are not ready to do the job they are hired for," he said. "It takes three to five years to train a player. We spend $9 to $10 million a year on player development. When you hire a basketball player, he's ready to go."
He also stated that basketball players were more cooperative with owners than baseball players.
"If you ask a basketball player to do some promotional work, he asks you What time do you want me there?"
Reinsdorf said, "You ask a baseball player, and he drags his feet."
"Maybe it's because baseball is a more mental sport than basketball," he said. "There's a mind game that goes on between the pitcher and the hitter. If the player is too satisfied with his money, it takes away his incentive to win."
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TUESDAY AND THURSDAY EVENINGS
8:00pm-10:30pm
SATURDAY 9:00am-1:00pm
SUNDAY 1:00pm-5:00pm
Note: All days and times are subject to change. Changes will be posted.
All climbing takes place in Robinson 207 under the direction of qualified instructors. Limited climbing equipment is available free with KU identification.
For more information: Recreation Services, 208 Robinson, 864-3546
ROCK C
1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, February 8, 1994
11
Jayhawk Bookstore
Classified Directory
"Your Book Professionals"
"At the top of Naismith Hill"
8-5:30 M-F, 8-5 Fri, 8-6 Sat, 12-4 Sun, 843-3826
Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional
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 persons based on nationality, national origin 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 (Section 504) and requires, 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 disin the Kansas Union and 831 Massachusetts
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are non-employable.
1
100s Announcements
300s
Merchandise
105 Personals
Looking for 18-year-old and younger and 70 + KU students. I'm interested in doing a story on the different outlooks of KU students, but haven't any luck in finding them through regular means. If you or someone you know fits these age groups, please help Kuman, Kanan, 684-481, and ask for Angela Helmola.
110 Bus. Personals
Unique Sterling Silver Jewelry
Hoops, Pendants & More!
For Guy& Gals
Toys 928
Mass. Downown
SpringBreak1994
ADVERTISING WORKS!
CANCUNfrom$439
SOUTH PADRE from $159
Other destinations available
Lowest price guaranteed
WATKINS
HEALTH CENTER
864-9500
Call 865-1352
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
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.
Pharmacy Hour
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Friday 8am-6pm
Saturday 10am-9pm
Sunday 11am-9pm
-Kansan Classified; 864-4358-
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO
KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services
We're always open
Call Today!
for
AIRLINE TICKETS Don't Wait
We'll find the lowest fares and best schedules.
On Campus Location
Maupintour
TRAVEL SERVICE
120 Announcements
749-0700
Guitarist looking for practice and/or band mates
Leave a message. 841-0486.
MAVARU: America's New Spring Brink Hot Spot, Lake Havaneu, AZ, is throwing America's largest party! "Top-the Coneerts, Comedians, and Toppers" The Lake Will Riar Will in '91? CALL 1-804-MAVARU
Tax preparation: Short Form 815, Long Form 827
Day, evening & weekend hours, Call: 691-344-5000
Unique Egg-hase Culture fed 18 nursing pigs added sudden streng behavioral change, sudden strange physical change especially immune system body temperature mechanism. All changes caused by an humans in a premise's promise of a glorious future. Hope scientists doing follow-up.
13th YEAR!
SPRING BREAK 94
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND
NORTH PADRE/MUSTANG ISLANE
NORTH PADRE/MUSTANG ISLAND
T- L-O-C-N-D-R-A
DAYTONA BEACH
PANAMA CITY BEACH
ORLANDOWALT DISNEY WORLD
VINI/BEAVER CREEK
BRECKENRIDGE/KEYSTONE
M-E-V-A-D-A—
LAS VEGAS
S-O-U-T-H C-A-R-O-L-I-N-J
MILTON HEAD ISLAND
RESERVATIONS AVAILABLE NOW
CALL TOLL FREE 256-8741
CALL TOLL FREE FOR FULL DETAILS AND COLOR BROCHURE! Call Joan at 865-5611
130 Entertainment
Protect Yourself Against Attackers
With a
130 DECIBEL Personal Alarm
- Fits in the palm of your hand
- Available for only $24.50,
postage pd.
Send check or money order with name and mailing address to:
Mom's House PO Box 1837 Lawrence, Ks 660440-8837
Allow3 weeks if paying by check,2 if paying by M.O.
140 Lost & Found
Found a necklace near Watkins Health Center.
Call me to identify 842-3411.
Finnish passport found downtown. Call Carla at
749.0200 iidelogia
LAWRENCE HS ring, class of '91 Call 842-
4444
205 Help Wanted
Part-time temporary and permanent openings.
Hours needed: 2-4pm. Positions need to be filled by 7/16/94. Please call
(310) 581-1120.
1994 EXPANSION
200s Employment
Adams Ailum Center needs banquet prep cook and salad person. Flexible shifts, position available immediately, apply in person no phone calls. 1268 Orcad Ave.
$15 Today $30 This week
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
606 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 Counselors USA
420 Florence St. Palo Alto, CA 94301
NABI Biomedical Center
816 W 24th 749-5750
By donating your life saving blood plasma WALK-INS WELCOME!
CAMP COUNSELORS - 12 yr. old education
camp near Kansas City seeks counselors (WSI
helpful) for a residential summer program for
children 8-14. June 5 to August 8. Must be Sophomore or
older. 610 plus room and board. For details, send
mail to: Camp Counseling Office, 706 795-3024,
706 795 W. St., St. Louis, KS 60400.
Case Manager, full-time, to provide case management services to severely emotionally disturbed children/adolescents/their families. BA and experience working with SED children/adolescents required. Send resume/cover letter to J. Yancy, Lawrence, KS 6044. Holden until EOE.
Part-time position, includes occasional evenings.
HS GRADE or GED. Must have score of 40 WPM
application at Admin. Services, 2nd floor, City
6th and 1st floor. Please be 6pm to 8pm,
60% by time. 1984, EOR M/F/D.
CLERK TYPISTI
CITY OF LAWRENCE
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 over. Employees must have the ability to work but may not be required. A GOOD DRIVING RECORD IS A MUST. Please apply at Cottonwood Inc. 2801 W. 31. EOE.
Cruise line, entry level, on-board positions available, great benefit, Summer or year round (813)
East West Records is looking for a college rep in the Lawrence market. You are ifiligent, enthusiastic and will have alternative music, this might be for you. Work with bands in all aspects of marketing.
Delivers needed. Des Mundo Bilingual Hispanic newspaper needs dependable people to distribute paper through Lawrence. Transportation necessary. Good pay. Call 10-5816 2124-4747.
Need person for general office work plus showing departmental files and summaries; must be 65 resident Medicare number or accounting or be enrolled at KU in at least 12 hrs with a GPA of at least 2.0. Call 941-8600 bibnw
Night supervisor needed for janitorial staff. Sun •bonon Mon-Thurs 7-11pm or 5-30:30pm. Requirements: Grad student, leadership-training skills, ability to work with team, yr commitment $7.00/hr. Bailer Renee 842-6264.
Environmental firm needs executive assistant.
Serve as project manager, keeping, special events and projects. Salary commensurate with skills or will train. Typing helpful. Send resume to: LMI, P.O. Box 465, Lawrence, KS 66032.
Namines Wanted. Positions nationwide, summer
gain and pay. Great deal and beno.
(recruit) 613) 453-9800
(recruit) 613) 453-9800
Looking for mature and caring female to watch two boys ages 7 - 4 M-F 3:00 to 8:30 Call 642-4211
River City Market Restaurants, located lower level of the Riverfront Plaza Mall, has openings
-utility/clean up-weekends
visit fjlMME or tFJLDstime
-Front counter MWF lunch hours
-wait staff MWF or T/H-Daytime Apply in person 9AM-6PM Daily
Saa player wanted for working R&B variety band.
Jeff A1A, 1055 or A1A, 907.
SEEKING PROFESSIONAL SALES REPRESENTATIVE EXCELLENT COMMISSION OPPORTUNITIES ON CAMPUS, FLEXIBLE HOURS, CALLS CHRIS AT USG (800) 351-2297.
Top private girls resident camp lookup for athletic trainee. RM/B/adday, travelallowance. Women call or write: Camp Vega for Girls, P.O. Box 1771, Duxbury, M.A. (02532) (617) 934-8558. We will be on camp from 1am-1pm at Hirstam and Rperkian Holiday.
SUMMER JOBS/INTERNISHP-Average earnings $3,500.00. University Directions, the nation's largest publisher of campus telephone directories, hires over 250 college students for their summer sales program. Top earnings $5,000.00-$5,500.00. Gain valuable experience in advertising, sales and marketing.
ings $3,500.00. University Directories, the nation's largest publisher of campus telephone directories, hires over 250 college students for their summer internships. Gain valuable experience in advertising, sales and public relations selling yellow page advertising for your campus telephone directory. Positions available in other university markets. Expense paid training program in Chapel Hill, NC. Looking for ennusual, goal oriented students for challenging courses. Available INTERVIEWS on FRIDAY, FEBRIARY 11TH AT THE PLACEMENT CENTER, 110 BURGE UNION.
Tennis Jobs-Summer Children's Campus-Northeast-Men and women with good tennis background can teach them to play tennis. Good salary, room & board, travel allowance. Women call or visit the camp. Phone: (817) 634-5950; (82333) 617) 634-5953. Men call or write: Camp Winadam, 255 Glades Rd., Suite 400E, Boca Raton, FL 31431 (407) 994-5500. We will be on campus in the student union from 11 am-4pm at 6/3/63 in the Oread
WORK STUDY POSITIONS AVAILABLE AT THE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS. ABOVE MINIMUM MAGE. APPLY ONLY IF WORK STUDY QUALIFIED. RM 358 OR CAIL BY 864-4500.
225 Professional Services
German learners for beginners and advanced students. Qualified teacher from Germany. Lots of opportunities.
Driver education offered through Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 yrs. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749.
10402E - 810; *100; +815 plus extra fee for other
packages. We will pick up and deliver. Call Brian at 252-233-
6720.
TRAEFIC-DUI'S
English tutor: All English classes, proofreading,
writing and editing. English, BS Education,
BS Mathematics.
235 Typing Services
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters
Donald G. Stroie Sally G. Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
MATH TUCKER, TEACHING EXPERIENCE
EXCELLENT INDUSTRIALS $10HOUR.
WEEKLY 8 AM TO 5 PM.
For a confidential, caring friend, call us to listen and talk with your friend. Birthday parties are free.
DV-1 green card Program Sponsored by the U.S. Immigration Dept. Green cards provide permanent resident status. Citizens of almost all countries are allowed to take part. Students, tourists, tour guides and in 4 forms. New IRA Legal Services, 2021 Stagg, Canaan Park, GA 91368.
INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS! We transfer Videos from US mode to your system or from your country to US mode. $25 includes tape and mailing. Transfer, PO Box G, Ottawa. K 65679. Transfer, PO Box G, Ottawa. K 65679.
BRAXTON B. COPLEY
Attorney at Law
General Practice
Traffic Tickets, Mideameanors,
Landlord/Tenant,
Personal Income Tax
719 Massachusetts 749-5333
Words by Chris Word Processing.
High quality papers and printing; spell check
and proofreading.
Word processing, applications, term papers, dissertations, resume, Editing, composition, rush projects.
1-ler Women Word Processing. Former editor transforms scripts into accurate pages of letters
Looking for a good type?
*Papers, Applications, Sheetmaps, Charts
*Laser printing to WOW! your profs
*Grammar and grammar free
*19-year experience
*call Jacki at
Makin' the Grade
spelling free!
Computerized music scores available too!
Could you ask for more?
Coud you ask for more?
Go ahead, ask. DESKTOP DOCUMENTS,
842.7722
300s Merchandise
YES, your very own EXPERIENCED
PROFESSIONAL, CAN-DO secretary!
OF COURSE, laser printing, grammar and
modeling free!
VIDEO EDITING AND PRODUCTION SERVICES A/B bill editing with EDL 3D computer animation. Hit field production package. Award winning screen writer. PRIMAL SCREEN UNICATIONS 813-444-0600
J
Rick Frydman, Attorney
823 Missouri 893-4023
Be a Rock N' Roll Star! I mo old Pender F-Bass Lyte w/active pickups and gold hdrwr$45. $Fender bateries w/removeable keys $175 for $700 Damn! avoid everyone needs a bass guitar! Paid #84-9288
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
386 XS/X 395, 490, 49D, MONO-GVA, KK-P114 Pinter, DGS S.0, Window 3.14 865-2857-KEW, 78 WV Super Beetle convertible, $450, good condition, Cruise tickets for two to the Bahamas.
other portable Word Processor w/ theaurus
for sale for $200 b.o b. call 843-6697
Build a new body? Four month membership to
the college at lat year's price! Call
Jefferson at 848-727-7137
Clarinet-810; sax-4175; Tone-bass-8100; great cond
tion; great second instrument for band
钟385-3770
Compaq Notebook 658 12M MHz, Active Matrix Color
Colorado Hard Drive Barrel Used $200
Samsung 858-4944
Samsung 858-4944
Dek, 60x30, 35$. Computer desk, 66x20, 325.
Desk, chair, $225$. Call 841-6318.
FUTON Couch with endtails, mattress and
table. Maple Call 844-760-4760
or 749-7635, Christine $275.00
IBM Compat. Computer; Hard drive 3, in VGA
monitor, 286 M RAM, all manuals, system 1.5
yrs, old, over $1000 of software. Call 832-2292
mine Elevation 400 mni bike, 16' LX Comp. mat
forest green, CV tires, 2 bottle cups, mint cond.
water bottle, aluminum can
MACINTOSI Computer. Complete system including printer only 500; Call Chris at 828-398-6985.
Seven month membership to Body Boutique
Must call. Tell today for more information.
SPEAKERS-custom built, never used, 2-way,
must bear. $95. Call Chad at 837-2741
Talk trash, walk trash. DEJA RECYCLED
Talk trash, walk trash. DEJA RECYCLED
Ship goods, 785 Mass, M-Sat, 10-30, Thr 31.
Ship goods, 785 Mass, M-Sat, 10-30, Thr 31.
10-41 Graphing Calculator. Like new, 1.973-
2.778. Please let me know a message if not home.
**EDDING DRESS—never worn, sz. 8, blush pin**
broach clamp machine, 1450# for kit
$25
Wedding gown. Scalloped waist line. Cathedral train. Lots of gear. 913-469-5152
340 Auto Sales
1986 Black Honda Spree, excellent condition, well kept, new tires, tune and battery. Call mornings
1968 Dahlatus 5 spd. one owner. A/O C/$2000. Call
841-7843 daftime
1990 Mazda Rx7 GXL, red, 4K mI, power sunroof,
$10,000 charge 768-1640
86 'Mazda RX7 GXL Sun,rfwp win,cd wl, spd,
partials, quite film, f$,4,000 baul. Paul B2-
9958
房屋
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
2 for 3 bedrooms at 9th and Mississippi. W/D,
$200 monthly. Free use. Call 814-6887.
1 Bedroom Apt. available now! Call 841-1212.
Available immediately. Remodeled one bedroom
and two bathrooms. Heated heat are:
*Sid, Clean and quiet.* $275/mo 441-3124
*Cabinette, laundry room, gas fireplace.*
3 Bedroom? 2 full bath kit now available on bus route. Microwave & dishwasher $500. Route 897.
4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished,
Interested. Contacted I.81-8235, 704-0445 or
804-4455
Available March 1. Two bedroom townhouse
building, pool, $483 per month.
841-886, leave message
For sublease, 1 bedroom apt avail Mar. 1 Call
Connie at 865-2714
Parked room for rent with shared kitchen and
street parking. KU off street parking.
No pets. 841-5600
Hanover Place Apt. for near Campus.
$370/MO. Call 841-1212.
large IBR avail, now AC, dishwasher, mouse, over walk, pool, 10m to campus or bus rie. Pay electric. Free stuff. $330.00 month negotiable. Call TJ at 841-4829. Hear rie on machine.
Lorimer Townhomes
Now renting for June and August, 1, 2 and 3 bdrms,
diswasher, microwave, W/D, fireplace, ceiling
fans, cable pd. Call 841-7849 for appt.
House for rent 2 bedroom no pets, newly remodeled call 843-3033
Leasing for June and August. New w bedroom, new bath. 200 sq ft suite with gas fireplace, ceiling fans, bathtub, 190 sq ft master bedroom and covered parking avail. Early sign-up specials offered. For more information call Dave at 841-755-3000.
Booms, apartments, and well kept, older homes; available now. 811-STAIR (2922)
**homes available now. 841-STAR (7827)**
One bed apartment, sublease next to campus, off parkway..free rent for month of February; move in, leave message 865-0128
Park25
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 townhouses.
*2Pools
Voleyball Court
*On KU Bus Route with
4 Stops on Property
- 4 Stops On Property
* 2 Laundry Rooms
* Some Washer/Dryer
meadowbrook FALL '94
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. Call Kathy or Shana at Meadowbrook
15th & Crestline
Mon - Fri 8-5:30
Sat 10-4
Sun 1-4
Call or stop by today.
2401 W. 25th,9A3
842-1455
(sorry no pets)
Sorry no pets
Trailridge Apartments
New leasing for Summer and Fall
Study, Apa, and Town Home
KUB School, Bison Lake, Haskellsch,
Call Today for more information
843-7330 2500 W.6th
843-7330
Spacination 1 bedroom ap very close to campus. Pur-
ice this room. Call 841-1923. Ask about Coldwater flat 44.
S-Base three bedroom. apt. 4235 per month.
S-Base four bedroom. apt. 4260 per month.
nonsuperior. nikeer 120, Louisiana. 832-280-940.
Sublease 1BR in clean 284 apth. thru July 31. $198
+/1 utilities 641-1163
430 Roommate Wanted
Female need to share 138pm apt with W/D $150 a.m. Stadium View Apts. Call 832-2888.
1 Rrommate, non-smoke for 3 berm cnds $175 per month. at our campus. Washer/Dryer. Cat.
Male roommate needed through and of semester.
Roommate, near campus $11/mo. + 1/3rd
Call 814-0900
Female 2 shirtsre 1 bur she, 3 burs KIU $200; tull
or exchange for babaiteling 1 yr old girl I
I am not interested in
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Female, non-smoking room needed for quiet and clean 2bdm in a house. No lease. $162 - $180.
wanted M/F/3684 townhouse, W/D,
Fireplace, dishwasher. 766-992
How to schedule an ad:
One female roommate wants for a 3 bdm lat.
$202/$mo + util. close to campus 843-5146.
Male roommate needed immediately for fully furnished 4 bdroom $2 bath apt $60 Mo + litsb 1 bth $50 Mo + litsb 3 bedrooms
Female armour needed immediately on 1360 block of Vermont. Large bdem, hardwood floors.
Roommate needed to share huge 2 bumm? 3 bath
apartment. Water paid, water electric and gas.
Lease ends in May. In quiet neighborhood, on day
and night bus routes. $240/mo. B3-823-2062.
Studiosub, non-smoking roommate wanted to share
room with couple and bath
to house: $22/month + null = $23/month
Ads phone in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
phone number 1-844-358-FIXED
Calculation Rates:
Stop by the Kaplan 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
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of again lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that if qualities for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
Blind Box Numbers:
Drive work inquiries.
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 cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available.
3 lines
4 lines
6-7 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
105 personal
110 business personalis
129 anneancaments
129 entertainment
Cost per mile per day
1X 2-3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 30+X
2.65 1.95 1.95 .85 .75 .69
1.90 1.15 1.90 .78 .69 .49
1.85 1.85 .75 .65 .69 .49
1.75 .90 .69 .69 .69 .36
Please print your ad one word per box
148 host & board
149 host unstated
225 professional services
225 hospital services
380 multifacility
1
2
3
4
5
370 want to buy
465 for rent
439 reannounce wanted
ADS MUST FOLLOW KAMSAH POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form · Please Print:
Name:_
Phone:
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 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 Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 68045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1994 FarWorks, Inc./Dist. by Universal Press Syndicate
Sir Frank wants his spoon back.
Baby-sitter sex?
The Wright's want us to go to the beheading Tues.
In medieval times, a suit of armor often served as a family's message center.
12
Tuesday, February 8, 1994
fifis
fifi's 925 IOWA 841-7226 Lunch & Dinner Great Food
N
Rentco USA
749-1605
Student Discount
Now 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
Bottleneck
913-841 live
737 New Hampshire Lawrence, KS
Tonight
Alex Chilton
Ben Vaughn
18 & over
Wednesday
KLZR Presents
Swervedriver
Therapy?
Medicine
18 & over
Thursday
Nik Turner's
Hawkwind
Zoom
Sleep
18 & over
DON'S AUTO CENTER
"For All Your Repair Needs"
*Complete Auto Repair
*Machine Shop Service
*Parts Department
841-4833
920 E. 11th Street
Bottleneck
913.841 live
732 New Hamshire Lawrence, KS
For All Your Glass Needs
All automotive glass replacement
& insurance claims handled.
730 New Jersey 843-4416
Friday Salty Iguanas Low Life
CHAINS FIXED FAST
Kizer
Cummings
jewelers
749-4333
833 Mass • Lawrence, KS
NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Give Teleflora's Puppy Love Bouquet
The
Puppy Love
Bouquet
Be Mine
Fresh, romantic flowers and an adorable, cuddly puppy. We can send one anywhere.
Teleflora
C
FLOWER SHOP
9th & Indiana • 843-6111
Owens
Clinton asks Congress for cuts
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — President Clinton sent Congress a $1.52 trillion no-frills budget yesterday, declaring that cuts in hundreds of programs would achieve a deficit-reduction record unequaled since the Truman administration.
But Clinton dismissed the criticism, saying his new budget showed the world that "we mean business" about cutting the deficit. Still, he conceded his plan would face a difficult time in Congress.
Clinton's federal spending plan for 1995 includes no new general tax increases. It does propose more than tripling the cigarette tax to 99 cents a pack, and it puts forward almost three dozen fee increases.
Liberals complained that the budget cuts would hurt the poor. Conservatives said the president virtually ignored the cost of putting into effect his two most important initiatives — health care and welfare reform.
"It's the toughest budget on spending cuts that Congress has yet seen," Clinton said. But he also said Congress could not waver from the deficit plan he initiated last year and that he said had brought prosperity by lowering interest rates.
Clinton's 1995 budget contained litte in new initiatives, basically keeping faith with last year's five-year deficit reduction program that had boosted the gasoline tax and raised taxes on the wealthy while restraining government spending.
Spending on the one-third of the budget affected by annual appropriations — everything from paper clips to battleships — would actually decline by $7.7 billion below the current level, something that has not happened for a quarter of a century.
And for the first time since Harry Truman was president, the deficit will have shrunk for three consecutive years, if Clinton's forecasts prove accurate. The president projected that the deficit for 1955 would drop to $176.1 billion. That would be down from a projected deficit of $234.8 billion this year. When Clinton took office, it was expected that the 1995 deficit would be $302 billion.
But as the price for cutting the deficit, Clinton had to work with tight spending caps that forced him to cut spending for more than 200 programs and eliminate 115 others altogether.
The program that pays heating bills for millions of poor Americans would be cut by $707 million, and several of the largest public housing programs would be sharply reduced as well.
The National Alliance to End Homelessness welcomed Clinton's 60 percent increase in spending on the homeless, but it said the increase was financed "by taking funds from permanent housing programs that are, for many Americans, the only safety net between them and homelessness."
Republicans belittled the size of Clinton's cuts and said he would not be able to achieve them without Republican help.
"To his credit the president has proposed terminating some federal programs, representing about one-fifth of 1 percent of the federal budget," said Senate Republican Leader Bob Dole. "We have seen most of the proposed cuts before, but congressional Democrats refused to go along when Republican administrations wielded the budget knife."
The budget is based on a projection that the economy, as measured by the gross domestic product, will expand by 3 percent this year.
While avoiding any new general tax increases, the Clinton budget proposed raising $11.6 billion in 1995 by increasing the tax on tobacco products. It would raise another $1.5 billion by increasing more than 30 fees for such things as meat inspections, bankruptcy filings and admission to national parks.
Clinton'sbudget
TAXES,FEES
Some key proposals in President Clinton's proposed $1.52 trillion budget for fiscal year 1995:
SOCIAL WELFARE. HEALTH
Federal tobacco tax increases from 24 cents a pack to 99 cents a pack to help finance administration's proposed health care plan.
SUGAL WELFIE, HEALTH
$673 billion for the Department of Health and Human Services, an agency of 64.4 billion, over 1994. Some $888 million to purchase vaccines for poor children. Also $2.7 billion, a 6 percent increase, for AIDS research, prevention and treatment.
LAWENFORCEMENT
$11.3 billion for the Justice Department, up slightly from $10.8 billion this year. Boosts aid for states and municipalities to put 50,000 more police officers on the street and increase the number of agents patrolling the border with Mexico. Does not fund in full 100,000 more police officers for which Clinton has called.
Clinton endorses Bosnian air strikes
JORS AND LABOR
Source: The Associated Press KANSAN
Outlets for Labor Department jobs and training rise to $4.8 billion, from about $4.5 billion this year.
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Clinton yesterday endorsed a U.N. call for NATO approval of air strikes against Bosnian Serbs and Secretary of State Warren Christopher said the allies would consider a range of actions this week.
In a Houston speech largely devoted to economic issues, Clinton said he had hoped U.N. Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali would ask NATO to authorize military retaliation for attacks on Muslim civilians in Sarajevo.
But, the president said, "until those folks get tired of killing each other over there, bad things will continue to happen."
He did not explain what other actions might be taken, but said that apart from the attack Saturday, for which there was only a strong presumption of Bosnian Serb responsibility, the Serbs had carried out a series of assaults on civilians.
On Capitol Hill, meanwhile, the chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee called for using NATO air strikes against Bosnian Serbs besieging the capital. A senior Republican senator said it was time to end the "indecisiveness of NATO."
"The appropriate thing now is to see if this horrible incident can be the spur to a vigorous effort to a
Christopher, apparently going beyond the U.N. official's threat, said, "We will respond to the specific, rather narrow request of Boutros-Ghali," later this week in Brussels. "But we will not be limited by that," he told reporters after Clinton's advisers met for a second consecutive day on the mounting bloodshed in Bosnia.
Boutros-Ghali urged the North Atlantic Council on Sunday to approve air strikes for an attack on a Sarajevo market Saturday in which 68 people were killed and more than 200 wounded.
Clinton said Sunday that while the possibility of retaliation against the Serbs was "certainly discussed at considerable length" with his advisers he was inclined to focus on reaching a negotiated settlement to the war in Bosnia.
peace agreement. That's what we ought to focus on now," Clinton said.
Rep. Lee Hamilton, D-Ind., and Sen Richard Lugar, R-Ind., agreed during a joint appearance on NBC yesterday that it was time to use air power, but they parted on how broad the military response should be.
Hamilton said air strikes were "in order for fairly limited purposes." He defined that as "to prevent the siege of Sarajevo, to stop that shelling. And also it's necessary to help move the humanitarian aid forward and protect the U.N. troops."
Long an advocate of lifting the arms embargo against the Bosnian Muslims, Lugar said U.S. leadership was needed to override divisions among Western nations.
"There are all sorts of views, so many views that nothing has occurred," he said. "And indecisiveness of NATO and friendly nations in the West has been obvious, not only to the Serbs but to everybody in the area."
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
KANSAS STATE
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA KS 66612
VOL.103, NO.97
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1994
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
Annex in need of renovations
Six fire-code violations spark student concern
NEWS: 864-4810
By Roberta Johnson Kansan staff writer
Amid a maze of paper, lockers and Christmas lights, architecture students spend hours on end working in potentially dangerous conditions in Lindley Amex.
Though Chancellor Gene Budig's secretarial office is undergoing renovations, repairs on the annex have been put aside.
The annee still is in violation of fire codes from the state fire marshal's last visit, in the fall of 1992, said Bob Porter, associate director of facilities operations.
According to the University response, released Jan. 27, 1993, by Michael Richardson, director of facilities operations, the fire marshal listed six violations for Lindley Annex.
Some problems have yet to be resolved, such as the addition of exit signs in the building. Emergency lighting also needs to be added but will not be installed until fiscal year 1996.
Budig approved the renovations of the office Sept. 10, a representative for the chancellor's office said.
The violations
Six violations were found in Lindley Annex during the state fire marshal's visit in Fall 1992.
Need at least two units of emergency lighting for general areas.
Need exit signs above doors and one directional sign in the north hallway.
- Need to repair conduit on west wall and eliminate extension cords.
Replace discharged fire extinguisher.
Need to repair southwest and southeast
Need to remove storage, etc., from north exit corridor.
Source: response report by Michael Richardson,
director of facilities operations, Jan. 27, 1993
KANSAN
Richard Mann, director of administration, said that the project had been planned since April.
"We have $15 to 20 million worth of projects on the books," Porter said. "They only can give so much each year."
Porter said it could take as long as seven to 10 years for a request to be fulfilled.
Ross Bolling, state fire marshal, said that as long as the University had the violations listed on a timetable of compliances for a reasonable amount of time, there was no problem with taking years for a violation to be fixed.
"We recognize that there are a lot of resources competing for other things," he said. "There's only so much money to go
Bolling said that the longest wait he knew of was the lighting violation, scheduled for 1996, and that time limits were taken on a case-by-case basis.
around, so they do the most serious first."
"The schools are pretty much at the beck and call of the University," said Dennis Domer, associate dean of architecture.
I
Although the facilities operations maintenance staff was notified that the southeast and southwest doors in the annex needed repair, the report said, the southeast door still cannot completely shut.
"The doors don't really lock," said Chris Missel, St. Louis junior. "Last semester, a guy who collected cans walked right in, in the middle of the night."
Bolling said maintenance problems, such as the doors not shutting, were the violations that recurred the most.
Because of the lack of security, several female students have expressed concern for their safety.
"It bothers me. It's not safe down here," said Dana D'Alesio, Kansas City, Mo., junior
In addition to building-code violations, students said that other students had broken the rules of building use, which included burning incense and smoking in the building.
These broken rules have caused some concern when dealing with class requirements.
This door at the Lindley Annex won't close or lock. It has been listed by the state fire marshal as one of six fire-code violations in the building.
"There's a lot of spraying to do," Missel said. "When it's cold you can't outside, so a lot of people do it in here," he said.
Extension cords, another possible hazard, are also prevalent in the annex.
"They say we can't have extension cords, but there's no place to plug anything in," said Dionne Newton, St. Louis sophomore.
when coping with project deadlines architecture students often pack into the annex for days.
Because of space constraints, second-year architecture students will be spending many more days in the annex, despite its conditions.
"It has a lot of problems," Domer said. "When Marvin Hall was renovated in 1980-81, the University facility planning recognized that we had 40,000 square feet too few for the students we had.
Building on campus longer than intended By Roberta Johnson
Lindley Annex was never intended to be on campus for long.
In 1946, the Federal Works Agency approved the University's application for 10 wooden framework units — in addition to the three Quonset huts already purchased — for temporary classrooms because of the sudden flood of students after World War II.
The School of Architecture alone had grown to nearly eight times its prewar size in a matter of years.
Building No. 10, now known as Lindley Annex, was intended to be used as a cafeteria for architecture and engineering students, according to the December 1946 issue of "Graduate Magazine."
Whether the annex was actually used as a cafeteria is unknown, but the building is still in use by architecture students today.
The annex never went under renovations until they were desperately needed in 1980, when the main entrance was renovated and a new roof was built.
In the 1960s, plans were made to expand the annex, linking it to Lindley Hall and a proposed annex to Learned Hall. The tunnel under Naismith Drive was to connect the two buildings.
The Kansan reported the next summer that there were panels missing from the doors and puddles of water standing in the building. Before the new roof was installed, the article said, a waterfall flowed down one wall whenever it rained.
Additional remodeling work was done on the building before fall classes began in 1981. But many of the same problems persist today.
In addition to the leaking roof, one door does not completely shut and many fire violations plague the building.
"When I saw this place, I thought, 'My class can't be here,'" said Chris Missel, St. Louis sophomore.
DESIGN
On wings of angels
John Gamble/KANSAN
Angie Garcia, Kansas City, Mo., junior, writes her name under her snow angel while her roommate, Shannon Kiekbusch, Kansas City, Mo., junior, watches. The snow is expected to end today with a total accumulation of about 1 inch.
Mixed reactions greet plan to raise tuition
By Heather Moore Kansan staff writer
Although Student Senate has taken a strong and unified stance in support of the Partnership for Excellence, some KU students oppose it.
"I understand that professors want decent salaries, but we're being taxed for everything," said Paulette Pauldring, Overland Park sophomore. "The cost of the bus passes and sports tickets go up every year. I feel very negative about it right now."
Michelle Robben, Topeka freshman, said she did not support the plan.
"From a student who pays tuition, I'm not very happy at all," she said. "My roommate and I figured out that she would pay $400 more, and that's a lot of money."
"I firmly believe that if the plan is explained properly, there will be support for it," he said. "It's a win-win situation for us."
But John Shoemaker, student body president, said he thought that the lack of support was due to the increase in tuition, not the plan itself.
Shoemaker said that he had talked to students about the plan.
1. waited down to the Union cafeteria and said, I know you don't know who I am," he said.
"Then I explained the partnership and asked students to support it."
Alan Tickwart, liberal arts and sciences senator, said the Partnership for Excellence would make the University more competitive with its peer institutions.
Tuition increases, which usually end up in the state's general fund, would go directly to the University under the plan. Shoemaker said.
"The plan will increase the educational value of the institution," he said. "If the educational value is not increased, we're going to lose students to other schools. Students will be paying more and getting less."
The outline
What is the Partnership for Excellence?
It is a plan endorsed by Student Senate that would increase faculty salaries to 100 percent of peer institutions. It would increase students' tuition during a three-year period, generating money for the salary increases.
Who would the Partnership for Excellence affect?
The plan would affect students and faculty. Students would pay more tuition—a 9 percent increase for resident undergraduates and a 13 percent increase for out-of-state undergraduates—for each of the next three years. Faculty would see a 12 percent increase in salaries above cost-of-living adjustments. This should bring their salaries to 100 percent of peer institutions.
KANSAN
Tickwart said that professors would benefit from the plan.
"At least this way, we're paying for teachers and not for roads," he said. "For once, tuition is going to the right place."
Eric Medill, holdover senator, said tuition increases were necessary.
"It's a tough call," he said. "There will be a burden on students to pay extra money," he said. "If the state holds up the bargain, there's no way we can lose. If we want to compete, we need to raise tuition."
Tonya Cole, liberal arts and sciences senator. said that she supported the plan.
"It's a small price to pay for education," she said. "It's necessary to keep up with other schools. We need to strive so students can get the same education."
Some students said they saw the need for the plan. Bill Grimwood, Emporia junior, said the plan was good for the University.
"This program gives something back to campus," he said. "We need to keep our professors here."
INSIDE
Taking the shot
Junior forward Alana Slatter has successfully returned to the Jayhawks after an off-season knee surgery. Page 11.
40
Continuous music pumped to cable radio subscribers
People who are tired of music on the radio may want to subscribe to a new service offered by Sunflower Cablevision, 644 New Hampshire St.
By Cheryl Cadue Kansan staff writer
With Sunflower Cablevision's new service, called Digital Cable Radio, subscribers can choose from 30 different types of music channels that have no disc jockeys or commercial interruptions, said Dennis Knipfer, general manager of Sunflower Cablevision.
Subscribers can listen to reggae, classical, country, rap, hard rock or any other type of music. Knipfer said. Subscribers simply hook their stereos into their television cable line.
"It turns your old stereo into a new
one," Knipfer said. "I have an old antique stereo, and it really sounds good."
The service would cost $8.95 a month and $25 to install, but right now installation costs 14 cents as part of a Valentine's Day special that will end Feb. 15, Knipfer said.
"The person would have to install the system, but it's a pretty simple process," Knipfer said. "All a person needs to do is come by Sunflower and pick up the converter and go home and hook it up to the cable line and the auxiliary input of the stereo receiver."
Sunflower provides a multipurpose remote control for the system's timer. The remote control also is compatible with cable converter boxes, most television sets and videocassette
recorders.
Jan McNish, office manager at Sunflower, said the service was selling well now because people had had the opportunity to hear the service in local businesses and friends' homes.
McNish said she was not aware of any stereo problems caused by the service.
"You can't really read about how the music sounds," McNish said. "You really need to hear DCR in person."
"I love it," McNish said. "My whole family loves it. You can, change the channel with your mood."
People who are interested in listening to the system can go to Sunflower during business hours, which are 8 a.m. to 6 p.m., Monday through Friday, McNish said.
Cable radio
Cable line
A new Sunflower Cablevision service allows subscribers to listen to 30 music channels without commercial interruptions.
Digital cable radio tuner Sunflower supplies subscribers with a tuner and a multi-purpose remote control. The service costs $25 to install and $8.95 a month.
Regular radio tuner
Register remote unit access. The device is transmitted along subscribers' regular cable lines. The cable line runs from the tuner to the auxiliary inputs on the regular tuner to the television.
0
Source: Sunflower Cablevision Joe Harder/KANSAN
2
Wednesday, February 9, 1994
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ON CAMPUS
The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an informational meeting about study abroad in Great Britain at 4 p.m., today in 4011 Wescool Hall. For more information, call Nancy Mitchell at 864-3742.
The Office of Study Abroad/Western Civilization Program will sponsor an informational meeting on study abroad in Italy and France at 4 p.m. today in 2085 Wescoe Hall. For more information, call Nancy Mitchell at 864-3742.
The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an informational meeting on study abroad in French-speaking countries at 4 p.m. today in 4049 Wescoe Hall.
Anthropology Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today in 633 Fraser Hall. For more information, call Destiny Crider at 832-1469.
KU Gamers and Roleplayers will meet at 5:30 p.m. today on the third floor in the Burge Union. For more information, call Alex Baker at 864-7316.
KU Environs 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 meet at p. 6.m.p today in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Mandana Ershadi at 842-4713.
KU Tae Kwon Do Club will meet at 6 p.m. today in 207 Robin son Center. For more information, call Jacob Wright at 749-2084 or Jason Anishslin at 843-3099.
Chi Alpha Christian Fellowship will meet at 7 tonight at the Frontier Room in the Burge Union. For
The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center will sponsor a program, "Dating and Violence," at 7 tonight at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Susan Hickman at 864-3552.
more information, call Stephen Swanson at 832-1242.
International Studies will sponsor a Panel Discussion, "Changes in Chinese Culture: Politics, Religion and Economics," at 7 tonight at Parlors A,B and C in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Cathy McClure at 864-4141.
KU Water Polo Club will meet at 7 tonight at Robinson Natatorium in Robinson Center. For more information, call David Reynolds at 841-6475 or Nick Pivonka at 841-6197.
Center for East Asian Studies will sponsor a lecture, "What is Zen Buddhism?" by the Rev. Keido Fukushima at 7:30 tonight at Center Courtyard in the Spencer Museum of Art. For more information, call Bertha Jackson at 864-3849.
KU Sailing Club will meet at 7:30 tonight at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Tom Conrad at 841-4597.
Watkins Memorial Health Center will sponsor an Eating Disorders Support Group at 7:30 tonight at Watkins. For more information, call Sarah Kirk at 864-4121 or 749-5725.
KU Libertarians will meet at 8 tonight at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Allen Tiffany at 842-2411.
WEATHER
Omaha: 12'/6"
Kansas City: 18'/8"
St. Louis: 33'/17"
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 76°/56°
Chicago: 12°/9°
Houston: 84°/66°
Miami: 81°/62°
Minneapolis: 4°/-13°
Phoenix: 63°/39°
Salt Lake City: 39°/15°
Seattle: 41°/27°
LAWRENCE: 20'/7"
Wichita: 26'/11"
Tulsa: 41'/23"
TODAY
Tomorrow Friday
Clearing skies but cold
High: 20°
Low: 7°
Sunny and warmer
High: 38°
Low: 10°
Sunny
High: 42°
Low: 20°
Source: Doulas Landwehr, KU Weather Service; 864-3300
ON THE RECORD
A KU student was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital on Monday, where he was treated and released. He had fallen from a loading dock at Ekdahl Dining Commons while emptying the trash, KU police reported.
Four tires of a 1992 Plymouth were slashed Thursday in lot 109 near Jayhawker Towers, resulting in $500 worth of damage. The car belongs to a Shawnee resident, KU police reported.
Someone punctured the tire of a 1980 Honda at about 11 p.m. Friday. The car, which belonged to a KU student, was parked in the Jayhawker Towers lot near Tower A in the east row, KU police reported.
A car parked in lot 35 near the Military Science building was broken into Sunday, and more than $700 of stereo equipment was stolen. The thief pried off the driver's side door handle and shattered the driver's side window, KU police reported.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, February 9, 1994
3
Washburn's addition concerns legislators
Regents schools balance funds
By Stephen Martino Kansan staff writer
TOEKA — Many opponents to Washburn University entering the Board of Regents system say the financial pie supporting all Regents schools is only so large. Another mouth to feed, they say, does not make the pie larger—just everyone's slice smaller.
"It is inevitable that we will come into the system," said State Rep. Barbara Ballard, D-Lawrence. "The concerns I hear is whether or not the state can afford to bring one more institution into the system."
Ballard said that Regents schools were fighting for funds to provide
scholarships, equipment and capital improvements and that another school might sap money away from schools in need.
However, Washburn advocates say their school would contribute much to the Regents system and would improve the quality of education in the northeast area of Kansas. It operates one of two law schools in the state and is the only higher education school in Shawnee County.
David Monical, director of government relations and executive assistant to the president of Washburn, said that people did not understand the demographics of Washburn.
He said the 6,500 students at Washburn paid $87 an hour for tuition, more an hour than any of the Regents schools. Part-time and nontraditional students make up about 45 percent of students, and the most common student, he said, is a divorced female in her late 20s.
"Working together we can make the pie bigger," Monical said. "We have to set priorities, and the magic numbers are 63, 21, 1. Sixty-three votes in the House, 21 in the Senate and the governor's signature."
However, Monical said that Regents professors should not fear for their salary increases if Washburn was admitted.
Gov. Joan Finney has linked the Partnership for Excellence, a plan to increase Regents professor's salaries, to Washburn's admittance. Passage of one without the other would earn a veto, she has said.
"We wouldn't become a member until July 1, 1997, and we will work to keep our professors' salaries competitive with our own resources," he said. "Except for governance and finance, we are a public university already. No one has anything to fear from Washburn."
Supporters of Washburn say inclusion could help Regents
By Stephen Martino Kansan staff writer
If Washburn University could talk, it probably would compare itself to a jilted lover — always a bride's maid and never a bride.
Almost every year, the Legislature mentions bringing the Topeka school into the Board of Regents system. Every couple of years, serious proposals are introduced to do exactly that. But they seem to die under the weight of opposition from pro-Regents and anti-higher education legislators.
But this year may be different. Washburn may be walking down the aisle, and Gov. Joan Finney, of all people, may be giving away the bride.
At least that is the hope of Washburn supporters, who say that the school's inclusion in the Regents system is inevitable and that people should support it now while the school's economic picture is rosy.
State Rep. Tom Bradley, R-Topeka, said that any coordinated policy among higher education schools in the state must include Washburn. That policy, he said, would only occur if Washburn is a school.
"The Regents will be getting a $100 million campus and the support of the entire Shawnee County delegation for
Regents issues if Washburn is admitted," Bradley said.
Washburn is the last municipally supported university in the nation. Its entire operating budget comes from tuition, an 18-mill property tax levy assessed on Topeka residents, and money it receives from the state.
And that last point, Bradley said, was the chief reason why the Legislature should support Washburn's inclusion.
This year, Washburn will receive about $6/3 million from the state general fund. The Regents have no control over how this money will be spent or for what projects it will be used.
Bradley said that it was important to the long-term quality of Washburn for the school to become a member of the Regents system. But he cautioned opponents against thinking that Topea residents had scored a major coup if Washburn was included.
The residents of Topeka, he said, would still have to pay the 18-mill levy and residents of Manhattan and Lawrence would pay nothing to support the state schools in their cities.
"This should not be seen as Topeka-wins situation," he said. "A lot of people think Topeka pulled something over on everyone else — that we hit a home run. Most people believe that we advanced to first base by getting hit by a pitch."
Brian Vandervliet/KANSAN
Wintery walk
Leann Keefe, Whitewater, Wis., graduate student, briskly walks along a snow-covered sidewalk on campus.
Group unites, recruits graduate students
African Americans form support system
Kansan staffwriter
By Denise Nell
Only about 138 of the University's nearly 7,167 graduate students are African American.
UNITING TO BE HEARD
"It's definitely a shortage," said Ronald Sullivan, first-year law student and member of the Association of African-American Graduate Students. "It's reflective of the undergraduate population."
That's why Sullivan joined the association. He said that the purpose of the association was to recruit and provide support for African-American graduate students.
"One of the focuses is to help promote the idea of graduate schools in the minds of African Americans," he said. "It has enlightened me that there are other African Americans here as opposed to the few I do see in the law school on a daily basis."
Mary Myers, the association's co-adviser, helped get the group restarted in 1991. She said that about four years earlier the group, which had existed as the Black Graduate Student Organization, had died out.
"More and more Black graduate students were coming to KU with no outlet," she
said. "We were trying to come together more as a social organization, a kind of networking outlet."
The group, which has between 15 and 20 members, meets once a month and organizes a graduate student symposium each semester for African-American graduate students, undergraduate students and faculty to get to know each other. These symposiums serve as recruiting tools for future African-American graduate students, Myers said.
"We're really trying to make the climate supportive in and of itself," she said. "I think the association at least gives us that mechanism where we can come together and interact and socialize."
The association will be sponsoring three events this week in conjunction with Black
History Month celebrations. It will sponsor "Onyx to Onyx," a student and faculty reception at 5:30 p.m. at the English Room in the Kansas Union. At 8:30 p.m. Friday, the association will sponsor "Second Fridays," a networking meeting at the Granada Theater, 1020 Massachusetts St. A panel discussion, which will address graduate school issues, will take place from 9 a.m. to noon in the Burge Union.
"I think the group basically serves as a support system," said Jonathan Allen, Fort Lauderdale, Fla., graduate student and president of the association. "It's nice to know I'm not going through this alone. We're still in the early stages of the organization, but I believe we've established a foundation that will carry us into the future."
CAMPUS BRIEF
Groups vie for extra Senate funds
Kansan staff report
Organizations are *surreuring* to get a remaining, unallocated amount of money from Student Senate.
Jeremy Haas, Senate treasurer, said that without any complications in the bills that were passed last week, Senate would have $3,716 unallocated for the remainder of fiscal year 1994.
The first to be submitted is a bill to finance the Asian American Student Union's festival. The group now is asking for $2,775 to pay for Jude Narita, a performance dancer.
KuoJen Tsao, off-campus senator, said the group would have to downscale the festival because Senate had not financed the original bill.
The second bill on the agenda is "Day on the Hill" bill. It went through Senate Finance Committee on Jan. 19 and failed. It failed again before the full Senate on Jan. 26. Tonight a bill requesting $3,200, which is the cost of the stage, will be submitted to the Finance Committee.
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OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Buybacks no business of Dole, U.S. government
Sen. Bob Dole has proposed $30 million of federal funds to support a gun buyback initiative. Gun buybacks may be an effective way of reducing crime, but the federal government should not support them.
The programs are aimed at reducing the number of guns on the streets by offering money, gift certificates, concert tickets, sports tickets, etc. to anyone wanting to give up a gun. These programs have been sponsored by corporations, community leaders and entertainers.
While private sector efforts should be applauded for their ambitious community service goals, gun buyback programs have not been shown to deter gun-related crimes. Even Dole has said "the jury is still out on whether these buyback efforts actually reduce crime."
A second problem with Dole's proposal is that it increases government spending unnecessarily. Even though $30 million isn't a large sum of money when compared with the federal budget, this program could be renewed year after year with increases in the size of expenditures to finance the added bureaucracy it undoubtedly would create.
For Dole to propose such a program seems bizarre because he has been a longtime opponent of gun-control measures. He opposed last year's Brady Bill, which imposed a seven-day waiting period for anyone attempting to buy a handgun.
Because of the lack of evidence that gun buyback programs effectively reduce crime or accidental shootings, Congress should not fund gun buybacks at a time of record government spending.
J. J. ANDRE FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Clinton should display confidence in nominees
Once again President Clinton has picked a controversial nominee. Last week he named Deval Patrick as his choice for Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights. Clinton should support his choice. He needs to show some backbone and break his trend of backing down from the questions surrounding controversial nominees.
We hope that Patrick's nomination doesn't end as Lani Guinier's did last year. Guinier was attacked because some people thought that she supported quotas. Faced with this negative publicity and Guinier's own controversial writings, the President withdrew his support and left Guinier dangling in a noose made of public indignation and sloppy research.
Patrick potentially faces a similar fate. One of his critics already has named him the "stealth Guinier." Despite such criticism, Clinton needs to stand by his choice. The criticism that sunk Guinier should not sink the nomination of Patrick. Clinton's unwavering support can make all the difference.
Thorough searches should be ordered on every nominee. Potential controversies should be anticipated. Once Clinton's choice is made public, however, he needs to show complete confidence in that choice.
Beyond the realm of research and confidence, Clinton needs conviction. He must support his choice even in the face of criticism. Wavering support, as was seen with Guinier, is not acceptable. Similar wobbling was seen with the nominations of Zoe Baird for attorney general and Morton Halperin for a top-level Pentagon position. It is time for such backpedaling to end.
Clinton should base his nominations on the needs of the nation. He then must realize the needs of his nominee. Right now Patrick needs strong executive backing. He needs a president with backbone.
MATT HOOD FOR EDITORIAL BOARD
Public must demand answers from the politicians it elected
COLUMNIST
I'm an old fashion guy. For instance, I still think there is value in writing my elected representatives once every other month to let them know how things look from outside the castle walls. They usually reply with a form letter. Such letters often have the tone of someone wringing his or her hands and pleading. "You can't blame me. I'm trying to fix the government. It's the other representatives and senators that are ruining things."
Nonetheless, since we are heading into another political season, now is a good time to let my representatives know what I think. They include President Clinton, senators Bob Dole and Nancy Kassebaum and Representative Jan Meyers. I'm presenting my methodology here in the hopes that it will help you organize your own letter to your elected representatives. It is best to keep such letters focused on just a few issues and be short and courteous. I arrange my letters topically, and they go like this:
COLUMNIST ALLEN TIFFANY
I wanted to take a few minutes to express my feelings on a few important issues that will have a major impact on my ability to eventually
Dear
earn a living and provide for my family. The theme here is taxes.
Welfare Reform: I noticed The Kansas City Star's classified section had 24 pages of "help wanted" ads last Sunday. Why does the Clinton administration want to spend billions of dollars to "make work" for people who are on welfare with so many private sector jobs available—especially since Clinton's make-work schemes will be paid for with higher taxes on the those people working the private sector?
Social Security: A recent issue of the Freeman highlighted how the Social Security system will be bankrupt by about 2015. If the benefits are not to be massively
decreased, payroll taxes will have to be dramatically increased to keep the system solvent. It seems that now is the time to fix Social Security. For instance, why not phase it out over a 40-year period and replace it with IRAs?
Health care: What crisis? I pay my own health care insurance premiums, so I don't understand why Clinton wants me to pay higher taxes for someone else also. Additionally, historically price controls always create scarcity and curtail research and development activities. What are you doing to stop Clinton's attack on our health care system, to curtail his desire to further raise taxes?
The Federal Debt and Deficit: In spite of the massive Clinton tax increase last year, the debt still is increasing dramatically and will grow even faster in the next few years. Actually, the Clinton plan has made our day of reckoning more painful by putting off the inevitable. The only viable solution is to dramatically decrease the size of the federal government. What is your plan to help stop the growth of our monstrous government, shrink our年-
ly deficit and begin paying off our national debt?
Thank you, for your time and attentiveness to these issues. I look forward to hearing from you. Sincerely...
One of my techniques is to ask hard questions. Those of us that complain about the slick nature of our politicians have only ourselves to blame. If we don't demand clear, unequivocal answers to precisely stated questions, we allow our representatives to put us off and answer with double speak. There is no time like now to start the habit of communicating with those who determine the cultural and economic climate of the communities in which we live.
You can write these people at the following addresses: President Clinton, 1600 Pennsylvania Ave., Washington, DC, 20500; your senators at. The Senate, Washington DC, 20510, and your Representative at the U.S. House of Representatives, Washington DC, 20515.
DOLE 6
GUN BUYBACK
"IT WON'T WORK, BUT WHAT THE HECK-
IT'S GOOD POLITICS"
DOLE 26
Y'KNOW, YA GOTTA WAIT
FIVE DAYS T'BUY THOSE,
MISTER!
GUN BUYBACK
"IT WON'T WORK, BUT WHAT THE HECK-
IT'S GOOD POLITICS"
To Fann
1975 (N.D.K.)
Y'KNOW, YA GOTTA WAIT
FIVE DAYS T'BUY THOSE,
MISTER!
'Big Dream Daddy' can be relentless
Welcome back to "A Day in the Life," starring Your Esteemed Writer. Knowing how breathlessly you've been anticipating the outcome of last week's cliffhanger, I've decided to give you an update. Last you heard, CC (Common Cold) and I were tangging down the Halls of Medicine. When we paused to dip, I made my move and escaped. But whose brawny arms should I run into but those of Big Dream Daddy.
Big Dream Daddy and I go way back. As a child I battled him fiercely. My parents insisted that I visit him in Dreamland. Now, I've always liked to travel, but Dreamland just didn't sound like my idea of a good time. Not compared with staying up and watching TV, anyway.
COLUMNIST
ALISHA
ARORA
But as I got older, I began to need Big Dream Daddy's ministrations. We reached a compromise during high school. If I didn't visit him enough during the week, I would stay extra long on the weekends. My parents, however, were not thrilled with this plan. My mother, normally a peaceful
lady, would aggressively drive Big Dream Daddy away. She would storm into my room, rip open the miniblinds and let Light do his dirty trick on my sensitive eyes. Big Dream Daddy was banished instantly. Light and Noise were no friends of his.
I didn't realize how powerful he was until I came to college. I ignored him in favor of friends like Hap E. Tymz and Might E. Fine. Big Dream Daddy was tolerant at first, but soon he got nasty. He disregarded Light and Noise and stalked me during the day. He toyed with my mind. I begged Judge Viv A. Rin for a restraining order, but
it didn't do any good.
As I sat in class one day, Big Dream Daddy sent out his heralds. Sleep waves washed over me. I swayed in my chair to the rhythm of their gentle caresses and then forced myself to resist them before he arrived. I propped my head up with one hand and took notes with the other.
But unbeknownst to me, Big Dream Daddy had already arrived. He sat patiently in the back of my mind, smirking as I foolishly convinced myself that I was awake. I kept on writing, while the professor was getting quieter and quieter. He seemed to be drifting back into the chalkboard.
I looked at my notes, but there wasn't anything about phospholipid bilayers therel Instead, I had written a bizarre dialogue between Big Dream Daddy and myself about red shoes. I had been dreaming! Aghast, I struggled toward Consciousness. My elbow slipped off of the simulated woodgrain formica desk, and my head crashed downward. I tried to regain my composure, horrified by
Big Dream Daddy's audacity. I was quite perturbed.
As the semester progressed, incidents like this became more frequent. Big Dream Daddy harassed me relentlessly, snatching me from Reality's grasp in movie theaters, cars and lecture halls. I've noticed him assaulting other people, too. In the halls of Wescoe, at airports, everywhere I go he ruthless claims his victims.
Honestly, he means well. I've had a hard time staying away from him. He knows me well. I'm always tempted to run back to him when times get rough. But I have to remind myself that I have other commitments. It's hard. Even as I sat in my room writing our story, I could feel his presence near me. I admit it, I caved in, I hated myself for it when I woke up and saw the telltale, spiral imprint on my face. Sure, I visit him every now and again, but it isn't the same as it used to be. I miss you, Big Dream Daddy. I miss you.
Alhana Aorra is an Overland Park freshman in biology and English.
KANSAN STAFF
BEN GROVE, Editor
LISACOSMILLO, Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
Editors
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Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the signature, name, address and contact information of any affiliated with the University of Kansas or a non-University or private organization.
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Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be required.
The Kanana reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kanana newroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
Columnist missed news of California earthquake
Why is Scott Tittrington complaining about CBS? Scott Tittrington went to the Kansas/ K-State basketball game. He didn't stay home and watch NBC's or ABC's important news coverage of the Northridge earthquake.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Later Titrington watched David Letterman on CBS. He didn't watch NBC's or ABC's important news coverage of the Northridge earthquake.
The basketball game took approximately two and a half hours of Tittrington's time. The David Letterman show is one hour. So three and a half hours of Tittrington's time were not spent watching NBC's or ABC's important news coverage of the Northridge earthquake.
It is an inevitable fact of life that, at some time in the future, a natural
disaster will strike again. When it does, I hope that Tittrington will reflect upon this incident and not make the mistake of neglecting to watch this important news coverage by attending basketball games and watching talk shows on CBS television.
After all, NBC and ABC cover these important news events for his viewing pleasure.
Lawrence resident
Overloading cheer leads to less effective business
Danielle Raymond's "Flight attendant overloads on cheer" in the Jan.
14 Kansan is a timely step in checking the cheer epidemic.
is prognostic of a deeper and widespread malaise.
The article, addressed to airline attendants' "overloading cheer," may, perhaps, be countered as was done in a letter in Jan. 26 issue. But it
Loading cheer is becoming a marketable commodity. Directors of human resources say that one's efficiency and professionalism soon will take a lower place to being a palatable member of a working team in every field. A greater part of the latter is the ability to load cheer.
Efficiency and professionalism are acquired with years of hard work and study. Loading cheer is an art. Someone that is emotionally inclined to it can pick up it in a few weeks. Rewarding cheer over professional efficiency will eventually be detrimental to the latter.
Lawrence graduate student
Loading cheer is a turned-on feeling, like the on or off of a water tap. It will make people robot-like.
If the cheer epidemic continues, we may have the Virgin Mary of the "Pista" in cheesy smiles and cheer. Cue the sound!
Christians exercising, not restricting, free speech
I have a hard time believing your statement in the Feb. 1 issue of the Kansan that said fundamental Christians "have managed to alter public curriculums, limit health education and censure libraries." I don't think many people would label KU as a Christian school. And I don't believe our country is becoming more receptive to Christianity.
I also disagree with your statement that Christians "have made the arrogant assumption that the First Amendment was written exclusively for them." When a group of people sees issues from a certain point of view and voices their opinion, they simply disagree with another group. It does not mean that one tries to silence the other.
Marshall Yin
Marshall Yin Naperville, IL senior
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesdav. February 9. 1994
BENIC
5
William Alix/KANSAN
Brian Farley, member of the Douglas County Rifle and Pistol Association prepares to shoot five shells at Lawrence Community Center's shooting range. The range has strict gun-handling rules to prevent accidents.
Handguns trigger mixed opinions
By Liz Chadwick Kansan staff writer
Country singer Reba McIntyre recently offered to trade concert tickets for guns. Former heavyweight champion Riddick Bowe paid $100 to everyone who turned in a gun to a Washington radio station. Rock star Ted Nugent went on the television show "Sonya Live" to explain why it's important to him to have a gun to protect his family.
Some, such as Sandra Albrecht, professor of sociology and women's studies, think that all guns should be banned.
All the recent news coverage of these events seems to reflect the national preoccupation with guns.
"I was raised around guns, and I understand why some people want them, but I would never have one in my house," Albrecht said.
Even those who handle guns on a regular basis differ widely in their opinions regarding what type of guns should be made available to the public.
Clay Barker, assistant professor of military science, said he would like to see all handguns eliminated.
"I know it makes people feel safer to
Fighting Back A Look at Violence in Lawrence
Farley said both male and female students attended the class.
But some see owning a gun as a right. Brian Farley, member of the National Rifle Association and a graduate of the School of Law, is a member of the Douglas County Rifle and Pistol Association. He teaches and supervises handgun target practice.
have guns around," Barker said. "Often, they end up shooting their own families. But this is a democracy, and if an individual wants them, what can you do about it?"
"The thing I hear from my women students in particular is that learning how to handle a weapon is a form of self-empowerment," he said.
"Essentially what we do is informal target practice with an occasional competition," he said.
Farley said supporters and opponents of gun control should try to find a compromise.
"Unfortunately, guns are becoming a radicalized issue," he said. "It's similar to the abortion issue or prohibition, and there's no compromising. We have a history of doing that in this country. We look for absolute solutions, and for some issues that just doesn't work."
Kansas is an "open carry" state in regard to guns. That means that if a person wants to carry a gun, it must be in full view.
Most states require that a gun be concealed and that the owner take gun safety courses and be familiar with the law. By doing that, the government can regulate who owns guns.
"This is a hold-over from frontier days," Fearley said. "The idea is that if the weapon is in full view, nobody will be surprised by an armed assault."
Aregulated concealed-weapons law makes more sense than an unregulated open-carry law, Farley said.
"In Kansas you don't have to register your gun," Farley said. "There's only a federal law that requires the gun dealer to take your name and put in on a list, commonly called a yellow sheet, that the federal government can have access to if it wants it. And now there's the Brady Bill, which requires a waiting period."
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NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Clinton health plan may inflate deficit
Clinton hea Budget office shows rise of $74 billion
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — President Clinton's health plan would drive the federal deficit up by $74 billion during the next six years, not cut it by $58 billion as the White House forecast, the Congressional Budget Office said yesterday.
He estimated that the plan would reduce the deficit by $10 billion in fiscal 1995 but then increase it from 1996 through 2000 by more than $80 billion.
The budget office said Clinton's program would require more subsidies for employers than the White House initially had projected. It also predicted that more low-wage workers would qualify for the promised subsidies.
mandatory premiums for employers should be included in the federal budget. Clinton wanted them treated off-budget as a strictly private transaction.
In another setback for the White House, the office said Clinton's
Clinton said the estimates by the budget office would not deter him
The budget office estimated that the subsidies for employers would cost $58 billion in the year 2000 alone, or "$25 billion more than the administration's figure of $33 billion."
"We'll fix that. That's not a problem. That's a Washington policy wont deal. No serious person out here in the real world will be too troubled by that," Clinton told reporters after making a speech on the plan in Louisiana.
Office director Robert D. Reischauer, in testimony prepared for the House Ways and Means Committee, said the Clinton proposal would boost national spending on health in its early years. But, he said, the plan would "reduce spending for health in the longer run" and could reduce the deficit after 2004.
Clinton's program, which seeks to guarantee private coverage for all Americans no later than January 1998, should be included in the federal budget because "it establishes both a federal entitlement to health benefits and a system of mandatory payments to finance those benefits," the budget office said.
It said the regional alliances where most Americans would get their coverage "would operate primarily as agents of the federal government."
World leaders talk tough but NATO planes still idle
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Six months after NATO authorized air strikes against the Bosnian Serbs, the United States is asking the alliance to do so again. And this time to mean it.
The problem; how to make these new threats credible after countless previous warnings evaporated. NATO warplanes fly daily missions over Sarajevo, swooping low over the surrounding mountains from which gunners bombard the city. Never once have the planes unleashed their bombs.
The leader of Bosnia's besieged Muslims, Alija Iztebegovic, met with Clinton in August. At the time, Secretary of State Warren Christopher stood in a NATO air base hangar and said, "The military operation is ready." It may have been, but the pilots never left the ground.
"Of course, threats cannot be credible for a long time if they're not followed by willingness to realize them," Izetbegovic said then.
During a NATO summit in January, Clinton said that if the Western allies threatened the use of force in Bosnia,"we have to mean it." The president said whether air strikes would be undertaken "depends upon the behavior of the Bosnian Serbs from this day forward."
Since that day, shells have rained down upon Sarajevo, killing hundreds of civilians - shopkins at an outdoor market, children playing in the snow.
The tough talk began during the Bush administration.
On July 9, 1992, President Bush told the Muslim president of Bosnia that he would consider the use of U.S. air power against Serbian artillery shelling Sarajevo. And so it continued until Bush left office and Clinton took over.
"The United States, this administration and NATO and the U.N. have all pontificated for so long that it can't go on much longer without our performing," said former Secretary of State Lawrence Eagleburger during an appearance on the "MacNeil-Lehrer News Hour."
Rains in California unleash mudslides
The Associated Press
MALIBU, Calif. — Fires level 1,000 houses. An earthquake kills 61 people. Now, Southern California has a new disaster: mudslides.
Cars were buried, people were plucked from upper-floor windows and houses were swamped while heavy rain unleashed tons of mud and debris from fire-scarred mountains. No injuries were reported.
Yesterday, bulldozers and dump trucks plowed up to 3 feet of muck from Pacific Coast Highway at Big Rock Canyon, where at least 10 beachfront homes were damaged in Monday's cloudburst. Storm-tossed waves 8 feet high plowed into home pilings, shaking the structures much like last month's deadly earthquake.
"We have the fire, the earthquake, the mud, and now we're worried about the surf. What could be next?" said resident Carrie Sutton, whose house wasn't damaged.
A 5-mile stretch of the coastal highway remained closed yesterday.
The storm also unleashed high winds that toppled trees, shattered windows and downed power lines.
About 25 Malibu homes were damaged, with estimated losses of about $1.6 million, said sheriff's Deputy Diane Hecht.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, February 9, 1994
7
THE NEWS in brief
SEOUL, South Korea
North Korea staging defense maneuvers. Southern officials say
"Facing the possibility of U.N. sanctions, North Korea is fortifying and staging defensive maneuvers around its main nuclear complex, a South Korean security official said yesterday.
North Korea, meanwhile, accused the South Korean leadership of "sword brandishing" and bringing Korea to the "brink of war."
North Korea is suspected of developing atomic weapons. If denies this but has blocked foreign inspectors from its nuclear facilities.
In a meeting yesterday of security-related ministers in Seoul, national security adviser Chung Jong-uk said intelligence reports showed that North Korea was conducting defense training around its main nuclear complex at Yongbvon. 60 miles north of the capital. Pyongyang.
Chung said North Korea also had fortified its underground military facilities at Yongbyon, but he said there was no sign that North Korea was trying to provoke a confrontation.
The Chosun Ibo newspaper quoted an unidentified high government official as saying South Korea has increased surveillance of North Korea "to be informed of possible military maneuvers ahead of time."
The stepped up tension comes less than two weeks before the International Atomic Energy Agency votes on whether to refer North Korea's continued refusal to allow nuclear inspections to the U.N. Security Council for possible international sanctions.
South Korean Foreign Minister Han Sung-joo will depart for the United States today for talks with Secretary of State Warren Christopher on the nuclear standoff.
WASHINGTON
Comet fragments to hit Jupiter
The refurbished Hubble Space Telescope, looking close to home, has photographed 20 comet fragments that will smash into the planet Jupiter in July with the force of 100 million hydrogen bombs.
The photographs, released yesterday by the Space Telescope Institute, show that the 11 largest pieces are $ \frac{1}{4} $ to $ \frac{2}{8} $ miles in diameter. They appear on the pictures as dots of lights in a string.
"Come July 19 this year, those 18 to 20 objects will hit Jupiter with the force of about 100 million megatons." Hubble project scientist Ed Weiler told a hearing of the Senate Appropriations subcommittee that oversees NASA.
"These objects are about 2 to 4 kilometers across," Weiler said. "The significance of that is that the best theory of what destroyed the dinosaurs on Earth about 70 million years ago was that just one object about this size came into the atmosphere and messed things up."
To laughter, Weiler said. "We heard every dinosaur on Jupiter is triving to get out."
The comet, named Shoemaker-Levy for its discoverers, broke up in the summer of 1992 from the tidal forces of Jupiter when it passed the gaseous planet. Its expected demise when it crashes into the Jovian atmosphere has excited astronomers around the world who never before have observed such an event.
The Hubble will continue to make periodic pictures of the comet and will be trained on Jupiter for the big event. Gallieo, another NASA satellite, also will be trained on the biggest planet in the solar system.
WASHINGTON
North's name absent in files
Senate hopeful Oliver North purged his name from court files detailing his efforts to suppress the prosecutor's final report on the Iran-Contra scandal, sources said yesterday.
A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals released hundreds of pages of previously secret court documents filed in December by former President Ronald Reagan and former Attorney General Edwin Meese III seeking to block the Jan. 18 release of the prosecutor's report.
But North's name was absent from the court files. One court document had black ink blotting out the name of a third party seeking to suppress the report. The name was North's, and it was blacked out by court officers at the request of North and his lawyers, according to the sources, who have closely followed the seven-year investigation of the scandal and who spoke on condition of anonymity.
"We just don't have any comment," North lawyer Nicole Seligman said when asked about the former White House aide's decision to keep his court motions off the public record.
North is seeking the Republican nomination for the Senate seat held by Democrat Charles Robb of Virginia.
The report by prosecutor Lawrence Walsh concludes that Reagan acquiesced in a cover-up of the Iran-Contra scandal, which was spearheaded by Meese. It also concludes that North regarded Reagan's comments about secretly assisting the Nicaraguan Contras as "an invitation to break the law."
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UNIVERSITY OF SAN ANTONIO
THE UNIVERSITY OF SAN ANTONIO
STUDENT EXHIBIT ART Feb. 21-Mar. 6
Exhibited in Kansas Union Gallery
Applications Due Mon., Feb. 14 by 5 p.m. For more information call 864-3477
May pick up Applications at SUA office from 9-5pm , level four of Kansas Union. Awards given in two categories Painting Sculpture
Bosnians mourn, recognize anniversary of Winter Games
net wt. 80 lbs(36.9 kg)
prussia
Fill it up
Martin Altstaedten/KANSAN
The Associated Press
Randy Russell, ground maintenance supervisor for facilities operations, and Terry Unfred, KU equipment operator, refill a salt truck with calcium. The calcium was used yesterday to melt snow on streets around campus.
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina — Ten years after welcoming the world's finest athletes to the 1984 Winter Games, Sarajevo marked the anniversary yesterday by laying more war dead to rest in the shadow of its wrecked Olympic stadium.
The stadium, now a base for French peacekeepers, has been ruined by Serb shelling from the hills ringing the capital during a 22-month war that has killed more than 200,000 Serbs, Croats and Muslims.
One shell Saturday killed 68 marketoers and injured 200 others in Sarajevo. Serbs are suspected of firing the shell, but U.N. monitors cannot confirm that, and the Serbs have denied it.
It was perhaps no surprise that Sarajevo observed the anniversary of its Winter Games with more funerals and
rage at the Serb gunners who, according to one mourner, "have broken the Olympic record in murder."
In the shadow of Zetra stadium, where the Olympic flame was lighted Feb. 8,1984,20 victims of the market massacre were laid in graves hacked from the ground of a former soccer field.
The stadium has been struck by Serb shells, many fired from cannon and mortar emplacements set up on skips and bobsled runs on the Olympic heights surrounding the city.
At a commemorative ceremony in the national theater, a girl's choir called "The Snowflakes" —named for Sarajevo's Olympic emblem —lipsynched to "The Flame is Still Alive," the city's Olympic theme song.
The mood among the 100 Sarajevans in attendance was dejected but dignified. The building's facade was battered by shelling, but its baroque
gold and velvet interior remained intact.
"For the riders of the Apocalypse riding across our former Olympic fields, we are guilty only because we are Bosnians," Mayor Muhamed Kresevlakovic said.
He bitterly invited mayors of other Olympic cities to visit "the city of love and death — the biggest Olympic paradox in the world."
Dozens of former Yugoslav Olympic team athletes are now fighting on the Bosnian Muslim side, said Izudin Filipovic, head of the Bosnian Olympic Committee. Five are fighting with the separatist Serbs.
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About 10 Bosnian athletes are competing next week in the 1994 Winter Games in Lillehammer, Norway.
"They have to fight three battles—to defend their country, for their athletic performance, and for their lives." Filipino said.
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food
Beating those beer munchies
What foods do students prefer when they get those post-party cravings? Many go for an early breakfast or a late-night feast of the junkiest junk foods.
STOP
TACO BELL
Potato Chips
By Kevin Hoffmann Kansan staff writer
The waiters and waitresses stood apprehensively, looking at their watches. Within minutes, the quiet and peaceful restaurant would be transformed.
Soon a hunger-striken crowd would stagger through the doors, raising a ruckus that could wake the dead. Soon it would be time for students with the late-night beer munchies to swarm Lawrence's restaurants.
Neil Christensen, manager of Village Inn Pancake House Restaurant, 821 Iowa St., has witnessed the chaos every weekend since he came to the restaurant more than a year ago.
"As a waiter, I'm standing there quietly, with no tables," he said. "In ten minutes, every table is full, and they all want something."
In an informal poll of late-night partners last weekend, Village Inn ranked as a popular place to satisfy the beer munchies, those cravings experienced after a night of consuming alcohol.
By 2 a.m., the 24-hour restaurant had a lobby full of customers, none of whom seemed to mind the 20-minute wait.
Many hoped that food would help absorb the alcohol they had just consumed and ward off hangovers.
Jenny Zeiner / KANSAN
But Julie Francis, public health educator at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said there was no link between food consumption and the slowing of the intoxication process.
However, certain foods are better at soothing an
unsettled stomach that often strikes after a night of drinking, Francis said.
"Iwould suggest you stay away from spicy meals and heavily acidic meals," she said. "Breads, pasta and the more bland foods will have a better soothing effect on the stomach."
Some of the people who crowded Village Inn just wanted to socialize with the beer-munchie crowd.
"When you go to a bar, you meet with people and you can't hear," Christensen said. "You want to go out to breakfast afterward and see these people before you go home."
Carrie Michaelson, Lawrence resident, said she and her friends frequented the restaurant for reasons other than the food.
"Some nights, we just come to watch people," she said. "There are always so many people in here on a weekend night."
Emily Niehaus, West Bend, Wis., sophomore, watched with amazement when the waitress arrived with a tray full of plates.
"Oh my God, look at all the food," she said, gasping.
"Oh my God, look at all the food," she said, gasping. Appetites of the late-night crowd varied. Many students wanted breakfast, choosing — or perhaps salivating over — omelettes and pancakes. Others opted for chicken fried steak.
Some people craved something sweet, and others said they wanted something greasy. Almost everybody wanted a large glass of water because alcohol has been proven to dehydrate the body.
"We usually crave greasy foods like french fries because they taste so good." Michaelson said.
The scene at Village Inn is common at other Lawrence restaurants, as well.
Taco Bell, Perkins, Burger King and various pizza delivery companies are among regular choices of the late-night beer munchie crowd.
Richard Tyner, an employee on the graveyard shift at Taco Bell, 1408 W. 23rd St., watched while the line for the drive-thru backed up into the street.
"You get a lot of big orders," he said. "Sometimes they're slow, and they don't always know what they want."
Tyner said serving the late-night crowd could be entertaining.
"Sometimes they're pretty funny to watch," he said.
Restaurants are not the only places where people with the beer munchies go. Irvine Bran, clerk at the Jayhawk Food Mart, 701 W. Ninth St., said his store saw a rush every Friday and Saturday around 1:45 a.m.
"I guess beer makes you get the munchies," he said.
"They all get junk food, no vegetables."
But even the die-hard nightwish must go home sometime. After satisfying their bellies with junk food, those in the late-night beer munchie crowd begin to disperse.
By 4 a.m., the city was calm again. Vacuum cleaners roamed the floors at Village Inn. Waiters and waitresses showed fatigue and an eagerness to go home.
"It's really draining," Christensen said. "After what we've been through, we're exhausted and ready to go home."
health
The wisdom behind tooth extraction
No one ever said getting wisdom teeth pulled was fun. So why are so many students subjecting themselves to the dentist's drill?
By Cathleon Siechta
Kansan staff writer
The dentist's office usually is a place that students try to avoid. The whining of drills, the sight of horrific dental tools and the sound of Michael Bolton on the overhead speakers would be enough to drive anyone away.
But when it comes to impacted wisdom teeth, students may as well just ask for the Novocain, sit back and open wide.
"A small percent of patients have wisdom teeth that erupt normally," said Joseph Harvey, an oral surgeon at Lawrence Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery. "But in general, we can predict when problems with the teeth will occur. Even if they come in slanted, they can be hard to clean and that can start a decaying process."
Getting wisdom teeth pulled is an ordeal that many young people face. The wisdom teeth, otherwise known as third molars, start coming in between the ages of 17 and 22. Because there usually is not enough room in the mouth for the extra teeth, most wisdom teeth are a health risk
Wisdom teeth can cause gum disease and structural damage to surrounding teeth. If a wisdom tooth grows into an awkward position, such as facing the cheek, it may irritate surrounding tissue, become hard to clean and even cause difficulty when biting down. The area around an impacted wisdom tooth can fill with fluid and form a cyst that can destroy surrounding bone.
When wisdom teeth are impacted, or trapped within the jawbone, decay is just one of the problems that can arise. Depending on the way the wisdom牙齿 grow, and depending on the size of the jaw, wisdom teeth can cause pain and swelling. Even if no symptoms arise, wisdom teeth can still put other teeth at risk.
Dental examinations are recommended at least once a year, even if a person does not experience pain or swelling. This enables the dentist to diagnose potential problems that the wisdom teeth could cause.
If a dentist decides the wisdom teeth should be removed, an x-ray is taken and an oral surgeon discusses the procedure with the patient.
Patients may opt to have local anesthesia or be put completely under.
be asleep during the surgery," Harvey said. "When we do the procedure under local anesthetic, the patient has to endure a lot of shots and alot of noise. The main difference is that the patient is totally aware of what's going on under local anesthetic."
Patients who suffer from anxiety about the surgery have the option of taking an oral sedative to relax themselves before going in for surgery, Harvey said.
The procedure Bilton endured was more complicated than usual because his wisdom teeth were impacted. When this occurs, an incision must be made in the gums and bone tissue to remove the tooth, which is sometimes sectioned into smaller pieces for easier removal. After the procedure, the gums are stitched back together.
"The majority of patients choose to
"My teeth were completely impacted into my jawbone, and that's the worst kind," he said. "I was totally gone, totally out during the whole thing. I didn't want to be awake for the surgery. I still felt terrible for weeks, and I couldn't eat any solid foods."
Although the potential does exist for some major complications such as damage to the sensory nerve in the lower lip and chin and infection of the sinus cavity, the risks of these problems are low.
Matt Bellon, a Lenexa junior who had his wisdom teeth pulled two years ago, said he preferred to be unconscious during the procedure.
If the teeth already have erupted through the gums, however, they are simply extracted with forceps.
Minor post-surgery complications such as bleeding, swelling, bruising and cracking of the skin around the mouth occur more frequently, but they are not always typical of the surgery.
"Young, healthy people usually never bruise or have problems," Harvey said. "Occasionally the patient will have a dry socket, but that's about it."
Drysocket occurs when a blood clot does not form in the removed tooth's socket. Harvey said this problem was easily treated by inserting a medicated pad into the socket to cover the bone and start the healing process.
"The chances of those complications are less than one percent," Harvey said. "It's very rare."
Removal of troublesome teeth
The crown of the wisdom tooth may erupt from the gums normally, but often it is partially or completely impacted in the jawbone. The roots of upper wisdom teeth may grow towards the sinus cavity, and the lower wisdom teeth roots may deepen and approach nerves in the lower jaw. These changes can result in pain, swelling or risk of disease and decay.
Erupted teeth
Extraction of erupted tooth
Impacted teeth
A wisdom tooth may be extracted with forceps. In some cases, the roots may be embedded into the jaw bone, forcing the doctor to split the tooth and extract the sections.
An impacted tooth requires an incision to be made in the gum to reach the tooth. If the tooth is lodged in the jawbone, the bone tissue covering it may have to be removed.
Tooth extracted in sections
Source: Kansan staff research
---
Incision with gum flap folded back
After getting wisdom teeth removed, patients are urged to rest, eat soft foods and apply ice packs to their cheeks for the initial 24-hour period after surgery. Students are advised to have the procedure done when their schedule allows a few free days in which they can recuperate.
The cost of an hour-long procedure which removes all four wisdom teeth and includes anesthesia and x-rays is about $994.
Wisdom tooth removed and sutures closing the incision
Graham Bailey, director of public relations for Blue Cross Blue Shield of Kansas, said another reason students got their wisdom teeth pulled before the age of 23 was because they could still pay for the procedure with their parents' insurance policy.
Harvey said that many people got their wisdom teeth extracted during their college years.
"The normal cut-off age on most family-plain insurance policies is 23." Bailey said. "It would probably be in the best interest of students to have the procedure covered by their parents' plan."
Dave Campbell / KANSAN
"Young, healthy people usually never bruise or have problems."
JosephHarvey oral surgeon
But some students may not have the choice of when to have their wisdom teeth pulled.
Cassidi Sporhase, Lincoln, Neb., junior, hasn't had her wisdom teeth pulled yet. Her dentist suggested that she wait until the teeth were more visible.
"I'd rather have an edema than have my teeth pulled," Sporhase said. "But I'd rather my parents pay for it now than have to pay for it myself in two years."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
FEBRUARY 9,1994
PAGE 9
KU Life
People and places at the University of Kansas.
calendar
EXHIBITIONS
Exhibition — Dennis
Exhibition — "The Sleep of Reason: Reality and Fantasy in the Print Series of Goya," Jan. 9-Feb. 20 at the Spencer Museum of Art.
Oppenheim: Drawings and Selected Sculpture, Jan. 16-Feb. 27 at the Spencer Museum of Art.
Exhibition — Sculpture by Douglas Warnock, Jan. 22-tomorrow at the Lawrence Arts Center, 200 W. Ninth St.
Exhibition — Sacred and Profane: Two Books In Black and White, Jan. 23-March 20 at the Spencer Museum of Art.
Exhibition — "By A Clearer Light: Commemorating the 75th Anniversary of the National Park Service — Photographs by David Halpern," Jan. 31-Feb. 19 at the Kansas Union Gallery.
LECTURES
Zen Talk — Fukushima Keldo Roshi, Zen Master and Abbot of the Tofuku-jl (Tofuku Temple) in Japan, noon tomorrow at Central
court in the Spencer Museum of Art.
Lecture — "Breaking Blases by Understanding Past Cultures and Art" by Jacqueline Chanda, 7 p.m. tomorrow at Spencer Museum Auditorium.
Exhibition — "Art Wake," a group show of paintings, prints and sculptures by 35 gallery artists, Saturday-March 1 at Artists En Masse, 803 1/2 Massachusetts St.
PERFORMANCES
KU Theatre for Young People presents "The Reluctant Dragon," 7 p.m. Saturday at Craftor-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall. All seats $3.
Winter Concert: KU Symphonic Band, 3:30 p.m. Sunday at the Lied Center, $6 public, $3 students, $5 senior citizens.
..
New Directions Series: The Lewitzy Dance Company, 8 p.m. Feb. 16 at the Lied Center.
SeeCALENDAR,Page10
10
Wednesday, February 9, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Storytelling — "Around the World in Eighty Minutes," told by Priscilla Howe, 8 p.m. tomorrow at The Lawrence Arts Center, 200 W Ninth St.
$16, $14 public; $15, $13 senior citizens;
$13, $12 KU faculty/staff; $8, $7 students.
STUDENT
SENATE
Continued from Page 9.
2 p.m. Tuesday in the rotunda at Strong Hall. Mardi Gras Celebration, Saturday-Tuesday at International Beadtrader, 1017 1/2 Massachusetts St.
CELEBRATIONS Susan B. Anthony Birthday Celebration,
BENEFITS
Habitat For Humanity "Homefest '94" Benefit, 7:30 p.m. Friday at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St. $10 donation.
Douglas County AIDS Project Benefit Concert. 9 p.m. Saturday at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St. $7.50 donation.
WORKSHOPS
KU Clarinet Workshop with guest artist Larry Combs, Chicago Symphony, Saturday all day at Murphy Hall.
'Poetry Slam' night encourages self-expression
By Laney Sailsbury Associated Press Writer
NEWYORK—Alone in the limelight of this smoky basement pub, only talent could save a would-be poet's pride. Last night was "poetry slam" night, and the jackals were out.
Judge Johnnie Heavyside was sitting atop the upright piano with a collection of cardboard number cards. He held up a three for Ron Kolm, a veteran of the twice-weekly event.
When the poet walked off the stage at the Nuyorican Poets Cafe, some in the crowd clapped in appreciation. Others booed the Heavyside's call.
Poetry slam emcee Bob Holman held the microphone, did a half-spin and said, "You know, I kind of like that."
But the Heavyside and three other judges stood firm, and another poet tiptoed on stage for a chance to be appreciated and win the $10 prize.
The audience, Manhattan's too-cool artistic set, many with horn-rimmed glasses and black stretch pants, prepared to judge the next one.
Anyone could have been next.
Throughout the United States, hundreds of poets — self-taught and lettered — are making their way into the growing poetry nightlife while poetry has a renaissance of sorts among ordinary people.
On New York's Lower Eastside, a creative workshop was held. Six people sat in a circle critiquing one another's poems, oblivious to a sheeled hobo who had been snoring in the corner.
A world away, beneath the towering stone arches of St. John the Divine, more than 1,000 people gathered to hear the greatest laureates of the day — Rita Dove, Poet Laureate of the United States; Joseph Brodsky, winner of the 1987 Nobel Prize for Literature; and Octavio Paz, winner of the 1990 Nobel Prize for Literature.
There were at least 20 other places to hear poetry in New York that night, said Elise Paschen, the executive director of the Poetry Society of America, which now has 2,500 members. And there were dozens of other
such sessions elsewhere in the United States.
The society has relaxed its membership requirements, realizing that the trend in poetry is pluralism. Its newest theme: All outlooks and styles appreciated.
Today's poets are of many races and sexual orientations. They have no common thread except to tell of their dealings in modern life. In this respect, poetry differs from the confessional free verse that typified much of American poetry in the '70s and '80s.
"You get all groups coming together to read and listen to each other through poetry. People want content in their entertainment," said Steve Cannon, a poet and playwright who recently retired from teaching at Brooklyn's Medger Evers College.
The humanism evoked by the Beats moved into exclusive literary circles, where it got lost among literary theories. Works less frequently reached into the lives of common people who once read verse for its ability to entertain, tickle and bite, people who had thrived on the rhythms and words of such poets as Emily Dickinson, Carl Sandburg, Langston Hughes, Walt Whitman and Robert Frost.
American poetry, which decades ago was taught from grade school to high school, had retreated during the last 30 years.
Now there's an "urgent desire for self-expression." Cannon said. And that desire is expressed in poetry performances in places such as the Nuyorican Poets Cafe.
Tracie Morris, who has traveled the country reading her works, was among the best-known new poets Rather than looking inward, her poetry drew on personal experiences and spoke to a class-consciousness felt by many in today's fragmented society.
Much of yesterday's performance poetry contained humor and irony that bordered on tragedy: Lesbians lament unrequited teen-age crushes; an ex-drug addict cynically saluted the agony of rehab over the boredom of her factory job.
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4
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, February 9,1994
11
40 SOUR JC
William Alix/ KANSAM
Forward surmounts leg injuries in stride
Kansas junior forward Alana Slatter attempts a jump shot against Missouri. Slatter scored 3 points and grabbed 1 rebound Sunday in the Jahyhaws' loss to the Tigers.
ALEXANDER ROMAN
Kansas junior forward Alana Slatter warm up before the game against Missouri. The Jayhawks lost Sunday to the Tigers 77-78.
By Matt Siegel
Kansan sportswriter
Most students look forward to the summer. It's a time to relax from classes and everyday hassles that accompany attending college. However, junior forward Alana Slatter dreads the summer for personal reasons.
"I'm a sports fanatic," she said. "All watch is basketball or football. The toughest part of the year for me is baseball during the summer. I hate baseball, and there aren't any other sports on television."
However, Slatter didn't have much time to watch television this summer. She was busy rehabilitating her right knee after undergoing arthroscopic surgery at the end of the 1993 season. She spent the entire summer lifting weights and running to strengthen her knee. Her rehabilitation was progressing as planned until a preseason practice.
"My mother is extremely superstitious," she said. "She thought it was bad luck that I chose to wear No. 13. But I always used to say in high school, 'I'm bad luck on the court —
"I got hit in a scrimmage," she said,
"From then on, I had swelling that kept occurring and wouldn't go away.
They drained my knee and had me sitting out of practice for three days, and then the doctor came back, and he took a look at it. I had just been going to class, and it was swollen again."
So Slatter decided that she would have a second arthroscopic surgery Nov. 11. The injury sidelined her for more than a month and she missed the first five games of the season. Slatter is averaging 5.6 points and 3 rebounds a game in 14 games. She has increased her scoring output to 7.1 points a game in Big Eight Conference play.
Although she has returned, Slatter said she never had expected to return fully to her pre-injury condition. She said that she could not do certain leg exercises and that even today she felt she needed to gain more strength in her legs and knee.
The injury was especially frustrating to Slatter because she had worked hard during the summer to get back into playing form. When it looked as if she was ready to return, she stumbled on some more bad luck. Or was it?
for the other team."
The 6-foot forward didn't start playing basketball until the seventh grade and then only because her friends were playing. She liked it enough to continue playing at J.J. Pearce High School in Dallas. She soon became a star, averaging 22 points and 8.9 rebounds a game her senior year and was named the No. 2 player in the state by the Dallas Morning News.
Slatter then had to make a decision. She said that she had known that she had wanted to leave Texas. She was recruited by schools such as Stanford, she said, but she liked Kansas coach Marian Washington and her program.
At Kansas, Slatter has helped Kansas become a top-echelon team. Last season, she led the team in scoring twice. After averaging 14 points a game in the conference tournament, she was selected to the all-tournament team.
"She is just a really aggressive player," senior center Lisa Tate said. "She is an offensive threat."
Slatter, who is majoring in business and business administration, said that she had no regrets about leaving Texas but that she wished she could have gone back for one thing.
"I was born in San Antonio, and ever since I was little, my dad would bring me back Cowboys souvenirs," she said of the Dallas Cowboys. "Growing up, I always liked them, and then we moved there. I wish I could have gone to any of their games."
Now if only the Cowboys played during the summer.
Basketball standouts elected to Hall of Fame
By Trudy Tynan The Associated Press
SPRINGFIELD, Mass. — Louisville coach Denny Crum's election to the Basketball Hall of Fame yesterday came as no surprise to his college coach.
"He was born to coach," former UCLA coach John Wooden said. "Even at the time that he was playing it was evident he was going to be an outstanding coach. I've never been able to say that about another player."
Two other coaches, Chuck Daly of the New Jersey Nets and Cesare Rubini, who had a 322-28 record and 10 Italian championships during his 31 years coaching in Milan, were also voted into the Hall today.
Elected as players were Carol Blazejowski, the shooting star of the women's game in the 1970s, and Harry "Buddy" Jeannette, a standout backcourt player in the 1930s and 1940s.
Blazejowski was nominated by the women's committee, Rubini was tabbed by the international committee and Jeannette by the veterans committee.
They will be enshrined May 9.
"I feel like I'm in a dream," said Blazejowski.
"This is a very, very special moment."
During her four years at Montclair State, Blazejowski had a 31.7 point average, which made her the most prolific scorer in women's basketball history. The only college player to score more points than "The Blaze" was the late Pete Maravich.
"It's no secret it was a struggle at times," said Blazejowski, now a director of consumer products for the NBA. "But this is the biggest accomplishment of any player's career."
Daly's coaching career began in 1955 at Punxutawney, Pa., High School and included NBA and Ivy League titles and Olympic gold.
In 1893, Daly took over the Detroit Pistons, which had never had back-to-back winning seasons, and led them to NBA championships in 1989 and 1990. He also guided Pennsylvania to four Ivy League titles in the 1970s. But he never had it so easy as when he led the Dream Team to the Olympic gold medal in Barcelona.
"I feel like I've never retired from basketball," said Jeannette, 76, who now lives in Nashua, N.H., with his wife, Bonnie. They met in Warren, Pa., when he was the pro Rookie of the Year in 1938.
Jeanette played on nine championship teams in four cities—Detroit, Sheboygan, Fort Wayne and Baltimore —during his 10 year pro career.
He was the Most Valuable Player in the old National Basketball League three times and once in the American Basketball League and later coached at Georgetown before returning to Baltimore as coach and general manager of the Bullets. He retired in 1967.
Crum's election came as his 18-2 Cardinals are enjoying their best season since the 1980s, when they made four appearances in the Final Four and won the national championship in 1980 and 1986. The Cardinals reached the Final Four two other times under Crum in the 1970s.
During his 22 years in Louisville, his record is 536-194. Only Wooden and Hall of Famer Dean Smith of North Carolina have coached more Final Four teams.
"He was the most inquisitive player I ever had and always learned," Wooden said of the San Fernando, Calif., native who graduated from UCLA in 1958. "He wanted to know why and how we did everything, from the mechanics of the game to why the coaches worked with certain players the way they did."
Wooden, 84, the only man to be elected to the Hall of Fame both as a player and a coach, said Crum's promise with a clipboard had been immediately evident when he arrived at UCLA.
The combination produced three of UCLA's seven straight national championships before Crum left for Louisville. In his first season, the Cardinals reached the semifinals of the 1972 tournament before being eliminated by the Bruins, who went on to win tourney.
As a player, Crum was "not outstanding at all, but a pretty good point guard," Wooden said. "He had good hands and was a good passer. As a shooter, he was above average, but not outstanding.
Crum served as Wooden's graduate assistant and freshman coach from 1958 until 1960. Then, after a stint in high school and junior college, Crum returned as Wooden's top assistant and chief recruiter in 1968.
"I think his ambition from the very beginning was to coach. And I got him back as an assistant as soon as a I could."
"It was a strange feeling because I had recruited all those players that beat us for UCLA," Crum said.
Track leaders look to stretch successes from past meets
By Andrew Gilman Kansan sportswriter
With his sparkling gold ring and matching gold earring, senior distance runner Michael Cox talks about superstition.
"Every year, on the first day of practice, I wear as much black as possible," he said. "It goes back to my high-school days. Black was one of our team colors. We were the Pirates."
His past performances would seem to indicate that he is doing something right. Cox, who is from Hannibal, Mo., has put together an impressive career with the Jayhawks. He placed ninth last year in the mile run at the NCAA indoor championships and placed first in the mile run at the 1993 indoor Big Eight Conference championships. This season, he has put together four first-place finishes, including victories last weekend in the mile and the 3000-meter run at the Kansas-Kansas State-Missouri Triangular Meet.
Cox and the rest of the Jayhawks will look to improve when they compete at the Cornhusker Invitational on Friday and Saturday.
Kansas will compete at the KSU Invitation on Feb. 18-19 before going to Oklahoma City to compete in the Big Eight Championships on Feb. 25-26.
"This meet is a lot like the Kansas Relays," assistant coach Steve Guymon said. "It's their big meet of the year."
"I expect the team to preform well," Guymon said. "The men's team is eager and hungry to prove that we've got a good program."
Kansas will look to Cox and senior middle-distance runner Dan Waters for leadership this weekend.
Cox will be running the mile and Waters will be competing in the 800-meter run.
"The mile is going to be a quick race," Cox said. "There will be an intense crowd."
Cox, who has provisionally qualified for the NCAA meet this year with a time of 4:04.8 in the mile run, will be competing at the NCAA championships unless his time is beaten.
Regardless of his times so far, Cox knows
that this weekend will be an excellent opportunity for him to improve.
"There will be a lot of guys to push me at this meet," he said. "That will help my times. I'd like to run close to four minutes, and I'm planning on winning."
Waters also realizes the importance of this weekend's meet.
"This is our toughest indoor competition of the year," he said. "There will be some really great competition there from both coasts."
Waters was a Big Eight champion in the 800-meter run in 1992 and was a member of the 3,200-meter relay team that placed fifth at the NCAA championships in 1991. But Waters said he was impressed by the unity on the team this season.
"There are no strict divisions on this team," he said. "Obviously you get closer to the people that you work with, but I'm friends with everyone on the team."
"We know it's a total team effort, and we all encourage each other well. There's a lot of divisions on other teams, there's a lot of tensions. We don't have them."
"When it comes to down to that last event, everyone is there watching." he said.
Cox agreed.
But the coaching staff also plays a role in keeping the team together. Waters said.
"Coach does a lot of talking." Waters said of Kansas coach Gary Schwartz. "But he always asks us what we think. He listens to us and then makes the best decisions on our behalf."
Both Cox and Waters said they hoped to make big improvements in the Big Eight championships.
Although Waters and Cox have made individual contributions, both are more concerned with the team's performance.
Waters, who has not qualified for the NCAA championships, will look to make that sten this weekend.
"I'm not looking toward the outdoor season," he said. "I want to concentrate on the indoor season."
"This year we have a great combination of old guys and new guys working together," Waters said. "We have some great team leaders."
Tom Leininger/KANSAN
NYSD
Senior distance runner Michael Cox was an All-American Big Eight champion in the mile last year.
Volunteers needed for Kansas Relays
The 69th annual Kansas Relays need individuals to help out.
Volunteers are needed for the student relays committee, which will be involved with premeet and headquarters organization, officials and other areas. If students are interested in volunteering, they should go to room 143 in Allen Field House or call the track and field office at 864-3486 by March 1. The Kansas Relays will be from April 23 to April 26.
1
12
Wednesday, February 9, 1994
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Harding to face Olympic panel
By Larry Siddons
The Associated Press
LILLEHAMMER, Norway — Tonya Harding's lifelong pursuit of a figure skating gold medal could end next week at an Oslo airport hotel, 110 miles shy of this Olympic town and one week short of the start of women's figure skating events.
The U.S. Olympic Committee, troubled by Harding's role in the Nancy Kerrigan assault, called a special hearing for Tuesday to decide whether to bar the U.S. champion skater from the Winter Games.
The committee's decision to convene its Games Administrative Board was buttressed by a 400-page volume of evidence from a figure skating federation inquiry and by Harding's own statements.
"It's not a matter of hearing more, it's a matter of giving Tonya Harding a chance to respond, which she has not had a chance to do," said LeRoy Walker, committee president. He said that Harding could submit her case in person or in writing but that he hoped she would testify. There was no immediate word if she would.
The administrative board is the committee's ultimate authority at the Games, and its decision is final. Harding could sue if she were removed from the team, but Walker said that possibility would not affect the committee's decision.
"We do not wish to respond to this in terms of what may eventually come in terms of suits," he said. "We want to do what is absolutely fair."
The meeting will be held at the SAS Park Royal Hotel, across the street from Fornebu airport. Committee executive director Harvey Schiller said the committee had wanted to meet out of town to keep from disrupting preparations at the Olympic site.
Harding will remain on the team until at least the end of the hearing Tuesday, three days after the Winter Games begin and eight days before the start of women's figure skating.
The panel will be the third to investigate Harding's role in the attack on Kerrigan, who was clubbed on the right knee as she left a practice rink at the U.S. Figure Skating Championships in Detroit on Jan. 6.
In addition, agrandjury in Multnomah County, Ore., is hearing evidence to determine if allegations by Harding's ex-husband, Jeff Gillooly, are true: That the skater gave the goahead to attack Kerrigan and was involved in the plot and the cover-up.
The U.S. Figure Skating Association is conducting its own investigation of Harding, a process that won't be finished until after the Winter Olympics but which could result in her expulsion from the sport.
Saturday, a skating association panel found "reasonable grounds" to believe Harding was involved in the plot to injure Kerrigan.
Harding said she had learned of the plot after the attack but admitted withholding information from authorities. She said she had feared her former husband and his friends would have retaliated.
As a team member, Harding's airfare to Oslo will be picked up by the committee, but the board must decide who pays for the expenses of her attorneys and other associates. Before yesterday's announcement, Harding was scheduled to arrive in Norway the day of the hearing; it was not known if that plan would change;
Her admission Jan. 27 was accompanied by a plea to have "my last chance" at an Olympic gold medal. The confession and the figure skating panel's findings weighed heavily in the committee's decision to call its own hearing, Schiller said.
"There are a number of issues to be considered," he said. "And among them are statements that she's made in the past few weeks about her knowledge of the attack when she returned to Portland."
If Harding does compete in the Games, she and Kerrigan would have to share the ice for practice. The International Skating Union turned down committee request to to keep them apart during practice.
Skating drama may give CBS top ratings
Bv David Crarv
The Associated Press
LILLEHAMMER, Norway — Yes,
CBS would like Tonya Harding to
compete. Soap opera plus detective
show plus "High Noon" on ice add up
to record ratings.
But even if Nancy Kerrigan skates without her rival, the network's coverage of the women's figure skating finals Feb. 25 is a good bet to be the most watched Olympic telecast ever in the United States.
"A lot of people would be interested in seeing both of them skate, the drama that goes with it," said Mark Harrington, CBS Sports' vice president for the Olympics. "But if she doesn't come, it will still be a great night of skating."
Harrington said he had stopped guessing. "The story's taken so many twists and turns."
Among the CBS legions in Lillehammer — more than 700 strong — opinions are divided as to Harding's chances of competing.
The women's figure skating final traditionally is the most watched Olympic event, summer or winter. The record Olympic Nielsen rating, according to CBS Sports senior vice president Richard Gentile, is 30 for the 1998 Games in Calgary, when Katerina Witt won her second gold medal.
CBS posted a 27 rating in 1992 with Kristi Yamaguchi's gold in Albertville, France, and 30 this year seems easily within reach.
don't want to make projections, fearing they might create unrealistic expectations about Super Bowl-level ratings in the 40s.
"We're going to have a big story no matter what," said Verne Lundiquist, who will handle the skating play-by-play. "But what happens if Nancy falls in her short program (Feb. 23), and suddenly she's struggling just for a place in the top five? You can feel America go, 'Oh my God.'
But Harrington and his colleagues
"That's the fear we all have."
CBS hopes that the Harding-Kerrigan drama will fuel interest in other events rather than distract from them.
But there is no question what event will take the spotlight, and not everyone thinks that the public fascination is healthy.
nie Blair, a three-time winner already, and Dan Jansen, stylized in three past Olympics.
Harrington cited the Olympic comeback of 1988 gold medalist Brian Boitano and the contrasting quests for gold by U.S. speed-skating stars Bon-
Landquist said his CBS colleague and analyst, 1984 gold medalist Scott Hamilton, was fed up with the furor;'
"He's very sorry that something like this has intruded in his sport, and I'm sympathetic to how he feels," Lundquist said yesterday. "But as a journalist, it's a great story."
At no point has CBS been tempted to alter its programming schedule and show the skating final live, he said. It starts at 7 p.m., but CBS won't show it until the prime-time broadcast from 8 to 11 p.m. EST.
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KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store that offers rebates to KU students
Introducing
Touch-Screen
Greetings
Touch-Screen Greetings is a new way for you to create and print custom greeting cards for any occasion, in just minutes!
PAGENET
NATIONWIDE
KU
KU
DOOKSTORES
Customize your Valentine Card for only $3.50! Now at the Kansas Union!
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.
Crown Center
Ice Terrace
The Ice Terrace at Crown Center
4
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
-
Wednesday, February 9.1994
13
Classified Directory
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
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 and therefore, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to such preference, limitation or discrimination.
P
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are for sale.
100s Announcements
105 Personals
Looking for 16-year old and younger and 70+ KU students. I'm interested in doing a story on the different outlooks of KU students, but haven't any luck in finding them through regular means. If you know you can tell these age groups, please call the KU schools, 864-8944, and ask for Angela Lopez.
110 Bus. Personals
Unique Sterling Silver Jewelry
Hoops, Pendants & More!
For Guys & Gals
228 MacShop
228 MacShop
SpringBreak1994
CANCUN from $439
SOUTH PADRE from $159
Lowest priceguaranteed
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 Hours
Monday-Tuesday 8am-9pm
Saturday 8am-12:30pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
120 Announcements
Guitarist looking for practice and/or band mate
Leave a message. 814-0486
HAVASU: America's New Spring Break Hot Spot,
Lake Havasu, AZ, is throwing America's largest party!
Top lake名家 Concerts, Comedians, and
Ballers! Lake Will Roar in '19' CALL 6:
800-4HAVASU
Tax preparation: Short Form 415, Long Form 427
Da. evening & weekend hours call. Call 865
1234567890
13th YEAR!
Unique Egg-base Culture fed 18 nursing pig produced sudden strange behavioral change, sudden strange physical change especially immune system body, temperature mechanism. All changes induced by humans indicated there's promise of a glorious future. European scientists doing follow-up.
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND
SPRING BREAK 94 StayHot!
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND
NORTH PADRE/MUSTANG ISLAND
F-L-O-R-I-D-R
DAYTONA BEACH
PANAMA CITY BEACH
ORLANDO/WALT DISNEY WORLD
CREAMY WATER WORLD
CITY OF DODG-O
STREAMSIDE
VAL/BEAVER CREEK
BROOKLYN/WEST VILLAGE
C-O-L-O-R-A-D-O
STEAMBOAT
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK
BRECKENRIDGE/KEYSTONE
N-E-V-A-D-A
S-O-U-T-H C-A-R-O-L-I-N-A HILTON HEAD ISLAND
RESERVATIONS AVAILABLE NOW
CALL TOLL FOR FILL
CALL TOLL FREE FOR FULL
DETAILS AND COLOR BROCHURE!
Call Joan at 865-5611
--for the best summer of your life,
see your career center for more
information or call Camp Counselors
USA @ 800-999-CAMP or write
CCUSA @ 424 Florence St..
Palo Alto, CA 94301
140 Lost & Found
Finnish passport found downtown. Call Carla at 749-0700 to identify
FOUND. Lawrence HS ring, class of '91. Call 842-
4444.
男厕 女厕
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Part-time temporary and permanent openings.
Flexible schedules around class. 49-810 to start
Positions need to be filled by 2/16/94. Please call
842-8531 for more info.
*******
1984 EXPANSION
...
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 Counselor USA
420 Florence ST, Alto, CA 94301
www.campcampusa.com
Babyfirst needed for 3-month-old in our home.
Mon:11:45-3:45pm or /or Wed & Fri:8:45-10:45am. No need to work all shifts. Ps call 843-2305. Ask for Nicola/Kathia $2.50 per hour.
CAMP COUNSELORS - 12 yr. old educational camp near Kansas City seeks counselors (WSI for children 6-14). June 1 to August 8. Must be Sponsored for children $180 plus room and board. For details, send inquiry before February 14, 1994 to Wildwood Center, 7095 W. 339th St., La Caye, KS 60400.
Case Manager, full-time, to provide case management services to severely emotionally disturbed children/adolescents/their families. BA and experience working with SED children/adolescents required. Send resume/re cover letter to 1. Yanayce, Littleton Road, Lawrence, MA 86044. Open until filled. EOE
CLERK TYPISTI
CITY OF LAWRENCE
15:30 time position, includes occassioned evenings.
18:30 time position, includes occasioned even-
or better on typing test. 7.52 per hour. Complete application at Admins. Services. 2nd floor. City Hall. Accessible from Bloor Street by Tuesday, 15.14. 1994. EOE M/F/D.
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 hourly, some may require sleep overs. College students must have a good but may not be required. A GOOD DRIVING RECORD IS A MUST. Please apply at Cottonwood Inc. 2801 W. 31, EOE.
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
Counselors/Support Staff-Children's/Camps/Northeast top salary, MR/BD/Laundry, travel allowance. Must have skill in one of the following: basketball, jazz, tap, ballet), drama, drums, field hockey, football, golf, gymnasiums, ice球, k dance
Delivers needed. Does Mundos Bilingual Hygiene newspaper needs dependable people to distribute paper through Lawrence. Transportation necessary. Good call 10-815-221-4747. Graduate Assistant position in the Office of Student Financial Aid beginning on or after March 1, 1994. Responsibilities: interview all applicants for the Kansas University Endowment Loan Proposal. enrollment as a graduate student at KU. Preference offer, skills and competence inmunization skills and ability to work in blocks of time. Salary: $641.64/month based on 50 assignment and 20 hours per week. Resume and three professional references to: Julie Cooper, Manager, Lawrence, KS 6045. All materials received by 02/18/94. Complete position announcement available upon request. EEO/AA.
5
SUMMER JOBS AT CAMP
Camp COUNSELORS
600 camps in the USA, Russia, and Europe need you this summer
this summer.
GREEKS & CLUBS
GREEKS & CLUBS
EARN
$50 - $250
FOR YOURSELF
Looking for mature and college female to
busses two boys ages 7-4 F-M 3:0 to 8:30. Call 822-
555-3121.
up to $250 for your use!
this funnel can save one week.
Call now and receive a free gift.
Need person for general office work plus showing apartments. Afternoons M-F until summer then full-time. Must be a KS resident majoring in business or accounting and be enrolled at KU in at least 12 hrs with a GPA of at least 2.0. Call 841-6003 btw 9,5-M, F-7.
Nannies Wanted. Positions nationwide, summer or year-round. Great pay and benne. (812) 623-4000. (812) 623-4000. (812) 623-4000.
Night supervisor needed for janitorial fun. Sun-
bloom Mon-Thurs. 7:11pm or 5:30-8:30m. Requirement:
Grad student, leadership-training skills,
experience with HR commitment
= 7.00/hr. Call Renes 842-658-9
We need a student (4.25 per hour) to dispense
medications. We will take the midday hours but,
apply 6000 Moldot. No phone
Medicinal Chemistry Dept.
Party photographers needed for Spring and Fall semesters of 1994. Prior 35mm experience is pre-requisite, and phone number. Fall 1993 applications need to reapply, due to the fact that nobody was contacted. River City Market Restaurants, located lower level of the Riverfront Plaza Mall, has openings
-Front counter MWF lunch hours
SUMMER JOBS/INTERNATIONAL Average earnings $30,200. University Directories, the nation's largest publisher of campus telephone directories, students for their summer sales program. Top awareness training. Gain valuable experience in advertising, sales and public relations selling yellow page advertising for your campus telephone directory. Position available for summer training program in Chapel Hill, NC. Located enbautisable, goal oriented students for challenging, well-willing summer job. Internships may be offered on WEDNESDAY ON FRIDAY, FEBRIARY 11TH AT THE PLACEMENT CENTER, 110 BURGUNION URGE.
-wait staff MWF or T/H-Daytime Apply in person 9AM-6PM Daily
SEAMSTRESS WANTED to work for small alterations business. Flexible hours: 41-631.
payer wanted for working R&B variety band.
Jef at 814-1555 or 814-9797.
WORK STUDY POSITIONS AVAILABLE AT
THE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS. ABOVE MIN-
MUM WAGE. APPLY ONLY IF WORK STUDY
QUALIFIED. RM 350A OR CALL 844-4500.
Spend your summer in Maine!
Pride girls girl resident camp looking for athletics training for Girl's Basketball/RM/BM/landy, travelallowance. Women call enroll; call Weng Game for Girls, P.O. Box 1751, Duxbury, MA. M. 06223 (617) 934-8338. We will be on Friday from 1am-4pm at 3/7/6, Alarm Room.
$$Premiere Tax Service $$
0402E- $10; 1040- $10 plus extra fee for other
terms to be filed with 1940. State returns $5-$10.
Will pick up and deliver. Call Brian at 265-2572
225 Professional Services
生
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
Rick Frydman,Attorney 823 Missouri 943-4023
For free consultation call
German lessons for beginners and advanced students. Learn German at your own pace. Lots of experience! Call Usach 749-7538
Experience. C: Carlo G. 749-753
Driver education offered through Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 yrs. Driver's license, transportation provided. Bt-749.
English tutor! All English classes, proedreading,
English translation, English HS, Education
Arthur 841-3113 math
For a confidential, caring friend. call us.
We're here to listen and talk with you.
Birthright #831-4231. Free pregnancy testing
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters the law offices of
Donald G. Strole
16 East 13th
Sally G. Kelsey
842-1133
DV-1 green card Program Sponsored by 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 or forms: New Erie Air Services, 2021 Stag 51, Canoga Park, CA 91436.
INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS We transfer
Video from US mode to your system or from your
country to US mode £25 includes tape and mailing
World-Wide Video Transfer, PO Box G, Ottawa.
Broadcast, PO Box E, Ottawa.
MATH TUTOR TEACHING EXPERIENCE.
EXCELLENT ENTERTAINMENTS SCHOOL.
; (818) 998-4425; Fax; (818) 882-9681.
INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS
BRAXTON B. COPLEY
Attorney at Law
General Practice
Traffic Tickets, Midemeanors,
andlord/Tenant,
Personal Income Tax
719 Massachusetts 749-5333
VIDEO EDITING AND
PRODUCTION SERVICES
A/B relationship with EDL
3D computer animation.
HiB field production package.
Award winning screen writer.
PRIMAL SCREEN COMMUNICATIONS
235 Typing Services
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor
1-der Woman Word Processing in accompany pages of letter
type. 894
Beacon Publication Services-Quality word processing, including typing, grammar proofing, and proofreading.
Looking for a good type?
*Papers, Applications, Spreadsheets, Charts
*Laser printing and your profs
*Grammar and spelling trees
*18 years experience
call Jack at
MakeIt the Grade
865-2855
1968 Black Honda Spree, excellent condition, well kept, new tires, tune and battery. Call mornings (913) 933-4848.
1968 Dahau7a spd. one owner. No A/C $2000. Call
986 Databas at spd one owner. No A/C $5000. Call
314 8383 daytime.
Word processing, applications, term paper, dis-
sertation samples, Editing, composition, rush
job availability.
your very own EXPERIENCED,
PROGRAM, or PROFESSOR.
OF COURSE, laser printing, grammar and
math.
Words by Chris Word Processing.
High quality papers and printing; spell check
spelling free!
Computerized music scores available too!
-
Computerized music scores available too!
Could you ask for more?
886 SX/12, 2.5 RAM, 40HD, MONO-VGA, KX-PI321,
PIDER, DOS, 5.0 Windows, 3.14142 868-2937, Kevin
BEER ON TAP-*Keg-coiler for sale* 2000 a.o.
Holds full or pony kegs. Comes with one empty kg,
no more deposits. Save $$$. Call John $41-8397,
leave message
*Go ahead, ask. DESKTOP DOCUMENTS,
842.2772
Caribbean $140, max-$175, T-bone $180, great cond
classify Makes great and instrument for band.
Cajun $300.
305 For Sale
300s Merchandise
Build a new body. Four month membership to Body Boutique at last year's price! Call 466-227-1277
For Sale Mac Classic II 480 with 40.5 MB + MB
For Sale Mac Classic II 480, $999.00 OBG. Call us
30268 day or 814-680-7500
Peavy T-40 with Hassardell. Peavy FN 138
Peavy T-45 with Hardsall. Peavy FN 718
Snow kia. 175 each, $26 for each, 79-118.
Snow kia. 175 each, $26 for each, 79-118.
poles $7. Radar detector. Whisper Spectrum $3E,
"Panasonic," $80. All in excellent condition.
kia. 441-931.
Brother portable Word Processor w/ theiusre
disc for sale. $290 b.o. call 843-6697.
BIM Compat. Computer; Hard drive 3, i.VG- inca
BIM Compat. Computer; Hard drive 1, v5.8
age, old, over 100 of software; Call BIM
Compat. Computer; Hard drive 1, v5.8
FUTON Couch with endtables, mattress and
maple. Maple, Maple 64-4760 or
749-8543, $279.90, $879.90
miyela拢装 400 mm hip kit **18* LX Comp. mat**
green, G Crims, 2 bottles cat kit, mint cond. 300 mm
equipment kit
Talk trash, walk trash; DEJA RECYCLED
Talk trash, walk trash; DEJA RECYCLED
Talk trash, walk trash; DEJA RECYCLED
Goods pleo, 725 Mass M-Sat: 10-30, The tlw &
the tlw
MACINTOSH Computer. Complete system including printer only 509. Call Christ at 800-289-6885.
SPEAKERS-custom built, never used, 2-way,
must hear, $251. Call Chad at 832-2741.
FT-81 Graphing Calculator. Like new, $55. 1-279.
468. Please leave a message if not home.
WEDDING DRESS -- never worn, & blush pink,
broad chest length train suit, $450/offer. Call
(800) 326-7900.
360 Miscellaneous
340 Auto Sales
Wedding gown. Scalloped waist line. Cathedral lot. Lots of pearls. 913-498-5123
1900 Maxdn HX7 OXL, red 4 Km lil. power sunroof
$10,000 cull to 788-1640
THE CHAPMAN
Used & Curious Goods
731 New Hampshire
841-0550
Noon-6:00 Tues-Sat
Buy • Sale • Trade
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
1, 2 or 3 bedrooms at 9th and Mississippi. W/D,
800/month. Free tuition. Call 641-8877.
3 BDRM LUXURY TOWN HOME
3 bdm town床, fp. tsupped ceilings, all appl,
D w/Hook kits. Attached garage, Haworth
Place. $25 a mes. Call 841-6080
3 Bedroom / 2 full bath now available on bus route. Microwave & dishwasher $500
$100
4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished,
very nice! Interested? Call 814-5235, 794-0445 or
604-3330.
Available Now-1 bdrm apt.
Live next to campus at: Berkeley Flats
Call today. 843-2116
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
VILLAGE SQUARE
apartments
- Close to campus
• Spacious 2 bedroom
• Laundry facility
• Swimming Pool
• Waterbed allowed
9th & Avalon 842-3040
Available immediately. Remodeled one bedroom apartment close to campus, water and heat are
1 value at Marcel 3. Two bedroom townhouse
15.184-861, leave message. pool 483 per month.
841-881, leave message
Furnished room for rent with shared kitchen and
workstations from KU. Off street parking.
No gate.
Hanover Place Apl. for rent. Near Campus.
$370/MO Call 841-1212
meadowbrook FALL '94
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. Call Kathy or Shana at Meadowbrook
842-4200
Leasing for June and August. New 4 bedroom, includes washer, dryer, dishwasher, microwave gas fireplace, ceiling fans, cable-fan, 1500 ft² feet and covered parking avail. Early sign-up specials offered. For more information call Dave at 81-7849
15th & Crestline
Mon - Fri 8-5:30
Sat 10-4
Sun 1-4
Sorry no pets
Rooms, apartments, and well kept, older homes available now. 841-STAR (7827)
One bedroom apt, sublease next to campus, off parking lot, west for week of February 13-18. $250.
Spicinus i bedroom apt very close to campus. Purifi
avail. Avail. immediatel Call 641-1318 Ask
me. Call 641-1318 Avail. immediatel Call 641-1318
SUNRISE VILLAGE
660 Gateway Ct.
(Behind Sonic)
Now Leasing for Fall
Mon.-Fri. 10-12, 1-5
Sub-lease three bedroom apt. 433 per month
including utilities. Bd from campus. Female
students only.
**Sublime large one bedroom pad.** on bus route. Low **Luxury** paid, PET ORT available ASAP, $309 845 784
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.
*Luxurious 2,3,&4 Bedroom Town Homes
*Garages; 2½Baths
*Microwave Ovens
*Some with Fireplaces
*On KU Bus Route
*Swimming Pool and Tennis Courts
We presently have available a select few 1 & 2 bedroom apartments for immediate occupancy
*2Pools
- 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)
841-8400 or
841-1287
Trailridge Apartments
new leasing for Summer and Fall
Studies, Apt. 43, and Town Houses
BU Bldg House, Buckingham,
Ballastrop, Call Today for more information
843-7333 2500 W.6th
Very nice studio apL. w/ swimming pool, tennis court and laundry facility. Located on busa route in quiet neighborhood. Water paid. $32/mo. + electric. Available Mar. 1. Call 749-689.
430 Roommate Wanted
1 Roimmate, non-smoke for 3 bdm cord. $175
2 Roommate, campus. Washer/Dryer, Drone.
reg. 768-119-6
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Female need to share a bdrm apt with W/$150 a.m. Stadium View Apts. Call 823-2888.
Male/Female roommate needed immediately to
share two bedrooms. apt $187.50 + walk To
walkway
One female roommate wanted for a 3 bdmr 820/m² +/m² until close to campus. 941-514-16.
Female roommate needed immediately on 1300
room. Must be able to lay barge down, hardwood floors.
1696 call: Tom Curran, 212-874-5211
How to schedule an ad:
Boomhouse Wanted M/F/W 3 birm in townhouse, W/D/F
Fireplace, dishwasher, 786-0992
Female 2 sharies 3 bri bras 2 skina R$ 800 UU*+
Female 2 sharies 3 bri babysitting 1 yel old girl 4
days/day/day/day
- By phone: 864-4358
Have your own room, covered parking, private
locking, Wi-Fi, or for only $170/mo plus 749.829-
170+mo plus 749.829-
Male roommate needed through and of semester.
Pally furnished, near campus $14/mo + /uil tl
*
ROOMMATE NEEDED to share two bedrooms
841-mro / 307 + Call days: Utilities BD-8390 or
841-mro / 307
Studious, non-smoking roommate wanted to share
room with you. Own room and bath,
walk to campus or $33/month.
Calculating Rates:
Stop in 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.
Ads shown in may be hired by your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
*119 Starflower Fillet*
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. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
Classified Information and order form
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 or check with the cash are not available.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kanan office for a fee of $4.00.
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.
NUM. OF INSET ITEMS.
3 Ines
4 Ines
5-7 Ines
8+ Ines
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.
Cases per mile per day
1.00 1-2X 4-7X 8-14X 15-28X 20+X
2.05 1.55 1.65 .85 .75 .65
1.90 1.15 .80 .70 .65 .45
1.85 1.65 .75 .65 .60 .40
1.75 .90 .65 .60 .55 .35
Classifications
105 personal
118 business personals
128 noun/comments
138 entertainment
140 lest & found 355 for sale
825 high water 440 auto sales
225 professional services 360 miscellaneous
225 juvenile nurses
Please print your ad one word per box.
379 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wanted
1
2
3
4
5
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN 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 Dalry Kanan)
Furnish the following if you are charring your ad:
Account number:
Expiration Date:
MasterCard
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
Signature:
The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66445
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
ROSCOE
JUNE 2, 1979:
CAUGHT HIS
OWN TAIL
14
Wednesday. February 9,1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
story idea? 864-4810
The
Sweetheart
Bud Vase
Bouquet
In My Valentine
Delightful, fresh flowers in a bright red bud vase. We can send one anywhere.
Say it with heart.
C
Teleflora
Owens-
FLOWER SHOP
9th & Indiana • 843-6111
D1983 Telefonica
Check Us Out!
Free Workday Trip Plan, Thursdays 10 7 pm
TRAVEL CO.
8300 W. 15th Rd. Bldg 3. Orchards Corners
Check Us Out!
Free Worldwide Trip Plan, Thursdays at 8:7 pm
Mountain Trekking?
Studying Abroad?
Spring Break!
Sight Seeing?
Nightfall!
TRAVEL CO.
3100 W. 19th St. S. 3rd Ct. Orchard Corners
River City Travel Go. is located on the KU bus route! -
- Leader of the women's suffrage movement.
* Pioneered the quest for equality for women.
* Among the first group of women to rank in a national election.
Susan B. Anthony
Birthday Celebration
Tuesday, February 15, 1994
3:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Rotunda, Strong Hall
Cake and punch will be served.
Sponsored by The Emily Taylor Woman's Resource Center, 115 Strong Hall for more information, Beck Sichuan Hickman at 864-3524
Adult Prices $9 & $6
THUNDER
WILLIAMS
For More Info Call (316)264-GOAL
COLLEGE STUDENT TICKETS
$5 w/VALID ID ON COLLEGE ID NIGHT
COLLE
COLLEGE ID NIGHT : FEB.10 Tulsa Oilers
Wichita Thunder
KANSAS COLISEUM : 7:30 PM
JPCOMING GAMES:
- Saturday Feb. 12
vs. Oklahoma City Blazers
* Wednesday Feb. 23
vs. Memphis Riverkings *
Featuring the Los Angeles Laker Girls
By Angelina Lopez Kansan staff writer
Homefest '94 lends a hand
Habitat for Humanity to receive proceeds from benefit concert
Patty McGrew doesn't believe in handouts.
Instead, she said, she believed in hand-ups — lending people a hand to help them get started.
As coordinator for Homefest '94; a benefit concert that will raise money for Habitat for Humanity, McGrew, Lawrence resident, said she hoped to raise enough money to lend someone a home as well as a hand.
For the fifth year in a row, Habitat for Humanity will sponsor Homeest, a two-hour variety show that features everything from hot jazz to cool love ballads, McGrew said. It will be 7:30 p.m. Friday at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St.
"It is our only fund-raising campaign, but we raise more money every year," McGrew said.
Habitat for Humanity, which opened its Lawrence chapter five and a half years ago, builds low-income housing for working families who cannot get a loan, McGrew said. In time, the families pay back the group.
"We give those who work as hard as everybody else the opportunity to buy a home," she said.
The eight groups who will be volunteering their time to Homefest '94 have a wide range of talents, said McGrew. Las Cuatro, a four-piece female group, will perform Latino folk songs, and the Lawrence High School cheerleaders will perform a cheer especially written for Habitat for Humanity, she said.
Chuck Berg, professor of film studios, will be playing the tenor saxophone and the flute with his son, Nathan Berg, in a jazz duet. Nathan Berg, Lawrence senior and an accomplished bass player, toured three years ago with trumpet player Maynard Ferguson and is directing the music for Rock Chalk Review, Chuck Berg said.
Homefest'94
Homeest '94
Homeest '94
When: 7:30 p.m., Friday
Where: Liberty Hall, 642 Mas-
sachusetts St.
Cost: $10 a ticket
Where available: Liberty Hall, 749
1912;
McGrew Real Estate Inc., 1501 Kasold
Drive, 843-2055
Who's playing: Home Harmonies
Chuck and Nathan Berg
Lawrence High School Cheerleaders
Walter Clark and Olé
Las Cuatro
Lawrence Children's Choir
Norman Page and Inci Bashar
KU Jazz Ensemble I
KANSAN
A selection of operatic and theater songs will be performed by Norman Paige, professor of voice, and his wife, Inci Bashar. He and his wife have performed at every Homefest.
Degrees, not faculty positions, are cut
By Jamie Munn
Kansan staff writer
He said that the discontinued programs had few faculty members and
KU officials cited limited funds for the discontinuance of seven degree programs last month. But faculty in those fields probably won't be looking for other jobs or paychecks.
Lindy Eakin, associate vice chancellor for administration and finance, said no faculty member had lost his or her job after the Board of Regents approved the eliminations Jan. 27.
Eakin said the cuts had been intended to keep future costs from increasing — rather than to decrease current expenditures.
"The programs were discontinued because they needed to be brought up to a level that we couldn't afford," Eakin said.
that bringing the programs up to strength would have been expensive.
"We're not taking any resources away," Eakin said. "We're just trying to avoid having to put more into them in the future."
Eakin said that some faculty probably still would be teaching the same classes but that they would be moved to different departments.
"There may be less costs for some of the laboratory work," he said. "That money could then go to the undergraduate courses."
In other situations, such as the elimination of the master's degree in atmospheric science, the professors will teach undergraduate courses, Eakin said. Only the bachelor of science in atmospheric science remains.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said that professors
Students in the discontinued degree programs have until Dec. 31, 1996, to complete their degrees. But no new students have been accepted in those majors since Dec. 31, 1993, when the University officially eliminated the seven degrees.
would be essentially in the same teaching roles while the programs were being faded out.
Ambler said the faculty, many of them tenured, probably would teach the same classes.
"Everyone remains in their area but not necessarily in their degree," he said.
Ambler said the departments now would not be compelled to hire additional staff in the discontinued programs. This would allow them to focus their limited funds on the courses and degrees that remain.
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KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.103.NO.98
KANSAS STATE
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA KS 66612
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1994
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(USPS650-640)
Student Senate hesitates to allocate funds
By Denise Nell Kansan staff writer
As Student Senate tries to distribute its remaining unallocated funds, two groups are being forced to downsize or eliminate plans for cultural events.
The Asian American Student Union's bill to sponsor their annual festival was voted down at last week's Student Senate meeting, and a bill presented by the Bangladesh Club was not heard.
The Asian-American group originally asked the Senate to contribute $4,832 to its annual cultural festival, which will be held in March. At the time the group presented its bill, it had raised $7,277 on its own.
The bill was approved at the Jan. 26 meeting of the finance committee, but failed when presented at the meeting of the full Senate last week.
Travis Harrod, head of the Student Senate Executive Committee, said he thought the bill
failed because last year's festival had failed to attract many people.
But Kuo-Jen Tsao, off-campus senator and external vice president of the Asiatic American Student Union, said the group had not yet had time to establish its festival.
"The organization is only three years old," he said. "Last year was the first time we put on a festival."
Last night, the finance committee passed a new bill in which the group requested only $2,775 for the festival. The full senate will vote on that bill at next week's meeting. Even if it passes, Tsao said some of the four speakers planned for the event may have to be cut out.
Harrod said that when considering requests for funding from different groups, senators must rely on their best judgment. They look at factors such as how reasonable the request is, what kind of success the group has had in drawing people to its events and what they know personally about the group.
The Hispanic American Leadership Organization's request for funding to help fund its Hispanics of Today conference in April was one example of what the senators look for, Harrod said. The group's request for $5,444 was approved at last week's meeting.
"They've proved themselves to be fiscally responsible," he said. "They're a group that can take money and do with it what they say they're going to do."
The Bangladesh Club also experienced frustrations when it requested $1,475 at the Jan. 26 finance committee meeting to fund a cultural celebration.
Rashed Haque, president of the Bangladesh Club, and two other organizers of the event who attended were told that they were in violation of a Senate rule that says bills must be filed at least 20 business days before the event is to occur.
Haque said the group filed the bill Jan. 21. The event was originally scheduled for Feb. 11, only 15 business days later.
"No one told us about the 20-day waiting period," Haque said. "They're not sure about the rules themselves. They're arguing about the rules all the time."
NEWS: 864-4810
Jeremy Haas, Senate treasurer, said that the rule had been established about two years earlier to allow Senate enough time to get the paperwork together.
"We want to fund projects people have spent time on and said 'we'd like to hold this event here' instead of saying 'we want to have a party next week — can you fund it?'" he said.
Haque also attended the last week's meeting of the full Senate. He said the group attempted to get the bill heard again, but the Senate voted against bringing it on the floor.
Haque said that the festival had been postponed indefinitely until the group could find alternate means of paying for it.
Flooding forces Union evacuation
"They didn't show any respect for my country or culture," he said. "They wouldn't even hear the bill."
KU
1948
Students leave half-heartedly as alarm sounds
By Jamie Munn Kansan staff writer
Water poured from ceiling tiles and light fixtures as more than 400 students and employees were evacuated from the Kansas Union yesterday.
The Union's fire alarm was triggered when a sprinkler pipe froze and broke in the ceiling above the fourth floor lobby, said Jim Long, director of the Union.
Jerry Karr, Lawrence fire department battalion chief, said the break had occurred in a one-and-a-half inch elbow of the sprinkler system's pipes. Any water leakage automatically sets off the fire alarm.
The Union was open again by 3 p.m.
The fire department shut off the water to the building once firefighters had assessed the situation. By that time water had run down the blue tile steps of the Union's main stairwell, crept into the University Bookstore and flowed down to the first floor, Karr said.
Martin Alftaedten / KANSAN
"I'm a rebel without a clue," he said.
Although insurance adjusters were expected to arrive yesterday afternoon, Bill Towns, operations manager for the Union, said he could not estimate the amount of damage to the building.
Karr said the firefighters were most concerned with the water in the Union's elevators. Fire fighters disabled the electricity in the elevators because water had run down into the shafts.
Although the Union had just celebrated its renovation and rededicated last fall, Long said, he did not know whether the cracked pipe had been part of the remodeling.
KU police Sgt. Rose Rozmiarek
said the alarm registered at 1:10 p.m. Fire trucks were dispatched immediately to the site.
Karr said two fire engines, one ladder truck, a commander car and 14 firefighters had been sent to the scene.
Towns said he thought the evacuation went well.
Mary Jo Hadl, Union post office employee, said she thought the Union lobby was especially crowded because of the cold weather.
"We initiated the evacuation right away and everyone was out within seven minutes,"he said.
"It couldn't have happened at a worse time," she said.
Helen Harrell, Union information center employee, said students got up out of their chairs automatically when the fire alarm sounded.
"We have so many false alarms here it's hard to tell," she said. "But once we saw the water, we knew there was a problem."
Carolyn Baer, Oklahoma City senior, said she was eating in the 'Hawks Nest on the third floor when she heard the alarm — but she didn't feel worried.
"We all just sat there because we didn't notice anything unusual," she said.
Some students in the Union didn't believe the alarms.
[Image of a large room with reflective surfaces, including a glossy floor and tall windows.]
Valerie Bontrager / KANSAN
Lawrence firefighters discuss options for handling water running from the ceiling in the fourth floor of the Kansas Union. A frozen water pipe cracked yesterday at about 1 p.m., and the Union had to be temporarily evacuated.
Hall to get cultural living area
By Frank McCleary Kansan staff writer
The KU departments of student housing and International Studies will give students a chance to perfect their Spanish-speaking skills outside the classroom next fall.
One floor in McCollam Hall will be designated as a Spanish floor. The floor will be open to 80 students learning Spanish as a second language, as well as native Spanish speakers. Activities with Latin American and Hispanic themes will be offered as part of the program.
Terry Weidner, associate director of International Studies, proposed the idea to the housing department.
"We want to create an environment where students can study a language in an intense way," he said.
Milton Scott, assistant director of student housing, said it was important for the University to put living and learning together.
"We are looking at how we can bring the academic experience into the residence hall community," he said. Scott said this was a program similar to the Excellence in Ellsworth program, in which freshman honors students live on the same floor together.
"We continue to see that the living and learning concept works well," he said.
Although the program will target undergraduate, Weidner said, graduate students also will be welcome, some possibly as resident assistants.
Yorka Velasco, La Paz, Bolivia, senior and vice president of Hispanic American Leadership Organization, said the program would be a good incentive for those studying Spanish.
Velasco said the community atmosphere will help students learn more about the culture.
"My confidence that this program will work is based on the other programs around the country," he said.
The active Spanish-speaking community at KU could also be a factor in its success, Weidner said.
Scott said programs like this could help make the University seem a little smaller.
"When we bring people to campus we can put them into a smaller community," he said.
Student autonomy will be an important part of the program, Scott said. Residents will decide specific policies on speaking Spanish on the floor.
"It's going to be successful only because the individuals will be involved," he said. "The experience they get from the community will help them in the long run."
Weidner said he hoped the University would eventually offer similar programs with other languages.
"My hope is that this is a starting point," Weidner said.
Students interested in living in the new community should contact Milton Scott in student housing at 864-4560.
INSIDE
Remembering the Holocaust
Steven Spielberg's award-winning film, "Schindler's List" is one of many recent attempts to record the plight of the Jews during World War II.
Page 9.
'Schindler's List' tops list of nominees
The Associated Press
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — A German businessman who protects Jews from the Nazis. A mute New Zealander who leaves her husband. Innocent women and men accused in an Irish Republican Army bombing.
Academy Award voters this year honored seemingly uncommercial storylines and the largest beneficiary was Steven Spielberg's Holocaust drama "Schindler's List," which received a leading 12 Oscar nominations Wednesday. Its nominations include best picture and best director.
Other films receiving multiple nominations include the New Zealand drama "The Piano" and the IRA story "In the Name of the Father," both among the five best picture nominees. Also notable this year: Tom Hanks was nominated in the best acting category for playing a gay man dying of AIDS in "Philadelphia."
"This is a very special moment for all of us who have dedicated ourselves to this subject," Spielberg said of "Schindler's List." "The news of 12 nominations was overwhelming."
The biggest loser was Hollywood itself. Just one traditional studio release — the stylish thriller "The Fugitive" — earned nominations in more than one top category.
"Schindler's List" chronicles businessman Oskar Schindler's efforts to rescue and employ concentration camp prisoners in a factory making intentionally unusable Nazi munitions.
Spielberg's "Jurassic Park," the highest-grossing release in movie history, was largely ignored in Oscar balloting, collecting three nominations in technical categories.
But "Philadelphia," the first big studio film about AIDS, got five nominations, including best actor for Hanks and best original screenplay. "In the Name of the Father," a little-seen
The nominations reflect the longheld belief that movies released later in the year receive more favorable attention. The leaders in nominations were released in late November or December.
account of a falsely convicted Irish rebel Gerry Conlon, received seven nominations, including best picture and best actor for Daniel Day-Lewis.
Wednesday's results also support the theory that the Academy takes drama more seriously than comedy. Robin Williams' cross-dressing performance in the hugely successful "Mrs. Doubtfire" was overlooked. "Sleepless in Seattle" received just two nominations.
While critically acclaimed works got most of the top nominations, "The Joy Luck Club," "Naked" and "Much Ado About Nothing" were among the well-received films snubbed by Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences voters.
ACTRESS: Angie Bassett, "What's Love Got to Do With It"; Stockton Channing, "Six Degrees of Separation"; Holly Hunter, "The Piano"; Emma Thompson, "The Remains of the Day"; Debra Winger, "Shadowlands."
The envelope please...
ACTOR: Daniel Day-Lewis, "In the Name of the Father"; Laurence Fibsume, "What's Love Got to Do With It"; Tom Hanks, "Philadelphia"; Anthony Hopkins, "The Remains of the Day"; Liam Neeson, "Schindler's List."
Nominees for the 68th annual Academy Awards:
PICTURE: "The Fugitive," In the Name of the Father,
"The Plano," "The Remains of the Day."
"Schulden's list."
SUPPORTING ACTOR: Leonardo DiCaprio. "What's Eating Gilbert Grape"; Ralph Reeves, "Schindler's List"; Tommy Lee Jones, "The Fugitive"; John Malkovich, "In the Line of Fire"; Pete Postlethwait, "In the Name of the Father."
SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Holly Hunter, "The Firm"; Anna Paquin, "The Piano"; Rosie Peresz, "Fearless"; Winona Ryder, "The Age of Innocence"; Emma Thompson, "In the Name of the Father."
DIRECTOR: Jim Sheridan, "In the name of the Father"; Jane Campain; "The Piano"; James Ivory, "The Remains of the Day"; Steven Spielberg.
MUSIC ORIGINAL SCORE: Elmer Bernstein, "The Age of Innocence"; Dave Grusin, "The Firm"; James Newton Howard, "The Fugitive"; Richard Robbins, "The Remain of the Dawn"; John Williams, "Schlider's List"
52
2
Thursday, February 10, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University Daily Kansaan (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-Flint-Hall, Lawrence, KA 68045.
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ON CAMPUS
*Spencer Museum of Art will sponsor a speech and calligraphy demonstration by Fukushima Keido Roshi at noon today at Central Court in the Spencer Museum of Art.*
The Office of Study Abroad/ Western Civilization Program will sponsor an informational meeting about study abroad in Italy and France at 1:30 p.m. today at 2085 Wescoe Hall. For more information, call Nancy Mitchell at 864-3742.
The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an informational meeting about study abroad in Great Britain at 4 today at 3 Lippincott Hall. For more information, call Nancy Mitchell at 864-3742.
Latin American Solidarity will sponsor a slide show, "Haiti Today", at 6 today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread. For more information, call Kenny Kincaid at 749-0789.
University of Kansas League of Undergraduate Art Historians will meet at 6 today at Alceo Ain the Kansas Union. For more information, call Lisa Winett at 832-0051.
KU Triathlon and Swim Club will meet for swim practice at 7 tonight at Robinson Natatorium in Robinson Center.
University of Kansas Pre-Law Society will meet at 7
tonight at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union. For more information call Brandy Sutton at 841-0113 or Shawna Hilleary at (913)345-9454.
Spencer Museum of Art will sponsor a lecture by Jacqueline Chanda at 7 tonight at the Auditorium in the Spencer Museum of Art.
Center for East Asian Studies will sponsor Zen Sitting at 7:30 tonight at Parlors A,B and C in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Bertha Jackson at 864-3845.
Ecumenical Christian Ministries will sponsor an informational meeting on Spring Break alternatives at 7:30 tonight at the center, 1204 Oread. For more information, call Thad Holcombe at 843-4933.
KU Women's Studies will sponsor a forum, "Creating Families: A New Look," at 7:30 tonight at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread. For more information, call Sylvia at 864-4011.
Amnesty International will sponsor a letter writing session at 8 tonight at the Glass Onion, 624 W. 12th.
Jayhawker Campus Fellowship will meet at 8 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call John Dale at 864-1115.
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 47"/42"
Chicago: 21"/14"
Houston: 40"/36"
Miami: 84"/70"
Minneapolis: 19"/14"
Phoenix: 71"/49"
Salt Lake City: 45"/30"
Seattle: 41"/34
WEATHER
TODAY
Omaha: 33°/19°
LAWRENCE: 36°/20°
Kansas City: 32°/18°
St. Louis: 31°/21°
Wichita: 39°/24°
Tulsa: 37°/27°
Sunny
Winds from the south at 10:15 mph
Cooler
Increasing clouds
High: 36'
Low: 20'
Tomorrow Saturday
**Source:** Dan Caroff, KU Weaterther Service: 864-330-3000
**Source:** Dan Caroff, KU Weaterther Service: 864-330-3000
High: 40' Low: 21'
High: 49*
Low: 27*
KANSAN
A KU student reported a series of harassing phone calls Monday. The student, who lives in Templin Hall, said the calls had been going
ON THE RECORD
on since last November, KU police reported.
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CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, February 10, 1994
3
Education grant provides for disability study
By Roberta Johnson Kansan staff writer
Two KU faculty members are taking a new approach in studying the behavior of young children.
Jung Guess, professor of human development and family life, and Sally Roberts, project coordinator for special education, recently received an $850,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Education to conduct a longitudinal study of behavior states of young children with severe disabilities. The study is being conducted in conjunction with Rockhurst College, the University of Kansas Medical Center and the Children's Mercy Hospital in Kansas City.
The behavior state, which ranges
from deep sleep to agitated behavior, is the level of alertness and response in a person. Guess said.
Although studies have been conducted over the behaviors of normal children, Guess said, no major studies of the behavior of children with severe disabilities — including children under the age of five — have been done.
"Most research has been done on infants with normal behavior," he said. "At three months of age, it's not much of an issue."
He said "normal" behaviors were exhibited by severely disabled children at a much later age.
"We're interested in the emergence of behavior state patterns of children with disabilities." Guess said. "Their
state patterns are not typical."
Severely disabled children may show symptoms such as over-reaction, seizures and the development of strange movements.
"There are a number of behaviors that wind around one another over time." Guess said.
Some of these behaviors include motor skills, language and cognitive development
Guess said that the behaviors of young children were related to their later development.
"It's a good indicator that something's potentially out of range," he said.
diagnosed before the project began.
Roberts said that the object of the research was not to diagnose disabilities. She said that the children were
The children will be observed for one- to three-hour time frames every four months for the duration of the project.
"We have to gather the information, but we're not sure we'll be able to follow all 25." Roberts said.
Guess said that the most difficult part would be maintaining contact with all 25 children over the next five years.
Guess said that the results could be used to intervene with children who exhibit potentially dangerous behaviors at an early age.
If a child exhibits signs of potential self-injuring behavior, he said, then intervention could help prevent the child from developing that behavior.
Disability signs
Exhibition of infant-like reflexes
Excessive fussiness
Over-reaction to stimuli
The following behaviors are possible signs of physical disabilities in children. Two KU faculty members are testing students with bullying three or more of these signs.
Over-reaction to stimuli
Abnormalities in motor tone
Seizures
- Difficulties feeding and sleeping
- Significant delay in developmental stages
Abnormal head righting, rolling, standing, etc.
Failure to maintain balance
Failure to maintain balance
Appearance of extraneous move
Appearance of extraneous movements
KANSAN
Zen master to give calligraphy exhibition
Buddhist priest lectures at KU
By Ashley Schultz Kansan staff writer
Keido Fukushima was 13 when his older sister died. His grandmother died when he was 14.
"In Buddhism, there is a teaching that if one person becomes a member of the clergy, then nine generations of that family, both living and dead, will be guaranteed entrance into a sort of heavenly-like world, which is called the Pure Land," Fukushima said.
"Therefore, I initially thought that in order to save or help the soul of my elder sister and my grandmother, I would become a Buddhist priest," he said.
Fukushima is also a Zen master at the Tofukuji training monastery. Zen training is intended to achieve a state of "mushimu," or a lack of self.
Fukushima, the head abat of the Rinzi Takufukuji sequest in Kyoto, Japan, oversees 370 temples throughout Japan. He lectured last night on Zen Buddhism at the central courtyard in the Spencer Museum of Art.
"The true Zen mind is that 'mushin,'" Fukushima said. "Because the mind is empty, it is able to freely absorb or take in anything. Because it is empty it is able to freely respond to or adapt to any event or thing. In that sense, then, we can say that the empty mind is also a free mind, a fresh mind and a creative mind." Fukushima said.
"Koans" — mental stumbling
blocks or, riddles — are used for training. According to tradition, there are 1,700 koans. Including subquestions, the questions total 3,000, Fukushima said.
Two koans form the basis ofkoan training, the "mu" and the "sound of one hand clapping." Each has 100 sub-questions. A fundamental understanding of Zen can be obtained by training with these 200 questions, Fukushima said.
At the quickest pace, Fukushima said, completion of all 3,000questions would take about 10 years. Before becoming a Zen master, monks must complete all koans and about 10 years of after-monastery training.
Fukushima said he usually spent about six weeks of the year in the United States and two weeks in China. This is his sixth visit to the University of Kansas in as many years, and he said he planned to return everyyear.
A number of East Asian studies students have visited Fukushima in Kyoto over the years, said Cameron Hurst, director of the Center for East Asian Studies and professor of history. The visit was arranged jointly by the art museum and the center.
"All you have to do is take one look at him," Hurst said. "He's a very important and influential cleric in Japan, and yet he maintains a very calm sense about him. There is a certain humor about him."
Fukushima will give a talk on Zen and a calligraphy exhibition at noon today in the courtyard of the art museum. He will also attend a Zen sitting at 7:30 p.m.at the parlors in the Kansas Union.
KYOSHIKO
Jennie Zeiner/KANSAN
Taking a moment from his busy lecture schedule, Kelido Fukushima meditates in his hotel room. Fukushima, head abbot of a Zen sect in Japan, is visiting the University of Kansas this week and giving lectures in various classes.
Professor evaluations discussed
By Jamie Munn Kansan staff writer
KU's Senate Executive Committee continued its debate yesterday of faculty evaluations and academic misconduct — two topics that overlapped several times during their discussion.
"No one is supporting academic misconduct," said Bob Friauf, head of SenEx. "It's a little like defending motherhood."
Friauf suggested that the Kansas Board of Regents propose to the state Legislature an addition to the academic misconduct policy.
He said he would like to see a new provision that would make faculty immune from civil suits resulting from student accusations of unfair grading.
John Altevogt, SenEx member and graduate student, said he thought new businesses that sold research papers to students had increased academic misconduct.
But Steven McCabe, SenEx faculty member, said he thought increased pressures on students to excel had also contributed to the rise in misconduct.
McCabe said many students thought they would not have many job opportunities if they didn't graduate with a 4.0 grade point average.
And the grading throughout the semester directly affects the evaluations students give, said Marion Obrien, SenEx member.
Friauf said he was worried about recent suggestions by Regent John Hiebert that would give more weight to student's evaluations.
KU mandates that students' evaluations are used in the annual merit evaluation of each professor, Frirau said. But he was concerned with another of Hiebert's suggestions: that department chairs should be able to review the students' personal comments about their professors.
Friauf favored older evaluations where personal comments had been written on separate sheets of paper. The department chairs saw the numerical evaluations, but the personal comments had been delivered in a sealed envelope to the faculty member.
However, Wil Linkugel, SenEx member, said he used students' comments as a department head.
He said he had observed patterns over the years in student evaluations of certain faculty members. Then, he was able to recommend changes in the professor's teaching methods.
Cultural diversity forum to present journalists and focus on diversity in news and newsrooms
By Cheryl Cadue Kansan staff writer
Understanding and achieving cultural diversity in newsrooms across the nation will better inform readers, said Bill Hilliard, editor of the Portland, Ore., newspaper, the Oregonian.
"For too long, reporting has been done predominantly on white groups with little attention paid to the rest of the people who make up the population," said Hilliard, the first African-American president of the American Society of Newspaper Editors.
Hilliard will be one of the speakers at "Cultural Diversity and the News," a forum to be held tomorrow from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. in the Kansas Room at the Kansas Union.
Other speakers at the forum will be Bernard Shaw, an anchor for Cable News Network, and Caesar Andrews, executive editor for the Rockland Journal-News in West Nayack, N.Y. The forum also will include three KU School of Journalism graduates: DeNeen Brown, a reporter with the Washington Post, Phil Garcia, state editor with the Sacramento Bee, and Vernon Smith, assistant managing editor with the Dallas Morning News.
Susanne Shaw, KU journalism professor and organizer of the event, said the forum was intended to inform students about achieving diversity in the workplace and about career opportunities in journalism.
"This is an important program on diversity in the workplace," Susanne Shaw said. "The American
Society of Newspaper Editors had a goal that the work force in the newsroom would represent the country's population. We're not there, now and it's unlikely we'll be there by the year 2000."
Brown said that when she was graduated from KU in 1986 she expected to see more minorities in the newsroom.
She said news editors around the nation had recognized the need for cultural diversity in the newsroom because newspaper readers were of different races.
"For most papers, their demographics are changing rapidly." Brown said. "The Washington Post has created a team of reporters to cover Latino issues. It's an important population and in that population there are important stories to write about."
BLACK
HISTORY
MONTH
Dr. Ronald McNair, laser physicist, and his fellow crewmen executed the first runway landing of the space shuttle Challenger in February 1984. McNair's research in laser technology helped pioneer research in laser use for satellite-to-satellite communication.
In another first, McNair entertained the other four astronauts with his saxophone in their spare time, thus performing the first jazz concert in space.
McNair died in the Challenger
explosion on Jan. 28, 1986.
Source: What's a Face Productions
Upcoming events
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4
Thursday, February 10, 1994
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
1. a. 2000
b. 3000
c. 4000
POINT/COUNTERPOINT
Editors' Note: We felt that the best way to serve the KU community was to provide both sides of the divisible capital punishment debate.
Death penalty sanctions murder by fallible system
Today a bitter battle about the death penalty begins in the Kansas House of Representatives. A capital punishment bill was passed by the House Federal and State Affairs Committee Monday, and legislators will begin debating the bill on the House floor today. Legislators should reject this barbaric legislation.
No justice system is infallible, and ours certainly is imperfect. When a prisoner is found to be innocent, he can be freed and even compensated. But an innocent prisoner's death cannot be reversed. The brutal finality of this punishment makes the death penalty so loathsome. The mere possibility of executing one innocent individual should be a sufficient argument against the death penalty.
Although proponents of the death penalty assert that life imprisonment is too costly, this is untrue. The death penalty is three times more costly than imprisoning an individual for 40 years. Executing one inmate costs more than $2 million, much of it in court costs.
The cost of the death penalty may be overlooked if the penalty proved to be an effective deterrent. However, of the 21 states that have carried out the death penalty, none has found a notable decrease in murder rates. In fact, murder rates in Texas actually increased after the implementation of the death penalty.
The death penalty is neither cost-effective nor an effective deterrent. It is not a just punishment but an archaic form of revenge.
The death penalty is state-sanctioned murder. Allowing our justice system to determine who lives and who dies is a frightening proposition.
COLLEEN McCAIN OF THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Capital punishment bill answers calls for justice
Capital punishment is once again before the Kansas Legislature. Although the state as a whole supports the death penalty, several legislators oppose it. Unfortunately, the opponents are missing the most basic issue.
Critics point out that states with the death penalty generally have higher crime rates than states that do not. They assume that crime will increase as a result of capital punishment. But their thinking is flawed. States do not have high crime rates because of the death penalty; states have the death penalty because they have high crime rates. But crime rate is not the issue.
Opponents also argue that jailing someone for 40 years is cheaper than executing them. If this disputed statistic is actually true, why don't we cut costs and parole every murderer, rather than incarcerate them? Ridiculous. But cost is not the issue.
The most basic issue is justice,plain and simple.
Is justice served by giving a violent mass murderer room service at the taxpayers' expense? Is justice served by seeing Charles Manson come before a parole board every few years? Is justice served by giving Jeffrey Dahmer the same privileges and lifestyle as a thief or someone who didn't pay taxes?
The answer is an unequivocal no. With the most heinous crimes committed against society, juries should at least have the option of giving criminals a sentence appropriate to their offense. Fortunately, Kansas is not a violent state. But when those awful crimes do occur, we should be allowed to effectively deliver justice to the worst members of our society.
RICHARD BOYD OF THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
BEN GROVE, Editor
LISACOSMILLO, Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
BILL SKEET. Systems coordinator
Editors
JUSTIN GARBERG Business manager
JENNIFER BLOWEY Retail sales manager
Aest 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
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
Business Staff
Campus sales mgr ... Jason Eberly
Regional Sales mgr ... Troy Tiernaver
National & Coop sales mgr ... Robin King
Production mgr ... Laureth Guath
Production mgr ... Laureth Guath
Orconne ABtannatha Riehle
Montserrat director John Garton
Cleaning manager John Garton
Classified mgr Kelly Connealy
Tearaheats mgr Wing Chan
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the letter's signature, name address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of California at Berkeley should use a standard font.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
New death penalty legislation prompts memories of murder
Reacting to public outrage about Kansas' 160 homicides last year, the Kansas House of Representatives today will begin debate on a capital punishment bill. The bill would put the state back in the business of death.
The operative words in this case are reaction and death. When coupled with a powerful notion such as capital punishment, reactionary legislation seeks not deterrence, but revenge.
The ultimate question concerning this type of legislation remains: Should the state have among its many powers the ability to kill?
For the many survivors of murder victims, revenge is an admittedly tempting option. Unfortunately, I learned of this lurid business of death and revenge at a young age.
On Jan. 28, 1983, a man entered an Olathe duplex armed with a "longhandled hammer." Under cover of darkness, he unleashed a fury of violence against an unsuspecting family. When it was over, my friend, Paul, 15, lay critically wounded on the living room couch. His 12-year-old sister, Janelle, had been murdered. His 17-year-old sister, Kelly, was missing —
COLUMNIST
GREG
THONEN
The days following this tragedy were filled with anger and bewilderment.
presumed dead.
As Paul's condition stabilized, the search for Kelly ended when police found her body dumped in a frozen culvert next to a lake. Vindication became a rallying cry among friends. Had the death penalty been in place at that time, we would have called for it.
Because of a 1972 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that declared capital punishment unconstitutional, the likelihood of a death sentence for this perpetrator was nonexistent.
Today, Sen. Mark Parkinson, R-Olathe, is a leading proponent of a
limited death penalty for murder. It is undoubtedly experiences such as Paul's that have mobilized at least 45 lawmakers to support one of two bills that would reinstate capital punishment.
A 21-year-old Olathe man with a history of criminal and emotional problems was eventually arrested and convicted of the 1983 slayings. He was sentenced to life in prison with no possibility for parole.
Poring over the newspaper clips of this terrible crime evoked a tremendous number of memories and emotions. Only now can I begin to comprehend the senselessness of this crime. What deterrent could possibly exist for such a heinous act? What could the state have in its arsenal that would counteract such a vicious attack?
But to give the public a sense of hope by proposing the death penalty as a deterrent to murder is misguided
Gov. Joan Finney has promised to turn the other way when death penalty legislation crosses her desk this year. Without her signature, the bill would become law in spite of her opposition to capital punishment.
and shortsighted. The threat of capital punishment would have done little to deter the attack on Paul's family and will likely have little effect on crime in the future.
When considering the number of convictions now in question as the result of genetic testing, the fallibility of our justice system becomes apparent. Given the permanence of capital punishment, we can afford to be wrong even once? Perhaps U.S. District Judge Howard Sachs said it best: "We have no guarantee that the judicial system will always produce the right result." Clearly, a state armed with the death penalty would make us all vulnerable.
Eleven years has put considerable distance between me and this incident. Yet after all these years, the headlines are as harrowing as ever: "Girl dead, sister missing as brother clings to life."
The new legislative session should act rather than react. As I've said, this is an ugly business, this business of death.
ALTERNATIVES TO THE DEATH PENALTY
Greg Thonen is a Kansas City, Kan. senior in sociology and Journalism.
RENTAL CAR
MIAMI
RENTAL CAR
MIAMI
L.A.
HOOD UDK 1944
K-STATE
L.A.
HOOD UDK 1944
K-STATE
Neighbors predict Kansas weather
If you're like most KU students,not only do you receive approximately 2,700 parking tickets each semester,but you probably have trouble deciding how to dress for morning classes because of our "Crazy Kansas Weather." To explain this designation in more technical terms,the National Weather Service issued this statement: "The weather there. It's crazy." What it means is,Kansas residents think nothing of putting snow tires on the car and hamburgers on the grill in the same afternoon.
Several people like to flip on the Weather Channel to check out what the day has in store, but because of the amount of "Kenny G" being played in the background, they are forced to change it before all of their brain cells are destroyed. Personally, I think it's hard to beat those light-humored morning shows for weather.
WITTY HOST: Okay, thanks to Mrs. Erna Trussel of Caldwell, Idaho, for showing us how to prepare those delightful spinach and wheat germ waffles. Now, for a look at the nation's weather, let's check in with Melvin Throater. Good morning,
WEATHER GUY: Well, let me tell you, Jean, they're shaping up nicely! For instance, Wyoming is in the shape of a square, Oklahoma is in the shape of an overused frying pan and Indiana looks like a shoe for someone who was attacked by angry hornets. Also, Jean, allow me to lower my voice almost two full octaves here while I say that it may be hot in a few of these states today, and others will experience coldness, except in Iowa and Maine, where weather recently has been done away with because of a lack of citizen interest.
COLUMNIST
SCOTT
AGIN
Melvin! How are the states shaping up today?
WITTY HOST: I see! And how long
WEATHER GUY: Well, I don't know about that, Jean, but as you can see here on this satellite map, complete with Magellan's route to the New Land, we should be having a lot of enormous smiling sun faces or lightning bolts popping up right in the middle of the country, which could destroy tons of property. I mean, just look at the size of this sun face! It's bigger than Massachusetts!
can we expect these weather trends to continue. Melvin?
Actually, the best method of knowing what to wear is a fairly new way of forecasting that I have been using all year with great success. I'll pass it on to you here.
WHAT YOU'LL NEED
- an apartment complex
- an upstairs neighbor who has huge stereo speakers
stereo speakers *e clock
*a clock
The way this works is, you get into bed at night, which is the upstairs neighbor's cue to set his speakers in front of an open window and start playing some song with so much bass that it sounds like a herd of elephants
trying to bust out of a gigantic piece of Tupperware.
Now look at the clock. If it's 4 a.m. or later and your neighbor still has his window open, it's a pretty good bet that it's going to be pleasant outside when you have to get up two hours later. If your neighbor has his window closed, this probably means that it was so cold out that he had no choice but to close the window, set the stereo on "Repeat" and lower the volume to a more tolerable 670 decibels.
Generally, what you'll want to do in this case is exchange frank insights with your roommate about the virtues of neighbors while you stack so many pillows on your head that you look like a Seally Postepedic display.
Several times, my roommate and I have tried to call our neighbor and thank him for providing this service, but for some reason he must not hear the phone.
Scott Agn is a Topeka sophomore in journalism.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Kansan editorial board should get facts straight
Student Senate has received unfair treatment of late by the editorial board at the Kansan. Under the cheap guise of fiscal responsibility, this board has chosen to attack Senate.
Students at the University of Kansas have a responsibility to the community in which they live — namely Lawrence — and in a larger sense, Douglas County. Many students at the University just 'stop in' for four or five years and then move on to other places.
Regardless of the length of stay,
any students who rent apartments or hold jobs outside the University's borders are members of the Lawrence community. Senate, for the first time, has taken measures to insure a relationship between the city and the University—a relationship badly needed.
For years, Senate has financed programs such as Headquarters Inc. Rape Victim Support Service, Women's Transitional Care Service and to a lesser degree, Hilltop Child Development Center. These programs are for use by students as well as the community.
The task force is a necessary
Senate demonstrated a responsibility to AIDS awareness in the creation of the AIDS Task Force. That organization has been absorbed by the Center for Sexual Health Education at Watkins Memorial Health Center and now is charged with more than AIDS awareness.
Entertainment such as the Lied Center, University Theater and University Dance Company also are
paid for in part by Senate. Lawrence does its share by allowing the Department of Student Housing free access to the Lawrence Fire Department. The relationship between city and University can be seen in the big green buses that travel around town, paid for mostly by students and used mostly by students who do not live on campus.
organization. People must have access to information about a disease that strikes one in 10 in this community.
If the editorial board at the Kanson spent more time researching instead of making blanket statements with little information, it may learn a thing or two. The evil monster of Senate is far more misunderstood than ferocious. If the Kanson felt any journalistic responsibility to this campus, it would start by informing students, not just complaining.
Ami Hizer
Lawrence sophomore
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, February 10. 1994
5
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Writing in opinion page is embarrassment to KU
The opinion page of your paper is a complete embarrassment to KU students and faculty. Columns or editorials that quote Winger lyrics or refer to people as "mean," "stupid" or "jerks" have no place outside a high-school paner.
Opinion pages are no place for the diaries or journals of your mostly sophomoric editorial-columnist staff (pun intended).
Had it ever occurred to you as to why The Kansas City Star puts Dave Barry on the entertainment pages and not as the lead column in the opinion pages?
Though I don't necessarily agree with the columns of Jack Fisher or Greg Thonen, at least they give us something to ponder. We all couldn't care less about trips to Wal-Mart for cold medicine. Quit embarrassing KU and hire writers who realize they are out of high school.
Lenexajunior
Mark Crouse
Lenexa junior
KJHK program changes reflect the real world
I am writing in support of KJHK program director Jay Berkern. In the past week I have noticed three major news stories in Lawrence papers, including the University Daily Kansan, criticizing Jay of his move to "limit" the rotation of music at KJHK. At first, the KJHK music library contained 300 heavy-rotation discs, now Jay has cut that number to 150. This move was done in an attempt to make listeners more familiar with the music being played.
Everyone seems to be complaining that this limits the ability of the disc jockeys to "experiment" with their style and playlist. If KJHK is to be a laboratory, opponents say, then they should be able to play whatever music comes in.
I have been a DJ for three stations in the area and a program director for one, and I have never seen as much freedom as I do at KJHK. If KJHK is to be a laboratory, then it should be a model for the students of what they may find on the outside, a world where the program directors tell you what song to play and when, what to say and how to say it. KJHK should be a training ground for students to practice for a career in the field of radio, not a free-for-all of musical stupidity. If the DJs at KJHK think they have it bad now, just wait until they get into the real world.
Jay is confronted with another problem. His job is to ensure the KJHK has
and continues to have a strong listening audience. He is forced to compete with newly-founded cross-town rival KLZR for the "alternative" market.
Jay has made changes, some more controversial than others, that he feels are in the best interest of the station. For those of you who don't like it, both he and I are sorry. He will be program director for only three more months; give him the support he deserves. Jay has worked tirelessly for that station, and his intentions are the best.
KJHK has never been more of a mirror-image of the real world then it is right now. If trying to prepare your staff for the real world and a career in the radio field is a crime, then Jay Berberick is guilty. Unlike KJHK program directors of the past, at least Jay has the courage enough to make moves that seem controversial on the surface but are honest to the core.
Jay...you have my support and the support of the silent majority...good luck.
Scott Parks Lansing senior
KJHK should continue to stress music variety
I moved to Lawrence from the West Coast with the same trepidations most people have when going from a large urban area to a small town in the conservative Midwest. The first indication that my move could turn out for the best was when I tuned into 90.7 FM and discovered KJHK. The selections played during the "College Radio" segments convinced me that awareness of new (and vintage) alternative rock music in Lawrence was equal to that on the oh-so-hip coast. However, new station manager Jay Berberick has decided to cut in half the number of albums disc jockeys can use for their shows, meanwhile reducing the amount of time allotted to alternative rock.
In the Lawrence Journal-World of Friday, Jan. 28, Berberick states that "when our rotation was larger, we were playing songs that some people may have never heard before" (it's got to be played somewhere first!) and that "by reducing the rotation of albums, listeners could be more familiar with the music." These are the premises behind Top 40 and "adult contemporary" stations, not college stations. Must Berberick be reminded that much of the most influential rock music from the late 70s to the present (from the Sex Pistols to Pearl Jam) were introduced to the world through the wonder of non-commercial radio? With a burgeoning, yet fragile, live alternative scene, Lawrence can hardly stand to have its
only radio source for innovative rock and roll go the way of 23rd Street.
David R. Benson, Jr.
Assistant Professor
Department of Chemistry
KU police column lacked accuracy, complete facts
Once again, your columnists refuse to check their facts. Scott Titrington's Feb. 4 column whining about the KU Police Department was misdirected and inaccurate.
First of all, revenue collected from police department tickets does not go to the University. It goes to the city of Lawrence. There goes Titrington's "financial bonanza."
Second, numerous visible police officers, especially in patrol cars, deter crime. This puts on a strong face for the University. How likely is someone to commit a crime if he just passed a squad car? We can't expect all of the officers on foot patrol to hold our hands as we walk home, as Titrington suggests. That's not the least bit logical or efficient. Rather, they can get to a crime scene much faster if they're in their cars.
Where is the base to Titrington's argument besides the fact that he's moping about a ticket? Also, if he knows where the officers are staking out Naismith, why doesn't he know enough not to speed in those places? I think we should be mature enough to realize that the KU police just enforces the laws for the good of all. It's part of being in a civilized society.
Michele A. Kumm Leawood senior
Graduate Senate should focus on constituents
I welcome a separate Student Senate for graduate students. However, I am concerned whether it will be capable to represent those graduate students who badly need on-campus support.
Saying this, I expect the intended graduate senate to strongly emphasize the graduate interests and run to the help and defense of those who are disparate. I am sure if the independent Senate comes up with a stronger agenda, it will be able to grasp a wider amount of graduate-student support.
However, I would not recommend a separate Senate or forming another organization which would not have the potential of enforcing graduate issues on campus. I hope the graduate Senate becomes a more practical force for our defense rather than a source of political games.
Naqib Ullah
Lawrence graduate student
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Student Union Activities is looking for Coordinators and Committee Members for the 1994-95 school year. Coordinators/Committees: Feature Films, Fine Arts, Forums, Live Music, Public Relations, Special Events, Spectrum Films, and Recreation & Travel. Coordinator applications are available now in the SUA office and are due by 5 p.m., Monday, February 28.
Committee Member informational meetings will be held Tuesday, April 5, in the Southwest Lobby of the Burge Union at 7:30 p.m., and Wednesday, April 6, in the Frontier Room of the Burge Union at 7:30 p.m.. Applications for committee members will be available only at these informational meetings.
For more information call 864-3477.
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6
Thursday, February 10, 1994
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NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Israel and PLO resolve issues in peace accord
CAIRO, Egypt — Yasser Arafat and Shimon Peres, Israel's foreign minister, reached agreement yesterday on some critical security issues that have stalled the Israeli-PLO peace accord.
The Associated Press
Peres said he and the PLO chairman had settled "five or six of the most complicated issues" involved in turning over control of the occupied Gaza Strip and West Bank town of Jericho to the Palestinians.
But Peres added, "We didn't complete our work."
ceded to Palestinian control.
The two sides were haggling over control of the crossings from the autonomous Palestinian areas to Egypt and Jordan, security for Jewish settlers who remain in Gaza and how much land around Jericho would be
The final deal is to be negotiated between Arafat and Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin.
Among the issues left for Arafat and Rabin to decide was the size of the Jericho area, Peres said.
Peres and Arafat initialed a 21-page document, complete with maps, at a ceremony hosted by Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak at the end of three days of talks.
After the ceremony, Arafat and Peres each shook hands with Mubarak and then, in Middle Eastern fashion, kissed him on both cheeks.
As Arafat and Peres spoke in Cairo, members of the World Jewish Congress in Washington got word of the agreement from President Clinton.
"Another big milestone has been achieved today." Clinton said.
The negotiations since Monday have included at least seven sessions between Arafat and Peres. Neither has given details on the talks.
The Israel withdrawal will clear the way for limited Palestinian self-rule in the territories. It was to have begun Dec. 13 according to the PLO-Iraeli peace accord signed in Washington in September.
Negotiators have repeatedly said that any agreement reached in Cairo will almost certainly contain some sensitive problems to be settled later by Arafat and Rabin.
First all-race elections has de Klerk fighting for votes
Israeli and PLO officials both have said it could take at least two more weeks of negotiations to complete specifies.
The Associated Press
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa It was a sight never seen before a white South African president in tribal garb, brandishing a cowhide shield and wooden club as cameras clicked away.
The campaign appearance by President F.W. de Klerk would have been unthinkable in the heyday of apartheid, when whites ruled unchecked and made no pretensions about appeasing blacks.
That's all changed now, with the black majority — more than 75 percent of the population — preparing to vote for the first time in all-race elections April 26-28.
indicate the ANC, which spear-
headed opposition to white rule
for more than 80 years, could win
more than 60 percent of the vote.
The black vote will decide who leads the first post-parteid government, and observers believe most blacks support the African National Congress. Initial polls
A new constitution drafted by de Klerk's National Party government, the ANC and other groups gives substantial power to a majority party. So de Klerk and others are battling for black support in hopes of preventing an ANC majority.
That appears unlikely. Hatred of the National Party, which created apartheid, runs deep in black areas.
Such popularity convinces the ANC it only needs a strong turnout by black voters in order to win. But obstacles abound in a nation where blacks have never voted, are mostly illiterate and live in townships wracked by political violence.
Aristide asks for end to deportation policy
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The State Department, dismissing complaints by Haiti's deposed President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, defended on humanitarian grounds yesterday the policy of returning all Haitian boat people to their homeland.
Representative Mike McCurry said the Clinton administration found Aristide's demand for an end to the policy "mystifying" and "peculiar."
On Tuesday, Aristide expressed his "profound concern" over the policy because it requires the return to Haiti of people who are fleeing for their lives and who therefore are entitled to political asylum.
But McCurry said Aristide's proposal "amounts in effect to encouraging people to leave Haiti in a way that could only encourage deaths at sea."
President Bush decided to repatriate all Haitians in the spring of 1992 after tens of thousands had tried to flee during the preceding months.
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Thursday, February 10.1994
42
Democrats look to pare down health care plan
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON—Democrats began talking yesterday about scaling back benefits in President Clinton's health plan to eliminate the red ink found by the Congressional Budget Office. Some Republicans said the CBO wasn't tough enough on the White House proposal.
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., said Congress could lower costs of the Clinton plan in a number of ways, including raising the cigarette tax by $1 instead of 75 cents and limiting subsidies to businesses with 50 or fewer workers instead of 75.
Sen. John Chafee, R-R.I., argued it would be better to take a pay-as-you-go approach to health reform. His bill would phase in subsidies for lower-income families to buy insurance as the government squeezed $213 billion from Medicare and Medicaid through 2004.
CBO Director Robert D. Reischauer, whose report indicated the Clinton plan would increase the deficit by $74 billion through 2000 and a total of $126 billion through 2004, said the plan could be made to have no effect on the deficit.
Relschauer urged lawmakers to "design a health care plan that makes sense" without worrying about the federal budget.
NATO sets deadline for Serbs to leave Sarajevo
Another cease-fire begins in Bosnia
The Associated Press
BRUSSELS, Belgium — NATO allies tentatively agreed yesterday to set a deadline for Bosnian Serbs to lift their murderous siege of Sarajevo or face air raids, diploms said.
Bosnian Serbs earlier agreed to withdraw their heavy weaponry from around the Bosnian capital beginning at noon yesterday and put it under U.N. monitoring, said the U.N. commander in Bosnia, Gen. Sir Michael Rose.
It was unclear whether it was a tactical maneuver by Bosnian Serbs to avoid the threat of air strikes. Dozens of cease-fires have been agreed to and broken in the 22-month-old conflict.
Under the U.S.-French plan tentatively agreed on, Serbs will be told to remove within 10 days the more than 500 heavy guns that for nearly two years have been pounding Sarajevo. If they did not comply, NATO would carry out the strikes. The plan was reached after months of indecision by the alliance.
NATO was expected to ask U.N. chief Boutros Boutros-Ghali to decide when to begin the 10-day waiting period, according to diplomats.
The discussions at NATO headquarters come five days after a mortar attack on Sarajevo's central market killed 68 people and wounded about 200. The attack horrified the world and highlighted Western inability to take a forceful stance against the carnage.
"It is time to act," NATO Secretary-General Manfred Woerner said earlier as he entered alliance headquarters. He said there had been "enough words."
Any air strikes would be the first offensive military action by the alliance in its 44-year history.
Several cease-fires in the past have been ignored.
In Sarajevo, in addition to the Serbian agreement to withdraw its artillery, Bosnian Serbs and the Muslim-led government agreed yesterday to a cease-fire to begin today, said Rose, the U.N. commander in Bosnia.
The NATO meeting came in response to a request from U.N. Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali for authority to call air strikes against artillery around Sarajevo because of Saturday's mortar attack.
Bosnia's Muslim-led government charges the shell fired into a crowded marketplace was launched from the surrounding hills by Syrian gunners, who have relentlessly shelled the city for months. Bosnian Serb leaders deny the shell was theirs, alleging the Muslims did it to gain Western sympathy.
"All I can say is that this is a morbid, disgusting invention," Bosnian presidency representative Kemal Mufic, whose brother-in-law was killed in the marketplace massacre, said of the Serb allegation.
At a meeting Monday, the 12 European Union foreign ministers were again divided over the strikes and passed the issue along to the NATO alliance, bringing the United States and Canada into the debate.
State defends alternative to all-male school
The Associated Press
ROANOKE, Va. — The attorney general for Virginia yesterday defended a plan to keep Virginia Military Institute all-male by setting up a separate but similar program for women.
The Virginia Women's Institute for Leadership "is designed to create the goal of a female citizen-soldier in Virginia in the same way that Virginia produces male citizen-soldiers." James Gilmore told U.S. District Judge Jackson Kiser.
"It's a good opportunity for women." Gilmore said in a hearing that resulted from a 1990 Justice Department lawsuit.
financial support to a separate program for women.
Kiser ruled three years ago that VMI's unique educational environment would be ruined if women were brought on campus. The 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Richmond overturned his ruling but gave the state the option of giving equivalent
The program at Mary Baldwin College, a private women's school 30 miles from VMI's Lexington campus, would have the same goal of preparing students for leadership but without VMI's sometimes harsh 24-hour military atmosphere.
"The evidence will show that the innovative, holistic program envisioned for (Mary Baldwin) would be in far greater demand among the young women of Virginia than a mere mirror image replication of VMI." Gilmore said.
The Justice Department returned to court to argue that the Mary Baldwin alternative allows sexual discrimination to continue in a way the appeals court barred.
The program omits the essential components of the VMI's unique experience and bases the differences
Haugen likened the state's position now to its maintaining separate but supposedly equal public schools for African Americans, a practice found unconstitutional decades ago.
on gender stereotypes, said Justice Department attorney Gary Haugen. The Justice Department wants Kiser to force VMI to admit women.
VMI attorney Robert Patterson told Kiser that if he rejects the Mary Baldwin plan, all single-sex institutions will fall.
"On this little battlefield rests the future of single-sex education in America," Patterson said.
Last month, the Supreme Court ordered The Citadel, the nation's only other state-supported male-only college, to let Shannon Faulkner attend day classes while a federal judge in South Carolina decides whether to back the single-sex plan or to let her join the corps of cadets.
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NATION/WORLD
Teacher certification may change
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — The state Board of Education unveiled yesterday a proposed change in the way Kansas trains and certifies its elementary and secondary school teachers.
The proposal, 18 months in the drafting, changes the emphasis on teachers' qualifications from their college training to whether they can meet outcomes established for professional educators. It would require them to demonstrate their competence in the field for a year or two before being fully licensed.
It is intended to improve the quality of Kansas teachers and train them to meet outcomes, or goals for accomplishing their missions.
Under the state's quality performance accreditation process, adopted in 1989, the general outcomes goals are "application of effective school principles, collaborative work with each school's community to create a total learning environment, and effective professional development of all school personnel."
Institutions that train teachers would be accredited on the basis of how well they prepare them to meet the outcomes.
"The proposed redesign will move from an emphasis upon resources and curriculum activities (college courses) to include the assessment of outcomes demonstrated by program graduates in teaching and learning situations," said the draft.
Teacher education programs would be accredited, "not only on the basis of a resources and curriculum approach to achieve outcomes, but also on the assessment of graduates' ability to demonstrate outcomes as determined by objective and reliable assessments of them in applied educational settings," the draft said.
Kathleen White, a member of the state board from Prairie Village, described the proposal to the Senate Education Committee.
The 10 board members met with both the Senate and House Education Committees at the Statehouse, reviewing status of the quality performance accreditation program and outlining the proposed changes in teacher and teacher program certification.
The board got its first look at the proposed redesign of the professional preparation and licensing system for teachers as it concluded its two day monthly meeting in Topeka. It
will vote on the plan at its March meeting, after inviting comment and suggestions from teachers, educators, administrators and the public.
They would be given conditional licenses to teach, then be evaluated at between one and two years on the basis of demonstrating that they had met the outcomes.
WASHINGTON
THE NEWS in brief
Senate committee endorses nomination for state department
Strobe Talbot won a strong endorsement from a Senate panel yesterday to be deputy secretary of state despite questions about his support for Israel.
The Foreign Relations Committee voted 17-2 to recommend his nomination to the full Senate, with only Sens. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., and Hank Brown, R-Colo, opposing. The lawmakers also voted 10-9, along party lines, against an attempt by Republicans to hold up a full Senate vote on Talbott.
The committee gave tentative approval, by a 17-1 vote with Helms dissenting, to Sam Brown to be head of the U.S. delegation to the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe. However, the committee agreed to delay action on the nomination until Hank Brown could review it.
Sam Brown was a leader of the anti-war Vietnam Moratorium Committee during the Vietnam War. He went on to be Colorado state treasurer and head of ACTION, the agency that oversees the Peace Corns.
Other names approved and sent to the full Senate were former Rep. James Scheuer, D.N.Y., to be U.S. director of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development; Alice Dear to the new position of director of the African Development Bank, and career diplomats Wesley Egan Jr. as ambassador to Jordan, David Merrill to Bangladesh and Sandra Vogelgesang to Nepal.
The nomination of Talbott, currently the State Department's senior adviser on Russia, ran into controversy when several Jewish groups demanded President Clinton withdraw his name. They said Talbot's writings as a former Time magazine reporter showed an anti-israel bias.
WASHINGTON Firm denies shredding papers
The Rose law firm, where first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton was a partner, shredded documents last week relating to the Whitewater Development corporation, the Washington Times reported yesterday. The firm emphatically denied the report.
The paper cited an unidentified Rose employee as its source. President and Mrs. Clinton, along with James McDougal and his then-wife Susan, were partners in Whitewater, an Arkansas real estate venture.
In Little Rock, Ark, Ronald Clark, managing partner of the Rose firm, said the report of shredding Whitewater documents was "totally false. I am absolutely sure."
Wesley Pruden, the editor-in-chief of the Times, said the newspaper stands by its story, which he said was based on conversations with "direct and corrobating sources" at the law firm.
The Little Rock office of Special Counsel Robert B. Fiske Jr. said the report would become part of its investigation into Whitewater and related matters.
WASHINGTON Price of stamps may rise
The nation's largest mailers urged a 10.3 percent rise in postal rates yesterday, saying higher rates are inevitable, and they can accept an increase of that size if the pain is shared equally.
The across-the-board increase of 10.3 percent suggested by a coalition of usually competing groups would translate into a 32-cent first class stamp. That rate was raised from 25 to 29 cents in 1991.
The board of governors of the U.S. Postal Service is expected to begin the long and complex process of raising rates late this month or early in March, so higher rates could take effect by early 1995.
Postal officials had no immediate reaction to the mailers' proposal. However, Postmaster General Marvin Runyon has said a 10.3 percent rate hike is one of the possibilities being considered.
A 10.3 percent increase would provide the post office an additional $5 billion a year and should allow rates to remain unchanged for at least two years, said Sackler.
While the current 29-cent rate will be in place four years before a new increase occurs, traditionally the post office has operated on a three-year cycle of making a profit one year, breaking even the next and losing money the third year, then raising rates and starting the cycle again.
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Remembering the Holocaust
Six million Jews died at the hands of Hitler's Nazis during World War II.Today, many choose to deny an era some
By Cathleen Siechta
Kansan staff writer
cannot forget.
Most of Louis Frydman's family were among the victims.
Between 1933 and 1945, the German Nazis systematically killed two-thirds of Europe's Jewish population. More than 6 million Jews perished in gas chambers and crematoriums. Some were executed with machine-gun fire, and others died of diseases they contracted while living in squall conditions.
Frydman, an associate professor in the School of Social Welfare, was a nine-year-old Jew living in Poland when World War II began. During the Warsaw Ghetto uprisings in April 1943, Frydman and his brother, Abraham, were captured by Nazis and transported to Budzyn, a Nazi concentration camp in Poland.
Until his liberation in 1945, Frydman endured slave labor, death marches and imprisonment at seven or eight different concentration camps.
In 1946, Frydman and his brother came to the United States. It was then that they had their first encounter with ignorance of the Holocaust.
"I didn't go to school from when the war began to when it ended," Frydman said. "So I had to catch up. In order to get credit, I took an advanced German language class. My brother was with me in the class, and I remember the teacher saying, 'Well, what happened in Germany couldn't have been that bad, if two kids this young could have survived.'"
Today, that kind of ignorance still exists.
In an April 1993 Roper Poll conducted for the American Jewish Committee, 38 percent of adults and 62 percent of high-school students
mine same poll, approximately one-fifth of adults and high-school students said they thought it was possible that the attempted extermination of the Jews by the Nazis never happened.
interviewed could not correctly answer the question, "What does the term 'Holocaust' refer to?"
However, many still remember those who died in the Holocaust. One week after the Roper Poll's release, the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum opened in Washington. In its first two weeks of operation, it averaged 5,000 visitors a day.
Steven Spielberg addressed the Holocaust in his Golden Globe Award-winning film "Schindler's List," adapted from Thomas Kenealy's 1982 nonfiction novel. This 196-minute, black-and-white journey through the horrors of Hitler's "Final Solution" portrays one man's attempt to save 1,200 Jews from almost certain death.
Today, there are more than 6,000 descendants of the 1,200 "Schindler-juden," or Schindler's Jews, who survived because of his efforts.
Frydman said that Spielberg's efforts to publicize the Holocaust should be commended but that a reverse side to Schindler's heroes also became evident in watching the movie.
"It's embarrassing to some, I think, to publicize Schindler," Frydman said. "There is the myth that you couldn't have done anything to help the Jews and if anyone would have tried to lift a finger to help, they would have been killed on the spot. Schindler's story proves that, in fact, there is virtually no evidence that a German was ever punished for helping Jews."
Frydman also said that Schindler was an unlikely savior. Schindler was a known black-market dealer, a war profiteer, an adulterer and a heavy drinker. After the war, all of Schindler's business ventures failed, and he was ostracized by the Germans when he returned to Frankfurt, Germany.
However, Frydman said he thought that Schindler's story could heighten Holocaust awareness.
"You have to bring something like the Holocaust into the public under the cover of entertainment," he said. "The fact that someone could do what Schindler did and save the Jews under the Nazis' noses is something that makes people feel good. You can't have a movie that just shows the torture and killing.
"Overall, the movie still has a Hollywood ending. The content tended to lean toward romanticism. Things weren't as good as they were shown in the movie. Things were worse."
Randi Barocas, Wichita senior,
agreed.
"I don't think Hollywood could ever depict how horrible the Holocaust really was," said Barocas, who is Jewish. "They have no means. First of all, they don't have the resources. I mean, unless they have hundreds and thousands of corpses with body parts missing, they can't show how it was."
Frydman said he thought that Spielberg's efforts were better than some he had seen. He said he remembered how disgusted he had been when he first saw the sitcom "Hogan's Heroes," which is set in a World War II prison camp. He also criticized public televisions' attempt to chronicle the Holocaust.
See HOLOCAUST, Page 10.
Blockbuster movies like 'Schindler's List' can take months to get to smaller towns
By Cathleen Siechta Kansan staff writer
Lawrence is not one of those cities.
when a blockbuster movie is released, usually it premiere in the cities that celebrities call home. Cities of glamour, riches and fame.
to see the hottest flicks.
Because of cinema politics, movies like Steven Spielberg's Golden-Globe-winning "Schindler's List" take longer to get to Lawrence and other smaller cities. And students may find themselves faced with a choice: Wait it out until Lawrence gets the new movies or make the hour-long haul into Kansas City
"Normally, it doesn't take any longer for films to get to Lawrence," said Kevin Leeseberg, theater manger at Dickinson Theaters, 2339 Iowa St., where "Schindler's List" opened Friday. "But some movie companies release certain movies on selected, limited and wide release."
Selected releases usually only show in large film cities, such as New York and Los Angeles, Leeseberg said. These cities are home to many movie critics who can make or break a film before it even opens to the public. If a movie does well as a selected release, it goes on to limited and wide releases.
"If a movie isn't going to make any money, the directors and producers aren't going to waste the money to release it any wider," Leesberg said. "If the movie is well-received, it generates talk, and that will generate money."
Leesebury said that "Schindler's List" was somewhat of an exception. Because the public and movie critics had anticipated the movie, its release dates were purposely spread out to generate even more publicity. This process can be an advantage to smaller theaters.
"It definitely promotes themovie."Leesebergsaid.
"I know that 'Schindler's List' has been playing at Parkway and sine Christmas Day, and South-Glen 12 has had it since mid-January, but that just fuels the fire for people waiting for it to come here."
Leesberg said he didn't think Lawrence theaters lost much business to theaters in Kansas City because moviegoers were patient enough to wait for films such as "Schindler's List" to get here.
"We may not have the big aquariums in the hall or plush seats like the other theaters, but we have digital sound," he said. "And we'll have the movie."
review
'I'll Do Anything' often does nothing
Hey, Sludge, I've got a little tidbit of trivia for you.
"Oh, yeah? Well, I'm a trivial kinda guy."
Right. The movie we saw this week, "I'll Do Anything," was originally shot as a musical, complete with songs and choreography, before it bombed in front of test audiences.
"Really? Hmmm... for some reason I can't see Nick Nolte singing and dancing around."
"First of all, he sounds like he starts off every morning with a bowl of food for breakfast."
Why not?
That's true, his gravely voice probably wouldn't sound too melodious in a song. I think that writer-director James L. Brookes ("Broadcast News," "Terms of Endearment") made the right decision by taking out the musical numbers. He reshot and rewrote a few scenes as a result, but ultimately you can tell that something is missing.
Matt & SLUDGE
AT THE MOVIES
Matt Hobbs (Nick Nolte) is an out-of-work actor who not only is struggling to find a job but also to raise his precocious and obnoxious 6-year-old daughter, Jeannie (Whittni Wright).
"She was a snot-nosed brat for most of the movie. I just wanted to pick her up and punt her."
In a parallel storyline, Albert
Brooks, who has turned neuroses into a career, plays an upright commercial-films director who lives and dies for the results of test-screenings (kind of ironic, considering the course of production for "I'll Do Anything.")
"He bugs me, too. Why does he have to be such a whiner in everything he's in? And what's up with his brillo-pad head! Wonder if he uses it to clean out his bathtub?"
Good question, Sludge. "Til Do Anything" is definitely ambiguous. It sets out to be a smart, screwy slam on Hollywood and turns into a watery reflection of its intentions. The scenes are often awkward and jumpy — probably a result of the last-minute adjustments — but other problems are at work here. There's no dramatic core. It ends up being a series of occasionally humorous scenes that eventually runs out of steam and resolves itself.
Hang on, Sludge, don't go off halfcocked. What I'm trying to say is that "Till Do Anything" can be entertaining. It's simultaneously funny and cynical at times, a sort of the "Player"-Lite. There are a few good laughs, and it's fairly interesting, but it's almost lifeless: It just sits there.
"Dramatic core?! Matt, why
"Yeah, it wasn't that great. But it was warm and buttery, like the popcorn that stuck to bottom of my Nikes. I just wanted to reach out and pinch its cheeks and say, "Niiiiiiice Movie" — the way I talk to my dog."
don't you just get to the point and quit with the smooty critic stuff. Nobody cares about the 'dramat-ate core.'"
One more bit of trivia, Sludge. Did you know that Nick Nolte was "People Magazine's" "Sexiest Man Alive" in 1992?
"He still needs to comb his hair. Walt a sec. John Goodman got that title in '91, didn't he? Real reliable survey. Geez, who votes for that thing?"
Maybe you'll win it this year,
Sludge.
"Hey. I resent that. Matt, why don't we go see "Schindler's List" this time?"
All right, but we need to get mentally ready for this one.
theater
'Reluctant Dragon' charms grade-school students this week
By Anne Sutherland Special to the Kansan
"The dragon was awesome," Elspeth, a second grader at Broken Arrow Elementary, said hopping from one foot to the other as she waited to board the bus with her classmates.
"Yeah, yeah, my voice is all hoarse from yelling," another seven year old said between giggles.
Elspeth and her classmates along with the first, second, and third grade classes of all Lawrence and Douglas County schools visited Murphy Hall by the busload this week to see The Reluctant Dragon, the spring production of KU's Theatre for Young People.
The play has been fun for both the students who watch it and the ones who perform it on stage, Kevin Saari, Ann Arbor. Mich.. graduate student said.
"The audience response is so wonderful," Saari said.
Saari, who plays St. George the knight, said he found performing for a child audience to be rewarding because of the feedback he gets.
“It's sort of a tug-of-war between us and the audience, the more they give us the more we give back. The kids really hated me today. They kept booing my character.” Saari said as a smile spread across his face. His character engages in a fight with the dragon at the end of the
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
See DRAGON,Page 10.
FEBRUARY 10, 1994 PAGE 9
KU Life
ife
People and places at the University of Kansas.
calendar
NIGHTLIFE
Benchwarmers Sports Bar and Grill
1601 W. 23rd St.
Stone Culture, 9 tonight, $3
Truck Stop Love, 9 p.m. tomorrow, $3
Broken English, 9 p.m. Saturday, $3
The Squibcakes, 9 p.m. Thursday, $3
The Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire St.
Hawkwind, Zoom and Sleep, tonight, $8(18
and over).
The Crossing
Salty Iguanas with Lowlife, tomorrow, $4
Billy Goat and The Nixons, Saturday, $6
Billy Goat and The Urge, Sunday, $6
12th and Oread streets
Tim Cross Jazz Group, 8 tonight, free
Uncle Dirty Toes, 9 p.m. tomorrow, free
Holly Sault, 9 p.m. Saturday, free
Jazz Brunch, noon Sunday, free
Tom's Tuesday Thing, 7 p.m. Tuesday, free
TBA, 8 p.m. Wednesday, free
Tim Cross Jazz Group, 8 p.m. Thursday, free
Hockenbury's Tavern
Pet Petition, 9 tonight, $2
The Spamskiniers, 9 p.m. tomorrow, $2
Bartley, 9 p.m. Thursday, $2
803 Massachusetts St.
1016 Massachusetts St.
10.35 Massachusetts
The Kenyon 10:45 tonight $3
Mountain Clyde with Danger Bob, 10:15 p.m.
tomorrow. $3
Salty Iguanas Record Release Party, 10:15
p.m. Saturday, $4
Open Mic Night. 10 p.m., free
The Whichdoctors, 10:15 p.m. Thursday, $3
The Granada
1020 Massachusetts St.
"Whack!" 9 tonight, cover charge
Valentine's Special-Lee McBee and the Passions with Marquee Jordan sextet, 9 p.m. tomorrow, cover charge
K-State vs. KU Game, 8 p.m. Saturday, cover charge
Lawrence Symphony, 7 p.m. Sunday, cover charge
Mondo Disco with D.J. Ray, 9 p.m. Tuesday,
cover charge
KU vs. OSU Game ('80s Night afterward), 7 p.m. Wednesday, cover charge
"Whack!" 9 p.m. Thursday, cover charge
The Jazhaus
926 1/2 Massachusetts St.
Motherwell, 9:30 p.m. tomorrow, $3
Monterey Jack, 9:30 p.m. Saturday, $3
'70s Disc Party, 9:30 p.m. Thursday, $1
Liberty Hall
642 Massachusetts St.
Natural Ties Benefit, featuring:
Natural Ties Benefit, featuring:
Motherwell, Mountain Clyde, Turquoise Sol
and Soul Shaker
.
9:00 p.m., tomorrow, $6 at the door.
10
Thursday, February 10, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Jayhawk Bookstore
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HOLOCAUST: A time to remember
Continued from Page 9.
Frydman recalled that there had been virtually no efforts in the 1960s to publish literature pertaining to the Holocaust. Today, there are countless records, historical texts and nonfiction works about the Holocaust. Some authors even take expressing the truth about the devastation of the Jews as a personal challenge.
Brian Dalderph, lecturer of English, put the horrors of the Holocaust into verse in a book of poetry called "Shadowing Mengele: Holocaust Poems," which is now available at Mount Oread Book Shop in the Kansas Union; Terra Nova Books, 920 Massachusetts St.; and Adventure A Bookstore, 844 Massachusetts St.
Daldorph's book revolves around Josef Mengele, dubbed the "Angel of Death" for his war crimes in the Auschwitz death camp. Mengele, a physician, practiced medical perversions on concentration camp prisoners.
"My knowledge of the Holocaust through education and classes was very broad and general," Daldorph said. "We just have this figure of 6 million, and I think what I wanted to do with the book was to look at how individuals were affected by the Holocaust, both the victims and the perpetrators. Poetry can do that somewhat better than history books."
Daldorph said he had wanted to bring the Holocaust to a more personal level through his poetry.
Daldorph said he had written his
"You have to bring something like the Holocaust to the public under the cover of
entertainment."
Louis Frydman
Assistant professor of Social Welfare
poems over a two-year period in which he spent a lot of time researching the Holocaust. Daldorph said the research had led him to fear that the present-day ethnic divisions of Eastern Europe could end in a modern Holocaust.
Steven Spielberg said in "Newsweek" magazine that his urgency to make "Schindler's List" had been spurred by the "ethnic cleansing" in Bosnia.
Frydman agreed that a tragedy such as the Holocaust could happen again.
the Holocaust could happen again.
"I think that we have such a hard time dealing with the Holocaust because of its immensity and because the people who were murderers were so much like us," Frydman said. "The
brutal killers of the Holocaust; they weren't hoodlums. They were educated, ordinary men, and their actions were orchestrated and controlled."
"In five or 10 years there will be very few of us left," he said. "Imagine if Spielberg didn't have the survivors to work with. What would he have done?"
Time is running out, Frydman said, and there is still a long way to go in understanding the Holocaust. Liberated at 14, Frydman is one of the youngest Holocaust survivors.
Frydman said one way to insure that the Holocaust would be remembered was to educate young people about its history.
The only class available at the University about the Holocaust has been an English class on Holocaust literature. George Kern, a professor at Kansas State University and a friend of Frydman, has taught an elective course titled "The Holocaust: A Destruction of the European Jews" for more than six years. Frydman said that the K-State class always had had a steady enrollment and that such a course would help raise campus awareness.
"There's this whole myth that it isn't fair, that it's cruel to talk about the Holocaust," Frydman said. "That's just not true. So many people were killed, and it's important to talk about them, to identify them, to remember them."
DRAGON: 25-foot-long reptile delights kids
Continued from Page 9
play and the audience is encouraged to root for their favorite character.
The dragon, a refined poet and tea drinker, is played by six actors who are responsible for different parts of the costume. The dragon, which is approximately 25 feet in length moves through the teamwork of the actors.
Angela Snead, Buckner Mo. senior, who plays the tail of the dragon, said coordinating the dragon's movement took a lot of practice. "We came in the week before the spring semester and practiced from nine to five everyday just to get the dragon working," she said.
Coordinating the dragon required coordination by the individual actors as could be seen in the work of Trevin Gay, Gardner sophomore. Gay simultaneously walked on stilts, operated the dragon's hands and spoke the
lines of the dragon.
The success of "The Reluctant Dragon" could be seen in the faces of the children as they left the theater.
Paul Meier, director, described the dragon as purely theatrical. "We made no pretense of hiding that the dragon was a fantasy. We wanted the dragon to be big so we needed more people since there was lots to operate."
"Yes, we had a good time," Elspeth said as her friends bobbed their heads in agreement. "They shouldn't have fought though," one boy said with an earnest look on his face as they began to file back onto their bus.
The Reluctant Dragon "will be performed for the general public 7.pm. Saturday at Crafton-Preyer Theater in Murphy Hall. Tickets are $3.
"It's sort of a tug-of-war between us and the audience. The more they give us,the more we give back.The kids really hated me today."
Kevin Saari
Ann Arbor, Mich., graduate student
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SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, February 10, 1994
11
GUEST COLUMNIST
CHESLEY
DOHL
Woman's view is new addition to sports page
As a faithful sports reader, chances are you opened the paper today, glanced through the sports page and saw the Kansan had hired a female - God forbid - sports columnist. Your initial reaction probably went something like, "Man, this ultra-liberal Kansan has gone and put a woman on the sports page. What in the H-E-double hockey sticks does a woman know about sports!"
Contrary to popular belief, there are females who do in fact know about sports, participate in sports, enthusiastically watch ESPN by choice and even go to Kansas basketball games at Allen Field House for reasons other than checking out the guys.
Sure, I'll admit the "social" opportunities available through sports are a nice benefit. But, watching freshman guard Jacque Vaughn connect for a game winning three-point shot in the waning seconds of the Indiana game in overtime no less $^{-}$ was by far more thrilling than the tall, broad shoulder, dark hairied guy over to my left in seat 7, row B, in the student section, on the second tier of the field house.
Anyway, as I was saying, what a person knows about sports has little, if anything, to do with age or gender. It's more a matter of personal experience.
A true love for sports and the desire to compete are things that must be introduced during childhood and learned and developed through the years. Unless, of course, your name is Greg Ostergay or Scot Pollard, and you're turning 6-foot in grade school—then your calling in life seems pretty much inevitable. Otherwise, with the exception of a few seemingly "custom made" athletes, most people aren't simply born with athletic interest and ability.
As for me, my introduction into the wide world of sports began about 22 years ago.
Only hours after I came home from the hospital, I literally had a ball placed in my hands. Coming into the world at a good 22 inches with nice-sized hands and a firm grip, my two older brothers made sure my hands palmed anything but a doll.
Needless to say, growing up on a farm in Kansas with two older brothers to follow around, my free time revolved around sports of all varieties. However, I was fortunate, my brothers were not the only ones who contributed to my young and growing love for sports.
My mom taught tennis and swimming lessons, so my brothers and I became spring and summer fanatics of the courts and the pool. My dad, a college football and baseball player, taught us a new sport every time the weather changed. Football in the fall, hockey in the winter when the ponds froze, baseball in the summer and basketball in the spring.
In high school, I played basketball, volleyball, softball and ran track. So sports were a part of my life virtually 365 days a year. This dedication and enjoyment paid for two years of college education at Butler Junior College. But did I want to play forever? didn't think so. So after the hardest decision of my life thus far, I threw in the towel and came to Kansas to get a degree in journalism.
Reflecting back on 22 years of running, jumping, throwing, racing, sliding, shooting, laughing and learning, I believe sports and team play can teach a person all they need to know about life. It's all there: good work ethics, dedication, feelings of accomplishment, leadership, teamwork, the fierce desire to compete, the rush of winning and the grace in accepting loss.
As athletes at Kansas can attest, it's amazing how character building a single season can be: preseason conditioning, bad practices, and incredible practices. Those pats on the back from the coach, marathon sprints and ecstatic fans.
I imagine every athlete has a story to tell about their entry into sports and their desire to continue playing. This semester I'll relay some of those stories to you with the hope you can appreciate it as much as the athletes do.
Through the years I've come to appreciate how sports have contributed to my life and the person I become. It makes me wonder about a career as a sportswriter or broadcaster.
When you love something this much, it's too hard to let go.
...
Naismith Memorial Gardens
Lawrence Memorial Park Cemetery-Mauaoleum
The ground breaking ceremony for the the Naismith Memorial will be at 11:30 a.m. on Friday at the entrance of the Lawrence Memorial Park Cemetery- Mausoleum, 1517 E.15th St. James Naismith, who invented basketball, was the first coach at Kansas. Ironically, he has been the only coach at Kansas with a losing record.
AISMITH
M. JOHN HENDRICKSON
1924-2017
Naismith legacy to be celebrated at local cemetery
By Robyn Wherritt Special to the Kansan
The University of Kansas continues its rich tradition of basketball by honoring the legacy of James Naismith.
A groundbreaking ceremony for the Naismith Memorial will begin at 11:30 a.m. tomorrow at the Lawrence Memorial Park Cemetery-Mausoleum, 1517 E. 15th St.
Speakers and honored guests who are scheduled to appear include Jim Dodd, who is Naismith's grandson, and Bob Allen, the son of former Kansas coach F.C. "Phog" Allen.
Kansas coach Roy Williams, who often visits Naismith's grave, also is scheduled to speak.
Karnes spoke with fellow owners Richard Link and David Duffy. Soon, their dream began to grow. With financial assistance from the University and the Lawrence community, the memorial will include a garden, benches and ledgers that honor and commemorate not only Naismith's history, but all of Kansas basketball's former and current coaches as well as several distinguished former players.
"This memorial is a long-time dream for me," Karnes said. "It has been in the planning stages for five years. After 100 years of basketball, I believe it is long overdue."
The idea for the memorial began after three men purchased the cemetery in 1988. Frank Karnes, who is one of the owners and an avid Kansas sports fan, learned that Naishtm was buried in the cemetery. Karnes then decided he wanted to honor the "Father of Basketball."
ketball in 1891 in Springfield, Mass. Working as a physical education instructor at the School for Christian Workers, he was asked to develop a game that would occupy students' time between football and baseball seasons.
In 1898, Naimith brought the game to Lawrence, where it received some fine tuning. After starting with peach baskets as goals, basketball has evolved into today's fast-paced sport.
Naismith invented the game of bas
Naismith coached Kansas from 1898 to 1907 Ironically, his 55-60 career coaching record is the only losing record among all Kansas coaches.
Naismith preferred to be called the "Father of Basketball" rather than the first coach of basketball. He once told his successor and former student, Dr. F. C. "Phog" Allen, "You don't coach basketball, you just play it."
Karnes said the memorial was receiving an enormous amount of support from the basketball community. Naismith and Allen, and former Kansas players Adolph Rupp and Dean Smith all will be honored at the ceremony.
Rupp, who went on to coach at Kentucky where he finished with a 880-190 career record, will be represented tomorrow by his sister, Elizabeth Lawson.
Williams will attend on behalf of Smith, who cannot attend because of his coaching duties at North Carolina. The memorial will be dedicated on April30.
Practices, homework, substitute role keep freshman center Pollard busy
"I'm happy to see the life of Dr. James Naismith is going to be honored," Williams said. "I personally look forward to seeing it become a reality."
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
Every freshman must make changes in study habits and living arrangements in college.
But for Kansas freshman Scot Pollard, more homework is not the only thing on his mind.
"It seems like I'm always either studying or practicing," the 6-foot-11 center said. "It's tough. Time management is the toughest part."
The Kansas basketball team has only one day off from practice during the week. The team usually practices for three hours, but Pollard and other players arrive early to warm up.
After practice is finished, the studying begins for Pollard. However, he does not have to go to as many study halls now because of his 2.76 grade point average. The GPA may not seem like a great accomplishment, but with the class time that basketball players miss on the road during the season, it's not as easy as it looks.
In that regard, Pollard said that Kansas coach Roy Williams' program for freshmen was helpful.
"That's what Coach Williams does really well, dealing with the adjustments the freshmen have to make," he said. "You've got a required amount of tutoring hours and study hall hours. As you make the grades, then they don't make you go to study hall as much."
When Pollard made the move to Kansas from Kennendick, Wash., he knew that he would play. What he didn't know was that he
would be averaging almost as many minutes as junior center Greg Ostertag.
Kansas junior guard Calvin Rayford said the team did not lose anything with Pollard in the lineup in place of Ostertag.
"They're both good low-post players," Rayford said. "I can get them both the ball, and they know what to do with it."
Pollard is averaging 17.6 minutes a game.
He has averaged 6.8 points and 4.9 rebounds a game. Ostertag has started every game this season, but Pollard is usually the first player off the bench.
"I knew Greg Ostertag would be the person in my spot," Pollard said. "I knew I wouldn't be playing the power forward position very much because Richard was there."
Ostertag's stamina has been a continual problem this season, and Pollard said he knew about that during recruiting. But it wasn't the only reason he came to Kansas.
"Of course they mention that because they want you to know you have a chance to play," he said. "All kids coming into college want to know if they're going to step on the court."
"A lot of coaches, when they come into your house, they just tell you what you want to hear about basketball," he said. "Anything I asked Coach Williams, he may have told me things I didn't want to hear, but at least he was honest with me."
When Williams came to visit Pollard, he told Pollard about what his playing time would be. Pollard said he respected Williams because of his honesty.
Williams said he was happy with the progression Pollard had made.
"He has adjusted well to the college game," Williams said. "He's got the size we need, and we will use his quickness."
Even though Kansas is without a healthy senior forward Richard Scott, Ostertag said the Jayhawks had many weapons in the front court. Scott has a nagging shoulder injury that prevents him from playing as much as usual.
"It's not like we're coming in and always looking to the inside," Ostertag said. "But they worry about me, Richard and Scot."
Speaking of pressure, Pollard's mother, Marlyn, came to see her son play against Nebraska on Saturday. He said it didn't phase him.
Pollard knows about embarrassing moments. While Williams was watching him on a recruiting trip, Pollard missed two consecutive dunks in a state playoff game and then fell flat on his back.
"I never really get nervous when people I know are in the stands," he said. "When coaches came to visit in high school I never really thought about it. I knew that if I started thinking about it, I'd try and impress people and do something stupid."
Making adjustments has been Pollard's challenge thus far in his college career, but he said the biggest challenge was not on the court.
"You've got to become more mentally tough," he said. "People think it's just the physical adjustment, that you have to put on weight and that kind of thing. If you're not mentally tough enough to deal with it, you'll just break down and quit."
SMU
KANSAS
21
KANSAN FILE PHOTO
Kansas freshman center Scot Pollard makes a move to the basket against Southern Methodist University junior center Kwame Brown.
Missouri 82,Colorado 70
COLUMBIA, Mo. — Missouri senior guard Melvin Booker and freshman guard Kelly Thames cooled off a Colorado rally in the second half last night and led No. 15 Missouri, the Big Eight Conference leader, to an 82-70 victory.
Missouri, 17-2 overall and 8-0 in the conference, has won 12 straight at home. It was the 23rd straight loss in Columbia for Colorado, 10-10 and 2-6, which has lost 76 of 77 regular season conference road games. Missouri has not been 8-0 in the Big Eight since 1982.
SPORTS BRIEFS
Paul O'Liney hit back-to-back 3-pointers that gave the Tigers a seemingly comfortable 57-38 lead with almost 13 minutes left. But then Colorado junior guard Donnie Boyce's jumper triggered a Colorado run, and with 9:20 to play, Boyce cut the lead to 57-50 with another short jumper that stilled the crowd and got the full attention of the heavily favored Missouri players.
With 7:29 left, Booker canned a pair of free throws, then got the ball back a moment later and drilled a 3-pointer that restored Missouri's lead to 12, at 64-52.
Thames led the Tigers with 20 points. His three-point play gave Missouri a 69-56 lead with 5:05 to go.
Big Eight Basketball
Nebraska 76, Kansas State 68
MANHATTAN, Kan. — Nebraska sophomore forward Terrance Badgett tied a career high with 17 points, and Nebraska held Kansas State scoreless during the final three minutes to beat the Wildcats 76-68 yesterday in the Big Eight Conference.
Kansas State, 14-7 overall and 3-6 in the conference, held a 68-64 lead after K-State junior forward Deryl Cunningham hit a short jumper with 3:03 remaining.
But the Wildcats took four shots and turned the ball over twice in the final minutes of the game. Nebraska, 13-6 and 3-4, took the lead for good, 70-68, on a jumper by Nebraska sophomore guard Eric Strickland with 1:52 remaining.
The Cornhuskers trailed 48-41 at halftime but put together a 9-3 run to surge ahead 60-59 with 6:56 to play. Nebraska sophomore guard Jaron Boone scored seven points during the run.
Badgett nearly doubled his season average of 8.7 points per game.
Nebraska snapped a four game losing streak.
St. Louis 90, Iowa State 75
ST. LOUIS — St. Louis junior guard Scott Highmark scored 23 points and No. 17 St. Louis hit 123-pointers in a 90-75 victory against Iowa State on last night.
St. Louis, 19-1, has won five in a row, is 13-0 at home and has wrapped up a 14-0 non-conference schedule, its first unbeaten run ever. The Billikens had little trouble against Iowa State before a crowd of 16,453, fifth-largest in school history.
All five of the top crowds came this season as St. Louis has two more victories than in its previous two seasons. St. Louis led 9-8 before going on a 16-4 run midway through the first half. St. Louis junior guard H.Waldman had eight hits in the run and capped it with a 3-pointer, then a steal and lay-up to make it 25-12 with 6:08 to go.
St. Louis led by as many as 15 points in the first half on Highnams' 3-pointer with 4:08 left. A three-point play and a 3-pointer by junior guard Claggett in a span of 13 seconds put the Billkens up by 20 for the first time, 70-50, with 8:55 left.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
12
Thursday, February 10, 1994
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Harding files $20 million suit as skater saga continues
The Associated Press
PORTLAND, Ore. — Tonya Harding filed a $20 million lawsuit against the U.S. Olympic Committee yesterday, seeking to prevent the organization from blocking her participation in the Lillehammer Games.
The 16-page suit, filed in Clackamas County Circuit Court in the suburb of Oregon City, points out that Harding has complied with all rules and regulations of the U.S. Figure Skating Association.
Harding's attorney, Robert Weaver, said the suit sought punitive damages, a temporary restraining order and a preliminary injunction to stop the USOC's hearing on Feb. 15 in Norway. He expected a hearing on the order to be held today.
Asked if the lawsuit meant that Harding would not appear before the USOC panel, Weaver said: "We're going to exhaust this first and see where it goes."
Peter Alakay, an attorney retained by the USOC, said any comment
would have to come from the USOC.
Earlier yesterday, Harding's ex-husband Jeff Gillooily asked a court for permission to travel to Norway to testify before the USOC panel that was scheduled to meet Feb. 15 to determine whether Harding's role in the attack on Kerrigan violated Olympic ethics.
Gilooly also asked that the results of an FBI lie-detector test be disclosed to his attorney so they could be presented to the USOC's Games Administrative Board.
"He wants to cooperate with the USOC's fact-finding in an attempt mitigate the injury he and others have caused Nancy Kerrigan and her family." Gillooily's attorney, Ron Hoevet, said in his motion.
Hoevet said he would not make the lie-detector results public unless they were submitted to the USOC board.
Hoveet told the USOC that Gilleoly would testify as long as:
the Multnomah County district attorney did not object;
the USOC paid the travel expens-
the USOC paid Gilleilly's attorney fees of $200 per hour, and
es for Gillooly and his attorney;
Gillooly were to leave no earlier than Sunday and return as soon as practical after the hearing.
Hoevet said the USOC had yet to agree to the conditions.
In another development, ABC quoted sources close to the investigation as saying the FBI now believes that handwritten notes on at least one scrap of paper found in a restaurant trash bin were written by Harding.
The notes included the phone number of the Tony Kent Arena in MASSACHUSETTS, where Kerrigan practiced.
Gillooly has told authorities that he watched Harding write down the information on the Massachusetts arena as she talked to a skating writer from Pennsylvania. The writer also has said Harding called her to get the information. Gillooly said Harding wanted the information because the attack initially was to occur where Kerrigan trained.
You'll even have money left over to buy the flowers
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
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2907 W.6th 841-1688 (Across from Dillons)
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9
School Specialty Supply
NEW STORE LOCATION
Tower Plaza, Retail Center
2540 Iowa St. • Lawrence KS.
PHONE: 865-5071
No Wait!
749-4565
Balloons
Bouquets
Bears
Boxers
And other
earable gifts
Gifts for your Valentine!
Patches
Prairie
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811 Massachusetts
With a lifetime
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The jewelry specialists
Since
gurantee
Gold chains $17.00 a gram
9th & New Jersey 841-8244
Some styles on hand Orders 2 days Custom making 7 days
Valentine's Day (Feb. 14)—a good day to begin an important week and to show concern for your sweetheart and yourself. Everyday—abstinence is the surest way to prevent STDs (including HIV) and pregnancy. But if you decide to have intercourse—use a latex condom and nonoxynol-9 spermicide every time. Communication can help to reduce the incidence of STDs and unplanned pregnancy. And remember that alcohol and other drug use is strongly associated with failure to use preventive measures.
NOW, LTD
Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students
Use your condom sense! Condoms are available at Walkins Pharmacy—3 for $50.
"We Care For KU"
1907
SOLUTION TO CRIME OR A BIG MISTAKE?
THE DEATH
University of Florida Sociology Professor MICHEAL RADELET
PENALTY
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864-9500
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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11 ALDERSON AUDITORIUM KANSAS UNION
Presented by amnesty international KU group Partially sponsored by
STUDENT
SENATE
National Condom Week February 14-21
Kansas Room Kansas Union
Sponsored by the William Allen White Foundation and the William Allen White School of Journalism and Mass Communications
9:30 a.m. Friday, February 11
NATURALWAY
a conference on multiculturalism and the news media
natural fiber clothing natural body care products
"Cultural Diversity and the News"
THE HEALING SHINE
820-822 Mass St. 841-0100
TOBACCO EXPRESS
210JAW 25th Street Holiday Plaza 842-0100 (North of Food-Less)
students invited
Heading to the Bars?
Need a Pack of Smokes?
Camel/Marlboro
Pack $1.50 Carton $14.05
Copenhagen/Skoal
Only $2.00
Zig Zag Papers
99 cents
I
EAT FASHION AUTONATIVE THEATRE
presents
Directed by Delores Ringer Featuring Jan Chapman and Darrell Everson
presents Jesse and the Bandit Queen a play by David Freeman
The Wild, Wild West Just Got Wilder!
8 PM Feb. 10-12 and 2:30 PM Feb. 13 Hashinger Hall (1632 Engel Rd.)
General Admission $3
Classified Directory
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105 Personal
110 Business
Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
- Kansan Classified: 864-4358 -
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
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 and to federal discrimination. limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to such preference, limitation or discrimination.
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are open.
P
100s Announcements
10% OFF JA Yayhawk Spirit
on Fraternity & Sorority Jewelry
Thru end of February
935 Massachusetts
Advertise in the Kansan!
105 Personals
Looking for 16-year-old and younger and 70 + KU students. I'm interested in doing a story on the different outlooks of KU students, but haven't had any luck in finding them through regular means. If you or someone you know fit these groups, please place your information in Kansan, k4-810, and ask for Angelina Lopez.
110 Bus. Personals
Call Today!
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for AIRLINE TICKETS Don't Wait
We'llfind the lowest fares and best schedules.
On Campus Location
in the Kansas Union and 831 Massachusetts
Maupintour
749-0700
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, February 10, 1994
13
Unique Sterling Silver Jewelry
Hoops, Pendants & More!
For Guy's & Girls
929 Maa. Downwon
929 Maa. Downwon
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
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Friday 8am-6pm
Saturday 8am-10pm
Sunday 11am-12pm
KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services
SpringBreak1994
CANCUN from $439
SOUTH PADRE from $159 Other destinations available Lowest priceguaranteed.
Call 865-1352
120 Announcements
Guitarist looking for practice and/or band mate
Leave a message. 814-0466
HAVASU: America's New Spring Break Hot Spot
Lake Havasu, AZ, is throwing America's largest party!
Top-name Concerts, Comedians, and
Musicians the Lake Will Roar in '94! CALL 801-
800-HAVASU
Tax preparation: Short Form 15.1 Long Form 27
Tax preparation: evening & weekend calls. Available
from 8am to 6pm.
Unique Egg-base Culture fed 18 nursing pigs produced sudden strange behavioral change, sudden strange physical change especially immune system body temperature mechanism. All changes are made in the human indicated there's a promise of a glorious future. European scientists follow up. -
13th YEAR!
SPRING BREAK 94 StitHot!
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND
NORTH PADRE/MUSTANG ISLAND
T- L- O- R- D- A-
DAYTONA BEACH
PANAMA CITY BEACH
ORLANDO/WALT DISNEY WORLD
C- O- L- O- R- A- D- O-
SYEAMBOAT
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK
BRECKENRIDGE/KEYSTONE
N- E- V- A- D- A-
LAS VEGAS
S- O- U- T- H - C- A- R- O- L- I- N- Athe
RESERVATIONS AVAILABLE NOW
SAVE FURTHER TIME
LAND VIEW
S-O-U-T-H C-A-R-O-L-I-N-A
HILTON ISLAND
---
CALL TOLL FORE FOR FULL
DETAILS AND COLOR BROCHURE!
Call Joan at 865-5611
130 Entertainment
BENCHWARMERS
Thursday Stone Culture $.25 draws Friday Truck Stop
Thursday
Love
$2.00 teas
Saturday
Broken Inglish
2 for 1 wells
Friday, Feb. 18th
Freddy Jones Band
140 Lost & Found
FOUND: Lawrence HS ring, class of 91. Call 842-4444
200s Employment
男 女
205 Help Wanted
THREE EXPANSION
Part-time temporary and permanent openings
Flexible schedule for $491 to $101.
Positions need to be filled by 2/6/94. Please call
842-8331 for more info.
MAYDANSION
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 Counselers USA
420 Florence St. Palo Alto, CA 94301
Baby sitter needed for 3-month-old in our home.
Mon;1:45, 3:45 and/or Wed & Fri;8:45,
10:45, 10:45. No need to work all shifts. Pls call 833-395.
Aask for Nicola/Sandra. $2.50 per hour.
CAMP COUNSELLERS - 18 yr old educational camp near Kansas City sees counselors (WSI help) for residential summer program for children 14-16. June to August 8. Must be Sophomore or higher. $160 plus room and board. For details, send resume to Camp Counseling Services, 7095 W. 39th St., La Crosse, KS 69040.
**MC COUNSELLRS** wanted for private Michigan boys' girls' summer camp. Teach: swimming, canoeing, sailing, water skating, gymnastics, swimming, crafts, dramatics, or Riding. Also kitchen, maintenance, Salary $150 or more. MC/CWC/WGC 785 Maple, NDL, IL 60039, 700-464-2444
Case Manager, full-time, to provide case management services to severely emotionally disturbed children/adolescents/their families. BA and experience working with SED children/adolescents in educational settings to J Ancey Bert Nash CMIC, 336 MIssissippi, Lawrence, KS 66044. Ountil filled EOE
CLERK TYPIST I
CITY OF LAWRENCE
Part-time position, includes occasional evenings. HS Graduate or GED. Must have score of 40 WPM or better on typing test. $75 per hour. Complete HS curriculum and field, floor, City Hall, 6th and Massachusetts, Lawnry, 58044 by Tuesday, February 15, 1994. EOE M/F/D. Cottonwood in职, a service provider for adults with developmental disabilities is currently accepting residential division. All positions are evening and weekend hours, some may require sleep overs. College course work and related experience help determine eligibility. Distance District RECORD IS A MUST. Please apply at Cottonwood Inc. 280 31 W. EOE.
EARN CASH
ON THE SPOT
$15 Today $30 This week
By donating your life saving blood plasma
WALK-INS WELCOME!
WALK-INS WELCOME!
NABI Biomedical Center
816 W 24th 749-5750
Cruise line, entry level, onboard positions avail-
great benefits. Summer or year-round (813)
(813) 245-6000.
Delivers needed. D dos Mundo Bilingual Hispanic newspaper needs dependable people to distribute paper through Lawrence. Transportation necessary. Good call. Pay 10-8/1882-21747. East West Records is looking for a college rep in the Lawrence market. If you are an enthusiast and know alternative music, this might be for you. Call Caleb Foster, retail and radio, call Catpe I or Ian I2172-25980. Graduate Assistant position in the Office of Student Financial Aid beginning on or after March 1, 1994. Responsibilities: interview all applicants for the Kansas University Endowment Loan Program. Required: enrolment as a graduate student in the College of Arts and written and oral communication skills and ability. Call time: $641.66/month based on 5 assignment and 20 hours per week. Resume and three professional references to: Julie Cooper, Associate Director, SPA-KU. 50 Strong Hall, 0218-94. Complete attendance receipts available upon request. EEO/AA.
Looking for mature and college female to watch two boys ages 7-4 M-F 3:00 to 13:00 Call #8215
Save the Planet!
Be a Hero!
Make Money Too!
Learn how your group, club, fraternity, sorority, can profit from the Environmental Fundraiser. Planetcard will provide your group with an opportunity to raise up $1,000 and help save Planet Earth. Special cash bonus to the person who arranges the event. For more information call CPN at:
1-800-669-7678
Be a Credit to Planet Earth!
Nanies Wanted. Positions nationwide, summer or yr-ren, exp. not resg. great pay and benne.
Nap room aid needed for child care center. Mon.-
Tuesday. 12:3. Contact 842-3582.
Need person for general office work plus showing apartments. Afterternoes M3sf until summer the staff will be available on weekends or accounting and be enrolled at KU in at least 12 hrs with GPA of at least 2.0. Gall 841-6005 bounces
Party photographers needed for Spring and Fall semesters of 1944. Prior 35mm experience is preferred, but no more than one phone number. Fall 1993 applicants need to reapply, due to the fact that nobody was contacted. River City Market Restaurants, located lower level of the Riverfront Plaza Mall, has openings
night supervisors need for juxtailor firm. Sun 8-10noon Mon.-Thurs. 7-11pm or 5:39-9:39pm. Requirements: Grad student, leadership-training skills, experience in HR or y commitment. 7:00 hr./Call Noreen B4264 8:52
Tennis Jobs-Summer Children's Camps-Northeast-Men and women with good tennis background can who teach children to play tennis. Good salary, excellent training. write: Camp Vega, P.O. Box 1771, Duburay, MA 02332 (617) 934-8536. Men call or write: Camp Waino, 2255 Glades Rd, Suite 406, Boca Raton, FL 32431 (407) 994-5500. We will be on campus in the inland and Regionalist rooms.
Top private girls resident camp look for training. trainer, GIS/8/4/9/20-120. Excellent salary, RM/B/D/landy, travelallowance. Women call or write: Camp Vega for Girls, P.O. Box 1711, Dunbury, MA, MA2523 (617) 834-8338. We will be on 3/24, Regular Room at 1-4pm on 3/24, Regular Room.
Sax player wanted for working R&B variety band.
1+f=1 at 841-1555 or 841-9797.
-Front counter MWF lunch hours
SEAMSTRESS WANTED TO work for small alterations business. Flexible hours. 841-6531.
WORK STUDY POSITIONS AVAILABLE AT
THE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS. ABOVE MINIMUM WAGE, APPLY ONLY IF WORK STUDY QUALIFIED. RM35 OR MAKE CALL 864-1650.
225 Professional Services
-utility/clean up-weekends
-wait staff MWF or T/H-Daytime
only in person 9AM 6PM Daily
Work study positions available in community agencies. Apply only if work study qualified. Applications allowed in Student Senate office in Kansas Union. 864-3710 ask for Julie or Shanda.
-wait staff MWF or T/H-Daytime Apply in person 9AM-6PM Daily
10408EZ * 810, 1040 = 815 plus extra fee for other
travels. The price of 815 is $279. Will pick up and deliver. Call Brian a 265-2572.
German lessons for beginners and an advanced student. German from Germany. Lots of experience! Call Usale 789-6789.
Driver education offered through Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 yrs. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749.
English tutor! All English classes, profeeding,
English tutor! All English classes, BS Education,
Arthur 841-2313 evening
For a confidential, caring friend, call us.
We're here to listen and talk with you.
Birthright 843-1621. Free pregnancy test
For free consultation call
Rick Frydman, Attorney
823 Missouri 843-4023
J
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
Tel. (818) 326-4950; Fax. (818) 326-6988
STUDENTS
videos from UMS mode, or from your country in US mode, 25 included tape and mailing.
World-Wide Video Transfer, PO Box G, Ottawa,
Australia.
VD-1 green card Program Sponsored by 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, 2031 Stags Lake, Canoga Park, CA 91036.
TRAFEIC-DUIS
TRAFIC-DUI'S
Fake ID & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civilitats
The law offices of
Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey 16 East 13th 842-1133
MATH TUTOR. TEACHING EXPERIENCE,
MATH 1201, MATH 1451, MATH 1601,
MATH 1812. Leave a message.
VIDEO EDITING AND
PRODUCTION SERVICES
A/B roll video tape editing with edu. IL
content writer
His field production package.
Award winning screen writer.
PRIMAL SCREEN COMMUNICATIONS
BRAXTON B. COPLEY
235 Typing Services
719 Massachusetts 749-5333
Attorney at Law
General Practice
Traffic Tickets, Misdemeanors,
Landlord/Tenant
Personal Injury
1-der Women Word Processing. Former editor transforms scribbles into accurate pages, letter format
Looking for a good type?
*Papers, Applications, Spreadsheets, Charts
*Laser printing to WOW! my profs
*Grammar and spelling free
*18 years experience
call Jack at
Makin 'the Grade
Words by Chris Wrist Processing.
High quality papers and printing; spell check
Word processor.
word processing, applications, term papers, dis-
tributes, and research. In command, rush job
job availability, Masters; degrees 1-6.
Resumes
Resumes
• cover letters
• writing
• consultation
Linda Morton, CPRW
TRANSCRIPTIONS
1012 MASS 842-4619
SUITE 201-UPSTAIRS
A Member of
PAW
Professional Association of
PA RW Professional Association of Resume Writers
YES, your own EXPERIENCED,
PROFESSIONAL CAN DO secretary!
OF COURSE, laser printing, grammar and
Computerized music scores available too!
Could you ask for more?
Go ahead, ask. DESKTOP DOCUMENTS,
X
305 For Sale
300s Merchandise
1983 GT PANTRARE 19' 'BRIGHT RED T060ALUM
1983 MORF FORK SUNIT XC-LT4 DERAILERS
1983 MORF FORK SUNIT XC-LT4 DERAILERS + LEVERS TIGOA
CHOI TRESLS MAKE $75.0 D. CHRS 842-493
LEAVE MESSAGE MAKE $75.0 D. CHRS 842-493
BEER ON AT PAP? - K歌能 for sale $0.20 b.o.
Holds full or not! Compes with one empty key,
no more deposits, Save $$. Call John 841-8397,
leave message.
Clairmiet-$10, sax $17, T-bone $18, great cond.
Clairmiet-$16, great 2nd instrument for bass
138-1577 178
Brother portable Word Processor w/ theausar
disc for sale. $200 b.o. o.b. call 843-6697.
Build a new body! Four month membership to Boutique Bootie. Wear last year's price! Call 212-648-7300.
IBM Compat. Computer; Hard drive 3.5, v.IG
monitor, 286, 1 MGR RAM, all manuals, system 1.5
yrs, old over $1000 of software. Call 832-2823.
MACINTYRE Computer. Complete system include.
4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished,
very nice interested? Call 814-6255, 794-0455 or
814-6255.
For Sale Mac Classic II 480 with 40.5 MB + MIS
Card with 990MB, $900 Call-Bill 628
06/24 day, or 819-903-6990
4-amp bass with harmonica, Peaty JNJ 1970
watt amp. $200 each, $350 for both 749-1518
1998 Mazda RXV GXL, red, 46 K mi. power sunroof.
$10,000 call 785-1640
Wedding gowns. Scalloped waist line. Cathedral train. Lots of pearls. 913-468-5152
1898 Daihatsu 5 spd. one owner. No A/C $2000. Cah
841-9838 daytime.
340 Auto Sales
405 For Rent
400s Real Estate
1, 2 or 3 bedrooms or Mississippi. W/D,
$800/month. Free utilities. Call 841-667-867.
www.mississippi.edu
Available now, two bedroom at 813 Tennessee.
Basic residence, $450 plus utilities,
small kitchen, 2 bedrooms.
Available March 1. Two bedroom townhouse. 81-
bath, walk to campus. pool $435 per month. 841-
Available immediately. Remodeled one bedroom apartment to campus, water and heat are provided.
1 Bedroom Apt. available now! Call 841-1212.
3 BDRM LUXURY YOUNG HOME
3 bimonth town house, $p$ audacled cellery, all apbell 3 bimonth town house, $p$ audacled cellery, all apbell
Furnished room for rent with shared kitchens and
staircases from KU. Off street parking.
No pets. 841-5500
Leasing for June and August. New 4 bedroom, new master suite, gas fireplace fireside fans, cable-paid, 1900 sq ft and covered parking avail. Early sign-up special offered. For more information call Dai at 841-362-7522.
Hanover Place Apl. for rent Near Campus.
$975/MO Call 841-1312.
www.hanoverplace.com
3 Bedroom/ 2 full bath kit now available on bus route microwave & dishwasher $800.
$149.95 per month.
or rent 2 bedroom no pets, newly remodeled call 843-2033
Now renting for June and August, 1 & 3 bdrms,
kitchenware, microwave, dishwasher, ceiling,
shelving, and laundry for 494 amps for a
month.
Lorimar Townhomes
MORNING STAR
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
Rooms, apartments, and well kept, older homes available now. 841-STAR (7827)
VILLAGE SQUARE
*Close to campus*
*Spacious 2 bedroom*
*Laundry facility*
*Swimming Pool*
*Waterbed allowed*
9th & Avalon 842-3040
meadowbrook FALL '94
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. Call Kathy or Shana at Meadowbrook
15th & Crestline
Mon - Fri 8-5:30
Sat 10-4
Sun 1-4
Sorry no nets
One bedroom apt, sublease next to campus, off street parking. free rent for month of February-room number 806-1248 Room for in rent 4ibd 1/3 A/b duplex Dep req /utils.Call 865-5099
GINKGO TREE
SUNRISE
VILLAGE
660 Gateway Ct.
(Belind Sonic)
Now Leasing for Fall
Mon.-Fri. 10-12, 1-5
*Luxurious 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*
Spacecina 1 bedroom vp very close to campus
natalie.matliel atlanta Call 644-8123 Ask about Coldwater flat #4
Sub-lease three bedroom apt. $235 per month
Female female bachelor level. Female female
18th, 19th and 20th Econ. $240-$240.
MASTERCRAFT
Sublease large one bedroom lm bus route. Low utilities,欠费 paid, PET OK! Available ASAP.
Offers
Offer s Completely Furnished Studio,1,2,3,&4 bedroom apartments and townhomes
841-5255 : 7th & Florida
HANOVER 841-1212 : 14th & Mass
TANGLEWOOD
SUNDANCE
Hookups
We are now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature studio 1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. We also have 3 bedroom, 2 1/2 bath townhomes.
TANGLEWOOD
749-2415 : 10th & Arkansas
749-2415 T0th & Arkansas
BLAZE
Park25
*2Pools
CAMPUS PLACE
841-1429 : 1145 Louisiana
*Volleyball Court*
*On KU Bus Route with*
4 Stops on Property
* 2 Laundry Rooms
* Some Washer/Driver
ORCHARD CORNER
749-4226 : 15th & Kasold
Open Daily 9AM - 5PM
Call or stop by today.
2401 W. 25th, 9A3
842-1455
(sorry no pets)
842-4455
Trailridge Apartments
now leasing for summer and Fall
Studios, Apea., and Town Houses
KU Bison Place, Manahatchi,
Mackintosh, Caldwell
Call Today for more information
843-7333 2500w. 6th
MASTERCRAFT
Sublure available March 1. $894 a month. WTD, microwave, trash, DW, fridge, stove, fireplace. Cable paid. On golf course. Close to KU. Call 686-253-7600.
430 Roommate Wanted
1 Roommate, non-smoker for 3 bdm冠. $175 per month. Near campus. Warehouse/Driver/Clerk
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Female need to share 3 bdrm apt with W/D, $150 a.m. Stadium View Apt. Call 823-2868.
Roommate needed to share huge b2dm. 2 bath apartment. Water paid, share electric and gas. Lease ends in May. In quiet neighborhood, on day and night bus routes. $240/mo. @32-2026.
- By phone: 864-4358
Female roommate needed immediately on 1350 block of Vermont. Large bdm, hardwood floors.
Male/Menale roommate needed immediately to
share two bedrooms. apt $175.0 + wk. Walk to
room.
Now to schedule an ad:
ROOMMATE MEDIDATION to share two bedroom house $178/mo. + /u/titiles Call Dave 8643-3509 or
Have your own room, covered parking, private
garage, or a bedroom (for only 480
*170 mm* + area, call 789-256-3241)
One female roommate wanted for a 3 bdm ac.
$20/mo + /uil)tilize to campus 845-514.
Roommate Wanted M/F'M/36d townhouse, W/D,
Fireplace, dishwasher, 766-0992.
house with 2 grad students. Own room and
bath to campus $233/mon + us$1.80. $213/mon
Roommate Wanted. 3 bedroom apartment, very nice. On bus route. Feb. free. Call 865-8291.
Commute to share bdip clermps, fenced yard,
Cali. Call Jack 823-1204 /5 utilities. Feb.paid.
Pets. Cali Call 823-1204
Ad phone in mail may be received by your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made. ■
4818张电话卡
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2.05 1.55 1.05 .85 .75 .50
1.90 1.15 1.00 .70 .65 .45
1.85 1.05 .75 .65 .60 .40
1.75 .00 .75 .60 .65 .35
148 lab & found
202 help wanted
205 help wanted
223 professional services
229 telephone services
300 miscellaneous
292 telephone services
106 personal
118 business personnel
129 annuoscomenta
138 anteriorsimme
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wanted
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THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1994 FarWorks, Inc./Dell by Universal Press Syndicate
2-10
"Well, as usual, there goes Princess Luwana — always the center of attention. ... You know, underneath that outer wrap, she's held together with duct tape."
14
Thursday, February 10, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WINONA RYDER
ETHAN HAWKE
BEN STILLER
movie poster trust
cereal food snacks
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RELATIONSHIPS
communication
hey that's my bike
Jobs
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buzz
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REALITY BITES
A COMEDY ABOUT LOVE IN THE '90s.
UNIVERSAL PICTURES PRESENTS A JERSEY FILMS PRODUCTION "REALITY BITES" JANEANE GAROFALO SWOOSIE KURTZ JOE DON BAKER JOHN MAHONEY MUSIC BY KARL WALLINGER MUSIC SUPERVISION BY KARYN RACHTMAN SUPERVISION PRODUCERS WILLIAM FINNEGAN AND SHELDON PINCHUK
EDITED BY LISA CHURGIN DIRECTOR OF EMMANUEL LUBEZKI EXECUTIVE PRODUCERS STAGEY SHER AND WM. BARCLAY MALCOLM WRITTEN BY HELEN CHILDRESS PRODUCED BY DANNY DEVITO AND MICHAEL SHAMBERG PHOTOGRAPHY
JERSEY FILMS
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FEATURING THE MUSIC OF LENNY KRAVITZ·THE JULIANA HATFIELD 3·U2·DINOSAUR JR.·WORLD PARTY AND OTHERS
OPENS FRIDAY AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU
1
Sports: Norwegian police prepare to protect athletes and spectators at the Lillehammer Olympics. Page 11.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.103,NO.99
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
KANSAS STATE
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA KS 66612
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
FRIDAY FEBRUARY 11, 1994
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
Graceland trip ends in tragedy
Road trip fatal for KU student
By Jamie Munn
Kansan staff writer
One KU student was killed and another was treated for serious injuries after their car crashed into a tractor trailer yesterday afternoon in Memphis, Tenn.
Jenna Robinson, Manhattan sophomore, died in the accident. Theresa Noonan, Derby sophomore, was admitted to the neuro-trauma unit of Methodist Central Hospital in Memphis.
Hospital officials said last night that Noonan's condition had been upgraded to stable.
Jean Garrett, Arkansas State Highway patrol operator, said a tractor trailer had stopped traffic on Highway 55. The accident occurred when
Jenna Robinson
Noonan tried to stop for the traffic.
The Chevrolet she was driving skidded on a patch of ice, spun out of control and hit the trailer from behind, Garrett said.
10
Roberta John-
son, Robinson's roommate, said that Robinson and Noonan had been in her residence hall room yesterday morning.
Unexpectedly, the two women pulled out a road map, she said. Within 20 minutes, Noonan and Robinson were ready to take a trip to Memphis, Tenn., to visit Graceland.
Johnson said she had been surprised that the two had planned to travel such a long distance.
"I thought they were just screwing around," Johnson said. "The last thing
she told me was,
"I'll be back for my Spanish test
at 7:30 a.m. on Friday."
Both Johnson and Christy Price, Landers-shire Plano, Texas, freshman and one of Robinson's good friends.
SHEPHERD MURRAY
Theresa Noonan
said that Robinson had been a dedicated student. She had a unique personality and marched to the beat of her own drum, they said.
One of Johnson's most vivid memories of Robinson was of her loyal support of Kansas State University. At the last Kansas K-State football game, Robinson wore purple velvet pants to show support for her hometown.
Robinson had everything going for her, Price said, and was determined to study medicine and become a doctor.
"She used to say, I didn't even make
good grades in high school," Price said. "But she worked so hard since she got here."
Johnson said people had lined up to hear Robinson explain her favorite subject, science.
She used models of molecules to explain to her friends the complicated ideas of organic chemistry, in which she was an A student, Johnson said.
Robinson also had an active social life.
"Once you got her away from her books, she was a blast," Johnson said.
Price said that Robinson had been an avid fan of "The Young and the Restless" soap opera and that recently she had decided to learn country western dancing.
Counseling services have been established for residents of Lewis Hall who lived on the same floor as Robinson. Funeral services are pending for this weekend or Monday, Johnson said.
Co-op explosion injures worker
Allen Hines of Carbondale is lowered onto the ladder of a fire truck from a grain elevator by Lawrence firefighters. Hines suffered a broken arm after a dust explosion at the Farmers Co-Op Association, 2121 Moodle Road.
Brian Vandervillet / KATHLEEN
By Stephen Martino
Kansan staff writer
A dust explosion at a Lawrence grain elevator stranded four men on its top for more than two hours yesterday afternoon.
Three of the men were not injured and refused treatment from Douglas County paramedics, but one man suffered a broken arm and had to be lowered to the ground in a secured body brace by Lawrence firefighters.
The explosion occurred around 2:15 p.m. at the Farmers Co-Op Association. 2121 Moodie Road.
David Dudley, a co-op employee from Lawrence, said the grain bins at the site were used to store wheat, milo, soy beans, oats and corn. He said that the grain, especially the wheat, milo and corn, had created a chaff and dust that could become exoslicious.
"You get that stuff in a confined space, and it goes off like a bomb," he said.
The co-op site has two tall concrete buildings, each containing many individual bins. The buildings are connected by a catwalk. Atop the larger building, which is east of the other, is a head house that contains pulleys and equipment to distribute the grain from the bottom of the elevator to the individual silos. There are 35 bins at the site.
Two of the men were working on the head house roof when the explosion occurred. The other two men were on top of the elevator building itself, which is about 35 feet lower than the too of the head house.
Duane Schiffbauer of Abilene said the explosion had sounded like a roar as it made its way up a elevator.
"Iheard her coming, so I ducked," he said. "I'm glad I did. It pretty much fried my coat."
Schifflauer sustained some minor burns, and his hair, beard and eyebrows were singed. Allen Hines of Carbondale, the other man on the head house, suffered the broken
arm.
Bill Stark, battalion chief for the Lawrence Fire Department, said the explosion had been caused when hot liquid metal or oil fell down into a cloud of dust while the men used a cutting torch.
The men standing on the lower part of the elevator, William Schiffbauer and Scott Ballantyne, both of Abilene, said the force of the explosion had knocked them down and had pushed them back.
Stark said the explosion, which blew out a door at the base of the elevator and all the windows from the head house, had caused at least $100,000 in damage and would interrupt service at the elevator for a couple of months.
Ballantyne said that had he not grabbed a spout anchored to the roof by two screws, he would have been thrown off the building, more than 100 feet down.
Co-op elevator accident
At the time of the accident, two men were on top of the head house — the building on top of the grain bins — using an acetylene cutting torch to remove a bearing from a grain elevator. Lawrence fire officials said the explosion might have been caused when a spark, hot metal or oil fell into the head house.
The head house’s six windows, three to a side, were blown out in the explosion. Some of the panes landed about 80 feet from the base.
Both of the structure’s garage-style doors were damaged severely in the explosion. The south door was blown completely away from the building and landed about 35 feet away.
Each of the structure’s 20 bins, which are sealed off from the head house, contain grain. The grain bins were not damaged in the explosion.
Grain-dust explosions
Grain dust can be extremely flammable if it reaches a high concentration in an enclosed space.
Source: Kansan research, Dennis Lane, N.T. Watt distinguished professor of civil engineering
Each of the structure's 20 bins, which are sealed off from the head house, contain grain. The grain bins were not damaged in the explosion.
100 feet
Grain-dust explosions
Grain dust can be extremely flammable if it reaches a high concentration in an enclosed space.
Joe Harder/KANSAN
O R E A D
F O R U M
The University Daily Kansan wants to know what you think about the Student Senate's financing of Day on the Hill, an annual, free spring music festival.
864-9040
THE ISSUES:
Student Union Activities provides the bulk of the funding for the event.
Recently, SUA submitted bills requesting first $5,000 and then $3,200 for stage equipment to the finance committee. The committee killed both bills.
Senate opponents of the bills have said that Senate is in debt and cannot afford the money request.
- Proponents of the bill have said that the request is reasonable and that the event is a popular one that thousands of students enjoy.
- Throughout the debate, SUA has made it clear that Day on the Hill will happen regardless of Senate funding, though the event may be "downsized" If SUA does not find more money for the event.
HOW TO USE THE OREAD FORUM:
1) Call 864-9040 and wait for the tone at the end of the greeting.
2) Record a concise message (try to keep it less than two minutes).
Names are not required.
3) Hang up immediately when finished.
4) If you prefer, you may respond in a written or printed letter to the Kansan newsroom, 11.1 Stauffer Flint Hall. Clearly mark "Oread Forum" on the letter or envelope.
WHAT WE WILL DO:
1) The Kansan will share the responses to the Oread Forum next Friday. The Kansan reserves the right to use all, part or none of each recorded message and letter.
2) The Forum will stop taking responses at 6 p.m. Wednesday.
By Heather Moore
Kansan staff writer
SUA's Day-on-the-Hill bill lost another bout with Student Senate at the finance committee meeting Wednesday.
The committee voted 13-8 in favor of the bill, but that was short of the two-thirds passing vote required.
Paul Wolters, engineering senator and sponsor of the bill, said he was surprised that the bill didn't pass.
"It's amazing that they won't fund the most successful event at KU," he said. "We're the oldest organization on campus. Other members that are so concerned about fiscal responsibility leave before the meeting is over. I was distressed that the committee wasn't fulfilling its role."
Wolters said that Day on the Hill would be downsized.
"In the past we've had some highbrow talent," he said. "Now, I'm not sure whether we can get that type of talent."
Shanda Vangas, holdover senator, said Senate should realize that it was the students' money that was spent.
"We're here to allocate funds to things that students want money spent for," she said.
Trevor Thompson, engineering senator, said that Day on the Hill should be supported because a lot of students went to the event.
"It's an event that students look forward to," he said. "It's also good publicity for Student Senate to have our banner splashed across the stage."
Katie Obdyke, Shawnee Mission senior, said that Day on the Hill should be financed by Senate.
"Day on the Hill is something that everyone enjoys," she said. "It is not just targeted for one group."
Krystyn Zetmeir, Overland Park freshman, said that she also wanted Senate to finance the bill.
"I it's crazy that they didn't fund it," she said. "It's not just something for Lawrence to enjoy. It's a huge show that brings money in."
Travis Harrod, Student Senate Executive Committee chair, said that some members were pushing their own interests.
"They aren't to be discussing the merits of these bills," he said. "I will definitely be discussing this at StuFx."
Brian Poeschel, finance committee member, said that he objected to the bill for financial reasons.
"We increased the budget for this year, and we spent it all," he said. "We are over budget $20,000 at the moment. SUA is asking us to support this so that they will stay above budget, while we are in the hole. This is a business, and we have to stick to the budget."
John Shoemaker, student body president, said the Senate was not in debt.
"Since ASK broke up, we had money roll back to us," he said. "$20,000 went into the unallocated fund, and $10,000 went into reserve."
Steve Campani, finance committee member, said that Senate could not favor the bill because of financial reasons.
"Student Senate has bailed out the SUA in the past," he said. "I'm sorry you've had problems, but it's not our fault. We don't have extra money right now. I'm annoyed and upset that it's been killed and came back."
INSIDE
BETTY MAYER
A journalistic legacy.
William Allen White, editor of The Emporia Gazette, was one of the most influential journalists of the century. His legacy continues today as the School of Journalism celebrates William Allen White Day.
Page 7.
KU award recognizes CNN anchor
By Stephen Martino
Bernard Shaw has accumulated many awards during his professional career, but none, he says, carry the same responsibility and obligation that the William Allen White Citation does.
Kansanstaffwriter
And few would disagree that Shaw, who reported to the world from a hotel room in Baghdad, Iraq, the night the Allied-coalition forces started bombing and began Operation Desert Storm, has been anything less than a consumate journalist.
"It's not just another trinket in my collection," he said. "The principles that the man stood for must be carried out every day. I don't take my life or profession lightly."
Shaw will receive the citation and deliver his acceptance remarks at 1:30 p.m. today at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
The citation, awarded by the William Allen White Foundation, recognizes journalists who uphold the standards of White, a 1923 Pulitzer Prize winner
and former editor of The Emporia Gazette.
the tenets that attracted Shaw to journalism, he said, are still the same and always should endure to guarantee the quality of the profession.
"Basic journalism has not changed," he said. "We still have to be right, fair, balanced and accurate."
Yet, the very thing that allowed Shaw to report from Baghdad — improved technology — was the greatest change he said he had witnessed in his 30 years in journalism.
"When I began working for CBS News in 1971, we were using film," he said. "Now we have satellites that can bounce information instantaneously from any part of this planet. It's revolutionized news coverage."
Shaw, a Cable News Network anchor for "Inside Politics" and "PrimeNews," has been at the center of the international and national spotlight. His reports from Baghdad were seen by a billion television viewers, and his nonsense question to Michael Dukakis about the death penalty during a 1988
Shaw, who moderated the debate, said he had spent two days working on the wording of the question.
Dukakis, a known opponent of capital punishment, was asked by Shaw if he would change his view if his wife was raped and murdered. Dukakis responded stociously about his opposition to the death penalty. It was seen as a pivotal point in the election, which Dukakis lost.
presidential debate caught the candidate off-balanced and searching for an answer.
"I haven't had much time to reflect," he said. "This is a fast-paced business."
Shaw said he had not had much time to contemplate his role in Baghdad, for which he received criticism. He has not even seen the tapes of the coverage, he said, but he will soon for the autobiography he is writing for Random House.
"I was striking unnecessary words, so it struck to the basic heart of the campaign," he said. "Capital punishment was an issue during the campaign, so the question had to count, and it had to be relevant."
A. J. C.
Tom Leininger / KANSAN
Bernard Shaw, Cable News Network anchor for "Prime News" and "Inside Politics," was named the 44th William Allen White Award winner.
2
Friday. February 11, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Fint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045
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NEW STORE LOCATION
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2540 Iowa St. • Lawrence KS.
PHONE: 865-5071
ON CAMPUS
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today at Dawnton Chapel.
The Women's Student Union will meet 5.p.m. today at Alcove D in the Kansas Union. For more information, call 864-7337.
KU Fencing Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Jen Snyder at 841-6445.
KU Baha'i Club will sponsor a speech, "Elimination of Prejudice," by Jeff Adler at 7:30 tonight at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Mehdi Khoshi at 841-7585.
Applications for Mortar Board Senior Honor Society are due by 5 p.m. today at 133 Strong Hall. For more information, call Paul Bajaj at 841-9174.
The Chinese Student Association, Chinese Student and Scholar Friendship Association and the Hong Kong and Macau Student Association will celebrate the Chinese New Year, "The Year of the Dog," at 4 p.m. tomorrow at the Lied Center. For more information, call SUA at 864-SHOW, or the Lied Center at 864-ARTS.
will meet at 11 a.m. tomorrow at the Kansas Union. For more information, call John Whitney at 749-3855.
KU Gamers and Roleplayers
KU Ballroom Dance Club will meet at 3:45 p.m. Sunday at 405 Lindley Hall. For more information, call Sunita Yadar at 843-8271.
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
Call 864-4810 for the newsroom:
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HOW TO REACH US
— Ben Grove, Editor or Lisa Cosmillo, Managing Editor for News
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Come to the Kansan newsroom,
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■ 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 public meetings will be taken by telephone
Kansas City 813-694-5261
WEATHER
Kansan fax #--- 913-864-5261
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 58'/45'
Chicago: 33'/14'
Houston: 57'/29'
Miami: 82'/71'
Minneapolis: 29'/12'
Phoenix: 50'/22'
Salt Lake City: 37'/30'
Seattle: 43'/34'
LAWRENCE: 47'/24'
Wichita: 50'/24'
Tulsa: 52'/27'
TODAY
Sunny
Tomorrow | Sunday
Mostly cloudy, 40 percent chance of snow overnight
Partly cloudy
LW 24 LW 24
Source: Bruce Reeves, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
Partly cloudy
Sunny
High: 39'
Low: 21'
64-3300
High: 45 Low: 27'
KANSAN
A KU student was robbed Wednesday of a bus pass and a driver's license, valued together at $55, near Strong Hall, KU police reported.
A canvas satchel and its contents, valued at $480, were stolen between 1:30 p.m. and 2:30 p.m. Wednesday from the women's locker room in Robinson Center, KU police reported.
H
ON THE RECORD
CORRECTION
on Page 11 Wednesday. The retails will be from April 20 to April 23.
"Your Book Professionals"
"At the top of Naismith Hill"
The date of the Kansas Relays was incorrectly listed in an article
layhawk Bookstore
Graduation Announcements & Caps and Gowns
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Notice: Mrs. Creditor, Associate Dean of Admissions at KUMC will be here for advising Thursdays in March from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. For an appointment or more information call the office of Pre-Med 864-3667 or stop by 110 Strong Hall
ve.
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- Admission Requirements
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Including dental optometry and veterinary students
ATTENTION Pre-Med Students!
Informational meeting
Wednesday,February16,7:00pm Kansan Room--Kansas Union Representatives from the KU Medical School and KU advisors will discuss:
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday. February 11..1994
3
KU attracts few African-American GTAs
Brian Vandervliet / KANSAN
Sandra Barnes, left, graduate teaching assistant in chemistry, answers the questions of Gina Kim, Lenexa freshman. Barnes instructs students in the laboratory for ten hours every week. She said she enjoys helping out her students.
Teaching can be a rich experience
By Angelina Lopez Kansan staff writer
James Jackson said he appreciated his training as a graduate teaching assistant for the department of psychology at the University of Kansas.
"Being a GTA paid off a great deal," he said. "With the experience I gained through lecturing at KU, I am comfortable in front of my classes at Lehigh."
In 1992, Jackson was the first African American in the nation to graduate from a cognitive experimental psychology program. Now he is a research scientist at Lehigh University in Bethlehem, Pa.
Though the experience of being a GTA is a positive one for many students, some African-American GTAs feel underrepresented at the University. Some blame the low numbers on a lack of recruitment on the University's part, whereas others say they are due to African-American students' inability to afford graduate school.
"The school doesn't have the resources to go and seek out Black graduate students," Robinson said. "It all comes down to money."
Sammie Robinson, GTA in the School of Business, said there were so few African-American GTAs at the University because there were so few African-American graduate students. Greg Frost, assistant to the dean at the Office of Research, Graduate Studies and Public Service, said that only 138 of the University's 7,167 graduate students are African Americans.
She said that the University was gra
cious in doing what it could to help support students when they applied. However, he said, the administration did not actively recruit qualified African-American students.
Ernest Jenkins, assistant instructor in history, was a GTA for two years. He said that as an undergraduate student at Furman University in South Carolina, he was attracted to the University by the quality of its history program. Although the KU administration did not recruit him, he said,
when he applied, it offered him a College of Liberal Arts and Science Minority Graduate Teaching Assistant Fellowship.
Frost said the Minority GTA Fellowship was a $7,500 plus tuition award given every year for four years to a qualified minority student. The award is sponsored by the college and the student's department.
Kathleen McCluskey-Fawcett, associate dean of the college, said the fellowship had been set up to attract
"It also allows more graduate students to teach in the classroom and serve as role models for minority undergraduates," she said.
more minorities to KU's graduate schools.
Jenkins said that KU's location was another reason it did not attract African-American graduate students.
"The big name schools are located in the same areas of the country where Blacks tend to live," he said. "Harvard, Princeton, Yale — big names
Tomorrow
African-American undergraduates interested in going on to graduate or professional schools have an opportunity to have their questions answered and their fears addressed.
The Association of African-American Graduate Students will sponsor a symposium, "The Next Step," from 9 a.m. to noon tomorrow at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. It will be a round table discussion between graduate and professional school students, faculty and interested undergraduates. Clyde Mudeo, president and CEO of Full Employment Council in Kansas City, Mo., will speak about the impact and the need of post-baccalaureate education at 10:15 a.m.
"We hope to attract more African-American students to KU's graduate and professional schools," said Jonathan Allen, president of the association. "But our long-term goal is to be able to retain these students and graduate them."
KANSAN
with big resources — are going to snap them up."
Jocelyn Freeman, GTA in the department of human development and family life and a colleague of Lewis, said that if it were not for her affection toward her department, she wouldn't stay in Kansas.
Rhonda Lewis, GTA in the department of human development and family life, has lived in Kansas all her life, but she said that for many of her African-American friends, coming to Kansas had been a culture shock.
"Kansas is not seen as very attractive," she said.
"Kansas is cold and bland," she said.
"But my department is my home.
BLACK HISTORY MONTH
Other events
Milestones
Crispus Attucks was the first person to die in the 1770 Boston Massacre, the catalyst for the Revolutionary War. Years later, President John Adams said that the death of this African American marked the foundation of American independence.
Upcoming Events
**Tonight:** "2nd Friday," a networking event for students and faculty, sponsored by the Association of African-American Graduate Students. 8-p.m., The Granada Theater, 1020 Massachusetts St. Admission is free.
**Tomorrow:** "The Next Step," sponsored by the Association of African-American Graduate Students. Students will discuss issues concerning African-American students and opportunities for graduate schools at the University, 9 a.m.-noon, Pioneer Room, Burge Union. Admission is free.
Daily: "Soweto Blues: Life in a South African Township," a book exhibit at Watson Library.
Sunday: Kwanzaa celebration: Norma Norman, former associate director of the office of Minority Affairs, will speak on the principle of Unity (Ujmaja). 6:30-7:30 p.m., McColln Hall lobby. Admission is free.
**Monday:** Kwanzaa celebration; Dorothy Pennington, associate professor of African/African-American studies and communications studies, will speak on the principle of Collective Work and Responsibility (Ujima), 6:30 p.m., McColum Hall lobby. Refreshments served and admission is free.
Marijuana 'spirit of the times' in 1974
The Kansan-Tuesday, February 12, 1974
Twenty-nine adults and one juvenile were arrested in Lawrence about 4 a.m. today as a result of a drug raid by Atty. General Vern Miller and about 125 law enforcement officers.
KANSAN
By David Wilson Special to the Kansan
Shriver was not alone. That morning, 20 years ago tomorrow, 29 other people, 20 of whom were KU students, were arrested in the biggest drug raid in KU history.
In the quiet hours before daybreak on Feb. 12, 1974, Chuck Shriver lay sound asleep in his room at Jayhawk Towers. He was awakened by pounding on his door. A team of police officers burst into the room and arrested Shriver for aiding in the sale of marijuana.
For Shriver, it was a life-jarring event.
More than 100 law enforcement officers participated in the raid, which was orchestrated by then-Attorney General Vern Miller. The officers, armed with warrants, split into teams and rounded up students — everywhere from houses on Tennessee St. to rooms in Oliver Hall.
"That pretty much ruined that semester," he said.
Shriver remembered that he and his roommates, groggy and disoriented, sat on a couch
wearing nothing but underwear and handcuffs while officers barked at them.
"It was a bad deal," he said. "It was the middle of the night. We were there in bed, and they just came to the door and did their thing."
Shriver did not serve time in jail as a result of the arrest and was released from probation for good behavior.
"I had no record, and I'd only been 18 for four months," he said. "You find out pretty quick that you're an adult."
Shriver said that drugs, particularly marijuana, were part of the spirit of the times.
"Back in 1974, more people smoked pot than not," he said.
"I was just basically an 18-year-old kid. I suppose most of us were doing things we shouldn't have been, but he (Vern Miller) drumed us up. We were just students partying like everyone else, and we got the bad luck of the draw."
The bad luck began for Shriver and his roommates when the Kansas Bureau of Investigation undercover agent in charge of collecting information for the raid was posted across the ball.
Shriver said the agent had attempted to befriend him and his roommates.
"It was the buddy thing," he said. "You know, he'd make sure he bumped into us when we were dumping trash at the end of the hall."
Shriver and his roommates may have been content to regard the undercover agent as an over友 friendly student, but then-Douglas County attorney David Berkowitz was one of the few people who knew what the agent's true mission was.
And, unlike Shriver and his roommates, Berkowitz knew the reason police officers were
pounding on the door of room 105, Tower B in the early morning hours of Feb. 12, 1974.
Berkowitz said that from 1972 to 1976, there were many drug raids in Douglas County but that the one on Feb. 12, 1974, was the largest.
However, Rex Johnson, who was the Douglas County sheriff at the time, remembered the raid as uneventful.
"I don't recall breaking down any doors," he said. "There were no difficulties, really. The kids were pretty good.
"Some of them were real surprised. They wanted to know how we'd gotten the information."
Most of the students arrested in the raid did not serve time in jail, Berkowitz said.
"I would say most, but certainly not all, ended up on probation," he said.
Former Attorney General Vern Miller said the drug raid was, if nothing else, tiring.
"It was a long night," he said.
Miller said that raids like the one in 1974 did not happen today partly because of cost.
"Enforcement is a tremendous cost," he said. "I wonder if it isn't too much trouble for law enforcement."
But drug use is worse today than it was in 1974, Miller said.
Twenty years later, Shriver still remembers his brush with the law.
"Crime rates prove that," he said. "Any officer will tell you."
"It was definitely an experience," he said.
By Denise Nell
By Denise Nell Kansan staff writer
Rashed Haque said that Ramadan, a Muslim month of fasting, was easier to observe in the United States than at home.
Haque, a graduate student from Dhaka, Bangladesh, said that during the observance, Muslims abstained from eating and drinking from sunrise to sundown every day. At home in Dhaka, the days can last from 4 a.m. to 7 p.m., he said.
"You get used to it," he said. "Back home, the days are much longer. Here, it's easier."
Haque said the observance had begun in the time of the Muslim prophet Mohammed, who is considered the founder of the Islamic religion.
Mohammed, who lived from around A.D. 570 to 632, left his home in Mecca to escape religious hostility in 622. During his escape, Mohammed fasted when he traveled by day, and he ate at night, Haque said. This journey, known to Muslims as the Hegira, signifies the beginning of the Muslim calendar.
Mohammad Asalati, a junior from Kabul, Afghanistan, said Muslims fasted so they would be better able to
sympathize with the poor and hungry. Muslim children do not begin observing the fast until they are 14.
"When you see poor people hungry when you're hungry, you feel like they do, and you can help them in that way," he said. "We eat all the time, 11 months a year. It's to let our bodies rest inside. When you get used to it, it's not hard at all."
Asalati said the fast was broken at sunset when Muslim students gathered at the Mosque at 1300 Ohio St. They eat and pray together and listen while passages are read from the Koran, the Muslim's sacred book.
Ramadan will begin either today or tomorrow, Haque said. The Muslim calendar is determined by the phases of the moon, so there is no absolute day the observance will start. The observance will last for about 30 days, until Eid, which signifies the end of the fast, is celebrated.
Haque said that Muslims also were supposed to make an extra effort to avoid sin during the observance.
"You feel different after doing it. You get closer to God and closer to people who are hungry," he said. "You can correct yourself and get back on the right path."
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Friday, February 11, 1994
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Doctor should practice repay U.S. for education
The State Board of Healing Arts made a poor decision last week when it voted to postpone determining the status of Yolanda Huet-Vaughn's medical license.
There should be no question that Huet-Vaughn be allowed to practice medicine while she waits for the army to decide what course it may take in her case. Revoking her license would only waste the time and money put into her medical education, which could be used to provide the health care that is desperately needed by poverty-stricken Americans.
The only question remaining is how she should pay for the education she was given by the military, free of charge, and then refused to use in the Persian Gulf War.
Young doctors across the country still are paying off loans that got them through medical school. Others who have been trained through military programs are serving their time as medical personnel in the armed services. It is only fair that Huet-Vaughn be required to pay for the education that she agreed to use in service of the military and is allowing her to make a living as a doctor.
Since she refused to serve her country when it called upon her to fulfill her contract, the tax dollars used to make Huet-Vaughn a doctor should be put to use in community service. She should be required to offer free medical assistance to state programs to complete the contract she made when she signed her name on the dotted line.
DONELLA HEARNE FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Partial military policy in Bosnia unproductive
On Sunday, United Nations Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali sent a letter to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization requesting permission to start air strikes against the military targets around Sarajevo that are attacking civilian targets. Unfortunately, limited air strikes are not the answer to the problems in former Yugoslavia.
The United Nations either should commit to full military support or none at all.
The humanitarian purposes of air strikes are protecting U.N. peacekeepers, opening an air strip for humanitarian flights, and relieving Canadian troops that protect Muslim onclaves. The reasons for the air strikes are admirable. However, the strikes could result in NATO pilots being shot down and taken hostage or causing attacks on British, Canadian and other U.N. forces that are already on the ground serving in aid operations.
Boutros-Ghali's letter represents a further step in incrementalist military policies of the United Nations that also was used in Somalia. Incrementalism has serious weaknesses that should be realized. First, by slowly escalating our military purpose and presence in Bosnia, we are endangering our soldiers of attack. Second, the military commitment is limited to cover specific purposes. The limited military commitment can increase the chance of casualties to Western troops.
Our involvement in Yugoslavia is a tricky business. The conflicts are a continuation of cultural and ethnic strife that can't be completely resolved by the United Nations. Somalia and Vietnam have taught us that partial military involvement solves nothing.
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
Editors
Aasst Managing Editor ... Dan England
Assistant to the editor ... J.R. Clairborne
News ... Kristi Fogler, Katie Greenwald
... Todd Seifert
Editortal ... 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 & Coop sales mgr ...Robin King
Special Sections mgr ..Shelly McConnell
Production mgr ..Laura Guth
Gretchen Koonterloehlnch
Marketing director ..Shannon Reilly
Creative director ..John Carlton
Classified mgr ..Kelly Connelys
Teareases 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 Texas at Austin should use a standard font.
Guest teachers should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kauai reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kauai newsroom, 111 Stuaffer-Flint Hall.
Congressional term limits offer easy answers to big problem
Just when we thought we could take a break from the silliness, the issue of the 1990s — congressional term limits — rears its ugly head again.
Not content with their own right to vote for or against whomever they wish, the proponents of the measures want to take away your right to cast your vote freely. All across America, people are fed up with their representatives in Congress and intend to see to it that they all lose their jobs.
COLUMNIST
PAUL
HENRY
I'll admit that the idea of Bob Dole working at a Burger King somewhere holds a certain appeal for me. But if it happens, I'd like to see it come about as a result of a popular uprising against his wrong-headed policies, not through the elimination of his right to represent the people of Kansas in Congress.
Conservative columnist George F. Will now promotes the cause vigorously. He's a popular spokesperson for the term-limits crusade because he's the only one who doesn't talk as if he's set slightly askew on his mounts. The raison d'etre (reason for being) for the term-limits movement, according to Mr. Will and others, is
that the incumbent members of Congress are an elite class of patricians who have grown out of touch with the lunch box crowd back home and need to be replaced.
Fine, one might say; just vote against them. But no, this is impossible, according to term-limits proponents, because the incumbents have so many advantages that their underfunded, underpublicized rivals have no chance of winning no matter how hard they try or how many times they come back for more (this is the Buffalo Bills theory of politics).
This is a great argument. The only problem is that it's not true. Our Canadian friends proved that by de-electing nearly every member of the formerly-ruling Progressive Conservative party in their recent Parliamentary elections. They weren't forced to vote against their members of Parliament by some law, they just went ahead and did it.
People yearn for simple solutions to complex problems. Limiting terms of elected officials is a simple concept. But the sad reality is that, in many situations, the solution is invariably more complex than the problem.
Campaign finance reform is a way to make the race fairer for congressional challengers without forcing the voters to give up a representative with whom they may be satisfied. But it's complicated. It hasn't been worked out yet. Ross Perot can't put it on a flip chart. Factor in the average MTV attention span, and it's easy to see why this term-limits populism is spreading like wildfire.
There's another motive that many of these people have, one which Mr. Will and his conservative colleagues rarely mention. The American people consistently and overwhelmingly elect Democrats to represent them in
Congress. Republicans haven't controlled the House of Representatives since 1954. The GOP has not been successful in persuading the voters that their party should be given the responsibility of guiding the legislative branch, so they want to use this restriction to come in through the back door.
We live in a country with a serious aversion to elections. We consider it a good year if half of the eligible population votes. But an informed, activist population that educates itself about the candidates and votes in both the general election and the primaries would obviate the need for term limit proposals; incumbents would no longer have a free ride. That's the solution.
But alas, that's too difficult. It would require going beyond the sound bites and bumper stickers and into a serious discussion of the issues and candidates. Better just to vote *Yes* on a term limit initiative so we don't have to worry about it anymore.
Paul Henry is a Tacome, Wash., graduate student in journalism.
PERHAPS IF I JUST GO IN A LITTLE AT A TIME...
LAKE BOSNIA
Fenn 1994 - UPK.
Fraternity 'brother' finds a home
The phone rang last week, jolting me out of my late night doze. Who would be calling me at this hour?
COLUMNIST
Of course, it was Brian, my freshman brother from Colorado State University. He usually calls at this hour, and I figured he just wanted to chat. So I began to tell him to call back, needed my sleep. Only I couldn't because I started to yawn.
That's when he hit me with the news.
I sat there, dazed. I could tell my
He had pledged a fraternity — a new chapter of Delta Tau Delta.
That woke me up. Oh no, not my baby brother! My liberal, non-conformist and intelligent brother. He had just joined a conservative organization that forces its members to be just like everyone else and promotes smashing a beer can against a forehead as the cultural highlight of college.
At least that was my opinion of fraternity houses. Too many of my friends had pledged to a house their first year and struggled academically. And many of my girlfriends had sobbed on my shoulder after they had learned they were just another notch on the bedpost of a fraternity guy they were dating.
DAN ENGLAND
I felt betrayed and worried — even a little jealous. After all, I'm the only one Brian is supposed to call "brother."
Brian, his voice shaking, said, "Um, you're not mad are you?"
brother was nervously waiting on the other end for my reaction. And yet, I could say nothing. A vision of my brother wearing letters across his chest, calling a party a "function" and his fellow members "brothers" had stolen my words.
"I didn't have any place to belong to," he said. "You know that."
I sputtered out, "Well, no, I'm not. Just a little...confused, that's all. Why did you do it?"
That's true. Two weeks ago, I wrote about Brian missing his hometown friends, and how I really didn't any-
more. I still didn't know why he did and I didn't. Brian gave me a clue with his next line.
"You had marching band — instant friends. You got along with everyone in your residence hall — more friends. And you could always go home — comfort. I don't have any of that."
Of course, I recently had thought a lot about Brian. But because he was always so able to talk to people, more so than I ever was, I just assumed it would work out.
That's when it hit me. He said he would never miss our dog, and yet in his last few phone calls he talked about wanting a dog so bad. He talked about how he wished a dog could look into his eyes and just know something was wrong.
All the little things about home that we never think about until we leave were breaking his heart.
He said he wouldn't miss Mom or Dad, and yet he talked about wishing he had a home-cooked meal and someone to brag to in person about his grades.
I felt so guilty. I was caught up in my own life. I then asked if he was still depressed. I should have called more...
"No, no, I'm fine. I'm going to the house. Everyone is pretty cool there. I can talk to people there."
I found my heart swelling with relief. My baby brother was going to be OK
What? Was I actually relieved because he had joined a fraternity?
I've since changed my mind about fraternity houses. How many freshman like Brian who felt swallowed up by a big university have been uplifted by pledging a house? Probably more than I'll ever understand.
So if Brian does come home wearing letters, I guess I'll just groan and tease him on the outside. But inside, I'll be smiling.
I know the house will take care of him. I have accepted those members as his guardian while I'm away.
Just as long as I'm the only one he calls "brother."
Yes. He had found a place. Everyone needs a place where they can go. Where they feel like someone would care if they dropped off the world. It those places, and so I didn't miss it. I didn't realize how important it is.
Dan England is a Lenexa senior In Journalism.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
What is wrong with Dole's blunness? What is wrong with his honesty? Henry is right. Bob Dole pulls no punches. He lets people know exactly how he feels about them. One of the most detested things about politicians is how they often act like they are pleasing everyone by talking from both sides of their mouths (humm, sounds like someone living in the White House). Dole does not do this. His sternness and
Paul Henry's blind observations of Senator Dole are immature. His childish article was entertaining only because of its idiocy.
focused intensity may be hated by many liberals, but it should be respected. It is a shame Clinton's shady dealings with Whitewater were revealed so closely to the loss of the president's mother, but it would be irresponsible for Dole to blow this situation off. Bob Dole is not a cold hearted, mean person. Those who know him and have worked with him have found Dole to be incredibly hard working, friendly and hilarious. I guess Henry would rather have a handsome, politically correct, smooth-talking draft dodger in the office, but Bob Dole, like it or not, will be president in 1996.
One more thing, Henry. You made references to the television three
Dole's frank intensity respected by supporters
times in your article. Maybe if you could pull yourself off the couch, away from the TV and do some actual research, you would realize how great a man Bob Dole is. Your mellow dramatic [sic] "fear" for the senator's soul and ridiculous call for an apology is [sic] almost as lame as your entire writing style. Think before you write.
Ed Connealy Leawood junior
Council is exclusionary unreasonable in thinking
Perhaps Professors Srinivasan and Linkuel need to be reminded that faculty status has not always been a prerequisite for being granted permission to speak at University Council (UDK Feb. 3, p.l.: "Consensual relations conflicts discussed"). If that were the case, then a Regent, a member of the State Legislature, a member of Congress who expressed an interest in speaking to the body should not have been granted the privilege. Surely Council may accord speaking privileges to whomever it wishes. Things are getting totally out of control in the current governance: a task force recommendation is rewritten, a SenEx member is unilaterally replaced by SenEx, a presiding officer makes an improper exclusionary ruling. One can only wonder, what will be next?
Associate Professor of Classics
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, February 11. 1994
5
Partnership will increase bureaucracy, benefit few
I'm a second-semester freshman. I totally disagree with the tuition increase and the Partnership for Excellence plan. One of the reasons I came to KU was because its tuition is quite a bit lower than some of the other state schools, but also because it's an excellent school.
If we do have to have a tuition increase, let's use it for something useful, like more parking spots, or maybe hiring a new administration. I'm fed up with this administration. That's one thing we could use it on.
I don't think that the faculty deserve a pay raise. I don't see any of my professors in class; it's always GTAs that are doing the teaching. They (professors) don't do any work. So, why should they get a pay raise?
O R E A D
F O R U M
864-9040
I see spending cuts that we could make. There are some stupid, stupid organizations. Parts of this administration are just totally pointless, and
On Monday the Kansan asked for students' opinions about the Partnership for Excellence.
Following are the responses we received.
we're repaying these people to do these jobs. Let's cut some of those positions and the bureaucracy here at the University of Kansas.
Raising tuition not in the best interest of students
because I think a tuition raise would not be in the interest of students. Most people that I know — residents and non-residents — have a hard nought time trying to pay what they're being charged right now.
I think that the faculty salaries need to be raised, but I think the money needs to come from somewhere else
My opinion about the Partnership for Excellence is that it's wrong. Yes, they're probably going to raise tuition because they've raised it for the last five years, but there are other things that some of that money could go for, such as raising non-faculty members' (salaries). They have increased the ratio of TA's so high; they've increased the ratio of the bureaucratic system to where the number of faculty members is not going up, but they keep adding administrative duties.
If that is an area that needs to be cut back, I for one would be very unhappy to see tuition raised again.
Money for Partnership could be put to better use
LETTER
Drug problem can be solved by drug camps
Our government doesn't really want to stop the illegal drug trade. The drug trade is now so large and intertwined in our economy that its removal would send the nation into terminal shock.
I propose a special drug camp where additionally disadvantaged persons can get "three hots" a day and unlimited self medication. They won't need much more, not even bars or guards. Cheap, effective and certain.
As a side benefit, the drug trade would be ruined, profits would dry up and traffickers would stop their gradual takeover of legitimate business.
Because this program would virtually eliminate crime, gunshot wounds, robberies, car-jacking and related social problems, it would surely be popular.
Topekaresident
Needs of graduate students are good reason for graduate senate
A separate representative body for graduate students was established Jan. 19 by Student Senate. The measure's supporters mustered the necessary two-thirds majority by a comfortable margin, but it also produced a lot of grumbling by some senators and a negative, insulting editorial in the Kansan.
The editorial voiced sentiments that probably are shared by many undergraduates. Why do we need a graduate student government? Why does a group of students constituting only 30 percent of the total campus population deserve a separate voice? The editorial clided graduate students for failing to participate in the original Student Senate and suggested that we reflect upon our guilty and apathetic souls before creating our own government.
The basic argument here is that graduate students are just older and busier versions of undergraduates. This is not so. Graduate students have distinct problems and needs that are best addressed by a separate governing body. Above all, this new graduate senate must focus on building a sense
COLUMNIST
BRIAN
DIRCK
of community in a very fragmented graduate student population.
Undergraduates at the University have a variety of shared institutions and experiences that help create a sense of commonality. Many live in student housing and share the same physical spaces day after day. Core curriculum requirements throw together students with different backgrounds. A survey course in psychology, for example, is likely to include in one classroom students from all majors and walks of life. This is not to deny the heterogeneity that characterizes KU students. But opportunities do exist for undergraduate
uates to bridge their differences and build a community. That is what university life is supposed to be all about.
Graduate students, in contrast, are a motley bunch with few opportunities for getting to know each other or undergraduates. Amultitude of interests compete with the University for our attention. Many graduates are married. Mosthave worked for several years before coming back to school and are older than the average undergraduate. Nearly all graduate students live off-campus.
Graduate students do not even have shared academic interests. We have no core curriculum requirements, and therefore we do not share a classroom with students from other majors. In fact, many of us spend our entire careers at the University in only one or two buildings. Opportunities for interaction with the campus community as a whole—such as writing a column for the student newspaper—are precious because they are so rare.
Graduate students are pulled in several different directions at once. We did not ignore the Senate because of apathy. Heaven knows, we aren't lazy
(those of us who are will not be around very long). The Senate was just one more competing interest among many, and it represented a campus community that has little impact on our daily lives and with which we have infrequent contact.
I hope that this will change with the new arrangement. I believe that graduate students will be far more enthusiastic about participating in a separate governing body because it will be tuned to our specific problems and needs in a way the old Senate never could be.
The purpose of a separate Graduate Senate is not to further isolate graduate students, but rather to focus our concerns in one governing body and communicate them to the University. The new Graduate Senate is not an unreasonable demand for disproportionate power as the Kansan editorial insinuated. It is an anchor that graduate students can use to attach themselves to the larger KU community.
Brian Dirk is a Conway, Ark., graduate in history.
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IF YOU THINK WAR IS HELL YOU SHOULD SEE IT IN WINTER
War is Hell, but in winter it's worse. Right now, victims of war in the former Yugoslavia are suffering a second, deadly winter. Bosnia's cruel tragedy -- its murder, its sickness and its hunger -- has been doubled by severe shortages of food, medicine and fuel.
Now is the time to help. The University of Kansas Hillel Foundation is inviting friends of all faiths to join us for BosniAid: An Evening of Hope. Uniting with campuses around the world, we will raise awareness about Bosnia's tragedy and contribute to humanitarian relief funds for all its victims.
Professor William J. March, Department of Russian and East European Studies, Slavic Languages and Literature, University of Kansas
Join us for a panel discussion featuring:
Sakir and Jasminka Hadzimeille, Bosnia
Anna Pavichevich Harkins, National Coordinator, Serbnet: Serbian American Information Network
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Friday, February 11, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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South Africans prepare to vote
Advancement of process brews speculations here
By Roberta Johnson Kansan staff writer
On the fourth anniversary of anti-paraparty leader Nelson Mandela's release from prison, he and thousands of South Africans prepare to take a radical step this April — casting their first votes.
South Africa has a parliamentary system of government, and the majority party chooses the nation's president.
The Black majority — more than 75 percent of the population — and other non-white groups will vote in the country's first all-race elections, April 26-28.
The African National Congress is expected to win with 60 percent of the vote. Mandela, the ANC president, could be South Africa's next president, said Surendra Bhana, associate professor of African-American studies and history. Bhana's family lives in Johannesburg, South Africa.
$2.99 lunch buffet
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"I think he brings a tremendous amount of power," he said. "He has the power to understand the problems and enough drive to change South Africa."
Ahlieha Maurellis, Cape Town, South Africa, graduate student, said he planned to vote for Mandela.
PIONEER
"I also hope de Klerk is the leader of the opposition. He is an astute, clever man. A good
Nelson Mandela
opposition means a good government."
Bhana, who was on leave during the fall semester, spent five months in South Africa and watched open meetings on the development of the new governmental system.
"There are factions like the white extremists and the Zulu tribe that want a piece of land where they can govern themselves," said Johann Abrahams, Cape Town, South Africa, senior. "Most Africans don't feel that way."
Some small groups have threatened war if there is not a white homeland reinstated.
Inkatha is the creation of their leader, Chief Buthelezi, Bhana said.
"There was a sense of participation," he said. "I'm sorry I had to come away before April. The most important months are January to April."
The month of February, when the political parties must formally register, could be an important month.
Two large political groups are formally in opposition to the new desegregated system: white, right-wingers and the Inkatha Freedom Party.
Regardless of the outcome of the election, Bhana said, South Africa will not return to a state of apartheid.
He said that the ANC and the National Party, the party of President F.W. de Klerk, were trying to accommodate the two opposition groups.
Bhana said he thought that the elections still would take place but that he was unsure how disrupted they might be.
"Segregation is out," he said. "It is completely unsupportable."
Campus recycling has become a habit
KU cooperates with off-campus programs
By Ashley Schultz Kansan staff writer
The University of Kansas reclaimed 2,475 gallons of oil from University vehicles in fiscal year 1992. Three-quarters of a ton of laser cartridges were recharged, and 3/4 tons of six-pack rings were recycled by KU Concessions, according to data collected by the Environmental Ombudsman's Office.
The office is working on updating that information. The Environmental Ombudsman's Office began operations in Fall 1990 to address campuswide environmental impacts. It is run by one full-time staff member and four part-timers. Steve Hamburg, director of the environmental studies program, heads the office.
The office works with different units within the University that facilitate recycling, said Sue Ask, associate environmental umbudman.
Ask said. "Recycling is something that needs to become a habit in order to be successful. It shouldn't be something that you have to think about.
"If it is just a matter of moving your hand a few inches further over to hit the aluminum container instead of the trash can, that's not going to be a barrier to most people."
"There has really been an attempt to make recycling programs a part of the regular operations of the University so they are not something separate."
The office also is acting as a voice for the environment in the administration's program to create a 20-year plan for the University.
The apparent decline in enthusiasm for recycling does not necessarily mean trouble for future efforts, Ask said.
According to the office's report, seven tons of aluminum cans and 72 tons of newspaper were recycled by facilities operations in fiscal year 1992.
"A lot of it has become more of a habit." Ask said. "Recycling is not something to get really excited about now. It is just something that you do, and it is taken for granted. I think that is a really positive step.
Newspapers collected on campus are taken to Lawrence High School, said Steve Green, associate director of management information with facilities operations.
The high school's Environmental
Awareness Project is coordinated by teacher Stan Roth. The University has two of the project's recycling bins, or "blue monsters," similar to the one in front of Stauffer-Flint Hall, Roth said. Every 12 to 14 days, the full container from campus is switched with another that has been emptied by students at the high school.
Roth estimated that KU contributed 1.5 tons of newspaper each month. The papers are loaded into a semitrailer and taken to the Central Fiber Corp. in Wellsville, Roth said.
Three times a week, housekeeping staff collect aluminum cans in campus buildings. Green can.
"Normally we take them to either Kaw Motors or Lonnie's Recycling, whoever is paying the highest price," Green said.
The going rate for a pound of aluminum cans is 28 cents, said George Faler, owner of Kaw Motor and Salvage Co., 1549 N. Third St.
"We lose money on the operation by the time we figure the labor, the fuel and what it takes to collect those, and we collect a little bit of the money back into it," Green said. "But what we are looking at is being able to divert some of that from the waste stream.
About 460 tons of landscape materithan as a repository for newsprint
Fall 1990 — Facilities Operations begins collecting cans from collection containers.
Recycling at KU
Summer 1990 Dumpster is set up in front of Stauffer-Flint Hall as a receptacle for newsprint.
Fall 1990 - Environmental Ombudsman's Office is created to assess and reduce University environmental impact and develop policy.
Fall 1991 — The University begins collecting old phone books for recycling when new phone books are distributed.
Spring 1991 — Facilities Operations begins reclaiming and recycling freon from campus air conditioning equipment and vehicles.
Spring 1992 — KU Concessions begins recycling six-pack rings from campus soda machines.
Source: Environmental Ombudsman's Office
TOMBSTONE
al was recycled in fiscal year 1992, according to the report. Antifreeze, automobile batteries, scrap metal, tires, freon and office paper also are recycled by the University.
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--International Herald Tribune
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Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office (864-ARTS);
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Tickets to all New Directions Series events half-price for KU students!
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, Special thanks to this year's Very Important Partners: Hallmark Cards, Inc., Klatt's Audio and Video, Pawel Shoe Source and W.T. Kemper Foundation, Commerce Bank Trusts.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, February 11, 1994
7
IT BEGAN WITH $1.25 AND A TITLE
William Allen White formed career from meager resources
Photos courtesy of University Archives
C
William Allen White oversees paste-up at The Emporia Gazette. White was publisher of that paper from 1895 to 1944. He knew seven presidents.
By Jamie Munn Kansan staff writer
William Allen White began his publishing career as a reporter in Lawrence. When he moved back to his hometown of Emporia in 1895, he had $1.25 in his pocket and the mortgaged title to *The Emporia Gazette*.
From this early beginning as an enterprising publisher, White created a distinguished career that included two Pulitzer Prizes. He left a legacy of journalism and political activism that KU students continue to recognize.
The University's School of Journalism was named for White just a few months after his death on Jan. 29, 1944. But White had begun his ascent to fame many years before.
The editorial launched White and the Gazette into the national spotlight. But it was White's July 27, 1922, editorial that would earn him the Pulitzer Prize.
"You tell me that law is above freedom of utterance. And I reply that you can have no wise laws nor free enforcement of wise laws unless there is free expression of the wisdom of the people." White wrote.
Santa Fe railway workers had gone on strike that year because the Railroad Labor Board had cut their wages. When posters supporting the workers were outlawed by Kansas Gov, Henry Allen, White hung them in the Gazette's front windows.
White was arrested but not prosecuted. His editorial, "To an Anxious Friend," was inspired by the experience.
White's national acclaim may be equally attributed to his support of several presidents, especially his close relationship with President Theodore Roosevelt. White actively supported progressivism and later ran as a third-party candidate for Kansas Governor in 1924.
As a journalist, White also was adamant about ethics and social conscience. He opposed yellow journalism, and he would not print questionable advertising or racial and religious slurs.
"There is no Middle Western editor of national prominence between the Mississippi and the 'Coast' except Mr. White," said Oswald Villard in 1923 in "Some Newspapers and Newspapermen."
Later in his life, White contributed to such magazines as "Collier's," "Harper's Magazine" and "Saturday Evening Post." He served as president of the American Society of Newspaper Editors in 1938.
White also was awarded a second Pulitzer Prize posthumously in 1946 for his "Autobiography."
After White's death, President Franklin Roosevelt said he had lost one of his best friends.
"He made the Emporia Gazette a national institution." Roosevelt said. "As a writer of truth, forcible and vigorous prose, he was unsurpassed."
A. W. H. Manning
FASHION
Cynthia Wimmer, Tulsa, Okla., senior, and Sandy Saltzstein, Milwaukee graduate student, work on a costume at Murphy Hall. On the right and in the background are clothes that belonged to William Allen White, his wife and son.
William Allen White's wardrobe a perfect fit
By Jennifer Freund Kansan staff writer
William Allen White's legacy usually is associated with the School of Journalism, but a recent donation from White's family will make sure that his legacy also continues at University Theater.
Renita Davenport, costume shop manager, will celebrate William Allen White Day by adding several hundred pieces of clothing donated by White's family to the theater's costume collection.
White was a noted Kansas politician as well as an editor of The Emporia Gazette. The University's William Allen White School of Journalism and Mass Communications was named after him, and William Allen White Day is being observed today.
Although the clothes have not yet been used, Davenport said, she may use some dresses from the 1960s and 1970s in the play, "The Heidi Chronicles."
"We got some nice men's three piece suits as well as beautiful silk dresses that were hand tailored. We also received men's and women's Italian shoes." Davenport said.
Davenport said that she had received the donation last week and that she had been impressed by the quality of the clothing.
Charla Jenkins, director of public relations for University Theater, also said she was impressed with the donation.
"I don't know how to sew, but it's obvious that many of the dresses were handmade," she said. "I can also see that even the zippers were sewn in by hand."
Jack Wright, professor of theater and film, said he would wear one of White's suits in his one-man production of "The Sage of Emporia," in which he portrays White as a 70-year-old man reflecting on his life.
Wright said that he had been performing the play since 1981 but that he hadn't performed it recently because he had been busy with administrative duties.
Wright said that White's granddaughter, Barbara Walker, donated the clothes that had belonged to White, his wife, Catherine, and White's son, William.
Wright said he wanted to offer special thanks to the White family for donating the costumes.
"The reason we're so thrilled is that we will be using the clothes in future productions," he said. "The clothes are very well made."
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Cease-fire violated in Sarajevo
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NATO to strike if siege continues
The Associated Press
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina — After 22 months of death and shelling, Sarajevans watched a new cease-fire take hold yesterday. But as midnight approached, the familiar sounds of mortars and gunfire rang out.
Several mortars landed around the Jewish cemetery, a front-line position in central Sarajevo, followed by bursts of heavy machine-gun fire and anti-aircraft guns that lasted four or five minutes.
Unconfirmed fatalities were reported, but no further details on what appeared to be the most serious violation of the latest truce in the 22-
month siege. Earlier in the day, one government soldier was wounded by machine-gun fire in another apparent violation of the cease-fire.
It was not immediately clear whether the violations would prompt NATO to begin air strikes, as threatened Wednesday in an ultimatum by the alliance.
NATO gave Bosnian Serbs 10 days to withdraw their guns and lift the siege of Sarajevo or face air strikes. The declaration also gives U.N. chief Boutros Boutros-Ghali authority to order immediate bombing runs against any artillery or mortar positions that continue to attack civilians in the capital.
There was no immediate comment from Boutrous-Ghali or U.N. officials in Bosnia on a U.N. response. NATO would need a one-time authorization from Boutrous-Ghali or his special
envoy to former Yugoslavia to begin attacks.
A senior U.S. diplomat in Washington said earlier that no further authorization for air strikes was needed from the council.
In Geneva, where leaders of Bosnia's factions gathered for new peace talks, Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadiz refused to negotiate and denounced NATO. He demanded a public investigation of a mortar shelling on Feb. 5 that killed 68 people in central Sarajevo and prompted the threat of NATO intervention.
Though suspicion has fallen on the Serbs, Karadzic claims it was a setup by Bosnia's Muslim-led government to kill its own people, blame the Serbs and win international sympathy.
The United Nations later agreed to form an international panel to investigate the attack, and allow Serbs to participate, U.N. officials said. The peace talks were to resume today.
But the Serb general cooperated with U.N. soldiers to put a cease-fire into effect at noon.
Karadzic's generals warned they would hold foreign aid workers hostage if NATO followed through on its demand for the Serbs to withdraw heavy weapons from around Sarajevo by Feb. 20 or face air strikes.
French peacekeepers and armored vehicles occupied several key positions in the Bosnian capital to monitor the truce. U.N. officials said the soldiers had orders to shoot back if fired upon.
They also apparently will act as a tripwire for other NATO threats to call in air power to protect U.N. troops or to immediately retaliate for any renewed shelling of the city.
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The Associated Press
TOPEKA — A death penalty bill won tentative approval yesterday in the House.
Representatives voted 70-55 to advance the measure to final action after about 3 1/2 hours of debate. A final vote is expected today, and supporters believe that the measure will pass and go to the Senate.
Opponents argued that the death penalty wouldn't fix the justice system and that it was wrong to kill someone whatever the reason.
Supporters of capital punishment made two significant arguments for their cause. First, they said a large majority of people supported it. Secondly, they said the state should protect its population by executing certain criminals.
As put before the House, the bill would make death by lethal injection a possible penalty for a relatively short list of murders. It would require two trials, the first
to determine guilt or innocence,
and the second to determine
whether the death penalty should
be imposed if a person is convicted.
Capital crimes would be:
Promedicated murder
An unintentional killing in the course of a kidnapping.
- Murdering a judge, prosecutor, jailer, prison guard, parole officer, probation officer, court services or law enforcement officer.
An unplanned killing in the course of a sexually violent crime.
Premeditated murder.
The killing of a prison or jail inmate by another inmate.
Senators are waiting for the House to act, making it likely that they will not take up the issue if representatives reject the bill.
Kansas has not had a death penalty law since the U.S. Supreme Court struck down all supreme 'laws as unconstitutional in 1972. The last executions in Kansas were in 1969.
Russian reformer to organize new party
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — Yegor Gaidar, the champion of Russia's market reforms, announced plans yesterday to create a new political party that he said would help solidify the ranks of reformers.
Gaidar's action, however, reflected a split within Russia's Choice, a proreform alliance he leads in Russia's new parliament.
Some of its members are turning away from Gaidar, blaming him for their defeat in the Dec. 12 parliamentary elections. Smaller pro-reform parties are going their own way and have rejected Gaidar's calls to unite.
Gaidar announced his plan to about two dozen politicians and cultural leaders. He said reformers needed a well-oiled campaign machine to succeed in the 1996 presidential race and other elections.
"I am convinced that we need stronger forms of integration. We need a normal mechanism for advertising our views," Galdar said.
er, yet tightly organized reformist party.
"A strong, democratic and well-organized party is a condition for the development of democracy and the continuation of reforms," he said.
Gaidar's idea was immediately supported by President Boris Yeltsin's representative Vyacheslav Kostikov, who also attended the gathering.
Kostikov, whose remarks were carried by the Interfax news agency, said Yeltsin would have a "natural ... internal ideological link" with the new reformist party.
It was the first in a series of meetings planned by Gaidar to create a broad-
But he declined to say whether Yeltsin would join or endorse this party, noting that many political groups are now competing for the "presidential flag."
Progress slow in Palestinian move toward autonomy
Yeltisn said after the elections that he would create his own party. Now, the president is apparently having second thoughts, and some aides doubt that he would agree to head any party — which does not preclude Yeltisn from choosing a party to serve as an informal support base.
Palestinians won the right to raise the Palestinian flag and post armed police at crossings from Jordan and Egypt into the autonomous enclaves
— the Gaza Strip and the West Bank region of Jericho. Humiliating questioning and searches of Palestinians would cease. Palestinians achieved a foothold in the Dead Sea and limited control of two religious sites in the West Bank.
Israel would maintain all Jewish settlements in Gaza, control roads leading to them and keep army bases near the settlements. Israel also would maintain ultimate authority over border crossings and the right to prevent anyone from entering from Jordan or Egypt.
PLO leader Yasser Arafat and Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres initialed an agreement yesterday in Cairo, Egypt, resolving key issues that had blocked the start of Palestinian autonomy for two months.
JERUSALEM — Despite a breakthrough in PLO-Israel talks, Israel's prime minister said yesterday that it would take at least a month to finalize an agreement and that there would be no prisoner releases or Israeli troop withdrawals until then.
"We can say that Palestine — and the name of Palestine — has returned to the map of the Middle East," Arafat said.
Palestinians in the occupied lands, however, complained that little had changed since the Israel-PLO accord was signed Sept. 13 and that blood-shed and army control continued.
Palestinian support for the Israel-PLO accord has dwindled as Israeli forces continue tax raids, house demolitions, land confiscations and arrests.
Palestinians say there are as many as 14,000 Palestinians in Israel jails, although Israel contends that the number is half that.
Most damaging to the peace process has been the ongoing bloodshed. According to an Associated Press count, 62 Palestinians and 20 Israelis have been killed in violent confrontations since Sept. 13.
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Beer advertising turning youth into future drinkers
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Those fun-filled beer commercials at halftime may be influencing children to drink, according to research that found fifth-graders reciting slogans, reeling off brand names and saying they intended to drink frequently later in life.
And they get plenty of chances to absorb those commercials whenever they watch sports on TV. Researchers counted 685 alcohol ads during 122 televised sporting events, only three of which advocated moderation in drinking.
Friday, February 11, 1994
"Their beliefs are being influenced, their beliefs about the positive consequences of drinking," said Joel Grube of the National Institute of Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism's prevention research center. The institute is an arm of the government's National
Institutes of Health.
The issue of alcohol advertising's impact on children has long been controversial. Teenagers consume 1.1 billion cans or bottles of beer every year, and some researchers have linked such drinking to exposure to ads.
The industry insists that it doesn't target underage consumers and that even if minors are exposed to the ads, it doesn't influence their behavior.
But Grube, in two studies to be published today in the "American Journal of Public Health," found that not only are children bombarded with alcohol advertising, they link drinking with "romance, sociability and relaxation."
The Beer Institute responded that no one has proved advertising contributes to underage drinking, which
has been dropping since the 1970s thanks to intensive education programs.
"This is an obvious campaign against the beer industry waged by a small anti-alcohol faction within the American Public Health Association," which published the Journal, said institute President Raymond McGrath.
Grube found that fifth- and sixthgraders recited slogans, reeled off brand names and even identified commercials by photographs in which the brand names were marked out. Those most aware of the ads were most likely to say they intended to drink frequently as adults.
Yet they weren't aware of the negative impacts of alcohol, from drunken driving to alcoholism, nor of public service announcements on drinking.
THE NEWS in brief
MOGADISHU, Somalia
Three hostages freed one day after capture in northern Somalia
Somali gunmen freed two British lawmakers and a charism worker yesterday, about 24 hours after they and three other people were abducted in northern Somalia, officials said. The other hostages were released earlier.
"We can confirm that they are the ActionAid office in Erigavo and we understand that they will fly out" today, the British Foreign Office said in London.
The captives were identified as Mark Robinson and Tony Worthington, members of Britain's Parliament; Anne Johnstone, a reporter for the Glasgow Herald, in Scotland; and Robert LeMare, Action Chinnock and Haroun Yusuf, all of the charity group ActionAid.
"Negotiations carried out by the elders of the local community were successful in securing their release unarmed," said Julia Felthouse, representative at Action-Aid's London headquarters. Felthouse said Johnstone, LeMare and Yusuf had been freed sometime before the other three.
George Bennett, a U.N. representative in Mogadishu, said the six had been seized Wednesday evening somewhere between the village of Hared and the coastal town of Mait, about 150 miles east of the northern port of Berbera. He said he had been held overnight at Hared.
Bennett said the United Nations did not know the motive for the kidnapping, but British news reports said they were being held for ransom.
The area in which the six were kidnapped is in the self.
proclaimed Somaliaand Republic, which was a British colony before Somalia won its independence from Britain and Italy in the early 1960.
FARGO, N.D.
Abortion consent law upheld
A federal appeals court yesterday upheld a North Dakota law requiring a 24-hour waiting period for women seeking abortions.
In a 2-1 decision, the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals found the "informed consent" law was not an undue burden for rural women and pregnant minors.
The law, passed in 1991, had been challenged by the Fargo Women's Health Organization, the only clinic in the state where abortions are performed. The clinic argued that the law could require two, possibly even three, long-distance trips to the clinic.
"Although the distance a woman must travel to obtain an abortion may be a factor in obtaining abortion, it is not the result of the state regulation," said Senior Judge John R. Gibson, writing for the major on the appeals court.
The law, which was allowed to take effect in April, requires that the state make available information about fetal development and abortion alternatives. In the case of minors, the law requires that the girl's parents be informed.
The U.S. Supreme Court has upheld the Pennsylvania law on which the North Dakota law is based. The high court said that "important decisions will be more informed and deliberate" after a period of reflection.
Judge Theodore McMillan, who cast the dissenting vote in the North Dakota case, referred to the opinion of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, who said an undue burden existed if it represented "a substantial obstacle to a woman's choice to undergo an abortion."
Compiled from The Associated Press.
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The University of Kansas Theatre for Young People Presents
Directed by Paul Meier
Adapted by Mary Hall Surface
From the book by Kenneth Grahame
Commissioned by the
John F. Kennedy Center
for the Performing Arts and
the Seattle Children's Theatre.
7 p.m.
Saturday, February 12, 1994
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Murphy Hall
RESERVED SEAT TICKETS ARE AVAILABLE
THROUGH THE KU BOX OFFICES:
MURPHY HALL: 913.864.3982,
LIED CENTER: 913.864.ARTS.
ALL TICKETS ARE $3 REGARDLESS OF AGE.
VISA AND MASTERCARD
ARE ACCEPTED FOR PHONE ORDERS.
Partially funded by the KU Activity Fee.
The University of Kansas Theatre for Young People Presents
Directed by Paul Meier
Adapted by Mary Hall Surface
From the book by Kenneth Grahame
Commissioned by the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts and the Seattle Children's Theatre.
7 p.m.
Saturday, February 12, 1994
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Murphy Hall
RESERVED SEAT TICKETS ARE AVAILABLE THROUGH THE KU BOX OFFICES:
MURPHY HALL: 913.864.3982,
LIED CENTER: 913.864.ARTS.
ALL TICKETS ARE $3 REGARDLESS OF AGE.
VISA AND MASTERCARD
ARE ACCEPTED FOR PHONE ORDERS.
Partially funded by the KU
SECURITY SAFETY Activity Fee.
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---
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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 864-4676.
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Hate crime unites U.S. luge team
The Associated Press
LILLEHAMMER, Norway — Wendel Suckow holds up a snowy glove to describe the difference between him and fellow luger Duncan Kennedy on any given day.
"Two-hundredths of a second," he says, spreading his thumb and forefinger to the width of a healthy bread stick. "When you think about it, it's almost ridiculous."
For the past three years Suckow, Kennedy and teammate Robert Pippins have been leapfrogging each other by fractions of seconds, pushing for faster times on their tiny sleds until the U.S. ule team has become a leading force in international meets.
The success has a downside.
“it's hard in a sport like ours to build the team unity you'd like because there is a point when they're competing against one another,” said Ron
Rossi, executive director of the U.S. Luge Association. "There is a tension because if you win, you're on the Olympic team; if you lose, you're going home."
Days are a succession of hotel rooms and narrow, icy luge alleys where success is determined by how little resistance you create with your environment.
Then, two days before Halloween, the familiar ride came screeching to a halt on a bumpy patch of ugly reality.
Celebrating a teammate's birthday at a pub in Oberhof, Germany, Pipkins and Gordy Sheer were confronted by a skinhead decked out in a wardrobe of hate.
Sheer, who is Jewish, and Pipkins, who is black, took exception to what the angry youth had to say.
"They asked the kid, What's your problem," Kennedy recalls. "He stated his case. They stated they weren't
happy with him and it was kind of left at that. Or so we thought."
Instead, another 10 to 15 skinheads marched in and began making monkey noises at Pipkins. The lugers tried to leave.
"I saw they were following us," Kennedy said. "I told Rob to run like heck and get out of there. They stopped at me, and I said to leave him alone. I was really unset at that point."
The skinheads encircled Kennedy, knocked him to the ground and took turns kicking him. Kennedy, a California surfer who once decorated his sled with Bart Simpson stickers, returned to the hotel with a mild concussion, a broken nose, various bruises and an altered view of the world.
"I never experienced anything like it," he said. "You could feel the hatred. Just the fact that someone had to run from these guys because of the color of his skin made me so angry I
10000000000
1994 Winter Olympic Game
couldn't believe it."
The ugly incident was an awakening for Pinkins.
"You read about it (racism) and hear about it, but you say it won't happen to me," says Pipkins, an engineering student at Drexel University.
The team has tried to return to its routine, but memories of the incident linger. Kennedy went back to Oberhof last month to testify against three of his attackers; the team returned for a strong showing in a World Cup competition.
Something else happened.
CBS plays with 'toys' for Games
"It brought them closer together," said Rossi.
The Associated Press
tech gear will include a camera planted in the helmets of U.S. hockey goalies Mike Dunham and Garth Snow, and a come-and-go camera that conveys the speed of skiing.
The come-and-go cam, which earned an Emmy for the network in Albertville, France, provides an instant switch as each skier passes a specific point in the course. Gentile likens it to the ground-level camera
LILLEHAMMER, Norway — Television technology has plenty of toys available for CBS Sports' coverage of the Winter Olympics, and Rick Gentile, the network's senior vice president of production, intends to use them all.
The helmet cam is an attempt to present hockey from the perspective of a goalie. To use it, CBS needed approval from USA Hockey, the spartan's governing body, as well as from coach Tim Taylor and Dunham and Snow.
When 16 days of action begin on Saturday, Gentile's assortment of highused in auto racing coverage.
"It's mounted on the side of the helmet, like a third eye," Gentile said.
"The camera is located in a slot in the helmet that is wired to a battery pack. It's not just for replays. We can go live with it. It's not obtrusive or dangerous."
And, perhaps most important, it appears indestructible.
"The picture was not disrupted when the goalies fell on it making a save," Gentile said.
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Send her what she really wants this Valentine's Day;
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University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Department of Music and Dance
KU Symphonic Band
Robert E. Foster, conductor Larry Combs, clarinet soloist
3:30 p.m. Sunday February 13, 1994 Lied Center
For general admission tickets, call the KU box offices (Murphy:
913/864-3982; Lied: 913/864-ARTS); KU student tickets are available through the SUA Office, Kansas Union; public $6, students $3, senior citizens $5; VISA/MasterCard accepted for phone orders.
The KU Bands arg partially funded by the KU Student Senate Activity Fee.
THE LIST BROTHERS
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STUDENT SENATE
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, February 11, 1994
11
Records point to victory against Cyclones
Nathaniel S.
Tom Leininger / KANSAN
Kansas guards Charise Sampson and Angie Halbleib reach for a ball under the watchful eyes of Coach Marian Washington. The team practiced yesterday for tonight's home game against Iowa State.
By Matt Siegel
Kansan sportswriter
On paper, it looks like a ruismatch when the No. 10 Kansas women's basketball team faces Iowa State at 7 p.m. tonight in Allen Field House.
Iowa State is 7-14 overall and 2-7 in the Big Eight. Conference. Kansas is 16-3 and 7-2. The Jan. 16 meeting at the James H. Hilton Center saw Kansas sophomore guard Charisse Sampson score 21 points in an 84-71 Kansas win.
Kansas coach Marian Washington isn't taking Iowa State lightly, though.
"I think Coach Becker has done an outstanding job trying to turn attitudes around," Washington said. "I think Iowa State plays hard, and as a result of that, they upset Oklahoma State, which is one of the favorites in the conference."
If Iowa State is going to upset Kansas, the Cyclones will need to contain Kansas' potent offense, which is producing 80.2 points a game, the second highest output in the conference. Three players are averaging double-figure scores.
Iowa State ranks last in scoring offense, averaging 55.4 points a game. None of the Iowa State players are averaging in double figures.
Iowa State coach Theresa Becker said that equally important for Iowa State would be containing Kansas junior forward Angela Aycock, who is averaging 17.7 points a game. The preseason All-American candidate has led the team in scoring on 10 separate occasions. She ranks in the top 10 in the conference in scoring, steals, field goal percentage, rebounding and free throw percentage.
I don't know if anybody can stop her," Becker said. "I was fortunate enough to be involved in the recruiting process of Angela when I was an assistant at Nebraska, and I've
watched her develop. I still don't know if she has played a game to her entire potential because she has so many outstanding players around her."
Aycock, who once scored 50 points in a high-school game, was a starter on the U.S. Junior World Championship Team in August. She is coming off a 20-point performance Sunday that left Missouri forward Desiree Wallace impressed.
"She is a great athlete, a great player and she's got a great attitude," Wallace said.
Aycock, who averages 9.1 rebounds a game, has had seven games in which she has grabbed more than 10 rebounds, which is yet another area of concern for the Cyclones. Iowa State consistently has been outrebounded by its opponents this season. The Jayhawks are 13-1 when they outrebound their opponents.
"It's not going to turnaround overnight," Becker said. "I would have liked to say that we could have won the Big Eight Conference this year, but that's not realistic. We have 12 freshmen, 10 of whom suit up. I am not conceding defeat by any means. All I'm concerned about is if we play well and are competitive"
The Kansas Courtsiders, a booster club for the Jayhawks, will be selling tickets for a trip to the women's game against Kansas State. Tickets cost $10 and will be available before the tipoff of both the Iowa State and Nebraska games this weekend in the field house. The price includes tickets and transportation to and from the game. The bus will leave at 4 p.m. Feb. 26.
Kansas also plays Nebraska at 2 p.m. Sunday at Allen Field House. The Cornhuskers are 13-10 overall and 4-5 in the conference. Nebraska is led by senior forward Nafessa Brown, who is averaging 21 points a game.
Swim teams hope to shuck 'Huskers
Kansan sportswriter
By Andrew Gilman Kansas sportswriter
Kansas swimming coach Gary Kempf put tomorrow's dual meet against Nebraska into perspective.
"There's 25 yards of wet stuff, and we've got to get through it faster than they do," he said.
That wet stuff will be at Robinson Natatorium at 1 p.m., when the No. 13 men take on No. 21 Nebraska, and the No. 16 women take on the No. 21 Cornhuskers.
There will be some streaks that are intact when the two teams face off.
The women have beaten Nebraska four consecutive times in dual competition, but the men have not been as successful.
"This team has been asked to step up," Kempf said. "We've got to swim the way we know how."
"The team philosophy is different this year," said senior spinner Curts Taylor. "It may be more, maybe it's just because I'm a senior."
The men have not beaten Nebraska in dual competition since the 1981 season, a run that has included 13 consecutive losses, but the swimmers think that this could be the year for a turnaround.
Whether or not things have changed, the 13th ranked men will be competing against a Nebraska team that Kempf considers a strong one.
"I expect Nebraska to be completely ready," Kempf said. "There's a lot of attitude between the two teams. I expect them to have their best dual in the last five or six years."
The No. 13 position, the Jayhawks' highest ranking ever, may have some impact on the way Kansas will approach the meet.
us swim better."
"We want the challenge of proving that we're worthy of our ranking," Taylor said. "That challenge makes
Taylor will be swimming the 50-yard freestyle and the breaststroke in the 400-yard individual medley, and he will be part of the 400-yard freestyle relay.
Another streak on the line is the men's 400-yard relay. The team that includes Taylor has not lost all season, and he is confident that the streak will continue.
"If it comes down to that last relay, we won't lose," he said. "They don't have the depth that we do. We just put four good swims together and do it for the team."
The women, who remained at No. 16 for the second consecutive time, are extremely confident about this weekend. But junior distance swimmer Frankie Hanson was not one for predictions.
"There are no guarantees," she said. "But we're aware that this is the key dual meet of the season. If we achieve what we know we can, we'll win."
"I don't care who wins the events," Taylor said,"as long as it's KU first, KU second and KU third."
The women are undefeated this year in dual competition, putting together a 7-0 record, but said they were ready for the big meet.
"We love to hate them, and they certainly don't love us," Hanson said of the Cornhuskers. "If we didn't, then it wouldn't be as much fun."
The Jayhawks will have to maintain their composure this weekend when they look to the Big Eight Conference championships.
"I don't think any one person has to step up," Kempf said. "The whole team has got to perform."
Kempf said that Kansas was not looking for individual performance, but a total team effort.
Taylor agreed.
Kansas wants to avenge home loss to rivals
'Hawks set to face Wildcats
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
The bitter aftertaste that Kansas State left in Lawrence three weeks ago still has not worn off for the No. 5 Kansas men's basketball team.
K-State upset then-No. 1 Kansas on Jan. 17. A last-second shot by K-State senior guard Anthony Beane won the game for the Wildcats 68-64.
Kansas freshman guard Jacque Vaughn said the team still felt bitter about that defeat at Allen Field House. The two teams rematch at 8 p.m. tomorrow, but this time the setting is Bramlage Coliseum in Manhattan.
Despite this statistic, Kansas coach Roy Williams said the team seemed to have a hesitant attitude about the K-State game. He said some of his past teams had a cocky attitude when going to Manhattan.
"To me, it's just one game we need to win," Vaughn said. "The loss is kind of a bad taste in our mouths."
"It'll be interesting to see what their mood is in the locker room before the
The defeat snapped a 12-game winning streak for the Jayhawks and dropped them from No. 1 in the polls. With the time between games though, both teams have faltered slightly.
Kansas lost to Missouri Jan. 31 and enters the game at 20-3 overall and 5-2 in the Big Eight Conference. K-State has lost three consecutive games, dropping its record to 14-7 and 3-6. In K-State's last game, Nebraska defeated the Wildcats in Manhattan 76-68.
Manhattan may be a safe haven for Kansas on the road. The Jayhawks have won 10 consecutive games at K-State, dating back to 1984.
game," Williams said. "We're going out there a little bit wounded and not as confident."
Williams said the team finally realized that senior forward Richard Scott's injury on Jan. 24 was indeed serious. Scott rejuvenated his left shoulder against Nebraska on Sunday and did not play the second half.
Scott is listed as questionable for the game, but Williams said that the assessment was on the generous side. That may put more pressure on Kansas senior guard Steve Woodberry, who averages a team-high 15.7 points a game.
"When Steve has played well, we've been hard to beat," Williams said. "It would become more of a key with Richard out of the game. They will have their defense geared toward Steve and so will the next team."
NSAS 12 NSAS 24 STATE
On the defensive end for the Jayhawks, Vaughn said Woodberry was the Jayhawks' best defensive player.
"Right now, he's really everything for us," Vaughn said. "He's our leader and our motivator. On defense, he knows some of the other players better than I do, and he is more alert."
The Jayhawks will have to deal with a quick point guard in Beane. Kansas freshman center Scot Pollard said Beane seemed to enjoy playing against Kansas.
File Photo/KANSAN
"We have to do a really good job of controlling Beane," Pollard said. "His style is similar to Jacque's style in that he can drive by people and create a play so well."
Kansas senior forward Patrick Richey drove past Kansas State's Askia Jones during the Kansas 68-64 loss to K-State in Allen Field House. The Jayhawks will face the Wildcats tomorrow at Bramlette Field House in Manhattan.
"We've got to stop Askia's outside shooting or at least make him shoot a smaller percentage," Pollard said. "Another thing we're going to have to do is shut out the crowd. I've heard it's pretty hostile."
One of the players Beane passes to after penetrating is senior guard Askia Jones. Jones averages a teamhigh 22.5 points a game and scored 26 points against Kansas in the last game.
Vaughn said he had heard many
things about K-State's home court
"I've heard some rumors, good and bad," he said. "Some of them I can't tell you about. It's a place where the college atmosphere is definitely in full effect."
If Vaughn is referring to last season's adventure for Kansas, the rumors are true. When Kansas traveled to Manhattan, some fans in the crowd threw pennies at Kansas players. One coin hit former guard Rex Walters in the head and cut him.
Williams said that he did not hold any grudge against K-State or the crowd for last year's incident.
"It could happen in Allen Field House," he said. "I hope it doesn't, but it could. It only takes one imbecile in the crowd to give you a bad taste. But I'm not mad. I made seven cents on the bench before the game."
Returning 'Hawks dominate lineup for baseball opener
The Jayhawks, coming off a trip to the College World Series last season, will take on North Carolina State at 1 p.m. They will play Tennessee at 4:30 p.m. and Central Florida at 1 p.m. Saturday before playing in the consolation game or the finals Sunday.
The No.25 Kansas baseball team begins its season today in Kissimmee, Fla., at the Olive Garden Classic.
The Jayhawks return 14 lettermen from last year's team, including All-Big Eight senior pitcher Chris Corn, and senior outfielder Darryl Monroe and sonho.
sophomore pitcher Jamie Spittorr, both second-team All-Bight Flight players.
The Jayhawks finished 45-18 last year, finished second to Oklahoma State in the Big Eight Tournament and won the Mideast Regional of the NCAA Tournament.
Men's tennis in tournament
The No. 33 Kansas men's tennis team travels to Minneapolis, Minn., this weekend to compete in the Ice Vollies Tournament. The team will take on Washington at 6:30 p.m. today. Kansas enters the four-tournament with a 5-0 dual match record.
The two other teams, West Virginia and Minnesota, are ranked No. 43 and No. 27, respectively. The Jayhawks will be competing for the
SPORTS BRIEFS
first time since Jan.21.
Reid Slattery, playing No. 1 for Kansas, is looking to rebound after losing two matches last weekend at the Rolex National Indoors in Dallas. Slattery is ranked No. 22 in the nation, and his overall record stands at 11-5.
Kansas tennis to face Notre Dame
Rolex National Intercollegiate Indoor Championship in Dallas.
Juniors Nora Koves and Rebecca Jansen upset the No. 1 ranked doubles team in the country.
The No. 15 Kansas women's tennis team travels to South Bend, Ind., this weekend for two dual matches. On Friday, the Jayhawks tangle with the Fighting Irish of Notre Dame, and Saturday, they play William & Mary. In the Jayhawks' only dual match so far this season, they defeated the Utah Utes 9-0.
Kansas is coming off a highly successful
According to the Intercollegiate Tennis Association poll, Koves and senior Mindy Weiner are ranked No. 17 and No. 35, respectively. Weiner has compiled a singles record of 17-5 and Koves is 9-1.
The women will return home and immediately be tested by No. 1 Texas at 1 p.m. Tuesday at the Alvamar Racquet Club. The Longhorns are the defending national champions.
Volleyball gains three recruits
Compiled from Kansasn staff reports
The Kansas volleyball team signed three new players for the upcoming season.
Kendra Kahler, Maggie Mohrfeld, and Leslie Purkeypile have signed letters of intent to attend Kansas.
kahler, who was born in Lawrence, lives in Ottawa, where she lettered in volleyball for three years. She was the 1993 class 5A player of the year and was named to the first team all-area and all-state teams.
Mohlrief, West Point, Iowa, lettered in volleyball at Marquette High School for three years. This year she was named to the first team all-state and was named the Hawkeye Plaver of the Year.
Purkeypile, who is 6-feet tall, is from Wamego, where she lettered in volleyball for four years. She was named the Kansas High School Volleyball Player of the Year.
12
Friday, February 11, 1994
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SLEEPLESS IN SEATTLE
FRI. & SAT. 7:00 PM
FRI. & SAT. 9:30 PM
SUN. 2:00PM
PLAN 9 FROM OUTER SPACE
FRI. & SAT. MIDNIGHT
ALL SHOWS in KANSAS INST
TICKETS $2 50, MIDNIGHTS $3 00
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CALL 864-504-SHOW for more info.
CIRcuit 6
Schindler's List® 6:15, 10:00
I'll Do Anything™ P13-12:80, 7:10, 9:45
Blink® A2:5, 7:15, 9:40
Blank Check® P4:0, 7:00, 9:30
Grumpy Old Men™ P13-12:70
Shadowlands® P4:05, 9:45
Ace Ventura - Pet Detective® P13-12:400,
7:20, 9:35
PrimeTime Show! © MFH Meeting Delay
Dickinson
Crown Cinema
3 PrimeTime Show (1) Meeting Colors
Kensington Art Gallery Metropolitan Museum
BEFORE & PM ADULTS $3.00
(UNION) + FATHER
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
VARSITY
The Getaway R 5:00
7:15,9:30
My Girl 2 PG 5.90,
7.20, 8.39
My Father, The Hero PG 7.15, 8.39
Mrs. Doubtfire PG-13 4.45,
7.19, 8.39
Tombstone R 7.20, 8.49
The Fugitive PG-13 4.45
Philadelphia PG-13 4.45,
7.15, 8.45
Jurassic Park PG-13 5:00, 7:20, 9:45
Age Of Innocence PG 5:00, 8:00
Competition may have lost its excitement
By Chris Sheridan The Associated Press
Dunking contest slammed
Don't tune in to the end of "All-Star Saturday" expecting to see the finals of the slam dunk contest. By that time, the dunkers will be done, and the guys who can't jump will be shooting 3-pointers.
MINNEAPOLIS — The NBA dunk contest has been slammed to secondstring.
In a move for which the NBA provided no explanation, the slam dunk contest was moved from the last to the next-to-last event on Saturday night. It will follow the rookie game and precede the 3-point shooting contest.
Rod Thorn, the NBA's vice president of operations, refused to specify the thought process behind the dunk contest's demotion.
"They asked us about it, and we said we didn't want to touch the format," McGuire said. "The sense was that there's more drama in the 3-point shooting contest. The dunk contest flows nicely on television, but it's been a little flat in the arena because it was too long."
"It's just something we decided to do," he said, straining to remain positive.
The dunk contests in recent years haven't lived up to the excitement level of the earlier Michael Jordan vs. Dominique Wilkins leapfests, and players have had to resort to gimmicks — Dee Brown pumping up his shoes, Cedric Ceballos wearing a blindfold — for an extra edge.
"The contest don't have the flair it had in the past. All the great dunks have been done," said Boston's Brown, champion in 1991.
Don McGuire, executive producer of TNT Sports, said it was a tacit admission by the NBA that the dunk
The rounds have been cut from three to two, and instead of having every dunk judged separately as in the past, this year's contestants will have 90 seconds in the first round to do as many dunks as they choose before being graded on the entire performance.
"It's lost some of its appeal," said Shawn Kemp of the Seattle SuperSonics. Kemp has been a contestant in each of his five NBA seasons. "There's only so many dunks you can do."
In an effort to speed up the event, the rules have been drastically changed this year.
Three of the six contestants will make the finals — in past years it had been two — and each dunk will be judged separately. The player with the highest-rated dunk will win the contest, even if he misses every other attempt.
In past contests, the dunk scores were totaled up, and missed dunks were especially costly. In fact, a botched dunk cost Larry Johnson the contest two years ago.
The contestants this year are: Kemp,
defending champion Harold Miner of
"The league has called me a few times to try and talk me into being in the dunk contest, but I had to tell them no. It's more important that I get my rest," Stacey Aumon of the Atlanta Hawks said. "I could probably win it right now if I wanted to do it. But after a while, it gets boring. You dunk so many times, you get tired of it."
Daredevil dunking has its downside, too.
6 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS
BEST PICTURE
BEST AACUR
Daniel Day Lewis
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESSES
Emma Thompson
"If you're in the dunk contest, people expect you to dunk all the time," said past champion, Dominique Wilkins. "You're supposed to be the high-flying, windmilling dunk guy. But if you concentrate on that, you tend to overlook other parts of your game. It detracts from your overall game if all you are worried about is dunking."
Doug Christie of the Los Angeles Lakers pulled out Tuesday because of a sprained ankle. About six other players declined invitations, Thorn said.
Miami, James Robinson of Portland,
Ore, Isaiah Rider of Minnesota, Antonio Davis of Indiana and Robert Pack of Denver.
A TRUE STORY FROM THE DIRECTOR OF 'MY LIFT FOOT'
DANIEL DAVLEWIS ❶ EMMA THOMPSON
IN THE NAME OF THE FATHER
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1:30 p.m.Friday,February 11 after receiving the 1994 William Allen White Foundation National Citation
Sponsored by the William Allen White Foundation and the William Allen White School of Journalism and Mass Communications
-Public Invited-
Twos won't do for trey-ace Price
All-Star contest to feature top NBA shooters
By Chuck Melvin The Associated Press
MINNEAPOLIS — Remember that shot Michael Jordan made against the Lakers in the 1991 NBA Finals? The one where he floated down the lane, thought about dunking, changed his mind, kept floating, switched the ball to his left hand, flipped it off the glass and scored?
Mark Price can't do that.
But Price also points out that, awesome as it might have been, the shot counted for only two points — and Price could have gotten three just as quickly.
"I think more than any other shot, the three-pointer can really drill a team," said Price, the Cleveland Cavaliers' All-Star point guard. "If you're up by one point at the end of a game, and you come down and hit a three, all of a sudden the game's out of reach.
It's great, especially for a guy like me who can't go in there and excite the crowd with a dunk or something like that."
Price will be busy this weekend participating in the NBA's A&T Long Distance Shootout on Saturday and the All-Star Game on Sunday. It's his fourth appearance in the shootout — he finally won it last year in Salt Lake City, edging Portland's Terry Porter in the finals—and also his fourth year as an All-Star.
Competing against Price in the shootout will be San Antonio's Dale Ellis, the 1989 winner and the NBA career leader in three-pointers made; Chicago's B.J. Armstrong and Steve Kerr, the career leader in three-point accuracy; Philadelphia's Dana Baros; Phoenix's Dan Majerle; Milwaukee's Eric Murdock; and Sacramento's Mitch Richmond.
The contest has been held for eight years but has had just four winners. Larry Bird and Craig Hodges each won three times, and Price and Ellis each won once.
"It basically comes down to who's hot that night," Price said. "Last year, I had a blast winning it. I always said if I could get past the first round, I could
win it. The first round is the toughest,
because everybody's nervous."
After winning the contest, Price kept it up the next day by sinking a record six three-pointers in the All-Star Game.
The exposure he got that weekend helped him earn a spot on the All-NBA first team at season's end.
"To shoot like that during the game probably meant more to me than winning the shootout," he said.
Price has been shooting from long range as long as he can remember. His father, Denny, a former college coach who was once an assistant coach with the Phoenix Suns, taught him the fundamentals, helping Price develop the textbook shooting style that has allowed him to compensate for his size.
"In high school (in Enid, Okla.), I scored a lot," he said. "Teams start playing you harder. You had to step out farther to get shots. That just never bothered me."
Price arrived at Georgia Tech at the perfect time, or so it seemed, because in 1982-83 the Atlantic Coast Conference became the first to set up a three-point line.
As a freshman, Price led the league
"If our pregame 'horse' games over the years are any indication, I won't have any trouble." Kerr said. "Danny (Ferry) and I really used to put it to Mark all the time. In fact, we worried about injuring his confidence. If those games are any indication, I'll handle Mark very easily."
The most intense competition Saturday may be between Price and Kerr, who were teammates in Cleveland for four years.
with a 20.3 average.
Price recalls it differently.
"Everybody tends to block out the bad points in their life and remember the few good points," Price said. "Steve was probably just remembering the one or two times he did win. He seems to forget the hundreds of times he lost."
"I beat Michael Jordan out, which is my one claim to fame," Price said.
Mark Antony always gave Cleopatra the finest of gifts So give your sweetheart hers out of Cleopatra's Closet
"It would be interesting if you went and asked some of the coaches. I'm sure it had something to do with it," he said.
The conference promptly dropped the three-point shot, then restored it the year after Price graduated. Coincidence? Price thinks not.
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1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, February 11, 1994
13
CO
Your sweetie deserves a Valentine from Graham's
GRAHAM'S RETAIL LIQUORS
The mom & pop liquor store of Lawrence
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1906 MASS 843-819-6
Classified Directory
100s
Announcements
1105 Personal
1101 Business
Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
200s
Employment
Help Wanted
Professional
Services
205 Typing Services
Classified Policy
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against a person with a disability, 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, unless otherwise specified, 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
300s
Merchandise
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are subject to change.
100s Announcements
II
105 Personals
Looking for 16-year-old and younger and 70 + KU students. I am interested in doing a story on the different outlooks of KU students, but haven't had any luck in finding them through regular means. If you or someone you know fit these groups, please, please, please, Kansas, 648-410, and ask for Angelina Lopez.
Holiday Inn, Steamboat Springs, Co. Party with someone you know. Free beer and appetizers every night from 9 p.m. - 7 p.m. you stay with a friend or family member. 1-800-643-3499 to book your Spring break today.
Send your Valentine a special card. A WOICE
all. For more information call 800-300-9003.
For more information call 800-300-9003.
110 Bus. Personals
Kansan Classified: 864-4358
Jayhawk Spirit
20% OFF Greek Merchandise
Thur end of February
stores open
Unique Sanque Silver Jewelry
Hoops, Pendant & More!
For Guy & Gals
The Etc. Shop
928 Mass, Downtown
SpringBreak1994
Other destinations available
CANCUN from $439
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
SOUTH PADRE from $159
Lowestpriceguaranteed
Call 865-1352
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10p
Saturday 11:30am-4:30p
Sunday 8am-4:30p
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11:30am
WATKINS
HEALTH CENTER
864-9500
Pharmacy Hours
Monday - Thursday 8am-9pm
Saturday 9am-12pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services
130 Entertainment
BENCHWARMERS
Friday
Truck Stop
Love
$2.00 teas
Saturday
Broken Inglish 2 for 1 wells Friday. February 18th
the Freddy Jones Band
120 Announcements
HAVASU: America's New Spring Break Hot Spot, Lake Havasu, AZ, is throwing America's largest party! Top-name Concerts, Comedians, and Musicians Lake Will Hiar Roan! '94! CALL 1-804-HAVASU
Tax preparation. Short Form $15. Long Form $27.
evening & weekday hours available. Call 865-2796
Unique Egg-base Culture fed 18 nursing pigs produced sudden strange behavior change, sudden strange physical change especially immune system body temperature mechanism. All changes occur in humans indicated there's promise of a glorious future. European scientists follow-up-
140 Lost & Found
FOUND: Lawrence HS ring, class of 91. Call 842.
444.
男士厕所
女士厕所
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
1994 EXPANSION
Part-time temporary and permanent openings.
Flexible schedules around class. $$-10 to start.
Positions need to be filled by 2/16/94. Please call
842-8311 for more info.
600 CAMPS 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 SA 9210 Flowerville CA 94301
420 Florence Blvd. CA 94301
(855) 942-9727
Baby shower need for 3-month-old in our home.
Mon:1:45 4:50pm or /Wed & Fri:8:45
10:45am. No need to work all shifts. Pls call #832-795
for Nicola/Kathele $2.50 per hour.
CAMP COUNSELORS • 12 yr. old educational camp near Kansas City县 seeks counselors (WSI helpful) for residential summer program for children 8-14 June to August 8. Must be Sophomore or equivalent. Send resume to CAMP COUNSELORS in inquiry before February 14, 1994 to Wildwood Center, 7085 W. 339th St., La Cayenne, KS 60040.
CAMP COUNSELSORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach: swimming, canoeing, sailing, water skiing, gymnastics, camping, crafts, dramatics, or Riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. Salary $150 or more plus RB&C. Camp LWC/WCG 785 Maple, NIFL, ID.
Case Manager, full-time, to provide case management services to severely emotionally disturbed children/adolescents/their families. BA and experience working with SED children/adolescents in a letter to J. Yancey Bert Nash CMIC, 336 Missouri, Lawrence KS 6004. Open until filled. EOE
CLERK TYPIST I
CITY OF LAWRENCE
Part-time position, includes occasional evenings. HS Graduate or GED. Must have score of 40WPM or better on typing test. $7.32 per hour. Complete application at Admin. Services, 2nd floor, City Hall, 6th and Massachusetts, Lawrence, KS 60044 by Tuesday, February 15, 1994, EOE M/F/D.
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. The staff will be available until the benefit but may not be required. A GOOD DRIVING RECORD IS A MUST. Please apply at Cottonwood Inc. 2601 W. 31 EOE.
Counselors/Support Staff-Children's Camps/Northeast Top salary, RM/BD/Laudrey, travel allowance. Must have skill in one of the following activities: archery, arts & crafts, baseball, basketball, dance (jazz, tau, ballet), drama, drum team, hockey, horseback riding-hunt seat, karate, lacrosse, photography, piano, pioneering, rocketry, rollerblading, ropes, sailing, soccer, swim team, tennis, theater, technicians, track, video, water ski, Wsl, wind surfing, woodworking, nursing, nurse's secrets, secretaries, call or write: Camp Wilduad For Boys, 225 Glades Rd., Suite 40E, Boca Raton, FL 31341 (407) 944-5500. Women call or write: Camp Vega for Girls, P.O. Box 1775, Duxbury, MA 06238 (617) 934-8538. We will be on campus on 8/10 and the Regional and List Rooms.
Cruise line, entry level, board positions available, great benefit. Summer or year round. (813) 762-2050.
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
Night supervise needed for janitorial firm. Suh
mon-Thon-Tuesday. 7:11pm or 5:30-9:00pm. Requirements:
Grad student, leadership-training skills,
training in hospitality or yr commitment
$7.00/hr. Call Resume #82-6048.
Part-time Position, Flexible Daytime Hours, Good Communication Skills, Above Average Pay, Call The Dream Factory Special Project Office, 900-231-3560.
$15 Today $30 This week
By donating your life saving blood plasma
WALK-INS WELCOME!
NABI Biomedical Center
816 W 24th 749-5750
Deliverers needed. Dos Mundos Bilingual Hispanic newspaper needs dependable people to distribute paper through Lawrence. Transportation necessary. Good pay. Call 10-5-8 3247-4247
Nannies Wanted. Positions nationwide, summer
great. Great pay and bonne.
travel (1) 623-649-8000
Party photographers needed for Spring and Fall semesters of 1994. Prior 35mm experience is preferred. To apply call 865-1495 and letters to River City Market Restaurants, located lower level of the Riverfront Plaza Mall, has openings
Help wanted: Maintenance person, 62 unit apt,
complex, 15-20 hrs p/wk. Duties include plumbing,
carpentry, & minor electrical. Call anytime 843-
823. Ask for Chris or Susan.
Nap room aide needed for child care center. Mon.-Thu.
12: 3-10. Contact 843-5828.
Graduate Assistant position in the Office of Student Financial Aid beginning on or after March 1, 1994. Responsibilities: interview all applicants for the Kansas University Endowment Loan Program (EUL). Attend KU. Preferred: effective written and oral communication skills and ability to work in blocks of time. Salary: $641.64/month based on 50 assignment and 20 hours per week. Send resume and three professional references to Jule Cooper. Req.: Bachelor's degree in Law, Lawrence, KS 66045. All materials received by 02/18/94. Complete position announcement available upon request. EEO/AA.
Need person for general office work plus showing
resume. Must be a KS2 graduate with full-time.
Must be a KS2 resident majoring in business
or accounting and be enrolled at KU in aat
19 hrs with a GPA of at least 2.0. CalKU-8403-6003
-Front counter MWF lunch hours
SEAMSTRESS WANTED to work for small alterations business. Flexible hours. 841-6331.
-duity staff w/weekends
-wait staff MWF or T/H-Daytime
Apply in person 9AM-6PM Daily
Sax player wanted for working R&B variety band.
Jeff at 841-1555 or 841-9797.
Top private girls resident camp looking for athlete trainer. 6/20/1948/8/20/1948, Excellent salary, RM/bud/land travel allowance, Women call or write: Camp Vega for Girls, P.O. Box 1771, Camp Vega for Girls, 6/45-658. We will be on campus in the student room at 11am-4pm or 3/7/4. Reinfantial Room.
Tennis Jobs-Summer Children's Gamps-Northeast-Men and women with good tennis background can who teach children to play tennis. Good salary, room & board, travel allowance. Women call or work in the program. 820-631-4544; 02333 (917) 643-5343; 619 (934-6534). Men call or write: Camp Winnadu, 255 Glades Rd., Suite 406E, Boca Raton, FL 32431 (407) 984-5500. We will be on campus in the morning up to 6pm or 6/4/13 in the Greed and Residential rooms.
WORK STUDY POSITIONS AVAILABLE AT THE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS. ABOVE MINIMUM WAGE, APPLY ONLY IF WORK STUDY QUALIFIED. MR350 OR CA484. 656-1400.
Work study eligible student assistant needed at International Student Services. Good typing & filing skills. Macintosh experience. Apply at 2 Strong Hall by Feb 14, 5pm.
Work study positions available in community agencies. Apply only if work study qualified. Applications in Student Senate office in Kansas Union. 864-370-14 for Julie or Shanda.
225 Professional Services
1040EZ - $30; 1014 - $15 plus extra fee for other forms to be filed with 1040. State returns $5-$10. Will pick up and deliver. Cail Brian at 256-2572. Driver education offered through Midwest Driving School, school KU students for 20 yrs. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-
$$ Premiere Tax Service $$
BRAXTON B. COPLEY
Attorney at Law
General Practice
Traffic Tickets, Midmeenors,
Landlord/Tenant,
Personal Income tax
719 Massachusetts
749-5333
For a confidential, caring friend, call us. We're here to listen and talk with you. Birthright 4821-4821. Free pregnancy testin
HYDROGENATIONAL
DV-1 GRANT. Sponsored by the U.S.
Immigration Depot, 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 Stagg St., Canoga Park, CA
Tel: (818) 980-4455; Fax: (818) 980-6491
transfer videos from USM to your system or from your country to US mode. $25 includes tape and mailing.
G. Ottawa, WS 9677, Tel: 1-432-7800 - 900-006-696
TRAFFIC.DUI'S
TRAFFIC-DOIT
Fake ID & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
Donald G. Strobe Sally G. Kesley
16 East 13th 842-1133
MATH TUTOR - TEACHING EXPERIENCE
MAFS 810/812 MALS 810/HOUR
845-312-7 Leave a tutor
VIDEO EDITING AND
PRODUCTION SERVICES
A/B roll video tape editing suite with EDL.
3D computer animation.
High production range.
Award winning screen writer.
PRIMAL SCREEN WRITER
PRIMAL SCREEN COMMUNICATIONS
913.521.4000
WEDDING DRESS — never worn, ns. h. blush pink,
broached brooch length, train, $450 / offer Call
866-323-7999
235 Typing Services
1-der Women Word Processing. Former editor transforms forms into accurate pages of letterhead. 845-263-9051 845-263-9053
340 Auto Sales
X
360 Miscellaneous
1988 Dahlatus s 5pd. one owner. No A/C $2000. Call
841-9838-daytime
Beacon Publication Services-Qua.
processing, (including typing, grammar*, proofing,
resumes, laser printing, call Mary. 843-2674.
Look for a good type?
*Papers, Applications, Spreadsheets, Charts*
*Laser刻录 to WAVE your proofs*
*Grammar and spelling free*
*18 years experience*
call Jack at
Makin' the Grade
855-2855
Word processing, applications, term papers, dissertations, research, consultations, rush
*LIVING ROOM SET*, sofa, love seat and chair
Plains high back style in plastic, cost $1500.
Fabric upholstery.
193GT PANTERA 19* BRIGHT RED 705 ALUM.
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Words by Chris Worm Processing.
High quality papers and printing; spell check
and proofreading.
*BRAZ BED, firm, orthopedic mattress set and used, cost $100, sell $35 cash, dealer,
305 For Sale
1969 Mazda R32 GXL, red, 46 K mi. power roof.
000 call 788-1040-1640
BEER ON TAP!-K cooler for sale $200 a.b.o.
Holds full or pony kegs. Comes with one empty keg,
no more deposits. Save $$. Call John 814-8397,
message leave
300s Merchandise
Build a new body! Four month membership to
Ana's website at last year's price! Call Jennifer at 864-7217.
Carmine $116, aax-175; T-bone $104, great cond.
Charline $166, aax-175; T-bone $104, great cond.
Bradley $385-370
For Sale Mac Classic II 400, with 40.5 MB + MS
800, or 400, with 400, OBG Call 800,
day or day, 91-999 night
FOR SALE: MACH XG-1 w/45mm f2 lens auto-
man. $25.00 obs call Mike at 749-3349.
IBM Compaq, Computer, Hard drive, 5.5 in., VGA monitor, 286, I MG RAM, all manuals, system 1.5 yrs. old, over $1000 of software, Call 832-2282
camera, $200 each, $350 for both, 749-3188
SNOW SKI 17S Rossignol + bindings + case
+ poles $75.0 DETECTOR Whistler Spec.
+ poles CD $35.0 PANASONIC,
$60.0 in all excellent models 841-6331
MACINTOSH Computer. Complete system including printer only 500. Call Christ at 809-328-5685.
THE CHAPMAN
--available now Call 841-1212
3 BDRM LUXURY TOWN HOME
Used & Curious Goods
731 New Hampshire
841-0550
Noon-6:00 Tues-Sat
Buy • Sell • Store
H
405 For Rent
400s Real Estate
1, 2 or 3 bedrooms at 9th and Mississippi. W/D.
$200/month. Free utilities. Call 041-8487.
I Bedroom Apt. available now! Call 041-1214.
3 dbrm town home, fp, wapted ceilings, all appl.
4 bdrm town home, fp, wapted ceilings, Hawthorne Place, 27225. Call 841-809-6351.
3 Bedroom/ 3 full bath now available on bus route. Microwave & dishwasher $500.
4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished,
Interested? Interested? Call 815-6255, 794-0455 or
862-4543
Applecroft Apt. aval, April 1 2 bdrm, b bath fully equipped tkp dishwasher, micro. disposalheat, air, water, trash paid. On bus route. No pets. Call anvii 843-422K. Ask for Chris or Susan.
Available at West Hills Apts. Spacious. I beg unfurred apt $295 per month. Water pd. Great location near campus. 1012 Emery Rd. No pets. 841-3800. 542-3884
Available March 1. Two bedrooms townhouse 1½
room, two baths, pool, $435 per month, $841,
1881 leave room, message
Available now, two bedroom at 912 Tennessee,
two bedrooms, $400 plus utilities,
small oak 800, 790-758
Furnished room for rent with shared kitchen and
parking. 914-540-7500. RU. Off street parking.
No beds. 914-540-7500
Hanover Place Apt. for, Near Campus.
$370/MO, Call 841-1212.
meadowbrook FALL'94
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. Call Kathy or Shana at Meadowbrook
15th & Crestline
Mon - Fri 8-5:30
Sat 10-4
Sun 1-4
Sorry no pets
House for rent 2 bedroom no pets, newly remodeled call 843-2033
Lorimer townhouses
Now renting for June and August, 1, 2 and 3 bdrs,
dishwasher, microwave, W/D, fireplace, celling
fans, cable pd. Call 841-7849 for app.
Leasing for June and August. New 4 bedroom, 3 bath fireplace, gas fireplace, ceiling fans, cable-paid 1500, feet and covered parking avail. Early sign-up specials offered. For more information call Dave at 81-427-8000.
Sublime large one bedroom on bp. on busu. Low
waters, water pad, PET ORT, AvailD ASAP.
Rooms, apartments, and well kept, older
bomar apartment, 81-WSTAR(7922)
One bedroom apartment for sublease. Water and
furniture included. January free $340/mo. Now
until Auir. Call 869-1234.
One bedroom apt, sublease next to campus, off street parking . free rent for month of February-move in now, leave message 865-0126
Room for rent in rbd 13/4 1/3/4 duplex. Dep. req.
/autils. Mail 865-509
Spacium I bedroom appt close to campus. Furnished. Avail immediately. Call 841-1212. Ask
MASTERCRAFT
Sub-lease three bedroom apt. $235 per month
Male nominee, 12th and Louisiana. $800 per month.
Female nominee, 12th and Louisiana. $800 per month.
Studio,1,2,3,&4 bedroom apartments and townhomes
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.
REGENTS COURT 749-0445 :19th & Mass.
Hookups
Offers Completely Furnished
Offers
SUNDANCE
Park25
HANOVER
841-1212 : 14th & Mass.
We presently have available a select few 1 & 2 bedroom apartments for immediate occupancy.
HANOVER
Hookuns
*2Pools
4 Stopson Property
*2 LaundryRooms
*Some Washer/Dryer
SUNDANCE
841-5255 : 7th & Florida
- Volleyball Court
* On KU Bus Route with
Call or stop by today.
2401 W. 25th, 9A3
842-1455
(sorry pets)
TANGLEWOOD
749-2415 : 10th & Arkansas
ORCHARD CORNER
749-4226 15th & Kasold
CAMPUS PLACE
841-1429 : 1145 Louisiana
Open Daily 9AM - 5PM
842-4455
MASTERCRAFT
Trailridge Apartments
Now leasing for Summer and Fall
Appeal, Apa, and Town Houses
KU Bud House, Doussie, Bunhill, Blackmail,
Pleasant Grove
Call Today for more information
843-7333 2500w. 6th
Ubbable available March 1. $399 a month, W/D,
microwave, trash, DW, fridge, stove, fireplace.
table paid. On golf course. Close to KU. Call 865-
655.
430 Roommate Wanted
1 Roommate, non-smoker for 3 dorm room. $175
campus. campus. washer/Dryer/Grout.
Greg. 709-211-860
Female needed to share 3 bdm arm with W/D $150 a.m. Stadium View Apeil. Call 832-286-98.
Female non-smoking roommate wanted to compete for next fall. Must be a student. Call 823-2929
3 furnished bedrooms in home, close to campus.
DW, DAC, BV, 2/bath. $190/mo
Call Seh 841-8290-6258
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
- By phone: 864-4358
One female roommate wanted for a bdm aptm.
$302/mo + 1/2 up. close to campus. 843-5146.
How to schedule an ad:
Female roommate needed immediately on 1360
8165/mo. Call 841-1074 or 832-0706.
Have your own room, covered parking, private
garage, and washer, etc. for only 79m/day + call 414-250-3600.
Roommate Wanted. 5 bedroom apartment; very nice. On bus route. Feb. free. 651-8692.
Roommate to share bripm爬墙, fenced yard,
uiutities Feb. paid.
Pets: Jack Cailk 832-120-1000
Roommate needed to share b2.8m, 2.bath apartment. Water paid, share electric and gas. Lease ends in May. Route near neighborhood, on day and night bus routes. $240/mi. 832-296-2.
ROOMMATE MISSED to share two bedroom
house $178/mo + /utilities Call Dave 863-390
or Alex 863-390
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The University Dataly Kaukarn, 1919 Staffer Flint Hall, Law serece. KS. 6004 543
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1984 Sorensen Inc. All rights reserved by Universal Press Syndicate
"Well, here he comes ... Mr. Never-Makes-a-Dud."
14
Friday. February 11, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Metropolis BBS
832-0041
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University
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C
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8th & Mass.
843-1099
Thurs. 'til 8:30, Fri. & Sat. 'til 7,
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VALENTINE
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14.99
SILK BOXERS
Solid red or heart print silk boxers make a fun and practical gift for your man. Reg. $20.
Other Valentine Gifts:
Heart woven socks $6
100% Cotton briefs $7.50
Cotton boxers $10.00
Weaver's
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Olympic security ready for bombs, whaling protests and irate skaters
The Associated Press
LILLEHAMMER, Norway There's more to protect here than Nancy Kerrigan.
Middle East terrorism and anti-walhing protests are the main security concerns at the Lillehammer Games, and one-third of Norway's police force was assigned to maintain the status quo in this tranquil lake town.
Bomb-sniffing dogs and hostage negotiators — both new concepts to the 23,000 residents — joined athletes and tourists gathering here for Saturday's opening ceremonies.
1994 Winter Olympic Games
"All the world can feel calm and feel that their athletes are protected," said Arne Huuse, commander of the Olympic police force. "We have planned security for these Games down to the last detail for five years, and we are ready. It will all come off safely."
Organizers spent $50 million on security, though their approach is more low-key than at past Olympics. "Service with a smile" is their motto — a slogan more likely for an interstate gas station than an international security force.
Norwegian police don't carry guns, a difference from Games at Barcelona and Sarajevo, where armed soldiers were a common sight. In Albertville, the security force was triple the size of the Lillehammer contingent.
But authorities here are confident of handling anything that arises — even the possibility of Middle East terrorists reacting to Norway's role in last year's peace agreement between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization.
"We constantly looked at that and at the international signals that we get," Roger Andresen, representative for the Olympic police force, said yesterday. Andresen would not discuss any specifics. But Lillehammer Olympic Organizing Committee head Gerhard
Heiberg said four months ago he had been told opponents of the accord might "want to teach Norway a lesson."
Organizers said 2,770 police officers were assigned to Gums duty. Included are an anti-terrorist unit, hostage negotiators and bomb sounds.
One athlete will receive special protection — and no, it's not Kerrigan or Tonya Harding. Prince Albert of Monaco, competing in the Olympic bobsled, will whip down the run at Hunderfosen under the watchful eyes of plainclothes police.
Five helicopters, 400 cars and 50 police dogs — eight of them bomb-sniffing specialists from Northern Ireland — are also on the case. On the high-tech front, surveillance cameras will photograph cars coming into the region and a helicopter will provide live shots via both day and night cameras.
That's not all. All food brought into the Olympic athletes' village is inspected. Mail sent to VIPs is run through X-ray scanners. Credentials are checked electronically for authenticity.
Skater trains as brother recuperates
By Ron Lesko
The Associated Press
HAMAR, Norway — After most of her teammates left the ice, U.S. speedskater Kristin Talbott stayed behind to work on her technique with Bonnie Blair. It was good to concentrate on skating again.
Talbot turned lap after rhythmic lap behind Blair in the Viking Ship Hall on Wednesday, more confident than ever that the bone marrow she donated to her brother last month is saving his life.
Jason Talbot, who was diagnosed with aplastic anemia in December, was released as scheduled this week from Baltimore's Johns Hopkins Hospital.
The strain of her brother's illness has weighed on Talbot, a 500-meter specialist skating in her third Olympics. Jason, 19, wanted the news kept from her so she could focus on Olympic preparation, but Talbot eventually had to be tested to see if she was a bone marrow match.
She was. So were two younger brothers, but Talbot demanded that her marrow be used even though she knew
it could cost her a spot on the Olympic team.
"I feel like I've done what any sister would do for her brother," she said.
On Jan. 11, doctors at John Hopkins poked about 100 holes in her hips to extract the marrow. It was transplanted within 45 minutes, and Jason's white blood cell count has risen steadily since.
He will be treated as an outpatient for about two months.
"It really is a burden off of her," said Talbot's coach, Nick Thometz. "It's been hard for her these last few weeks."
With her brother's life threatened and the transplant looming, Talbot struggled at the Olympic trials, which ended two days before the operation.
She was the fourth and final qualifier at 500 meters and then missed a week of training to recuperate when the transplant left her anemic and with sore hips.
But she feels as strong as ever with the Games ready to begin Saturday and the 500 scheduled a week later. Talbot finished 25th in the 1988 Olympics at Calgary, and 17th at Albertville in '92.
KANSAS JAYHAWKS SWIMMING AND DIVING
KANSAS VS.
Saturday, February 12th - 1 PM Robinson Natatorium
Nebraska
- Free Jayhawk Keychain to first 200 Fans •
Free Admission
KANSAS
COUNTY
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL
6 KANSAS VS.
Iowa State
Friday, February 11th - 7 pm Faculty/Staff Night
6 KANSAS VS. Nebraska
- Lawrence Elementary School Coloring Contest
- Sunday, February 13th - 2 PM
- Junior High School Day
Both Games in Allen Fieldhouse Admission: Adults $400/Kids $100 Students FREE with KU ID
Call the KU Ticket Office at 864-3141 for info.
YOU AIN'T SEEN NOTHING YET!
Payless ShoeSource
K~you
A promotional supplement to the University Daily Kansan
Before they read the "Guide"
February 11, 1994
THE 1994 GUIDE TO GOING OUT
After they read the "Guide"
Table of Contents
PENETRATOR
Page 5- For many nontraditional students, the definition of going out is different than the average KU student's.
Page 7- The Kansas City Blades offer the action of local ice hockey.
THE DEERMANS
Page 11- Some Lawrence restaurants offer specials to people celebrating birthdays.
Page 16 Mark Yonally provides entertainment through tap dancing at Paradise Cafe.
Page 19 KU students are willing to wait in line to play bar games.
Page 21 Columnist Dan England tries to find the answer to the question: Is Lawrence the next Seattle?
Credits
Special Sections Manager
Shelly McConnell
Freelance Editor
Christine Laue
News Editor
Todd Selfert
Copy Chief
Matt Hydeman
Copy Editors
Tiffany Hurt, Shan Schwartz,
Amy E. Patton, David Stewart
Photo Editor
Doug Hesse
Digital Technician
James Wilcox
Technology Coordinator
Bill Skeet
Cover Photos
Melissa Lacey
Cover Models
Jennifer Bennett, Michael Strelow
Special Thanks to Paul Wenske's Reporting II class, Dave Habiger, Bill Thomas and Brian Fusco for production assistance.
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2
GUIDE TO GOING OUT • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN • February 11, 1994
Choices abound for coffee connoisseurs
Restaurants cater to students' desires
By Amanda Traughber Special to the Kansan
Decaf, black or topped with whipped cream, coffee from some Lawrence restaurants won't let a coffee fan go unsatisfied.
B
"It's a nice place to go after you eat with friends to talk and hang out," Tracey Cluthe, Houston, Texas, sophomore said about La Prima Tazza, 638 Massachusetts St.
Heather Lofflin / KANSAN
She said that she just recently had started frequenting La Prima Tazza because she liked the nice, relaxed atmosphere.
On Friday and Saturday nights, La Prima Tazza, with its subdued lighting and simple decor, attracts people of all ages.
Bart Smith, manager of La Prima Tazza,
said the cafe was busy almost constantly
during its business hours. La Prima Tazza is
open 7 a.m. to 11:30 p.m. Monday through
Thursday, 7 a.m. to midnight Friday and
Saturday and 7 a.m. to 11 p.m. Sunday.
Smith said La Prima Tazza was unique because the people that worked there were highly skilled in making the specialty coffees the cafe is known for.
Stephen Mathis, Memphis, Tenn., graduate student, studies the philosophy of language at La Prima Tazza coffee shop. He said he usually goes there to study at night but does not stay long if it is crowded.
sachusetts St. Blue Bird recently extended its hours to accommodate people who were looking for a place to go after bars closed. The diner is now open from midnight to 3 a.m. on Friday and Saturday nights.
Right down to the shaved chocolate sprinkles topping gourmet drinks such as Mocha Florentine, Black Forest Mocha and Iced Grasshoppers, La Prima Tazza tries to use nothing but the best ingredients. Smith said.
Another place that serves a large student clientele is the Blue Bird Diner, 814 Mas
The Blue Bird Diner is also open 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday and Tuesday, 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday, and 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sunday.
"There's a lot of competition downtown," said Sheryl Robertson, co-owner of the Blue Bird. "We wanted to do something different, and we're near all the bars."
Blue Bird is different from other restaurants that serve coffee because of its diner theme and decor, Robertson said.
On a weekend night, students can listen to techno music and sip any of seven different kinds of espresso made in Blue Bird's espresso bar. The diner also offers organic coffees.
Many different menu items include what Robertson calls "down-home American" dishes such as pot pies, hamburgers, pastas, and vegetarian dishes.
Julie Nelson, manager of the Terra Nova Cafe, inside the Terra Nova bookstore at 920 Massachusetts Sf., said she had noticed a significant number of students at night and on the weekends but not as many as she had expected.
"I thought that there would be more student traffic since this is a university town," she said.
The Terra Nova lunch crowd is generally a little older, but students come in at night for coffee and dessert. Nelson said.
The Terra Nova Cafe, which opened last July, serves organically grown coffee and
teas and natural sodas. Other menu items, which include sandwiches and salads, Salmon Gruyere Cheesecake, Wild Wild Chicken (chicken with wild rice and a wild mushroom cream sauce) and venison, are made in the cafe. The menu and the coffees served change frequently.
Other old standbys for late-night coffee drinkers include restaurants that are open 24 hours a day, such as Dunkin Donuts, 521 W. 23rd St.; Perkins Restaurant, 1711 W. 23rd St.; Village Inn Pancake House, 821 Iowa St.; and Munchers Bakery, 925 Iowa
St., except on Mondays when it is closed.
Neil Christensen, manager of Village Inn, said the restaurant saw its biggest rushes at midnight on week nights after the libraries closed and at 2 a.m. on weekends after bars closed.
Village Inn offers a 10 percent student discount.
Village Inn, Perkins and Dunkin Donuts have smoking sections, and the Blue Bird Diner allows smoking from midnight to 3 a.m. La Prima Tazza and the Terra Nova Cafe do not allow smoking.
Valentine's Day special
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• Highlighting
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MANE·TAMERS
HAIR STYLING
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Valentine's Day special
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846 Illinios Old Towne Square 841-5499
BENCHWARMERS
Thursday Friday Saturday
Feb.10 Feb.11 Feb.12
Stone Culture Truck Stop Love BROKEN INGLISH
Feb.17 SQUIB CAKES Freddy Jones Band from Chicago with Hard Soul Poets Feb.19 NOVEMBER w/Turquoise Sol
Feb.24 These Days Suave Octopus Poets w/Sun Sawed in Half Feb.26 IGNITE presents COMMON GROUND
Mar.3 Michelle MaLone from the H.O.R.D.E.tour Mar.4 Allgood WAKE
Drink Specials
Mon. $3.75 Pitchers
Tue. $1.00 off imports
Wed. $.50 Sam Adams draws Boulevard draws
Thur. $.25 Draws Free Pool on Tuesdays Over 25 NEW IMPORTS!
Fri. $2.00 Teas
Sat. 2 for 1 wells
Sun. $2.00 Bloody Marys Screwdrivers Greyhounds
Every Day-- $1.00 shot of the day!
New management • New Staff
New Attitude
BENCHWARMERS
Thursday Friday Saturday
Feb.10
Stone Culture
Feb.11
Truck Stop Love
Feb.12
BROKEN INGLISH
Feb.17
SQUIB CAKES
Feb.18
Freddy Jones Band from Chicago with Hard Soul Poets
Feb.19
NOVEMBER w/Turquoise Sol
Feb.24
These Days
Feb.25
Suave Octopus Poets w/Sun Sawed in Half
Feb.26
IGNITE presents COMMON GROUND
Mar.3
Michelle MaLone from the H.O.R.D.E.tour
Mar.4
Allgood
Mar.5
WAKE
Drink Specials
Mon. $3.75 Pitchers
Tue. $1.00 off imports
Wed. $.50 Sam Adams draws
Boulevard draws
Thur. $.25 Draws
Free Pool on Tuesdays Over 25 NEW IMPORTS!
Fri. $2.00 Teas
Sat. 2 for 1 wells
Sun. $2.00 Bloody Marys
Screwdrivers
Greyhounds
Every Day-- $1.00 shot of the day!
New management • New Staff
New Attitude
February 11, 1994 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN •THE GUIDE TO GOING OUT
3
Under-21 crowd can find fun in Lawrence
By Sabrina Steele Special to the Kansan
While some KU students are on their way to their favorite bars tonight, Tahjzia Baker, Kansas City, Kan., freshman, will be in search of something else to do:
"It's boring here," Baker said. "I'd like to have more places for younger people to go, safe places to go."
Baker, like many KU students, may not be aware of the plethora of opportunities available for people under 21 or for those who are not interested in the bar scene.
Social activities are abundant, ranging from affordable movies at the Kansas Union to a myriad of events through religious and nondenominational groups and even a few nights when some Lawrence bars admit 18-year-olds.
Baker also said parties were common, either at apartments or in residence halls.
Tonya Watson, Lawrence freshman, said she and her boyfriend often went to movies or to dinner. She also attends friends' parties or fraternity and sorority parties.
"The SUA has had a few good movies," Baker said. "And the Burge Union has Black PanHellenic parties."
Margaret Hu, president of SUA, said the organization was working on booking various comedians, musicians and bands to perform at the University.
"The concerts don't have age minimums, and it provides an opportunity to see a lot of great bands." Hu said.
SUA also sponsors movies every Tuesday through Saturday or Sunday, pool teams and bowling leagues.
Trevor Calarco, Littleton, Colo., sophomore, said he spent time with his girlfriend rented movies or attended parties. Calarco also said his floor at Ellsworth Hall had activities.
"We're trying to go to a Blades hockey game, and we had a Christmas party," he said.
Mark Mensik, president of Ellsworth, said that the residence halls were in the process of organizing an all-hall dance. He also said each floor of the hall was responsible for organizing activities, some of which included going camping, eating out or trips to places such as comedy clubs.
David Rozenberg, Chicago freshman said he enjoyed his fraternity parties and KU basketball games.
"The guys' and girls' basketball games are great," he said. "Half of the girls' team lives in my hall, and they're exciting to watch."
Mariana Juric, St. Louis junior, said that going to movies or hanging out with friends were common practices.
"You have music, drinking, all of your buds over," Juric said. "You meet people by having friends over, and they invite their friends."
As Juric indicated, drinking, or even going out illegally to bars, may be pervasive among underage students. Though some minors use false identification and risk possible humiliation and arrest, there are a few bars in Lawrence that offer "18-nights."
Fiona Dawborne, Chicago freshman, loves dancing at the Granada Theater, 1020 Massachusetts St.. Though a couple of bars offer 18-nights sporadically, the Granada is the only place in Lawrence that is always open to 18-year-olds.
said the bar wanted to offer a fun place to go. All are carded at the entrance and marked with a stamp indicating if they are over or under 21, she said.
Stacy Elwell, manager of the Granada,
Calarco said that he liked The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St., a bar that offers random 18-nights. Most national acts that perform at The Bottleneck are open to 18-year-olds, and some local bands request it. People 21 or older are given bracelets to wear, and the underage customers are marked with a black "X" on their hands.
The Branding Iron Salon, 806 W. 24th St., has male dancers who perform on the first and third Thursdays of each month. The bar is open to females 18 and older for the performances and on special events such as date dashes.
Greg Totzke, Arlington Heights, Ill., senior and a bartender at The Yacht Club, 530 Wisconsin St., said anyone was allowed in until 10 p.m. Sunday through Thursday to eat. Friday through Saturday anyone is allowed to stay and eat until midnight, when the club closes down the grill, he said. Underage patrons who are eating are assigned to certain tables and are monitored by waitresses.
However, bars and drinking are not the only activities available for students. The Jaybowl in the Kansas Union, SUA and other organizations can provide alternative activities. The Jaybowl has pinball machines, pool tables, TV's and video games in addition to the bowling lanes.
Michael Fine, Jaybowl recreation coordinator, said the leagues and open bowling were popular activities.
"There is also quite a bit of business from people who like to play pool but aren't old
enough to get into the bars," he said.
Tim DeMars, assistant manager, also said the Jaybowl was a popular option for those under 21.
"It's a place to have fun at half the price of other establishments," he said.
Wilderness Discovery and Camping Equipment Rental operates out of the Jaybowl. Fine said that camping was a popular activity during the spring and summer and that equipment was reasonably priced.
"Two people could rent a tent, sleeping bags, a lantern, stove and a cooking kit for the weekend, all for under $30 each," he said.
Campus Christians has socials most weekends in addition to Sunday night Bible studies. Members have gone ice skating at Crown Center Ice Terrace,2450 Grand Ave. in Kansas City, Mo. The group is planning on doing work on a house with an inner-city group.
The International Students Organization has Operation Friendship at the Baptist Student Union. The group's socials offer international students an opportunity to become acquainted with U.S.citizens. It often has socials reflecting a theme of the month or season, such as Valentine's Day, Thanksgiving or even carnivals and field days.
Harambee provides yet another option for students. It is a Bible study group geared toward African-American students but open to all students, said Anthony Case, group president. It often holds socials after Bible study meetings in addition to its monthly gatherings.
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Classes, kids and carpools
Nontraditional students have other ways to go out
Matt Irwin Special to the Kansan
For most of the school year, Kathie Pelan goes out almost every day of the week.
Except for Pelan, going out means going to a gymnasium or a soccer field to watch her children practice or play a game.
For many nontraditional students like Pelan, their definition of going out is different than the average KU student's. Because of finances and the responsibilities of marriage and children, going to bars or movies and dining out are not always options for these students.
Nontraditional students fall into one of the following categories: They are more than 24 years old, commute more than 10 miles, have children or are married or are veterans.
Pelan, for example, a 35-year-old Lawrence sophomore, is married and has three children. She takes her daughter to gymnastics training four days a week and attends her son's basketball games on Friday nights and both of her sons' soccer games on Saturdays.
"That is my recreation time," Pelan said. "It gets my mind off school."
Not every nontraditional student's life revolves around marriage and kids.
Some, like Michael Brown, a 29-year-old Eugene, Ore., first-year graduate student, go out with traditional students. Brown is single and has no children, so he has time to
go out Fridays, Saturdays and sometimes after classes during the week with classmates.
However, many other nontraditional students lead different lives than the average college student. Marriage, children and financial needs play significant roles in what they can and can't do.
One of the options for nontraditional students is a group called OAKS, Non-Traditional Students Organization. On Tuesdays and Wednesdays, OAKS members have a brown-bag lunch together at one of the unions. During spring break, the group sponsors activities for students who stay in Lawrence, including a night of bowling and a golf tournament. OAKS also holds a Stop Day party. This year it will be at Dos Hombres, 815 New Hampshire St.
Gerri Vernon, 35-year-old Colby graduate student and president of OAKS, said that about 450 people had responded to newsletters sent out by OAKS at the beginning of the year. Although the group has a membership of about 450, Vernon said that there were only about 30 to 40 active members. This reflects the difficulty many nontraditional students have finding time for extracurricular activities.
Vernon said OAKS was a support network for undergraduate, nontraditional students. But many graduate students are also a part of the group. Vernon said nontraditional graduate students often met in classes and tried to support one another.
"We try to get new people to feel comfortable," he said. "That's what we're there for."
Vernon said that OAKS also held a "coffee clutch" on the fourth Tuesday of every month. Only four people showed up to the
Vernon said the group planned to advertise the event more in the future.
January session.
Pelan said that she felt lucky to have a husband who worked so she did not have to but that she still must manage her studies between caring for her children and attending practices or games. She said she could often squeeze in time to study during her daughter's gymnastics training.
To help manage her time better, Pelan has become resourceful, she said.
"I'm a professional car-pooler," she said. "I'm very good at saying, 'If you drive, I'll pick up.'"
When the family does not have a sporting event to attend, Pelan said, they enjoyed going out to eat, renting a movie or going to a $1 movie theater.
Pelan and her husband, however, try to find time to be alone with each other. Sometimes, when one of their children makes plans to stay over at a friend's house, she arranges for the other children to stay somewhere, as well, she said. She and her husband plan a big meal — using the fancy china — and afterward enjoy a quiet evening watching a rented movie while sitting in front of a warm fire.
Vicki Thompson, a 34-year-old Lawrence senior, has a son, but she has more options for going out. Thompson said she planned to marry Terry Schmidt, a 35-year-old Lawrence junior, in May.
One reason Thompson and Schmidt are able to go out more is because Thompson's 16-year-old son can look after Schmidt's 5-year-old daughter.
Thompson said that they tried to limit going out to weekends because of their
I am writing to you about the following issue:
The current policy in California requires that all students have access to a computer. While this is an important piece of legislation, there are some concerns about its impact on our education.
One concern is that it may limit the range of subjects and skills that students can learn. With the increased use of technology, students may be forced to focus on more technical skills than other areas, which could lead to a lack of breadth in their education.
Another concern is that it may not be available to everyone. Some schools do not have computers or internet access, so students with disabilities may struggle to access the same resources.
Finally, there is a concern about the potential for overuse of technology. If students spend too much time on computers, they may become too reliant on them and lose the ability to think critically and creatively.
I hope that you are satisfied with the information I provided. If you have any questions, please contact me.
Thank you.
Heather Lofflin / KANSAN
Kathie Pelan, Lawrence sophomore, works on calculus during her son's Lawrence Parks and Recreation junior high basketball practice at Pinckney Elementary School.
children's needs and school but that they participated in volleyball during the fall and softball during the summer. Thompson said that after they played volleyball, they sometimes went out to a bar to chat with friends.
Even though they occasionally take these small breaks to release the pressures of school and studying, they still are busy most of the time.
Because of their busy schedules, Thompson and her fiance are forced to organize their studying so that they can take care of their children and still do well in school.
"I don't know what I'd do if I had a lot of time on my hands," Thompson said.
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Monday
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February 11, 1994 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN •THE GUIDE TO GOING OUT
Skaters, hockey players can take to ice in Lawrence
By Manny Lopez Special to the Kansan
His black hockey skates don't get much use these days. The only action they see anymore is on an occasional Sunday for a pickup hockey game in Kansas City.
"I played in a league for six years until they tore down the ice rink in Lawrence," said Max Utsler, associate professor of journalism.
Finding a place to step onto the ice to enjoy an afternoon skate or raucous hockey match with friends may be a little difficult in Lawrence this winter. But take heed there are some options.
Ice skating in the Lawrence and Kansas City areas offers a unique way to get some exercise or just to use as an excuse to plan a short road trip with friends as a study break.
Usually, Watson Park at Eighth and Kentucky streets is open to skaters. The Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department sometimes plugs a drainage pipe during the winter and floods the basin for ice skating.
But Fred DeVictor, director of the department, said that massive flooding from the summer had caused some erosion under the basin, preventing it from holding water
"Unfortunately, when you are dealing with nature you can't always control things," DeVictor said. "So right now it looks like there won't be skating in Watson Park."
Teresa Rasmussen of the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers at Clinton Lake highly recommended that people stay off of the ice in Lawrence.
"Obviously, on a body of water the size of Clinton Lake the ice is not always going to freeze well," Rasmussen said. "Also, the waves and wind on the lake make the ice that does freeze very uneven and difficult to skate on."
She said that the corps was responsible for the maintenance of Clinton Lake, but that they did not test the ice for safety because they did not have the manpower to provide adequate skating services.
John O'Brien, professor of systematics and ecology, said that it was safe for people to ice skate on Potter Lake as long as temperatures were below freezing and the ice was thick.
For those students that must get their winter ice-skating fix, a trip to Kansas City is the answer. One of the most popular venues there for ice skating is the Crown Center Ice Terrace, 2450 Grand Avenue, Kansas City, Mo. The drive from Lawrence to the Ice Terrace takes about one hour.
Admission is $5 daily except after 5 p.m. on Thursdays, when students get a $1 discount. The Ice Terrace is open from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. daily.
Another option in the Kansas City area is the Ice Chateau of King Louie West, 8788 Metcalf Avenue in Overland Park. Admission at the Ice Chateau is $4.75, and skate rental is $1.75. Group rates are available at both rinks, but advance reservations for groups are required.
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GUIDE TO GOING OUT • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN • February 11, 1994
Faithful fans are 'goal' of KC Blades
Team's success swells support for hockey action
By Matt Irwin Special to the Kansan
The physical crunch of football, the nonstop action of basketball and the hitting skills of baseball, all done while maneuvering gracefully like a figure skater — that's one way to describe the sport of hockey.
The fascination for professional hockey is growing in Lawrence and throughout the Midwest, especially since the Kansas City Blades started bringing the action locally
"I love hockey. It's an exciting game that really sells itself," said Nate Berman, Overland Park sophomore.
But hockey is not the only reason the Blades have a higher attendance than this time last year, said Bob Kaser, director of media relations and broadcaster.
To entertain people between periods, the Blades have brought in the "San Diego
To draw people from places like Lawrence, the Blades have put together a night of entertainment geared toward all kinds of people, not just hockey fans or people who want to see violence.
Chicken", set up promotions such as winning a car parked on the ice by throwing a paper airplane into the car's sunroof and had shootouts for other prizes.
"You want to create an atmosphere that even if the team gets beat 10 to nothing, people will come out of the building happy."Kaser said.
The Blades also have set up two college nights, including one on Feb. 19 where $10 upper-level tickets are $5.
10
James Wilcox / KANSAN
For any group of 25 or more people, the Blades have targeted campus groups by charging $8 for their lower-level $12 tickets.
The Kansas City Blades' J.F. Quintin (20) blocks Atlanta's Eric Dubois while Kansas City's Gary Emmons (15) controls the puck. Emmons stole the puck from Duboos, skated the length of the ice and scored. The Blades defeated the Knights 7-6 in overtime Jan. 28.
A winning team is what makes the difference in bringing people to the games, Kaiser said.
"I think it has a lot to do with it. It has more to do with teams that have been established," Kaser said. "Winning is the number one source of promotion."
The Blades have done that again so far this year, with their fourth season record up until Jan. 31 of 23-21-4.
After starting off with a 25-53-4 season in the 1990-91 season, the Blades became the International Hockey League affiliate of the San Jose Sharks the following season. That year they won the Turner Cup, the league championship, and followed it with another winning season in 1992-93.
Yet the Blades' success is not what brought Kevin Koehler, Wellington senior, to the team's first college night this season.
Although Koehler was disappointed that he did not see as much checking as he would have liked, Koehler said he would
After watching NHL hockey on television and hearing how violent the game was and how rowdy the crowd got, Koehler went to observe it first hand.
return.
"It's something for a group of people to do," said Koehler, who had helped organize a trip for Amini and Sellards scholarship hall residents. "I'd like to go back sometime."
This is the Blades goal in trying to get people from places like Lawrence, said Scott Dyess, executive director for the Blades.
"I feel if I can get one person to come and watch a game, they'll have fun and want to come back," Dyss said.
One of those repeat fans is Nate Berman.
"There's fast-paced action. There's vio-
lence," Berman said. "I like the checking, not so much the fighting, but the checking. It's just like a good hit in football."
In spite of his enjoyment of the contact in the game, Berman said he attended games for more than just the violence.
Kaser agreed reluctantly that people liked the game's violence. He said he disagreed that violence was why people came to the games.
"There's no question that a lot of people are into that," Kaser said. "I don't think it has anything to do with violence. I think people come to see hockey. There is constant action."
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February 11, 1994 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN •THE GUIDE TO GOING OUT
7
From preppy to retro, nightlife fashion a matter of personal style
By Erika Rasmussen Special to the Kansan
A night out on the town in Lawrence involves more than just deciding where to go-it means deciding what to wear. Just as the choices of where to go are varied, so are the fashions people wear.
Although personal style is always a factor, Lawrence clothing stores that have a high clientele of KU students offer advice about what is hot to wear on a cold winter night out on the town.
"A lot of denim sells," said Angie Ash, employee at Britches Corner, 843 Massachusetts St.
She said that men appeared to be buying a lot of shirts, jeans and blazers by the designer Tommy Hilfiger.
Bill Forsythe, Shawnee, junior, said that he wore a similar style of clothing.
"Usually when I go out I wear a button-down shirt or rugby and a pair of blue jeans," he said. "I think that's a fairly typical outfit."
Students of both sexes said that baseball hats were a popular accessory and that brands such as Gap, Polo, and J. Crew were among their favorites.
In women's clothing, it seems anything goes, from a classic, preppy style to a trendy, retro look, some retailers in downtown Lawrence said.
Shelly Lane, manager of Cleopatra's Closet, 743 Massachusetts St., said that wide-legged pants, miniskirts, chokers, tight shirts such as bodysuits and anything velvet are popular.
A.J.
Jennie Zeiner / KANSAN
These outfits from Britches Corner and Cleopatra's Closet in downtown Lawrence are among the popular clothing for going out this winter.
"We have a line of clothing called Betsey Johnson that sells really well in Lawrence," she said. Lane described the clothing as "a revitalizing of the '60s and '70s."
However, some KU students forgo the latest trends and choose a simpler look when they go out.
Shea Rhodes, Paoli, Pa., senior, said that she usually wore a leotard, denim shirt or a blazer, but that jeans were an essential part of her wardrobe.
Kris Hoffman, Enid, Okla., sophomore,
said he liked baggy pants and shirts, worn
with Doc Martens or Birkenstocks.
"I like the lazy look," he said.
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February 11, 1994. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN •THE GUIDE TO GOING OUT
9
KU museums show and tell history
I'll see if there's any more.
William Alix / KANSAN
George Lauppe, Lawrence resident, explores the Museum of Natural History's exhibit with his grandsons from Manhattan, Shane, 7, and Craig. 4.
By Nasrin Yasmin Special to the Kansan
A tour of one of KU's many museums might help bolster the spirits and inform the minds of students who are caught with nothing to do and face a boring weekend.
These museums, with their individual specialties, tell great stories about the history and culture of people and the fascinating animal kingdom, nationally and in Kansas.
KU has a wide array of museums, all located a few blocks from the Kansas Union.
The Museum of Natural History, is located at the corner of 14th Street and Jayhawk Boulevard.
Panorama, an exhibit that recreates a scene from the wild, features an exotic display of flora and fauna from all around the world. According to a recent poll, which was conducted by the museum, this exhibit is the most popular.
"People just love it," said Kathryn Morton, marketing and public relations officer of the museum. "They immediately get carried away by the splendor of the shapes and colors."
Besides the Panorama, the Fossil Exhibit, which lately has been nicknamed "Jurassic Park," is a favorite of children. But adults are equally fascinated with the fossils of dinosaurs and other huge prehistoric animals.
The Spencer Museum of Art is near the north entrance to the KU campus, on Mississippi Street. The museum has a superb collection of sculptures, paintings, prints, drawings, photographs and metal work. These art works come from western
Europe, the United States and East Asia, and date from ancient times to the present.
Among the remarkable works of the museum are the Japanese Standing Amida Buddha from the 15th century and the paintings from the great European artists of the 17th and 18th century, as well as modern arts and crafts.
The Museum of Anthropology, which is just across the street from the Kansas Union has a great story to tell about the cultural diversity and ethnicity of people
around the globe.
The major permanent exhibit has a collection of 300 artifacts from 38 separate societies. Every fall the museum has an exhibition on contemporary Native-American art, which is part of the Lawrence Indian Arts show.
The Wilcox Classical Museum, which resides in a quiet corner of Lippincot Hall, often goes unnoticed. It has modern plaster replicas of original Greek and Roman sculptures.
Museum Hours
Museumhours:
Museum of Natural History
8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Saturday
1 to 5 p.m., Sunday
Spencer Museum of Art 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday
Hours extended to 9 p.m., Thursday evenings
Noon to 5 p.m., Sunday
Museum of Anthropology
9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Saturday
1 to 5 p.m., Sunday
Wilcox Classical Museum
9 to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday
KANSAN
The medieval Greek and Roman heroes, gods and goddesses, all stand together in this two-room museum. Dark-glazed attic potteries with mythical figures painted on them, a Greek and Macedonian coin collection, and multi-colored marble pieces from all around the world make the museum even more intriguing.
Besides these prominent museums, there are a couple of small ones around the campus. These are the Snow Entomological Museum at Snow Hall, the Meredith Lane, RL McGregor Herbarium at West Campus and the Museum of Invertebrate Paleontology at Lindley Hall.
Each museum, whatever its size, has an image of its own and a different story to tell. Each museum tour can unravel the splendors and intricacies of our roots, heritage and culture.
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10. GUIDE TO. GOING OUT • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = February 11, 1994
Birthdays are times for treats
Restaurants, bars offer specials on food and drink
By Nasrin Yasmin Special to the Kansan
Libbie Jon Peterson, Omaha, Neb., senior, thinks birthdays are cool, especially a 21st birthday. That's when many restaurants and bars in Lawrence treat people to a free dessert or a shot of booze.
Last September, when Peterson turned 21, her boyfriend took her out to dinner at Molly McGee's, 2429 Iowa St.
"They gave us free ice cream as a birthday treat," she said. "That was kinda neat."
But the real fun for Peterson started after dinner.
When she got home from the restaurant, a bunch of her friends took her to Hockenbury's Tavern, 1016 Massachusetts St. Her friends decided that Peterson needed a couple of shots — after all, she was the one who turned 21.
The bartenders at Hockenbury's
seemed to be on her friends' side, Peterson said. The bartenders gave her a few drink specials when they found out about her birthday, and, of course, her friends bought her a couple more. The next day she woke up with a huge headache that reminded her of the night before.
Students often celebrate their birthdays at area bars. And sometimes, they celebrate too much.
"It's a common sight to see young people get sick on their birthdays," said Reed Brinton, manager and owner of Benchwarmers Sports Bar & Grill, 1601 W. 23rd St. "Friends make them drink and drink until they get sick."
Benchwarmers offers a special $1 shot to anyone celebrating a 21st birthday. The regular price for this shot ranges from $3 to $4.
Other bars in Lawrence also give students free shots on their birthdays.
Besides the bars, many restaurants in Lawrence also welcome people of all ages on their birthdays.
Mr. Steak Restaurant, 920 W. 23rd St., gives a free petite cut siriron steak of offers a $7.85 discount on someone's birthday meal. But customers need to show an identification verifying their birthday. The restaurant staff also gives balloons, and they'll sing "Happy Birthday" to you—if you wish to be conspicuous.
"It's a common sight to see young people get sick on their birthdays. Friends make them drink and drink until they get sick."
Reed Brinton
Owner,Benchwarmers
Sports Bar and Grill
Besides giving a free birthday treat of chocolate-dipped fried ice cream, servers at Carlos O'Kelly's Mexican Cafe, 707 W. 23rd St., will take a free photograph of you in a Mexican sombrero. The photo is a birthday present from Carlos O'Kelly's, but the sombrero has to be returned.
The whole idea is to make people feel special on their birthdays, said Brad Remington, general manager of Carlos O'Kelly's. "It's great when kids show up for their birthdays. I love it," he said. "It kind of breaks the monotony of the day's job."
Applebee's Neighborhood Grill and Bar, 2520 Iowa St., and Perkins Restaurant, 1711 W. 23rd St, both offer a free fudge brownie sundae to those celebrating birthdays.
Plum Tree,2620 Iowa St.,has a different way of welcoming people on their birthdays. Plum Tree provides a free ice cream sundae with a cherry and a candle on the top and a fortune cookie inside. And the waitresses will sing birthday songs. Plum Tree is the only restaurant in Lawrence that will sing the happy birthday song in Chinese, if the birthday person happens to be Chinese.
Though some bars and restaurants require an identification to verify birthdays, most will take a person's word for it.
"Birthdays are very special events," said Mary Lipscomb, a waitress at Applebee's. "It's most unlikely that people are going to lie about it. It's so much fun to watch people who just turned older, they act real different from regular customers. Birthdays are cool."
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February 11, 1994 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN •THE GUIDE TO GOING OUT
11
KANSAS Burge Unions
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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.
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- Wilderness Discovery camping equipment rental
- Full line of engraving services
- Party facilities
UNION FOOD SERVICE
- Union Square offers cafeteria dining
- Hawk's Nest for snacking and treats
- Hawk Stop, complete dining at Burge Union
- 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
All your Needs. All on Campus.
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GUIDE TO GOING OUT • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN • February 11, 1994
12
Traditionally Lawrence...
- Largest selection of audio and video equipment in the region
- Huge range of discounted CD's and tapes
- Serving Lawrence for over 35 years
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February 11, 1994 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN •THE GUIDE TO GOING OUT
13
Just 'redo' it: Exercisers can make health a habit
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Want to start exercising again?
Making a resolution is easier than making a habit, as some New Year's exercisers already are finding out.
Surveys indicate that half of American adults are fits-and-starts exercisers, according to researcher Rod K. Dishman. About another third are never-starts, and the rest are active enough to get some health benefits, he said.
The American Heart Association recognizes physical inactivity as one of the top risk factors for heart disease.
"About two in four people start an exercise program during any year, and one of those two will stop in six months or less," said Dishman, an exercise physiologist at the University of Georgia.
But Dishman goes further: "A good scientific argument can be made that physical inactivity is the number one health problem facing the United States."
Compared with people who work out at least 20 minutes three times a week, inactive people have twice the likelihood of heart disease,Dishman said.
That's better than the 2.5 times higher risk that smokers have over nonsmokers, Dishman said. But there are almost three times as many sedentary Americans as there are smokers, so the overall impact of inactivity is greater, he said.
Researchers like Dishman know of ways
Dishman considers it important to recognize that exercise is not just an act, but a group of acts. You have to decide to exercise, choose a particular form of exercise, plan how, start, make it a habit and recommit after any backsliding.
to help you get restarted after your initial attempt at exercising fails.
Dishman considers inactivity more than a failure of willpower. His research found many reasons for failure, including wrong ideas about how exercise works and how quickly it can get results. But he also has found causes of success.
"Confidence is best increased by a successful exercise history — the Catch-22 of exercise adherence." Dishman said.
So the trick to get people on the right track is to help them believe in their own success.
Dishman suggests building exercise into your schedule and giving it priority, so you don't drop it in favor of something else for that time period. To make it harder to talk yourself out of exercising, make sure you already have whatever equipment you need where you need it to exercise.
Do things you like, at least to start, Dishman said. And choose an intensity that lets you feel at least as good when you end as you did when you started, he said — you don't have to burn yourself up to get a healthful workout.
"Your exercise program should make you feel better," Dishman said. "If it doesn't, change it until it does."
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Etc. Shop
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OILS OF LOVE
928 Mass.
IT'S NOT EASY BEING GREEN.
Taking care of our environment takes a little more effort. But it's worth it. Because even though you may not think it amounts to much, no effort is wasted when it comes to making the earth a cleaner, healthier place to live. So remember to give that little extra effort each day. Reduce. Reuse. Recycle. It's something everyone and everything will appreciate.
KAMA SUTRA. THE ART OF MAKING LOVE
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GRANADA
Invites You and Your Date to our
Valentine's Extravaganza
Lee McBee and The Passions with Marqueal Jordan Sextet Feb 11 at 9pm
Champagne
Balloons
BE MINI
ROSES
1020 Massachusetts 842-1390
GRANADA
1020 Massachusetts
Downtown Lawrence
913-842-1390
Fri.Feb 11
LEE McBEE AND
THE PASSIONS
$1.50 Vodka wells
Sat. Feb 12 KU vs K-State Rematch @ 8pm
32 oz Sam Adams $ 3.50
32oz Bud & Bud Light $ 2.50
Sun. Feb 13
LAWRENCE SYMPHONY
MC, DJ Ray, Movie Screen Tues. Feb 15
Wed. Feb 16
Eighties Night
50¢ draws
IMAGKX
Thurs. Feb 17 MC, DJ Ray, Movie Screen
Fri. Feb 18
70's, 80's, & Alternative
$ 1.50 Vodka wells
Sat. Feb 19
32oz Sam Adams $ 3.50
32oz Bud & Bud Light $ 2.50
February 11; 1994 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN • THE GUIDE TO GOING OUT
15
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DILLIONS
Student discovers music at his feet
Childhood exercise turned into passion for tap,jazz dancing
By Rebecca Horowitz Special to the Kansan
When Mark Yonally was 4 years old, his mother was afraid that he had asthma. She enrolled him in dance classes to keep him in shape. Sixteen years later, Yonally has outgrown the asthma but not his passion for dance.
Yonally's style of dance was popular even before the invention of radio. Now, tap dancing is slowly making a comeback in American culture.
"Tap isn't necessarily what most Americans consider it," said Yonally, Overland Park sophomore. He said Americans derived their knowledge of tap from showtap stars such as Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers. However, tap dancing originated through a combination of African rhythms and Irish dances.
Yonally's tap style, called Traditional American Tap, is similar to jazz dancing.
"It's improvisation,exploring new musical space and combining it with other instruments,"he said.
Traditional American Tap allows the sounds of the taps to become a part of the music instead of the tap dancing itself.
"I consider it more to be an instrument than a form of dance," Yonally said.
Last year, Yonally was invited to play the Birdland Jazz Tribute at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St. Through the jazz circuit around Lawrence, he hooked up with Mark Rasmussen, Lawrence resident, who also played at the tribute and is a member of a local jazz trio, So What. Through these connections, Yonally has been invited repeatedly to dance with So What, which performs regularly on Thursday nights at Paradise Cafe, 728 Massachusetts St.
It's free, and people of all ages pack into a small room to get a good spot before the show. The restaurant is busy. Coffee cups are clicking, an occasional loud laugh is heard, customers try to raise their voices above the band testing its equipment.
From 10 p.m. to midnight each Thursday, Paradise Cafe offers beer, cocktails, coffee, desserts and an ideal atmosphere for live jazz.
As the lights dim, the noise level falls. So What is snuggled into a small space in the front of the room with a large window overlooking Massachusetts Street as their backdrop. Yet the audience and band are completely oblivious to the world of cars and passers-by outside.
Yonally sits at a table with friends, enjoying the music, waiting eagerly to join in.
POLICE DANCE
So What plays songs such as "Tranquility," "Humpty Dumpty" by Chick Corea, and some Herbie Hancock. Rasmussen, pianist of the trio, sweeps scales and chords up and down the keyboard. Drummer Nathan Berg, Lawrence senior, and bassist Stanley Sheldon, who is a former bassist for Peter Frampton and has returned to Lawrence to attend classes, add a low harmony and beat to the improvisation.
A red hue shines on the trio from a neon sign in the window above, creating a hypnotizing ambiance. After 15 minutes into
Heather Lofflin/KANSAN
Mark Yonally. Overland Park sophomore, tap dances in front of the band "So What" at the Paradise Cafe.
the first set, people start filing in from the street.
As the trio begins to pick up the tempo, Chuck Berg, professor of theater and film, approaches the microphone with a saxophone around his neck. His sax squeals and hums deeply, dipping up and down with the trio's rhythm.
"There's more than just a band. It's a hootenanny jazz fest," said Rich Rodriguez, a bartender at Paradise.
After the first set ends, Yonally, still waiting, leans over to tie on his tap shoes. Cued to come on, he gets up, brushing imaginary dust off his droopy pants and gray vest. The audience moves closer to the front of the room, hoping to get a glimpse at his feet in action.
As Yonally taps, he creates a unique rhythm to the songs. He becomes not a dancer, but an instrument, intertwining the beat of his tap with the melody of jazz. As the beat quickens, so does his tap, sliding back and forth across the floor.
"It's like bringing something dead, alive," said George McFarley, St. Petersburg, Fla., soohomore. "It's his interpretation of the music."
The crowd is amazed, clapping and cheering Yonally on as his feet blaze onto the floor at a stunning pace, never missing a beat.
"I've never seen live tap dancing before," said William Pile, Kansas City, Kan., sopho-
13.
TUO SWICE 0736159 SWY WWW.ZWICE.WSVC.NYC REE.LLV.mindest
Tapping since he was 4, dancer considers it music
Continued from Page 16.
more. "I just think it's incredible."
At the end of the last set, Chuck Berg, So What and Yonally receive a standing ovation. Yonally steps back to his table, grinning from ear to ear and wiping lines of sweat off his forehead. Audience members slap him on the back and give him thumbs-up.
"The most important part in playing in a jazz band is to pay attention to what the other members are doing," Yonally said. "We're all improvising together. It also focuses you not to think about being in front of an entire room of people watching you."
He said that although the art was making a resurgence, he enjoyed the small world of tap. He has worked with some of the best performers in tap dancing today.
"The nice thing about the tap community is that it is small enough to be able to work
with the masters," said Yonally. "The people who have made the art."
Yonally was a prodigy of Cy Ledgin, a 90 year-old vaudevillian tap dancer, and studied with him for four years at the Valley View School of Dance in Overland Park.
Yonally said he would like to start doing a combination of jazz and rap fusion in the future.
"I want to try to make tap more accessible to a young audience, kind of the way rap made jazz more accessible to a young audience," he said. "It makes it more relevant to them."
Yonally, a political science major, said that he hoped to have a future with tap dancing but that he realized he needed to remain practical in his career choice.
He never gives up hope, however.
"If I could have my wishes fulfilled, I would make my living being a tap dancer," he said.
So What
Formed: 7 months ago
Performances: 10 p.m. to midnight, Thursdays at Paradise Cafe, 728 Massachusetts St. Free.
Members:
Stanley Sheldon, bass, freshman majoring in environmental studies. He played the bass for 25 years and plaved bass for Peter Frampton on the album "Framump Comes Alive."
Nathan Berg, drums, senior majoring in American studies. He toured with Mayonard Ferguson and a jazz Big Band for almost two years, and he traveled throughout the United States and Europe. Mark Rasmussen, piano. He played back up for Jimmy Witherpoon and Bo Diddly.
KANSAN
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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%.
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CREDIT UNION
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February 11, 1994 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN •THE GUIDE TO GOING OUT
17
Take 15% off your Pizza Hut order.
Student ID
Just show your KU student ID and receive 15% off your pizza order. It's the best deal in Lawrence.
Please mention your student ID when ordering. Not valid in combination with any other Pizza Hut offer. Valid on Dine-In, Carryout or Delivery at participating Pizza Hut locations. Limited delivery area. ©1994 Pizza Hut, Inc. ® designates trademark of Pizza Hut, Inc.
1008 W. 6th St.
843-2211
Delivery/Carryout
804 Iowa St.
842-1687
Dine-In/Carryout
934 Massachusetts
843-7044
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Delivery
2449 Iowa St. Q
843-3000
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1608 W. 23rd St.
843-3516
Dine-In/Carryout
etts
Just show your KU student ID and receive 15% off your pizza order. It’s the best deal in Lawrence.
Please mention your student ID when ordering. Not valid in combination with any other Pizza Hut® offer. Valid on Dine-In, Carryout or Delivery at participating Pizza Hut® locations. Limited delivery area.
©1994 Pizza Hut, Inc. ® designates trademark of Pizza Hut, Inc.
18
GUIDE TO GOING OUT • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN • February 11, 1994
Students 'cue' up for bar games
1234567890
PETER B. KRAEMER
William Alix / KANSAN
Rebecca Osladil, Ottawa sophomore, attempts a bull's eye on the electronic dart board at the Taproom, 19 E.8th St.
Pool, darts and pinball keep pub patrons amused
By Shannon Newton Special to the Kansan
It's just a game, some might say about a pub sport such as darts, pool or pinball. But that's not what many KU students think these days, especially with new interactive trivia games popping up.
The continuing popularity of the games is reflected by the rows of quarters competitors leave along the edges of the games meant to save their turn at play—as well as the attentive crowds watching, and sometimes betting, on the outcome of a particular game.
Students are willing to stand in line or slap down a few quarters on the traditional bar game machines.
"The winner of the game during the Super Bowl won two round-trip tickets to Las Vegas," said David Johanning, employee of Jox Sports Emporium and Fun Drinkery.
But one new form of a free bar game interactive trivia, proves that players can get more than just the thrill of winning from the games.
Jox, 601 Kasold Drive, has seen increasing popularity in their new trivia games that go beyond answering questions.
"During the (Super Bowl) game, people anticipate a football play, and if they are right, they receive points," Johanning said. "For the Super Bowl, we had 20 playmakers hooked up to the system so that more people could play."
The system was set up nationwide so that customers could compete with other bar
Jox has had the games for three weeks and plans on having special promotions to attract more people to play, he said.
patrons or people around the country.
But a recently installed dart board at the Wheel, 1401 Ohio St., is gaining most of their customers' attention.
Don Glasscock, Overland Park graduate student and employee of the Kansas Union's Jaybowl, said more people played pool on the weekends.
"I came in last Friday and there were quarters across the game," said Danielle Lindquist, Overland Park junior and employee of the Wheel. "Having the board is kind of a downfall for me because I want to play darts instead of work."
Students expressed several reasons why they enjoy the games.
"Throughout the weekend we sometimes
have to start a waiting list for people who want to play pool." Glasscock said.
Kara Laricks, Overland Park junior, said that when she drank, she felt she could play darts and match scores with anyone
Heather Kramer, Overland Park junior, said she played bar games to show men that it was not just a male competition.
"I'm not very good at darts, but I like to play because I am a competitive person," she said.
"I enjoy playing pool and darts to beat the boys," Kramer said. "Though I like winning, I also enjoy playing with people that are better than I am so I can learn more."
Melissa Nieva, Shawnee junior said, "I
Name of the game
Pool
The origin of pool dates back to ancient times, but experts are not positive exactly where in Europe it began. The first pool table was brought to Florida in 1565 to America by a family from Spain. Popular variations of the game include rotation, eight-ball, and line-up.
Pinball comes from the earlier game of bagatelle, a game in which marbles were shot into an area with pockets and assigned points. The game has remained popular but has seen many technological advances such as flashing lights, music and multi-ball versions.
Pinball
KANSAN
Another popular game college students enjoy is pinball.
really enjoy playing bar games especially when I'm not into the mood to mingle."
Jim Barry, an employee of Planet Pinball. 2223 Louisiana St., began working there for nearly six months after it had opened two years ago.
"Sometimes I would be at work for three hours with no customers," Barry said. "Now, on the weekends probably 300 to 350 people come in a day."
ball machines appeal to college students more than the video games. Pinball is probably popular among college students because it's a cheap form of entertainment. You can spend a couple of dollars playing pinball and easily have a few hours of exciting entertainment."
Greg Leuenberger, also an employee at Planet Pinball, said, "It seems like the pin-
Eric Medill, Sedan junior, an employee of Quinton's Bar and Deli, 615 Massachusetts St., said he thought people enjoyed pinball so much "because people don't have to have any athletic ability or skill to play."
I Look
---
February 11, 1994 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN • THE GUIDE TO GOING OUT
www.theuniversitydaily.com • MAXIMUS HAYAT (MAIL) 700-256-8323
19
Birds follow call of refuge
Bald eagle is top attraction at haven of Squaw Creek
By Anne Sutherland Special to the Kansan
The only sounds are the eerie creaking and moaning of the ice on the lake. The wind blows cold and harsh off the frozen lake.
But then, on the horizon, a small brown dot appears and draws closer. Binoculars reveal the dot to be one of the birds that Squaw Creek is best known for - the bald eagle.
Squaw Creek National Wildlife Refuge, just west of Mound City, Mo., at first seems silent and abandoned. It could feel like the loneliest place on earth from atop the lookout tower near the refuge entrance.
KU students going on a day trip won't feel alone at the refuge. Squaw Creek is home to dozens of different species of wildlife despite its barren first appearance.
Primarily a waterfowl refuge, Squaw Creek boasts more than 268 breeds of birds. The bald eagle is the refuge's feature
attraction. In early December, an estimated 300 eagles inhabit the refuge, drawing hundreds of birdwatchers to the annual Eagle Days at Squaw Creek, said Mike Callow, assistant refuge manager. Currently there are approximately 30 eagles at the refuge.
Besides the bald eagles, Squaw Creek houses an extensive mallard preservation in its western-most marsh. The marsh is a combined effort of many different organizations including the U.S. Wildlife Federation, Ducks Unlimited and several private sponsors.
The marsh provides a haven for migrating ducks. Dozens of muskrat houses, made from reeds, dot the frozen marsh. The houses are a favorite roosting place for many of the birds at Squaw Creek.
Spring migration promises to bring several different types of birds on their return north, Callow said. Unlike fall migrators, birds migrating in the spring spend fewer days at the refuge because they are eager to return home. Bird-watching in the spring is sometimes better because the birds are in brighter plumage due to the mating season.
Other birds, such as the pelican, use the refuge as a place to stop and rest during migration in the fall and spring. Because of the different times of migrations,the inhabitants of Squaw Creek are constantly changing.
Among the many types of birds that stop briefly at the refuge in the spring are Canadian and snow geese. White pelicans, which spend the winter in Texas, are also at the refuge in April.
Winter viewing of the wildlife is done most comfortably from the auto-tour route that extends around the boundary of the refuge. Eagles, deer and muskrats are some of the more easily spotted animals on the route.
The refuge also has many nature trails on which people can hike, weather permitting. The trail that divides the pelican pool from the eagle pool at the southern end of the refuge offers a clear view of the lake. An occasional spotting of one of the refuge's many muskrats is likely on the trail because the western side of the narrow trail is lined with muskrat houses and partially chewed tree trunks.
The northern and eastern sections of the auto-tour route were recently reopened after being closed since July because of flood damage, Callow said. He estimated damage to the refuge to be approximately $1 million. Repairs have cost $200,000 so far.
Though the refuge has reopened, it still shows effects from the flood, Callow said. The south end of the refuge sustained damage to vegetation that helps feed the large
Over the river...
Take Interstate 70 west to Kansas City, Kan., then take Interstate 435 north. Take Interstate 29 north past St. Joseph, Mo., then take Highway 159. The refuge is near Mound City, Mo.
NEBRASKA
Falls City
Mound City
KANSAS
St. Joseph
MISSOURI
Kansas City
Topeka
Lawrence
79
Micah Leaker/KANBAK
waterfowl population.
Big Lake State Park, which is five miles west of Squaw Creek, has also been undergoing flood repairs to its motel and dining lodge. Big Lake will reopen its campground and outdoor areas in April.
Squaw Creek opens for public fishing April 1, and the refuge headquarters will be staffed from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on weekends beginning March 19.
Wake up to Cedarwood Apts. ow leasing Summer and Fall
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20
GUIDE TO GOING OUT • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN • February 11, 1994
Lawrence music scene: the next Seattle?
DAN ENGLAND
I was sick of the whispered rumors about Lawrence's music scene.
I had heard enough about our city's growing reputation for spawning original alternative rock bands.
It was time to silence the whispers. It was time to answer the question: Is Lawrence really the next Seattle?
Why any city would want this title, I'm not really sure. Seattle, among other things, is known for its mediocre professional baseball team, its dreary and bitterly cold weather and citizens who either live on the edge of fashion or get by with clothes direct from the J-Crew mail catalog.
Maybe that's why Lawrence is called "the next Seattle."
One of the positive things, the fact that the "grunge" sound came directly from that city, has now left Seattle as the place to go for hip clothes and hard-edged bands with an attitude.
Before I embarked on my seven-bar trip to thoroughly examine this burning question, I popped Alice in Chains and the soundtrack from the movie "Singles" in my stereo. I picked out what I thought would be the ultimate Seattle outfit: ripped blue jeans, a plaid flannel shirt and tennis shoes.
Inspired. I headed out the door.
8:00 p.m. It came to me. I would rate each bar for its 'Seattleness' on a scale of one to 10. If I reached more than 50 Seattle points, Lawrence would be the next Seattle. I thought of this while trying to find a place to park downtown, which can be an adventure in itself. After finding a space (finally), I discovered my first location was sold out. Great. So far, this was going to be one cynical article. 0 points.
8:45 p.m. The Timber Rattlers began playing. The members, all male, had the weathered look of a slow, easy-going blues band. The lead singer held a harmonica in one hand and a cigarette, which he periodically puffed between verses, in the other. The drummer had a long, black beard and dreadlocks that draped over his shoulders, and he used an A-team bed sheet to muffle his drums.
"We try to keep it toned down here," the singer said as he introduced the band. It worked. This place served mostly older patrons who wore old sweaters and drank imported beers. This was a place to go and contemplate your life. And from the looks of it, most of the customers' lives had been pretty relaxed.
A little too mellow for Seattle. +3.
9:45 p.m. I was beginning to learn that a scheduled time referred to when the band members started drinking, not when they started playing. But it was going to be Drako Magnet's last show, and this place was ready. One of the band members of Drako Magnet told me, "Our drummer is moving to Florida. It just wouldn't be the same thing." Flannel shirts and torn jeans dominated the scene. A dog, Cody, jumped
up to greet me when I walked in. The place was covered in posters of past bands that had played there.
Gobstopper and Drako Magnet both played a harsher kind of alternative music, the kind Black Flag used to play. And that topped off the visit. This place was definitely Seattle. +10.
10:00 p.m. The L.A. Ramblers were playing at a bar on 23rd street. I walked in and was immediately disappointed. J-Crew was the cloth of choice. Hair either was fluffed for the women or nice and short for the men. Lights bathed the side stage in a pale green glow.
The Ramblers started. Everyone seemed more interested in playing pool than listening to the band. There was hardly any dancing, which was too bad because the Ramblers were great. They had a female lead singer who dressed in black and waved her arms around when she opened her mouth. But their style of music, late '60s Grateful Dead covers, isn't too Seattle. Their sound man even wore a tie-dye shirt. +4.
10:45 p.m. We stopped at a Taco Johns for a bite to eat. Whitney Houston was played three times over the radio. Would Seattle allow this? I don't think so.-1.
11:00 p.m. It was freezing. +2.
11:05 p.m. Downtown again. This time I would stay. And I found a location that was packed. You couldn't move, Or breathe, for that matter. Soul Shaker was on. It played '70s soul with a '90s edge. My personal favorite of the night. And everyone in the bar had a different outfit on. The women wore anything, just as long as it wasn't mainstream. Very cool. Isn't this what Seattle is about? Diversity? I don't think the city
could help it that everyone liked its style and copied it. +10.
11:30 p.m. I walked inside the bar, and everyone, and I mean everyone, was wearing flannel shirts. I even got complemented on mine. Off into the corner, Crap Supper was jamming on a stage outlined by white and green Christmas lights. This band played punk with an edge. The singer even looked like Kurt Cobain, Nirvana's vocalist. The only down side? No dancing. +8.
12:00 a.m. I stopped in a bar that had average clothes, cheesy '80s rock on the radio and disinterested pool players. Would Seattle have a bar like this? I don't think so.-1.
12:30 a.m. My last bar. And what a bar it was! Plaid shirts. Torn jeans. Mopped hair. Love Squad was playing, and if they are this good all the time, the members now have a devoted follower. Everyone was dancing on the floor, moving up and down like they were kernels in a popcorn machine. This probably not only inspired Seattle, but alternative rock as a whole. I stayed there until the bar closed. +10.
That gives us a total of 45 points. And actually, I'm kind of relieved. Do I really want to live in a town that is known as "the next anything?" No. Lawrence can be proud of its music scene. It's diverse. It rocks. And it's cheap. I did all this for under 30 dollars. I had a great time. I don't think Manhattan has this.
The next Seattle? No.
A great college music scene?
Definitely.
Dan England is a Lenxa senior in journalism
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February 11, 1994 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN •THE GUIDE TO GOING OUT
---
21
Warm weather invites picnics
Students envision romantic interludes in parks, on roofs
By Sabrina Steele Special to the Kansan
Movies, dinners and parties are pleasant ways to spend time on a date or with friends. However, for a unique experience when the weather warms up, some students suggest a picnic at Clinton Lake or even on the fire truck in the park at 12th and Massachusetts streets.
Students have diverse perceptions of what would provide a special atmosphere for a picnic. Their ideas of a dream date also vary, ranging from Rex Walters to any willing participant.
Brenda Griffith, Raytown, Mo., senior said the grassy mall in front of the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City, Mo., would be a good location for a picnic.
The lawn in front of the Nelson is called the Henry Moore Sculpture Garden, and it contains 13 monumental bronze sculptures, said Gina Kelley, public information officer for the museum.
"You can picnie there, then take a stroll through the garden." Kelley said. "There is a wide-open green mall. On either side there are trees, bushes, benches, and it's a bit more enclosed and intimate."
Griffith said the cultural atmosphere was appealing.
"It's in the middle of a big city, but it's more of its own little world," she said.
Kathy James, Engelwood, Colo., senior had other suggestions for places to go in the Kansas City area.
James said having lunch with the animals at the Kansas City Zoo, which is in Swope Park, in Kansas City, Mo., is fun because of the children, animals and large, open spaces.
"You can be in the city, but you're not, and it doesn't take long to get there," she said.
She also said Shawnee Mission Park in western Johnson County would be a good place to go. The pine trees are relaxing, and sailing and canoeing are possible activities for after lunch.
The most popular suggestion for a picnic location in Lawrence was Clinton Lake. Kurt Hoobing, Overland Park junior, said the scenic view, the trees and the lake were great for a picnic with friends.
Lametrious Bates, Louisiana sophomore, agreed and added that Clinton Lake was a good place for a date because the water was relaxing and almost sexy.
"It's peaceful, quiet, and nobody could catch us," she said. "You couldn't get caught in a romantic kiss."
plates have been thrown away, other options for entertainment remain.
Jodi Olson, Junction City senior, suggested that the wooden gazeebo in a little park on the 1200 block of Massachusetts Street provided another secluded place for a picnic. When dinner is over and the paper
"It's also a good place to dance," she said.
The Flint Hills would provide the ultimate place for a romantic picnic because of the seclusion and privacy, said Audra Widau, Topeka senior.
"Off in the middle of nowhere, when you're driving between Topeka and Manhattan, along the highway there are luscious green hills where nobody ever goes," she said. "It doesn't even look like there are roads leading up to them."
James Fightmaster, Raytown, Mo., junior, had a suggestion for another secluded place to date.
"I would go up on top of a roof where nobody would see us, take a radio, a candlelight dinner and a table," he said.
Any roof that would provide a clear view of the stars and a room for slow dancing to romantic music would work for his picnic, he said.
Suggestions for food varied from the convenient and fast to the more elaborate and seductive.
For a dream picnic with Sharon Stone, Michael Greenfield, Missouri City, Texas, freshman, said he would opt for Yello Sub and Mountain Dew.
Bates said she would like to take wine, grapes and blankets on a picnic with a guy she met in Fall 1992 in her African Traditional Religion and Thought class.
Renee Mitchell, Kansas City junior, said
she would carry strawberries and cream for a romantic picnic by the lake with her boyfriend, Rodney Harris.
Olson said she would take whipped cream in addition to wine and chicken if she could go on a picnic with Rex Walters, who was a Kansas basketball guard from 1991 to 1993. She said lakes were good for skinny-dipping after picnics.
Derek Winger, Leawood graduate student, said shrimp cocktail would be a tasty and easily made dinner for a special picnic with his girlfriend, Jean Weber. He agreed that a lakeside would be a good location.
"Then, if things don't go well, you can drown your date," he said jokingly.
Fightmaster said that for his dinner, he would opt for Italian food.
"It would definitely be something you would take time to prepare," he said.
He said there wasn't anybody special he would like to take on his rooftop picnic.
"Anybody who would be willing, female friends maybe," he said. "If I had a girlfriend, I would take her."
On her picnic in the Flint Hills, Widau said she would like to take chicken, wine and Ken Olin of "Thirtysomething" fame.
Shelly Hefferon, Chanute freshman, said she would enjoy a picnic watching a football game on Campanile Hill with Patrick Richey, KU basketball player.
"He's a really good player, but he doesn't get much attention," she said.
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-- A good time to remember to show concern for your sweetheart and for yourself. Communication and caring in relationships can help to reduce the incidence of STDs and unplanned pregnancy. And remember that the use of alcohol and other drugs is strongly associated with failure to communicate effectively and to use preventive measures.
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Fly into another world with a balloon ride
Bv Ros McPaul
Special to the Kansan
The sky is cloudless, and a soft breeze carries the hot air balloon across the sky. Only the squeaks of the rattan wicker basket are heard as the balloon soars soundlessly through the sky.
"Ballooning is very exciting, but it is also very relaxing as there is no feeling of movement," said Sandra McDavid, who first flew in a hot air balloon while a student at the University of Kansas. "It's like floating."
As well as being a hobby, a balloon ride can also be an unusual gift for birthdays, anniversaries, romantic valentines or even weddings.
Costs for balloon trips depend on the number of people who are ballooning and where the balloon is flying. A balloon trip in the Kansas City area through the club costs about $150, but only members can fly.
Petrehn, who has been ballooning since 1972, also is president of The Balloon Club of Kansas City, Kan., which has 75 members. Although there is no fee to become a member, an application form must be completed.
McDavid, who graduated from KU in 1990, became a balloon enthusiast after her boyfriend, Andrew Petrehn, took her to fly in a balloon. Today, the couple is married and owns Aeronautical Adventures Inc. in Kansas City, Kan.
Members can learn how to crew the balloon as well as how to fly it. If a member is part of the crew, then the ride is free. A quarterly newsletter ensures that members are informed of any events, such as the Kansas City Balloon Championships, which is held
in Shawnee Mission.
McDavid travels all over the country to go ballooning with The Balloon Club of Kansas City. As long as the weather conditions are favorable, the couple makes about 300 flights a year through Aeronsautical Adventures.
"If the wind is more than 10 miles an hour then it is too difficult to land," McDavid said. "There is also a danger that the balloon will be tossed off course. In winter it is often too cold to balloon for long."
The average height for floating in a balloon is between treetop level and 1,000 feet.
"At treetop level I can hear dogs barking and people talking," McDavid said. "This makes the trip more interesting."
The highest manned flight was in 1956 when a balloon reached 123,800 feet.
Most balloons can carry from two to four people and the pilot, who is called an aeronaut.
But Steve Streiker's two balloons each can carry up to seven people. Streiker owns Abracadabra Hot Air Balloon Adventures in Kansas City, Kan.
Rides must be booked two weeks in advance with a $50 nonrefundable deposit. If the weather prevents ballooning, then the ride can be rescheduled.
A trip for two people costs $239 for a one-hour trip. The pilot guides where the balloon floats, but altitude and wind conditions play a large part in determining the route.
"It tend to cover Grand View, Olathe, Long View Lake and Johnson County, which are more scenic," Strelker said.
Up,up and away!
Sandra McDavid/Andrew Petrehn
Aeronautical Adventures Incorporated
P.O. Box 7232
Overland Park, Kan., 66207
Telephone: (913) 649-0004
Steve Strelker
Abracadabra Hot Air Balloon Adventures
4938 Holly Street
Kansas City, Kan., 64112
Telephone:(913)384-3737
KANSAM
He said that he was not familiar with any health problems that restricted people from riding in balloons.
"Obviously if someone is concerned about a health problem, then they should get permission to take a balloon trip from their physician," Streiker said.
"Ihavehadsomepeoplein their90staking a balloon trip,"Streiker said.
The only age restriction is that no children under the age of 9 may ride in the balloons.
Although young children are not allowed to take balloon trips, they are permitted to crew. Gavin Bruce, Topeka junior, crewed for balloon enthusiasts at a young age.
"I was only 7 or 8 years old, but I liked to crew," he said. "Although I didn't get to fly, I hung around and helped to put the balloon into the envelope at the end of the day."
The envelope is a large protective bag, which is used to cover and store a balloon when it is not inflated. The balloons are
inflated with propane gas, which is thinner and lighter than atmospheric air. This allows the balloons to rise and soar into the sky. As the gas is contained in small cylinders there is only enough fuel to last for approximately one hour.
Fine straw and manure were used as fuel to inflate balloons in the 18th century balloons.
Annual balloon rallies exist all over the country. One of the largest rallies, The Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta, simultaneously launches 700 to 800 balloons each October.
The Great Plains Balloon Club in Topeka administrates the "Huff an' Puff" balloon rally every September, and The Balloon Club of Kansas City, Kan., plays host to the Kansas City balloon championships on Father's Day weekend in June.
"Over 100 balloons are launched simultaneously at the championships," McDavid said. "It's quite a sight to see."
The official name for a hot air balloon is an aerostat. The earliest recorded balloon flight was Aug. 8, 1709 in Portugal - two hundred years before the Wright brothers' first airplane flight. Rags and silk were used for 18th century balloons, while fine straw and manure were used as fuel to inflate them. Straw and manure were thought to have magical properties.
Today, there are two types of balloons: gas and hot air. Gas balloons usually are more expensive and are used for competitions, since they can fly for several days without refueling. The hot air balloons are used for both commercial and fun rides.
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February 11,1994 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN •THE GUIDE TO GOING OUT
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The Overlender™, this mega-sandwich, recently crowned with a little "tasty mark (TM)" *features a meaty combination of tender ham and succulent roast beef drapped with melted monterey jack and cheddar cheese, grilled onions, a touch of mayo plus our special BBQ sauce, served on a New York onion roll...5.50
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Molly's Turkey, smooth and smoky monterey jack cheese is melted on tender tom turkey breast and grilled onions plus a touch of mayonnaise on a New York onion roll...5.50
Molly's Roast Beef, smooth and smoky monterey jack cheese is melted on roast beef and grilled onions plus a touch of mayonnaise on a New York onion roll...5.50
Chicken Bacon "Sammy" Melt. breast of chicken, topped with crisp real bacon and juicy pineapple, smothered with cheddar cheese and our special BBQ sauce, served on an onion poppy seed bun...5.95
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Fibber's Chicken, an onion poppy seed bun surrounea a marinated, boneless breast of chicken, topped with a grilled pineapple, served with a side of hot honey mustard...5.75 Reuben's Revenge, the "Reuben" in all its glory, prepared according to tradition, served on light rye...5.50
Pork Tenderloin Sandwich, hand breaded with special seasonings then deep fried and served open faced on a bed of shredded lettuce, served with a side of mayonnaise...4.95 Winchester Steak Sandwich, one of the best reasons K.C. is referred to as a "cowtown", try our 7 ounces of juicy top sirloin on a delicately grilled New York onion roll...6.45
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Beringer Mushroom Burger, burgundy sauteed mushrooms, spices, sour cream and melted monterey jack cheese...5.85
Barbades Burger, piled high with guacamole, monterey jack cheese, diced tomatoes and sprouts, served with a side of picante sauce...5.85
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A
24
GUIDE TO GOING OUT • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN • February 11, 1994
√
CAMPUS: Journalism professionals discuss racial tensions and multiculturalism in the media. Page 5.
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Death penalty passes in the House 70-55
NEWS:864-4810
Bill faces close battle in Senate
John Hanna
John Hanna The Associated Press
TOPEKA — Opponents of capital punishment lost their chance to prevent a death penalty bill from passing the House when the Democrats lost their majority in the chamber in the 1992 elections.
Had Democrats retained the 63-62 advantage they had during the 1991 and 1992 legislative sessions, it is likely that the House would have approved a bill mandating life in prison without parole, instead of death by lethal injection, for certain murders.
The biggest loss for Democrats was the seat of Marvin Barkis of Louisburg, the speaker in 1991-92 and the party's House leader for eight years. The Republican who replaced him, Jene Vickrey of Louisburg, voted for the death penalty.
In addition, another five Republicans who voted for the death penalty had defeated Democrats who opposed capital punishment in the 1992 elections.
"Because we didn't take care of the business of re-election, the death penalty passed," Rep. Ed McKechnie, D-Pittsburg, the House Democrats' whip said.
Legislators like to say that the death
penalty is not a partisan issue. However, relatively few Republicans in the House oppose it, and only about one in five Democrats are willing to vote for it.
*Republicans now have, 66 House seats, and the democrats have 59.
"The numbers just show that one difference between having the Republicans in control of the House of Representatives and the Democrats in control of the House of Representatives is that the players themselves are more likely to be proponents," House Speaker Bob Miller, R-Wellington, said.
The Judiciary Committee in the Senate has scheduled hearings for Thursday and Friday, and Chairman Jerry Moran, R-Hays, hopes to take a vote
the following week. The vote is expected to be close.
Even supporters' most optimistic predictions have a narrow version passing in a close vote. Both sides concede it might not get out of committee.
"I would say the votes in this committee are very close," Moran said.
"My guess is it's narrow in committee and narrow on the floor."
To bolster their case, anti-capital punishment lobbyists brought with them Michael Radelet, a University of Florida sociology professor who has researched death penalty issues for nearly 15 years.
Radelet has visited more than 100 death row inmates and attended their executions. He also has studied their
families, as well as the families of murder victims. He is the co-author of four books on the subject as well as 40 studies for various journals.
Radelet said he was trying to convince supporters of capital punishment that their picture of the criminal justice system is too idealistic.
"They envision a system that contains no racial bias, where only the worst of the worst are sentenced to death, where no mentally retarded or mentally ill people are condemned and where no families of death row inmates are punished more than the inmates themselves," he said.
The House approved the death penalty bill Friday 70-55. The really crucial vote came during the debate Thursday, when opponents backed an
amendment to delete all references to the death penalty from the bill.
That amendment failed in a 61-83 vote. In 1992, the last time the House voted on the death penalty, the proposal was defeated 68-65.
Vickrey voted against the amendment offered during Thursday's debate. Barkis probably would have voted for it given his past actions on capital punishment bills.
UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA
Five other Republicans who voted against the amendment — and for capital punishment — defeated Democrats who were opponents of the death penalty. The new legislators were: Joann Freeborn of Ames, Joe Kejr of Salina, Robert Tomlinson of Roeland Park, John Toplikar of Olathe and Kenny Wilk of Leavenworth.
Bernard Shaw accepts award
Free press vital to public's rights CNN anchor says
Tom Leininger/KANSAN
Bernard Shaw, primary Washington anchor for Cable News Network, signs Terry Anderson's book, "Den of Lions," for Eduardo Molina, El Salvador senior. Shaw gave the book to Molina because Molina said he wanted to be a journalist. Shaw spoke to a packed room Friday afternoon at Woodruff Auditorium, when he received the William Allen White Award.
By Stephen Martino Kansan staff writer
Bernard Shaw began his acceptance speech for the William Allen White Award by pointing out that he had a reputation for bringing disaster to locations he visits.
"You do not realize your risk of being in the same room with me," he said.
Shaw, who became the 44th recipient of the citation, delivered his remarks Friday before a packed Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
He told the audience that catastrophes often happened around him, particularly on the date of Jan. 17.
Shaw was in Baghdad, Iraq, on that day in 1991 when the Allied coalition began bombing the city, starting Operation Desert Storm.
The same day this year, Shaw was in Los Angeles when, at 4:31 a.m., he was awakened by last month's earthquake. From his hotel room at the Regent Beverly Wilshire, Shaw talked on the air with a Cable News Network anchor on what had just occurred.
"That proved that news can wake you up, and one element can be covered from a hotel window," he said.
Shaw delivered a 14-minute defense of journalism and its place in American society, but he said that journalists did not explain their role in society well.
"We do an utterly poor job of explaining to the American people what it is we do," he said. "Americans take for granted the free press we have. This country wouldn't function without a news media."
Shaw said that the public's negative impressions of the media were formed in part because people did not like the deliverers of bad news.
"But sometimes we deserve the criticism for sensationalizing things like crime and being slow to admit our mistakes," he said. "When we stray, we jeopardize what is precious — and that's the people's right to know."
However, Shaw said, newspapers — not television—were integral to the public's knowledge of issues.
"Americans take for granted the free press we have. This country wouldn't function without a news media."
"Newspapers will always be important to an informed American population," he said. "Seventy-five percent of the public get their information from TV. That means 75 percent of Americans are under-informed.
Bernard Shaw CNN anchor and William Allen White Award winner
"You must read newspapers, you must read magazines, you must read books," he said. "The essence of journalism is in the printed word."
Following his speech, Shaw took questions from the crowd of University students, members of the state media and others who attended the presentation.
Asked whether he was afraid during the bombing of Baghdad, Shaw said that he never tried to conceal his fear.
"In war it's pretty simple: One moment you're alive, and the next you're dead," he said. "The paranoia of fear is what gets you. You don't know what will happen next."
But he said that his job in Baghdad was to present the information as he saw it and allow others to make their own decisions.
Shaw said that he applied his four years of Marine Corps training, which he said was "superb." to the situation.
"Impressions and opinions are formed by the news receivers," he said. "Integrity
is a journalist's only currency."
Chancellor Gene Budig said before Shaw's speech that Shaw deserved the award.
"Bernard Shaw is a first-class individual in every way," he said. "He characterizes the high ideals of William Allen White."
In addition to Shaw's award presentation, the White Foundation presented two awards to Kansas journalists for exceptional work done during 1993.
The large-newspaper organization winner was the Wichita Eagle for a piece by Tom Koetting called "A Life Worth Living." It was a three-part series that chronicled the paralyzing injury suffered by Daniel Caliendo, a Wichita emergency room physician, and his road to recovery.
The small newspaper award was given to the Harris News Service of Topeka for a four-part series about a government water project that state Sen. Gus Bogina, R-Shawnee, profited from. Mike Shields of Harris wrote the story, and John Marshall, editor of Harris, accepted it.
Valentine's Day Activities
Valentine's Day has come to the Kansas Union.
Valentine's Day has come to the Kansas Union. From 10:30 a.m. until 3:30 p.m., the Union will hold its annual open house for Valentine's Day. Last-minute gift-givers can buy flowers, create their own valentines or make their own valentine puzzles. Adventurous gift-givers also can decorate their own pair of boxer shorts.
Discounts also will be offered at the Kansas Book store, Food Services and Student Union Activities.
Dave Campbell / KANSAN
Homicides investigated
Kansanstaffreport
Police are investigating Lawrence's first two homicides of 1994.
Officer Todd Polson of the Lawrence police said yesterday that a homicide occurred at 1:13 a.m. Thursday.
"We are inviguraging the nomicide or an infant," he said. Polson said no other information was available about the homicide, but more would be released at a press conference at 4 p.m. today.
Police also are investigating the death of Curtis J. Thomas, 28.of Pierce City, Mo.
Thomas crashed his truck into a residence at 502 Lincoln St. at about 2 a.m. Saturday. He was transported to Lawrence Memorial Hospital where he died shortly after arrival. No one at the residence was injured.
Police discovered that Thomas had suffered critical wounds before the accident took place. Thomas' father, Stephen Thomas, said he believed his son may have been stabbed as he left the Riverside Bar, 520 N. Third St., and was looking for help when the accident occurred
Polson said the death was being investigated as a homicide.
He said more information about the homicide would be available at today's press conference.
Kansan staff report
Services to be held today
Funeral services for KU student Jenna Robinson will be held at 2 p.m. today at the Peace Lutheran Church, 2500 Kimbale Ave. in Manhattan.
Robinson, a Manhattan sophomore, died in a car accident Thursday in Arkansas.
Jackie Vogel, a research assistant who worked with Robinson, said an annual grant for outstanding work in undergraduate research would be established in her memory.
Vogel said Robinson was working with her on cutting-edge research in cell division.
The Jenna Robinson Award will be presented every year at a symposium to display student work.
Memorial donations can be made to the Jenna Robinson Fund through the department of physiology and cell biology, Vogel said.
INSIDE
Amazing Aycock
Kansas junior forward Angela Aycock scored 27 points as the Jayhawks defeated the Cornhuskers 64-56 yesterday at Allen Field House.
Page 11.
55
KU professors assist in Evers murder trial
Jury selection questions help to detect juror bias
By Cheryl Cadue
Kansan staff writer
The conviction last week of Byron De La Beckwith for the 1963 murder of Medgar Evers, a civil rights leader who was gunned down outside his home in Jackson, Miss., left Pete Rowland, professor of political science, satisfied.
"I literally jumped up in the air and yelled something stupid like 'Yes!' " said Rowland, a member of the American Litigation Analysts. "This was important to me personally and professionally. It was a a case of social significance and historical significance. I wanted to be part of it, but not part of losing it."
Rowland said he, along with Larry Wrightsman, professor of psychology.
developed questions for the prosecuting attorney to ask during juror selection in the Beckwith case. Beckwith was charged with the murder of Evers in 1964, but two trials — both with all-white, all-male juries — ended in mistrials.
The questions were designed asses the racial attitude of the prospective juror and whether the juror had sympathy for Beckwith because of his age, Rowland said.
"We had to figure out how to develop case themes to let, jurors go back 30 years, when Beckwith was 42, instead of the 73-year-old man sitting in front of them," Rowland said. "We had to show how a coward shot a man in the back in front of his own family and that it was not right in 1963 or in 1994. It was murder."
The jury that eventually was selected consisted of eight African Americans and four whites, and seven of the 12 were women.
Rowland said indirect questions — such
Rowland said the two trials in 1964 were mockeries of justice.
"Mississippi had to change a lot for this to happen," Rowland said. "Mississippi still has remnants or vestiges of the plantation history, which was built on slavery and racism. No question about it."
Sympathy questions — such as what the first reactions of prospective jurors were when they heard Beckwith would be retried for the third time — also were used.
as what the prospective jurors thought about Martin Luther King, Jr.'s birthday as a federal holiday — were used to discover racial blases.
"When I had a chance to reflect, I was struck by the wonderful irony that Medgar Evers had convicted his own killer," Rowland said of the trial, which ended on Feb. 5. "The work that Evers was killed for doing in 1963 reached fruition many years later. His work made it possible to pick a jury that was free of racial hatred and willing to convict Byron De La Beckwith based on the evidence."
"Nineteen sixty-four was the year when three civil right activists were killed by sheriffs and there were a couple dozen bombings in Mississippi, "Tuttle said. "A lot was happening in Mississippi. Any jury, especially an all-white jury, wouldn't convict Beckworth in that hostile environment."
Tuttle said he was even somewhat surprised the recent verdict was for conviction because the murder happened 30 years ago.
A
"If Beckwith had been convicted in 1963, I would have been floored," he said. "I'm even surprised now because it was so long ago and some witnesses have since died. I think it's quite wonderful he's 'been convicted.'"
2
Monday, February 14, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University Daily Kansas (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer; Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. .66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, KC 60405.
LOUISE'S BAR
1009 Mass 843-9032
Mon.
&
Wed.
SPECIALS
$2 $^{50} Schooners Irish Ale Ancorsteam
Office of Minority Affairs University of Kansas Presents in honor of African American History Month,1994
"African American Students and KU"
Guest Speakers: Christie Landers, Law
Es: Christie Landers, Law Curtis Jones, Architecture Eva McGhee, Microbiology Jonathan Allen, Public Administration Karen Blackwell, Organismal Biology Terry Bell, Civil Engineering
Moderator:
Amber Reagan-Kendrick,Higher Education
Tuesday, February 15, 7:00 p.m.
Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union
ON CAMPUS
Admission Free
The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an information table about study abroad in Denmark from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. today at the Kansas Union. For more information, call Nancy Mitchell at 864-3742.
Narcotics Anonymous will meet at 11:30 a.m. today at Alcovel in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Andy B. at 843-9461.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 today at Danfort Chanel.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a Catholic law student discussion group at 12:30 p.m. today at 109 Green Hall. For more information, call the center at 843-0357.
KU Kempo Karate Club will meet at p.m. today at 130 Robin Center. For more information, call Mandana Efsahd at 842.473.216.
KU Tae Kwon Do Club will meet at 6 p.m. today at 207 Robin
son Center. For more information,
call Jacob Wright at 749-2084 or
Jason Anishansilin at 843-3099.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor "Exploring the Faith," at 8 tonight at the center, 1631 Crescent Rd. For more information, call the center at 843-0357.
The Douglas County AIDS Project will sponsor support group meetings for persons living with HIV/AIDS and for those supporting aloved one with HIV/AIDS. For more information, call Rose Rousseau at 843-0040.
Harambe will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at American Baptist Center, 1629 W. 19th. For more information, call Anthony Case at 865-1682.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a class, "Fundamentals of Catholicism," at 7 tonight at the center, 1631 Crescent Rd. For more information, call the center at 843-0357.
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Kansan key # = 913-452-5981
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Houston: 57°/35°
Miami: 84°/65°
Minneapolis: 29°/15°
Phoenix: 70°/45°
Salt Lake City: 41°/21°
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Kansas City: 49°/30°
St. Louis: 43°/31°
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Winds from the south at
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High: 53°
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Increasing
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High: 56°
Low: 31°
Cooler
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KANSAN
Source: Brandon Dahl, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
ON THE RECORD
A KU student was arrested Thursday for possession of a false Kansas driver's license and contributing to juvenile misconduct at McCollum Hall. The suspect presented the license to security while checking in an overnight guest. A security official reported to KU police that the license didn't appear genuine. The suspect also
admitted the fake ID was to be used to gain entrance to bars.
A KU student was arrested Thursday for trespassing. He had been banned from Stephenson Scholarship Hall and was reported by witnesses to have been in the building. He was taken into custody at the hall, KU police reported.
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Send her what she really wants this Valentine's Day;
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interviews will be held Wednesday, Feb.16th from 10 a.m-2 p.m
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sign up in the placement center, 110 Burge Union
*Various shifts available
*Immediate openings on the night shift -11:00PM-2:30AM
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CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, February 14, 1994
3
Speaker urges students to work for change
Black history celebrated at Regents Center
By Gennifer Trail Kansan staff writer
OVERLAND PARK — Janice Spralting, a gospel singer from Wyandotte County, asked the 73 students in an auditorium at the KU Regents Center whether one wanted to sing improvisationally. Three did, and before long most of the students in the room were singing Christian songs with them.
This was the beginning of a Black History Month celebration at the KU Regents Center Friday. Wyandotte County high school students who are members of Educational Talent Search—a federally funded program to help students academically—participated.
Stacy Smith, head coordinator of the celebration and manager of the Regents administrative office, said she began the event because she came from Wyandotte County and wanted to give something back to its residents.
"I wanted to let Wyandotte County students know that the Regents Center is available to them and make them feel welcome here," she said.
This is the first celebration of its kind at the center, and Smith said that the center planned to hold it again in the years to come.
One guest speaker — Arthur Drayton, professor of African and African-American studies — urged students to make changes in higher education.
"African Americans laid the foundation of this country," he said. "They gave 300 years of free labor, but the current curriculum continues to deemphasize African Americans. You have to exert yourself at the University in curriculum reform. This is the one and only opportunity to exist side-by-side with other American cultures."
group discussion sessions out of five offered. The discussions were led by community leaders and KU faculty members and administrators, such as Sherwood Thomspon, director of the office of minority affairs. He said that in the future good language skills would be important.
The high school students then were allowed to attend three 20-minute
"We're getting ready for the new millennium," Thompson said. "On the information highway, there is one language: English. You can't say, 'Chillin' baby."
After the group discussions, the students gathered again to hear the life story of Sojourner truth as performed by Dorothy Pennington, associate professor of African and African-American studies at KU. Pennington, wearing 1800s-style clothing
and walking with a cane as Truth had, sang songs and spoke about Truth's life.
"I liked it because it's not fun, it's educational," she said. "I came to learn. I like how the speakers tell the truth. They don't try to cover up."
Stacy Sapho, a sophomore from Summer Academy of Arts and Sciences, said that she enjoyed all the events of the day.
Brenda Collins, coordinator of the celebration and secretary of the KU center for environmental education and training, said she was proud of the program.
"In order for high school students to dynamically reveal their inherent abilities, the doors of educational
BLACK HISTORY MONTH
Schedule of events
Tuesday:
Panel: African-American students at KU, 7 p.m. Alderson Auditorium.
Book Exhibit, Watson Library, (Daily).
BLACK HISTORY MONTH
KANSAN
dimensions must be unlocked to allow the entrance of these explorative young minds," she said. "On Friday, the Regents Center served as one of these doors."
CAMPUS BRIEFS
Two students win Hearst awards for feature articles
Two KU journalism students won awards in the William Randolph Hearst Foundation's 34th annual Journalism Awards Program.
Blake Spurney, Belleville senior, took fourth place for his article, "Leaving Main Street USA", and will receive a $750 scholarship. The article discusses the recent increase of small-town students who do not return home from college after graduation.
Terrilyn McCormick, Kansas City, Mo., senior, took ninth place for her article, "The Politics of Stripping," and will receive a 8500 scholarship. The article is about a female student who worked as a stripper to pay for college expenses.
Both articles appeared in the University Daily Kansan in the Spring 1993.
Money drive begins
The Interfraternity Council is joining the Panhellenic Association of the University of Kansas in this year's effort to raise funds for the American Lung Association of Kansas. The direct-mail campaign kicked off Thursday with a goal of raising about $40,000.
The money will be put to use in the association's "Freedom from Smoking" programs.
Women scientists share with girls
Awards will be given at Greek Recognition Night in April to the individual chapter generating the most revenue and the chapter with the highest amount of mailings sent.
A
Briefs compiled by Kansan staff writers Gennifer Traill and Ashley Schutzt
Examining a stuffed bird during a zoology session, Lindsay Shields, 12, Lawrence, takes advantage of the Expanding Your Horizons workshop. The workshop was held Saturday at Wescoe Hall and was meant to encourage girls to pursue careers in science and math.
KU workshop hopes to open up math fields
By Susan White Kansan staff writer
Rachel Tate, a 12-year-old pupil from Winfield, said she hoped to have learned more about science careers by the end of the day.
"I really enjoy the field of science, and I want more advice about my future," she said.
Tate was one of more than 200 girls from Kansas who attended the Expanding Your Horizons workshop Saturday at the University of Kansas,
Daphne Fautin, adjunct biology professor and co-coordinator for the program, said KU's math and science departments set up the day to encourage junior high girls to become more interested in careers in these areas.
"Because of peer pressure, girls are often told that it is not cool to take math and science," she said. "They perform equally with boys in these areas up until junior high. Then they stop taking classes and don't pursue studies in math and science."
the workshop is an annual national event, this is the first year for Kansas.
"We hope it is the first of many annual programs that will spread throughout Kansas," she said. "We have six to eight people here today from all over
Kansas hoping to get ideas to start programs of their own.
"Our capacity was slated for 200 girls," she said. "We registered 226 girls, and we had to start turning girls away after that."
Fautin said that she was surprised by the large number of girls who signed up for the program.
Amy McMillan, co-coordinator of the program, said the day consisted of math and science lectures and workshops given by women in related professional fields. The girls also listened to speeches given by Sally Frost-Mason, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences; Sylvia Earle, a marine biologist from the California Academy of Sciences; and Barbara Ballard, associate dean of student life and director of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center.
"We wanted to give them an idea of what the various careers in the math and science fields entailed from the perspective of women in these fields," she said.
Fautin said that in addition to the girls' program, there was an adult session for parents and teachers.
"I'm interested in animals, science and math," she said. "Hopefully the program will help me later when I go to get a job."
NATURAL WAY
"We want to teach them how to help their daughters or students understand the importance of taking math and science classes," she said.
Stacia Carrillo, a 13-year-old pupi from Winfield, said she hoped to gain a better understanding about marine biology from the program.
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4
Monday, February 14. 1994
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Information highway a potentially bumpy road
In spite of excellent publicity, the information highway has substantial drawbacks. It offers thousands of opportunities for incredible amounts of information. By merging cable, computer and telephone technologies, America's top three providers of information will be able to offer an infinite number of services. The possibilities seem limitless. However, dangers exist.
Lately, as computers and other avenues of information have become more complex, so have the minds of America's computer deviants. "Cyberpunks" or "hackers" as they are sometimes called, are learning more every day to make the information highway a computer pileup waiting to happen.
Computers become accessible to outsiders when they are hooked up to a network via a modem through a phone line. To benefit from the information highway as it is hypothesized, one would need his or her television, phone and computer all hooked up to such an outside line. This makes that person's home vulnerable to those who would master the technology for their own benefit by raiding files, stealing software or implanting computer viruses for their own amusement.
Computer hackers have broken into the Internet, an internationally-accessible computer system. The hackers broke the codes to individuals' files and read and/or erased letters. This computer robbery could be devastating to businesses and government agencies.
The information highway is a good idea. It has the potential to offer millions of avenues for entertainment, education and practical work applications. It also has a downside that needs to be examined at length. As long as there are those who have the ability to sabotage and loot from their basements, we must check our blind spots and drive carefully as we move on to this highway.
CARSON ELROD FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
New smoking laws make it hard to do business
Once again, Philip Morris Cos. Inc. finds itself in court, its home-away-from-home. However, this time the tobacco giant is acting as a moderating voice rather than a radical extreme.
Philip Morris sued San Francisco over its new, antismoking city ordinance. The ordinance, which took effect Feb. 1, bans smoking in offices and factories and calls for a ban on smoking in all restaurants and bars by next year.
For several years, the nation has undergone a smoking "reform" by mandating "no smoking" areas in restaurants, offices and other public places. Most of these changes were made with good intentions.
However, good intentions often go too far. The San Francisco ordinance goes beyond helping non-smokers. It looks to punish smokers and hurt businesses. Smokers should have the right to smoke if the smoke does not interfere with others.
Businesses also should have the right, if they choose, to let people smoke at their establishments. City Hall should not dictate such extreme smoking laws to businesses. As Philip Morris' attorney said, "If every local government took it upon itself to issue varying workplace regulations, it would be impossible to do business in this nation."
Smokers do not deserve to be the scapegoats of every city council. The government should let common sense prevail and let smokers and non-smokers peacefully coexist.
RICHARD BOYD FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
BEN GROVE, Editor
LISACOSMILLO, Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator
JUSTIN GARBERG Business manager
JENNIFER BLOWEY Retail sales manager
Aest Managing Editor ...Dan England
Assistant to the editor...J.R. Clairborne
News ...Kristi Fogler, Katie Greenwald
Todd Selfert
Editorial ...Colleen McCain
Nathan Olanon
Campus ...Jesse 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 Tawerley
National & Coop sales mgr ... Robin King
Special Sections mgr ... Shelly McConnell
Production mgr ... Laura Guth
Gretchen Kotterheilnch
Marketing director ... Shannon Reilly
Creative director ... John Carlton
Classified mgr ... Kelly Conneally
Tearsheats mgr ... Wing Chan
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the student's name, address, phone number and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas have a special privilege to use these formats.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Fint Hall.
Cynic turns over a new leaf and looks forward to Valentine's day
St. Valentine's Day is upon us once again.
Usually, this would signal that it was time for the cynic in me to take over and complain for hours on end about what a stupid "holiday" this really is.
My traditional St. Valentine's Day ritual has been to dress all in black, scoff at romance and rain on the parades of those who actually enjoyed this holiday o' love.
I had this theory that St. Valentine's Day was a hoax, that St. Valentine himself had never existed.
My theory was wrong. St. Valentine did exist. He was martyred, beheaded actually, around A.D. 270 because of his Christian beliefs. Kind of morbid that a man who had his head whacked off has become the international symbol for love and romance. huh?
Then I said that St. Valentine's Day actually had been created in some dark meeting place far, far away by a group of money-hungry greeting card company executives. This version was more cynical than the first, and that suited me just fine, thank you.
What is it a celebration of, anyway?
Sure, it's a great holiday for those people who happen to be in love or lust or whatever — but what about the people who have no one to love around the 14th of February? What are they supposed to do?
COLUMNIST
DANIELLE
RAYMOND
You'd get the afternoon classes off to have a party. It was great. You'd make your snazzy little Valentine box in art class and put it on your desk to hold your (preferably Gärfield or Snoopy) Valentines. And there were treats — fruit punch and all the cookies you could get your greedy little pre-pubescent paws on.
The best part was that EVERYONE got a Valentine. It didn't matter who you were, you got Valentines from everyone in the class. Those were the rules. That way, nobody would feel
neglected on St. Valentine's Day. That was good, as were most things in grade school.
There aren't any rules now. Your professors don't have St. Valentine's Day parties or make it a requirement that everyone gets a Valentine. No treats and no guarantees.
Those who don't have a significant other, or for that matter, any other on St. Valentine's Day get to watch all the festivities alone. This was one of the reasons I was vehemently opposed to "V-Day."
Something else that always had bugged me was how couples treated the "holiday." How seriously do most couples actually take it? Is it the one day that people really show their partner how much they care?
Apparently, the most popular way to show how much you care for your partner is to buy some flowers and a box of condoms. This is according to a checker at Dillons who has spent many a St. Valentine's Day ringing up roses and Trojans. Nothing like good old-fashioned romance.
It also kind of bothered me that there was a specific day assigned to show someone that you care. Shouldn't that be happening every day any-
way? Oops — the idealist in me is trying-
to sneak out again. Sorry.
Yes, I used to be violently against everything even mildly connected to this seemingly useless holiday. I say "used to" because I'm trying to turn over a new leaf. From now on, I'm going to try to have a positive attitude toward St. Valentine's Day.
You see, I recently decided that I'd had enough of my cynical outlook on romance. It just got old. I mean, how long could I have gone on complaining about how much love sucked? Possibly forever, but like I said — I'm turning over a new leaf.
This year I'm going to look forward to St. Valentine's Day festivities. My cynicism no longer will get in the way of those who truly enjoy the celebration of St. Valentine's Day. There will be no more dressing in black, no more scorn for those in love and no more denouncing the traditions accompanying this holiday.
That's right, there will be nothing but optimism and romance for this girl. And maybe — just maybe — I'll even like it.
Danielle Raymond is a Wilmotte, III., junior in Journalism.
MAXELA Chicago Tribune
Gillooly's Nightmare:
TONYA BOBBITT
Growing up won't split true friends
A few days ago I called an old friend from Wichita.
He is still my best friend
The last time I talked with Mike was during Thanksgiving break.
I wanted to talk with him pretty badly, so when he wasn't home, I tracked him down at his girlfriend's house.
Her father called Mike to the phone, and I said, "Hello, Mike Orth, this is the FBI."
COLUMNIST
JACOB
ARNOLD
Despite his extremely paranoid personality and the fact that I only had talked with him three times since August, he immediately recognized my voice.
We fell right into conversation. It was almost as if I still lived in Wichita and spent most of my free time hanging around his kitchen eating all the Ritz crackers. Time apart meant nothing.
It is almost impossible for me to picture Mike as a father. This is the same guy who used to tell people that he was Papa Smurf. Sometimes I feared he believed it.
Then he told me that his daughter was walking. Father Time appeared beside me, thumped me on the head and said, "You ain't no kid no more."
The fact that I only have seen his
daughter, Briana, once or twice since she left the hospital does not help me cope with Mike being a daddy.
She is a cutie, though. She looks just like him, flaming orange hair and all. Scary.
Mike is a true friend. He has seen me at my most psychotic, most depraved, most depressed, most looney and most drunk. Often in the same night. He talks to me anyway.
I have nearly killed him twice. Once was in a spectacular wreck that was a textbook case of how not to park a car in a stranger's muddy yard at 70 mph. The other time I was in a drunken stupor and tried to throw him into the rain-swollen Arkansas River because he had spilled my beer. When I fell in instead, he had to fish me out. I was not cooperative.
He has never held this or a thousand other stupid, impulsive things I have done that have resulted in injury to one or both of us against me.
He has helped me clean my house after parties, helped me clean my car before dates and helped me clean up my act.
This is a guy who would sit with me on his roof at 2 a.m. in 30 degree weather just because I needed to talk
This guy knows enough about me to have me arrested and possibly deported.
He has never even tried to blackmail me. Much.
I know I probably will never live in Wichita again if I can find any way to avoid it. I know that is probably where he will live. We never again will be able to shoot pool till 3 a.m. five days a week.
I had other friends in high school, but I have lost track of most of them. I don't miss them, either. I miss Mike sometimes.
Mike is getting married in May. It will be the final blow to my attempts to hold on to my childhood. A wife brings new responsibilities, and we never again can be the carefree wild maniacs we once were.
I wish him all the luck in the world,
and I hope that Beth always will make him as happy as she does now.
The visions two teen-agers have of the future while sitting on the curb swigging "Southern Comfort" seldom are true.
I never could have foreseen the beautiful woman that came into my life or the education that would carry me far away. Mike, the man who survived on Quik Trip microwave food, never dreamed he would be settling down in a few years with a precious daughter and a lovely wife.
We swore that we would never grow up. Both our girlfriends say we haven't. The world grew up around us, though, and pulled us along kicking and screaming.
Sometimes this grown-up reality gets a little too intense for me and tears me apart. I can always count on Mike to put me back together.
A friend like Mike is rare. If you even have had a *true* friend, you know what I mean. Treasure that person.
The miles can stretch the bond of friendship, and time can fray it. But nothing can destroy it, not if it is real.
Jacob Arnold is a Wiehita junior in journalism.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Manager of health store mistaken about penicillin
I am writing this letter in response to an article concerning homeopathic medicine that recently appeared in the Kansan. First of all, I am a proponent of homeopathic medicine; however, I am also a student of pharmacy. Hence, I must take exception to the comments put forth by Peter Schultz, former herb manager of the Wild Oats market. (The day this article appeared, I
called Wild Oats to talk to Schulz, only to find that he was no longer with the company.) Barring any misquotations, Schultz made two false statements.
The first claim is that herbs are better cures than penicillin because herbs are all-natural, not manmade. From this, I assume that Schultz isn't much of a medical historian, for if he were, he would have realized that penicillin first was isolated from a broth culture that had been contaminated with a certain mold,
something every bit as natural as an herb. Even today, penicillins are made on a large scale by fermentation.
Second, Schultz claims that penicillins are worthless due to the number of resistant viruses. Well, Mr. Schultz, in case you hadn't realized, penicillin aren't used to treat viral infections, but bacterial infections. They work by inhibiting the synthesis of the bacterial cell wall, a feature unique to bacteria. Cheers, however, to Hal Sears, herb and
vitamin manager of the Community Mercantile for refraining from propagating any obtuse medicinal claims about herbal medicine and also for realizing the importance of modern medicine.
Jeremy C. Holt
As pharmacists, or eventual pharmacists, we have enough problems with misinformation, and I believe that it behooves the two The Kansan and future herb managers not to exacerbate these problems.
Toneka senior
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, February 14, 1994
5
Med Center holds conference on rape
Students hear how to help survivors
By Ashley Schultz Kansan staff writer
More than 50 medical students attended a four-hour conference Saturday that was the first of its kind for the University of Kansas Medical Center. The subject of the conference was rape trauma, an issue often neglected in the Med Center curriculum, said Rachel Vile, first-year medical student.
Vile, who has worked at rape crisis centers in Washington and Boston, and William Pfau, second-year medical student, organized the conference with money from the American Medical Student Association and the department of history and philosophy of medicine.
The conference was intended to teach medical students how to better help rape survivors, Vile said.
"As physicians, we are going to be dealing with survivors of sexual assault, and we want to learn about it in a seminar rather than on our first patient," Vile said.
Brenda Thomas, director of education services with the Kansas City area Metropolitan Organization to Counter Sexual Assault, discussed the myths associated with sexual assault, phases of victim recovery, advice for health care professionals treating victims and the role of doctors as mandated reporters in cases of child sexual assault.
She also talked about the need for doctors to ask rape survivors the right questions.
"It's important to clarify that whatever they did — it is not their fault," Thomas said. "If they were drunk or if they were someplace they were not supposed to be, it is not their fault. Somebody decided to do this to them. It is not their fault."
Thomas said that women ages 13 to 24 years old were in the highest-risk group for rape and that 85 percent of rape victims knew their attackers.
"The only way that you and I, any of us, can protect ourselves totally from ever being a victim of sexual assault or abuse is to live on a deserted island in a plastic bubble all by yourself." Thomas said. "Because we can't control the actions of other people."
There are three types of rapists.
How to help
What you should do when someone you care about is raped:
- Be supportive.
- Don't pressure her to talk.
- See that she gets sensitive, concerned and competent medical attention if it happens.
- Don't tell her what she must or must
- Don't tell her what she must or must not do
- Be patient, and listen to her needs.
- Suggest she talk to someone trained to help victims deal with rape.
- Recognize your own limitations.
- Be gentle and sensitive.
Where to get help: Rape Victim-Survivor Service, 1419 Massachusetts St. 841-2345
Source: Metropolitan Organization KANSAN
To Counter Sequel Assault
Thomas said. About 50 percent fall into the category of power rapists, which includes acquaintance rapists. Thomas said that power rapists seek control, often without using a great deal of violence. A power rapist typically thinks that a woman does not know what she wants and that she will like it when she is shown.
About 45 percent of rapists are anger rapists who use violent, blitz-style attacks, Thomas said. The other 5 percent are sadistic or serial rapists who usually kill their victims.
Dennis Allen, director of Emergency Medicine at the Med Center, spoke briefly about problems in treating rape victims and about a doctor's four responsibilities to the patient: caring for their medical well-being, attending to psychological aspects, assuring some kind of follow-up and collecting appropriate forensic evidence.
A medical exam in an emergency room can last anywhere from one-and-a-half to six hours. Thomas said.
Pediatric cases of sexual assault outnumber adult cases at the Med Center's emergency room 2-1, Allen said. An average of two to three adult cases are handled each week.
Allen said he tried to make sure that a nurse experienced with rape trauma stayed with a rape victim throughout the hospital visit, playing a role similar to a patient's advocate.
The conference was concluded by a panel of four rape survivors who spoke about their own experiences at hospitals after their attacks.
Vile said she was working with administrators to integrate a two-hour seminar into first-year medical students' curriculum.
Dancing with ribbons
Jennie Zeiner/ KANSAN
Happy New Year!
Waving colorful ribbons in the Goddesses from the Moon dance was only part of the Chinese New Year celebration at the Lied Center. Dancing plays and food also helped to ring in the New Year, which is based on the traditional lunar calendar used in China. This year is the year of the dog.
Media coverage of minority community focus of panel
Bv Jennifer Freund
Kansan staff writer
LaTina Sullivan, Memphis, Tenn., freshman, told panel members of "Cultural Diversity and the News" at the Kansas Union Friday that she was not allowed on the Central High School paper because she was African-American.
The last step, Andrews said, was to take action.
Vernon Smith, assistant managing editor for the Dallas Morning News, concurred.
Sullivan said this unwritten rule kept her and other African-American students from contributing to the paper at her high school, which she said was 75 percent African-American.
Caesar Andrews, executive editor of the West Nyack, N.Y., *Rockland Journal-News*, said that minorities did not feel welcome in the media because of historical perceptions.
Panel members at the forum, sponsored by the William Allen White School of Journalism and Mass Communications, addressed Sullivan's concerns as well as other issues facing minorities and the media to an audience of about 75 people.
Andrews said that a newspaper first needed to have personnel who understood diversity, not just political correctness. Second, newspapers and staff have to make a commitment to diversity.
Smith said the News had taken steps to make contact with the minority
community, but he said he did not expect a friendly reception.
"You will have to go out and take your lumps," he said. "There's a lot of distrust out there over stuff done in the past."
Panelists also addressed the issue of the negative portrayals of minorities in particular, African-American males.
DeNeen Brown, reporter at the Washington Post, said that African-American violence was so bad in Washington, D.C., that a murdered African-American male wasn't news anymore but that the murder of a white man was. She said that despite accusations of sensationalism she felt obligated to cover violence and poverty in the African-American community.
the panelists said that crime and poverty needed to be covered but that minorities should be covered in a positive light as well.
The panel also discussed a political cartoon using the word "nigger" published in the Sacramento Bee.
Phil Garcia, state editor of the Bee, said that readers were so angered that the paper issued two apologies. He agreed that free speech was at issue, but he also said that the word might be considered an obscurity, which would not be covered by free speech.
Dorothy Posey, Kansas City, Kan. resident, said the panel raised interesting issues.
"I enjoyed the comments — those that were thought-provoking," she said.
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Back The Door
Security against theft not always guaranteed
Bag-check policies leave some KU students with a lighter load
By Jennifer Freund Kansan staff writer
John Gamble/KANSA
Marci Magnuson, lola senior, picks up her books from the mandatory book-bag drop at the Jayhawk Bookstore, 1420 Crescent Road. Magnuson said she rarely worried about the safety of her books while shopping.
When he returned, he found that his bag had been stolen.
Kok Phang, Penang, Malaysia senior, complied with the mandatory bag-check policy at the Jayhawk Bookstore, 1420 Crescent Rd., when she shopping there last Wednesday.
Phang said he never was compensated by the Jayhawk Bookstore. He also said he was dismixed that he would not recover his stolen bag.
Sohel Khan, Dhaka, Bangladesh senior, had his book bag stolen three years ago.
Muggy said that to prevent shoplifting his store required customers to check their bags.
He said that theft was not a major
"We expect all carry items and parcels that might cause confusion to be left behind behind the cashier counters or left at the unsupervised book drop," he said.
Khan, like Phang, also gave uptrying to receive compensation from the Jayhawk Bookstore but only after futile negotiations with Muggy, the KU police and Legal Services for Students.
Khan found the stolen text at the Jayhawk Bookstore the next semester, apparently turned in as a used book for money. He said he asked for it back but the owner, Bill Muggy, refused to return it to him.
"I was going to ask the Jayhawk Bookstore to sell me my books back at wholesale, and I was hoping maybe my bags would be returned, but now I think my hope is gone," Phang said.
Phang and Khan are just two of many KU students who are the victims of theft and are never compensated. Some of these thefts occur at book drops in KU and Lawrence book stores, which don't always offer compensation if belongings are stolen.
At first, Phang attempted to negotiate with the Jayhawk Bookstore for compensation, but he gave up when Muggy never returned his calls.
problem at his bag check
"In the 16 years that we've been in business we've only had three to four actual thefts where the book bags were not recovered," he said.
MAT 104321 21 08 2020 10:59 AM
Muggy said most bags reported missing were cases of people mistakenly picking up bags that they thought were theirs.
Despite the low number of thefts from the book check, Muggy said, security cameras would be installed within the next three to four weeks to provide more security against theft.
The Jayhawk Bookstore is not the only book store that has a mandatory book-bag check.
"The Jayhawk Bookstore's policies are perpetuating this crime problem," Scott Nehrbass, former legal intern at Legal Services for Students, said.
"Because of the lack of security and some of the stories I've heard, I would chose the Kansas Union over the Jayhawk Bookstore," Tetuan said.
Renee Tetuan, Topeka freshman, said that she was scared to leave her bag at the Jayhawk Bookstore.
Although Muggy said that the bagcheck policy was necessary to prevent shoplifting, some view it as inviting theft.
Mike Reid, manager of the Kansas and Burge Union Book Stores, said customers were required to check their bags while shopping during the first week of the spring and fall semesters.
Reid said that the system was similar to a coat check. During the rest of the year, bag checking is optional, but no security is provided.
He said that the only thefts that he was aware of occurred when bags were checked voluntarily.
The University Book Shop is the only book store in Lawrence that does not have a mandatory bag check.
Mike Lammers, store manager, said that because his store was removed from campus many students drove and left their bags at home.
But if customers bring bags in they are asked to leave it at the cash register.
"This is just a request," Lammers said. "If they don't want to leave it, then a clerk will be keeping an eye on them."
According to Sgt. Rose Rozmiarek, KU police, 30 book bag thefts have been reported on campus since Aug. 23, 1993.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, February 14, 1994
7
Class to create airplane interior
Richard Devinki/KANSAN
Students designing project for Learjet at renovated farm
Tom Yi, Lake Forest, Ill., senior, works with a quarter scale Learjet model to find a better way to utilize the interior space. Yi is a student in the Problems in Design class, which meets at Chamney Farm, 2445 W. 15th St. The class eventually hopes to build a full-scale model of the plane to test their new interior plans.
By Mary Beth Kurzak & Trine Nygaard Andersen Special to the Kansas
A class of KU design students are building a pilot project for airplane passengers.
A high-tech airplane manufacturer in Wichita and an old farm in Lawrence, which used to be the home of KU's glass blowing classes, have come together in Industrial Design 578.
On Tuesday 12 students and Lance Rake, professor of industrial design, moved their Problems in Design class from the Art and Design Building into the newly remodeled rooms of the Chamney Farmhouse, 2445 W. 15th St.
Through the Center for Design Research, a new program in the School of Fine Arts, the students are working on a project with Learjet Inc. of Wichita.
Later in the semester, a full-scale model of the interior of a 31A Learjet airplane will take form inside the barn. The class is building the model to test if its ideas would work in the 31A Learjet, a personal jet that holds up to eight passengers and generally is used by business executives.
Scott Ryan, Salina senior, said that the project's main goal was to increase passenger comfort in the small cabin, which is about 12 to 14 feet long, 4 feet 4 inches tall, and 5 feet wide.
One of the class's ideas includes making seats that would be more comfortable and that could be stored. The retractable seats would provide
passengers more room for equipment such as computers.
"We hope to develop a system that will be modular in nature," Rake said. "Then we can adapt it to the specific needs of each client without having to start from a blank sheet."
Darrell Truitt, Lawrence senior,
said that Learjet could use any idea
the think tank could generate but that
there were no obligations.
Leearist is the center's first and only client this semester. In future semesters, the class will work on different projects with different clients.
Rake said that he and Joe Zeller, head of the department of art and design, had discussed the concept of
the center for many years but that the department lacked space for it.
An opportunity for the center arose two years ago when the school stopped offering glass blowing classes at Chamney Farm. Through money from the school and alumni donations, the farm is being upgraded. Learjet Inc. will finance the materials needed for the airplane project.
Truitt said industrial design students usually worked alone on other projects. This project resembles work done in the professional world, where industrial designers work on teams.
Rake chose the students for this team based on portfolios of their work. He said that the students
involved were at various levels of their education and that each had different abilities and skills in the field of industrial design.
Brook Anderson, Central City, Colo, senior, said that such diversity in the group led to strong work practices.
Ryan said that although the class was just in its beginning stages, it had already been a good experience.
"The spread of jobs and the distribution of work is a lot more balanced," Anderson said.
"The most interesting thing is working as if we had a real industrial design office," Ryan said. "There is a lot more pressure to come up with real work."
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IF YOU THINK WAR IS HELL YOU SHOULD SEE IT IN WINTER
War is Hell, but in winter it's worse. Right now, victims of war in the former Yugoslavia are suffering a second, deadly winter. Bosnia's cruel tragedy -- its murder, its sickness and its hunger -- has been doubled by severe shortages of food, medicine and fuel.
Now is the time to help. The University of Kansas Hillel Foundation is inviting friends of all faiths to join us for BosniAid: An Evening of Hope. Uniting with campuses around the world, we will raise awareness about Bosnia's tragedy and contribute to humanitarian relief funds for all its victims.
Professor William J. March, Department of Russian and East European Studies, Slavic Languages and Literature, University of Kansas
Join us for a panel discussion featuring:
Sakir and Jasminka Hadzimejlic, Bosnia
Anna Pavichevich Harkins, National Coordinator, Serbnet: Serbian American Information Network
WHEN: TUESDAY,FEBRUARY 15th 7:30PM WHERE: ECUMENICAL CHRISTIAN MINISTRIES 1204 OREAD AVE.
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Monday and Tuesday February 14th and 15th 10a.m.-4p.m. Informational Table Kansas Union Talk to KU Program Returnees
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Roses, chocolates, sugar cookies,
daisies, Hallmark cards, baby's breath.
Cupid strikes again. Or does he?
While these sweet nothings symbolize different things to different people, women and men often clash as to the meaning of Valentine's Day.
Whether it's tools or flowers, Valentine's Day gifts, goodies must come from the heart
"I wouldn't want to make a blanket statement," says Joel Ashmore, Lawrence senior, "But If some women don't get a dozen roses, they feel let down. Valentine's Day is not that important unless you have somebody special to spend it with."
Tray Batson, Starkville, Miss., senior says, "It really depends on the people. A lot of people expect a gift. Men think they have to buy something. It's pushed and promoted that way to further the myth."
Batson says his most romantic Valentine's Day lasted an entire week because his girlfriend brought him a bouquet of wildflowers every day.
"I'm rebellious," says David Moore, Kansas City, Kan., senior. "I don't like to do what people tell me to do."
Some men would rather do romantic things on other days besides Valentine's Day.
He says that on one instance he filled the house with lit candles and ordered Chinese food for himself and his girlfriend. He ended the night with
Tyson Miller, Paola junior, says women liked more romantic gifts while men preferred more practical gifts, such as tool sets.
a special homemade ice-cream dessert.
"Sometimes they (men) try to be romantic, but it backfires," Miller says. "Sometimes it's just not in their nature. It's not that we don't try. It's just that things don't work out the way we perceive they will. Last Valentine's Day we got a hotel room, went out to eat — the whole works. It was just too much pressure to have a good time. So this year, we're going to sit back and relax."
For women, it's the thought that counts.
"It shows that you want to do something nice for someone — that is, when you're not forced to do it," says April Bittner, Dallas senior. "Women expect it to be something from the heart, something sincere. More times than not, it's forced on men. It's so commercialized now. The second Christmas stuff goes down, Valentine's Davandy goes up."
Erin Glaser, St. Louis senior, says she agreed with Bittner.
"I think Valentine's Day is a product of flower shops and card shops," she says. "I think men kind of dread it because they know that women love it so much."
I am a florist and I love to work with flowers. I have been working at the floral shop for many years and I enjoy creating beautiful arrangements for weddings, parties, and holidays. I also love to teach my students how to care for flowers and how to create their own floral arrangements.
Bob Scheibler, Gardner resident, arranges roses in the workroom of Englewood Florist, 939 Massachusetts. Scheibler said he was helping out during the busy season because he knew the owners of the shop.
Story and photos by Heather Lofflin
91
30NO
I ♥ BB
Left: Englewood Florist has sold thousands of roses during this Valentine's day season. All of their roses come directly from groves in California, shipped overnight on line.
Above: A Valentine's Day tradition, wood carvings declaring love can be found on the picnic tables of South Park.
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National Condom Week February 14-21
Valentine's Day (Feb. 14)—a good day to begin an important week and to show concern for your sweetheart and yourself. Everyday—abstinence is the surest way to prevent STDs (including HIV) and pregnancy. But if you decide to have intercourse—use a latex condom and nonoxynol-9 spermicide every time. Communication can help to reduce the incidence of STDs and unplanned pregnancy. And remember that alcohol and other drug use is strongly associated with failure to use preventive measures.
Use your condom sense1 Condoms are available at Watkins Pharmacy—3 for $50.
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Special Worship Services: 7:00 am and 7:30 pm. with Holy Communion & Imposition of Ashes available at both services
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NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, February 14, 1994
9
Gay community says 'no' to pedophile organization
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The gay community has long allowed other sexual outcasts to ride its coattails, from transvesties and transsexuals to bisexuals and leather fetishists. But it now is trying to distance itself from pedophiles.
Last month, a New York group called Stonewall 25 voted to bar the controversial North American Man-Boy Love Association from its international march on the United Nations on June 26. The demonstration will commemorate the 25th anniversary of an uprising at the Stonewall Inn, the Greenwich Village gay bar.
"Those who advocate or engage in sexual abuse of young people are not welcome in the family of gay men and lesbians who live upstanding and honorable lives," said Pat Norman, a co-chair of the march.
The gay community historically has been inconsistent in its response to pedophiles, leaving itself open to attack.
In January, the Senate unanimously passed an amendment, introduced by Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., to sharply reduce funds to the United Nations unless it severs deals with the International Lesbian and Gay Association. Helms objected to the association's relationship to NAMBLA, one of about 350 groups that belong to LGA.
David Smith, a representative for the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force, a Washington lobby group, accused the religious right of trying to link homosexuality to denodhilia to serve its "twisted interests."
"It's very clear that every major U.S. gay leader has
But he acknowledged disagreement among gay leaders about NAMBLA's presence at gay events. For example, the annual gay pride march in Los Angeles excludes NAMBLA, but the marches in New York and San Francisco have allowed it to participate.
condemned NAMBLA and condemned groups that promote pedophilia, he said.
Hans Hjerpkejon, secretary general of the Brussels-based ILGA, said that NAMBLA joined ILGA about fifteen years ago when ILGA was a loose organization with few criteria for membership. He said that many ILGA members would like to see NAMBLA expelled but that the group could not take up a resolution to oust a member until its next meeting, in July in New York.
"Under our constitution, there will have to be an 80 percent vote in favor of expelling the group," he said. "That can be hard to obtain on any issue, but our intention certainly is to expel them, and I am hopeful we will reach that goal."
Clinton Anderson, officer for lesbian and gay concerns at the American Psychological Association, said psychological researchers have found that convicted sexual abusers of children frequently "cannot be characterized as having an adult sexual orientation at all."
Hempelson said ILGA had been concerned about its association with NAMBLA since the late 1980s and had urged the group to resign. In 1990, ILGA adopted a resolution denouncing nodophilia, he said.
"Of those people who seem to have had enough experience as adults to have an adult sexual orientation in addition to pedophilia, as adults they were primarily heterosexual," he said.
South African parties planning election boycott
The Associated Press
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — The Zulu nationalist Inkatha Freedom Party said it would join pro-apartheid whites in boycotting South Africa's first all-race election.
Inkatha leader Mangosuthu Buthelezi said he would ask the Organization of African Unity, the Commonwealth and the United Nations to mediate stalled talks.
Political leaders say there still is time to overcome disputes before the April 26-28 election.
Inkatha's central committee called Saturday for the boycott and for the election to be opposed "in any and every way permissible by law."
A boycott by the Freedom Alliance — which includes Inkatha as well and right-wing whites seeking an independent white state — could escalate political violence that killed more than 3,000 blacks last year.
The violence, much of which stems from a power struggle between Inkatha and the African National Congress, is considered the greatest threat to free and fair voting.
Alliance members say they fear the ANC, which is expected to win the election, will trample minority rights. They want autonomous or independent homelands, a concept rejected by the white minority government and the ANC.
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina Serb forces refuse to comply with NATO orders to withdraw
THE NEWS in brief
Bosnian Serb commanders failed to show up for cease-fire negotiations yesterday after rejecting U.N. conditions for surrender of their heavy arms.
The Serbs are demanding that Bosnian government troops withdraw from front-line positions around Sarajevo as part of a cease-fire, U.N. officials said.
The Serbs say the government, which has stronger infantry forces around Sarajevo, could otherwise launch a ground offensive once the Serbs withdraw their big guns.
NATO has ordered the Bosnian Serbs to withdraw their heavy weapons from Sarajevo by midnight Feb. 20 or face air strikes.
As part of a cease-fire announced Wednesday, the Bosnian Serbs had agreed to pull back their guns and put them under U.N. supervision.
The U.S. State Department, apparently worried about a backlash against Americans if NATO carries out its threat, ordered the families of American diplomats and government employees to leave Yugoslavia immediately, embassy officials said in Belgrade.
But after handing over several mortars and other big guns Friday, neither the Bosnian army nor the Serbs turned in any weapons Saturday, U.N.ookesman Mai, Jose Labandeira said.
And despite U.S. and Russian pressure on the warring sides, peace talks in Geneva broke up with no progress reported.
LITTLE ROCK. Ark.
Whitewater made money
The money-losing Arkansas real estate venture that has entangled the first family in a federal investigation began generating a small income before President and Mrs. Clinton sold their interest.
The Clintons decided not to take any of the money before ending their relationship with Whitewater Development Corp. in December 1992, one of their lawyers said.
In May 1992, Whitewater paid off its remaining loans, enabling it to make a little money. Since
then, those proceeds — which total less than $200 a month — have gone to the Clintons' former business partner, James McDougal.
The Clintonts have said they invested and lost nearly $69,000 as co-owners of Whitewater. They sold their half to McDougal for $1,000 and have said they never made any money on their investment.
"It has never been clear as to what he (McDougal) has taken out of Whitewater," said James Blair, an attorney who advised the first family on the matter. "But I believe it to be more than anybody has talked about."
The attorney said he thought the Clintons should have received some Whitewater income.
McDougal said his Whitewater income went toward repaying his investment losses, which he estimates are about $90,000.
WICHITA
Shooter linked to clinic fires
In a series of letters and interviews with the newspaper, Shelley Shannon provided details that suggest she was involved in several arsons or knows who was.
Her activities are under investigation by the FBI and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms.
Shannon, 37, of Grants Pass, Ore., was charged with attempted first-degree murder in the Aug. 19 shooting of George Tiller outside his clinic, Women's Health Care Services. Tiller was slightly wounded in both arms and returned to work the next day.
In a telephone interview, Shannon said she decided in 1990 that violence against clinics was justified.
"So as far as somebody bombing a place, I came to the conclusion then that there was nothing wrong with that, especially when you see the results like we've had down in Redding, Calif., where the place was closed for eight months," she said, referring to a June 1992 fire at a clinic there.
Shannon is being held in lieu of $1 million bond while awaiting a March 21 trial.
Except video, no clues in art theft
OSLO, Norway
Despite a video of two men stealing the country's most famous painting — "The Scream" by Edward Munch — police said yesterday they had no clue as to who the thieves were.
Police were searching for a Mercedes station wagon the two men were believed to have used when they drove away from the National Art Museum on Saturday morning.
A video taken by a security camera showed a man climbing a ladder on the exterior of the museum and entering the building through a window. Fifty seconds later he handed the painting to his waiting accomplice beneath the window.
The camera filmed the men from a distance, and the picture quality was poor.
Police and art experts said it was highly improbable that the painting could be sold since it is so well known. No ransom demand has been made.
Munch painted several versions of "The Scream," but the stolen one is regarded as the most important.
WASHINGTON
Malaria vaccine in the works
In the wilds of Tanzania, 600 children are testing what could be a medical breakthrough: a malaria vaccine.
By 1998, researchers anticipate global vaccination for the disease, which strikes 300 million to 500 million people a year. Youngsters are the most vulnerable; malaria kills 1 million African children each year.
"If we have the right vaccine and the right resources, we could reach 80 percent of the people in Africa in just 24 months," said D.A. Henderson, a physician who is a renowned vaccine expert and an assistant U.S. health secretary.
But while Henderson says "we are hot on the right trail," the fight against malaria may soon be jeopardized by budget cuts.
Possible cuts in U.S. aid for malaria research may cause other donors to cut back. Medical officials say private companies will not pick up the tab because the vaccine, needed mainly in very poor countries, won't make a profit.
Compiled by the Associated Press
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COMPLETED FORMS MUST BE RETURNED TO OACBY 5:00 P.M. FRIDAY,MARCH4,1994
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SERENGETI. DRIVERS
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10
Monday, February 14, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
KU to begin self-examination before NCAA's check next fall
By Jamie Munn Kansan staff writer
KU will be giving itself an athletic self-exam this spring before the NCAA makes its own check up later this fall.
David Ambler, vice chancellor of student affairs, will spearhead a steering committee that will ensure that the University is operating within all of the NCAA's regulations.
This week's hearing, the first of two, will be an informal informational session where the four subcommittees of the University review will explain their fields of study. The information found by the study's four subcommittees will be examined at a hearing on April 15.
Ambler said the University of Kansas should finish its study on
July 1. Aftersome revision, Chancellor Gene Budig will present the report to the NCAA in August. He said that he and athletic director Bob Frederick expected a clean bill of health.
"There's a general feeling with Bob Frederick that the program has been operated with a lot of integrity," Ambler said.
However, the self study is a chance to correct any problems found at KU before the NCAA conducts its own study in November, Ambler said.
In Spring 1995, the University will have a chance to respond to the NCAA's ruling on KU whatever the outcome.
“It’s rather consequential for us if we were not to qualify,” Amber said. For example, the University could lose its eligibility for the Final Four
basketball tournament or football bowl games, he said.
The four subcommittees will be taking testimonies and questions from students, student athletes, faculty, staff and the Lawrence community at this week's hearing.
"The NCAA has stressed that all segments of the University community be involved." Ambler said.
He also said he wanted to invite all of the University's governance groups to the hearings. He said that he thought student organizations, especially those supporting women and minorities, would be interested.
Don Green, distinguished professor of chemical and petroleum engineering, said his committee was still in the data-gathering stages, but he said he didn't see too many problems in store for KU.
Green said he expected concern to be raised about entering credentials for student athletes compared to the University at large. Graduation rates for student athletes compared to KU students as a whole probably also will be a focus of his committee.
Deborah Teeter, director of institutional research and planning, said her committee also was developing its research.
"We don't know what problems to anticipate," Teeter said. "But personally I'm very impressed with the good practices and management."
Teeter said the department had specific accountability rules that had been well-documented so far.
"I'm impressed with the self study they did five years ago and the revisions made then," she said.
Court battle may determine role of gender in education
The Associated Press
ROANOKE, Va. — The issue of whether men and women learn differently is on trial as the Virginia Military Institute struggles to remain all-male. It wants a separate, but different military college for women set up at a former finishing school.
The Justice Department has sued VMI, saying the exclusion of women at the state-supported school is discriminatory. An appeals court agreed, but gave the state the option of setting up a similar program for women.
The Justice Department returned to court Wednesday to argue that The Virginia Women's Institute for Leadership, proposed for the all-female Mary Baldwin College, is based on gender stereotypes. It wants U.S. District Judge Jackson Kiser to force VMI to admit women.
The V-WIL program would exclude the 24-hour military atmosphere at the 155-year-old men's school. There would be no Spartan barracks with
our privacy and no boot camp indentation.
Women would be required to participate in the Reserve Officer Training Corps, but after their freshman year, they would play tennis, golf and racquetball, while VMI cadets participate in boxing, football and karate.
The V-WIL program would not require women to wear uniforms at all times, as required of the VMI cadets.
VMI's witnesses have said women would develop as better leaders in civilian and military life without the military atmosphere and "adversative model" of education. A program for women identical to VMI would fail for lack of interest, they said.
But Capt. Tamara Frezzel, a U.S. Military Academy graduate who commanded forces during the Gulf War, testified that she would have had no interest in attending V-WIL, even though it is in her native Virginia. The elements of VMI that are excluded "are what the military is all about," she said.
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THE END
Is there any significance to the greater frequency of natural disasters that have occurred worldwide over the last several years?
Is it a sign? For nation shall rise against nation,
and kingdom against kingdom; and there shall be earthquakes in divers places, and there shall be famines and troubles; these are the beginnings of sorrows. -Mark 13:8
Just in the U.S. recently:
Los Angeles earthquake
West Virginia floods
Record-breaking cold
Los Angeles fires
Midwest floods
Hurricane Andrew
Hurricane Iniki
McPherson tornado
Chicago River floods
Eastern Kansas hailstorms
Andover tornado
San Francisco earthquake
Hurricane Hugo
Are these events fulfilling Biblical prophecy? More later. Consider that there were at the very least, 48 specific prophecies entirely fulfilled at the first coming of Jesus Christ. The odds of this happening was 281,474,976,710,656 to one*. To be continued...
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SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, February 14, 1994
11
SPORTS EDITOR
DAVID
DORSEY
Jayhawk lovebirds have special plans for Valentine's Dav
Valentine's Day has arrived, and Sean Pearson already has made his plans.
Pearson, a sophomore forward on the Kansas men's basketball team, is engaged to Alana Slatter, a junior forward on the women's team. The two try to balance their romantic lives with their basketball careers, which is a tough task considering that both have different practice and game schedules.
Pearson, who is a junior by academic standing, met Slatter during their freshmen year. The two had study hall at the same time, and whenever Slater would enter the room, Pearson's eyes would meet hers. Then they would say hello to one another before studying on their own.
It was not until two months into school that they first started talking to each other.
"One day I went to a volleyball game," Slatter said. "I was sitting in the stands with two of my friends when Sean walked in. We waved to each other, but he sat by himself on the other side of the gym. We went over and talked to him during the game."
"We didn't get along at first at all," Slatter said. "For whatever reason, he had a bad impression of me, and I had a bad impression of him. Whenever we saw each other, he would just look at me and walk on by."
But since then, their relationship has grown.
It grew even deeper on Aug. 28 when the two agreed to get engaged. But it was Slatter, not Pearson, who made the proposal.
"I had asked him prior to that, and we went and sized his ring." Slatter said, "As of now, we're going to make some plans this summer on setting the date."
Pearson said that he immediately agreed to Slatter's proposal.
"We were just sitting there watching TV one day," Pearson said. "She gave me ring, I was being serious when I said 'yes,' but then it finally dawned on me what it really meant. I was very surprised. It's usually the guy that asks the girl first."
Pearson plans on making his own proposal, however.
"I'm going to get her a ring and make it official," he said.
Pearson and Slatter both agreed that having each other helped during the basketball season. Both players opened the season struggling, and both players subsequently have improved.
When Slatter plays, Pearson can be found in the stands, usually behind the Kansas bench.
Slatter missed the first five games of the season with a right knee injury. Now she's averaging almost six points a game and steadily has worked her way back into the rotation.
"Sometimes he sits near the bench, but a lot of times he sits up high in the stands," Slatter said. "When he sits down low, the children bombard him and ask him for autographs."
Slatter watches all of the men's home games that she can, and the two forwards sometimes discuss their performances with each other.
Pearson, who is establishing himself as one of the Jayhawks' best outside shooters, pulled out of a slump Jan. 26 against Oklahoma State by hitting five of five three-pointers.
"We talk after one of my games or one of her games," Pearson said. "But other than that, we don't talk much about basketball."
Now he is averaging almost seven points a game and should see an increase in playing time because of a shoulder injury to senior forward Richard Scott.
Today, Pearson and Slatter most likely won't see each other until the men's team finishes practice. The women practice from 2 to 4 p.m., and the men go from 4 to 7 p.m.
"It's hard," Pearson said. "We try to spend as much time together as we can."
Slatter said she was not sure about her Valentine's Dav plans.
"I don't know about his plans," Slatter said. "I probably won't see him all day because of practice."
But Pearson let me in on a little secret; he plans on making this Valentine's Day a memorable one for his fiancee. The two most likely will meet after Pearson is finished with practice.
"I've got something special planned, but you can't write that," Pearson said of the specific details. "I want it to be a surprise."
Jayhawk defense holds upset-minded 'Huskers
Kansas regains conference lead with victories
By Matt Siegel
Kansan sportswriter
The No. 10 Kansas women's basketball team found the ingredient to success yesterday and defeated Nebraska 64-56 in Allen Field House.
Down 6, with about 12 minutes left, the Jayhawks looked primed for an upset. But that's when junior forward Angela Aycock took over the game. She continually gave ways to score against the Nebraska defense and wound up with a game high 27 points. The output matched her career high.
Aycock scored on drives, put backs, foul shots and especially effective was a 12-foot baseline jump shot in which she simply elevated over, the waving arms of the Nebraska defenders.
Kansas did exactly that, holding Nebraska to 32.1 percent shooting in the second half. The Jayhawks also kept Brown in check. She finished the game with 18 points, two below her average.
up was going in," senior center Lisa Tate said. "I started to wonder if they were going to miss."
Kansas, after losing twice last weekend, found themselves down by one point at halftime. The Big Eight Conference leading scorer, Nebraska's senior forward Nafessah Brown, already had scored 9 points. Even more troubling for the Jayhawks, ranked No.1 in the conference in field goal percentage defense, limiting opponents to 35 percent shooting, was that they had allowed the Cornhuskers to shoot 45.2 percent.
The score was tied at 48 with 10:45 left to play when the momentum swung in the Jayhawks favor for good. Once again it was Aycock who supplied the heroes. Nebraska had possession of the ball, but Aycock came up with one of her 3 steals, and spotted senior guard Erica Muncy for a layup. Kansas never trailed again as key free throw shooting by Muncy, Aycock and Tate finally outdid the Cornhuskers.
"Angela Aycock is just an athlete on a different level," said Nebraska senior guard Megan Yedsena. "She showed that tonight."
"It seemed like every shot they put
"They got some good shots in the first half," Kansas coach Marian Washington said. "I'm really happy about the way our team regained their composure and came back in the second half."
The victory improved Kansas' record to 18-3 overall and 9-2 in conference play and dropped Nebraska to 14-11 and 5-6.
Kansas 64, Nebraska 56
KANSAS (18-3 9-2)
Despite the loss, Yedsena said that she was happy the Cornhuskers were able to hang with the Jayhawks and show they were able to play with the top teams in the conference. She issued a warning to the top teams in the conference.
However, the tournament did not seem to be on the minds of the Jayhawks. The players just said they
Player fgm/fga ftm/fta tp
Aycock 12-19 3-8 27
Trapp 2-5 1-2 5
Tate 1-6 1-3 3
Sampson 3-5 0-0 6
Muncy 4-7 5-6 13
Slatter 3-6 0-0 6
Dixon 1-2 0-0 2
Halbleib 1-4 0-0 2
Leathers 0-0 0-0 0
**Totals** **27-54** **10-19** **64**
"The thing about the Big Eight Tournament is that usually the first two teams get upset," Yedsena said. "I think we're going to be a strong contender for the championship at the tournament."
NEBRASKA(14-11,5-6)
Player fgm/tga ftm/taa tp
McClain 3-13 2-2 8
Brown 7-13 3-4 18
Thompson 3-5 0-0 6
Galligan 2-10 2-2 6
Yedensa 3-8 0-0 6
Aarmn 5-9 2-2 12
Bynum 0-1 0-0 0
Haselip 0-0 0-0 0
Totals 23-59 9-10 56
Kansas junior forward Angela Aycock rebounds the ball as senior center Lisa Tate picks for her in the final minutes of the Jayhawk's 64-56 victory against Nebraska in Allen Field House.
MIDWAYS 55
MIDWAYS 12
Halftime Kansas 3, Nebraska 3, 13-point goals
goalbanks 1-8 (Brown 1-1, Galligan 0-
4, Yedesaena 0), Kansas 3 (Sampson 0,
Habitable 0). Rebounds Nebraska 36
(Brown 11), Kansas 32 (Ayock 7, Tate 7).
Assists Nebraska 18 (Gardenia 6, Yedessaena
5), Game 5, Muncy 3). Total
fouls Kansas 14, Missouri 17. Attendance
1.350.
were going for the Nebraska victory before preparing for Oklahoma State
"They came out with a lot of intensity" Aycock said. "But all that matters is that we got the win."
On Friday, Kansas also was victorious, pasting the Iowa State Cyclones 82-50. The Jayhawks were leading 61-44 with 5:22 remaining and then went on a 15-0 run, sealing the victory.
The game marked a distinction for the Jayhawk defense. It was the 100th
straight game in which the Jayhawks defense held their opponent under 50 percent shooting. Aycock had a game high 18, freshmen guard Angela Hallebib had 15 and sophomore guard Charisse Sampson finished with 11 points. Kansas also outbounded the
Cyclones 52-40.
"We just need to focus on ourselves," Washington said. "We worked on blocking out all week during practice, and we will continue to work on it for the remainder of the season."
KANSAS
Kansas junior center Greg Ostertag kept the ball away from Kansas State's senior forward Denyl Cunningham during the second half of Saturday nights' Jayhawk victory in Manhattan. Ostertag had 16 points and 10 rebounds in the game. Ostertag's inside game helped Kansas maintain second place in the Big Eight Conference race behind Missouri.
THANKS
Kansas basketball coach Roy Williams, senior guard Blake Weichbrodt and senior forward Richard Scott found plenty to cheer for during Saturday's game.
Tom leininger / KANSAN
Jayhawks declaw Wildcats in Manhattan
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
MANHATTAN - One streak ended for Kansas and another one continued after the Jayhawks defeated Kansas State 65-56 Saturday night.
However, Kansas continued its winning streak at K-State. The Jayhawks now have won 11 consecutive games in Manhattan. Kansas sophomore forward Sean Pearson started in place of Scott, who has an allied left shoulder.
Kansas senior forward Richard Scott spent the entire game pacing the Jayhawk sideline, yelling frantically and jumping up and down. His streak of 126 games played was finished.
"It was different not being in there," Scott said. "I was just trying to cheer the team on. The coaches told me to calm down a little bit."
Kansas coach Roy Williams said he had wanted the victory badly. Kansas avenged its defeat against K-State in Lawrence earlier this season.
With the victory, Kansas improved its record to 21-3 and 6-2 in the Big Eight Conference. K-State dropped to 14-8 and 3-7.
"It was important for me," he said.
"I didn't want to lose three straight
games against Kansas State. And I know that the freshmen didn't want to lose again. But we didn't do anything differently in the first half. They were still more aggressive than we were."
The Wildcats had 12 offensive rebounds in the first half. K-State senior center Deryl Cunningham and junior forward Demond Davis combined for 18 rebounds in the game, 11 of which came on the offensive end.
It seemed Kansas might miss Scott's presence in the lineup. It was K-State's ability to get the offensive rebound that hurt Kansas early in the game.
Kansas built a 16-1 lead in the first half but let it slip away. The Wildcats came back with a 13-0 run with two three-pointers by senior guard Askia Jones, one of which hit the rim and bounced seven feet in the air before dropping through the net. K-State tied the game on a three-point basket from the top of the key by senior guard Anthony Beane.
"They're not the biggest team." Williams said of K-State. "But they may be the best rebounding team in the Big Eight."
K-State regained the lead with a slam dunk by Cunningham after he rebounded a miss by Davis. Despite
Kansas' 52.2 percent shooting display in the first half, K-State had a 30-28 halftime lead.
"Coach told us at half that they were killing us on the offensive boards," Kansas freshman center Scot Pollard said. "He told us we had to get a body on them."
Using its dominant strength inside, Kansas built a 56-43 lead in the second half. Kansas junior Greg Ostertag had 16 points, 10 rebounds and two blocks in the game. Pearson capped off the run when he took a pass from freshman guard Jacque Vaughn and drained a three-pointer.
"We knew we had a height advantage against them," Pollard said. "That was our focus the whole game."
Besides using its size underneath, Kansas buckled down on K-State's two scorers, Jones and Beane. The two combined for only seven points in the second half.
"They were definitely a factor in Lawrence," Vaughn said. "We concentrated on them. It shut them down, which stagnates their offense a little bit."
The Jayhawks seemed more alive after that run, but K-State pulled back into the game by causing several turnovers that led to easy bas
kets.
"We had that 12-point lead, and suddenly it was down to six," Williams said. "We did the dumbest things that a team could do. We helped them, but I'm not saying that they didn't cause some of those turnovers."
The Jayhawks finally ended KState's comeback with 2:19 left. Kansas senior guard Steve Woodberry found senior forward Patrick Richey, who passed up an open three-point shot and saw Vaughn at the top of the key. Vaughn took Richey's pass and slammed the door with a three-pointer.
"I'm just glad Pat had the confidence in me to swing the ball to me," Vaughn said. "He had an open shot too. When we came into the locker room he was hitting me on the head. He said that I better have made that."
"I'm just happy to get out of here with a win," he said. "I think we still have a shot. Two games in the Big Eight is nothing. Missouri still has to come to our place."
The victory kept Kansas in pace with Missouri for the conference title. The Tigers are 9-0 and two games ahead of the Jayhawks in the loss column. Richey said it was still possible to win the conference title.
Kansas 65, Kansas State 56
Player fgm/fga ftm/ta tp
Vaughn 3-5 1-3 8
Woodberry 5-11 3-4 15
Richey 2-3 1-3 5
Ostertag 7-10 2-4 16
Pollard 3-5 3-4 9
Rayford 3-5 2-2 2
Gurley 1-2 0-0 3
Pearson 3-9 0-0 7
Williams 0-1 0-0 0
Totals 24-26 11-19 65
Kansas State (14-8.3-7)
Player fgm/fga ftm/fta tp
Davis 1-6 0-2 2
Beane 4-15 0-0 10
Jones 5-11 0-2 15
Cunningham 5-15 0-2 10
Noland 7-12 0-2 15
Lucas 2-3 0-0 4
Gavin 0-0 0-0 0
Totals **24-62** **2-8** **56**
Halftime Kansas 28, Kansas State 30. 3-point goals Kansas State 6-22 Jones 3-7, Beane 2-10, Nolan 1-3, Davis 0,2) Kansas 4-11 (Woodberry 3-4, Vaughn 1-2, Guley 1-2, Pearson 1.3). Rebounds Kansas State 32 (Cunningham 12), Kansas 37 (Cestergat 10). Assists Kansas State 10 (Beane 4, Jones 3), Kansas 16 (Vaughn 6, richie 3). Total foults Kansas State 18, Kansas 11. Attendance 13,553.
1
12
Monday. February 14, 1994
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From the KU Bookstore Your Store on Valentines Day
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The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Lied Center Presents A New Directions Series Event
LEWITZKY
Dance Company
8:00 p.m.
Wednesday,
February 16, 1994
Lied Center
"One of the authentic voices of America
modern dance!"
--International Herald Tribune
OLYMPICS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office (864-ARTS); Murphy hall Office Box (864-3982); and any ticketmaster outlet (913) 234-4545 and (816) 931-3330; public $16 and $14, KU, Haskell and K-12 students $8 and $7, senior citizens and other students $15 and $13; KU student tickets can be purchased through the SUA office, Kansas Union; phone orders can be made using MasterCard or VISA; all seats reserved.
Tickets to all New Directions Series events half-price for KU students!
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. Special thanks to this year's Very Important Partners: Hallmark Cards, Inc., Keft's Audio and Video, Payatee ShoeSource and W.T. Kemper Foundation, Commerce Bank Trustees.
Skier Moe isn't 'Stooge' with 1st U.S. gold medal
By John Nelson The Associated Press
LILLEHAMMER, Norway — Every 10 years, like clockwork, America wins the Olympic men's downhill.
In Sarajevo in 1984, it was Bill Johnson. Here, it was Tommy Moe.
by.05 seconds.
"I didn't even have any thoughts in my mind that I was going to win." Moe said. "I just figured, hey, I'll ski the best I can."
He did just that.
Moe, who turns 24 in three days, raced down the 3,035-meter Kvittjell course in 1 minute. 45.75 seconds yesterday, beating World Cup leader Kjetil Andre Aamott of Norway by a mere .04 seconds and dealing home-country fans a huge heartbreak.
Aamodt, the 22-year-old who won the super-giant slalom at the 1992 Winter Games, was the seventh man down the course. This, he admitted, was the gold medal he really wanted — one of the most coveted medals of the Games.
It was the closest victory margin ever in Olympic Alpine skiing. The women's downhill in 1984 and men's downhill in 1992 each were decided
"It just wasn't Aamodt's day," said a crestfallen Greta Owesel of Oslo, who sat in the front row of the finish-line stadium, waving a Norwegian flag. "It was the American's."
More than 40,000 fans turned the finish area into a real Nordic blast when Aamodt crossed the line in 1 minute, 45.79 seconds, knocking archrival Marc Girardelli of Luxembourg out of first place.
The bronze medal went to Ed Podivinsky of Canada, who finished in 1 minute, 45.87 seconds.
1994 Winter Olympic Games
"I'm not really disappointed with today's second place," said Aammot,
The tally
A listing of countries winning medals in the Olympic games.
I
Country Gold Silver Bronze
Norway 1 2 0
Russia 0 1 1
Italy 1 0 0
United States 1 0 0
Canada 0 0 1
Netherlands 0 0 1
Source: The Associated Press
Dave Campbell / KANANE
who also will skid in the super-G, giant slalom and slalom. "Moe had a really outstanding race. But my main goal here was to win a gold medal, so I must concentrate even harder."
Hockey team ties 4-4 with France
By Mike Nadel
The Associated Press
LILLEHAMMER, Norway — After the final horn sounded, U.S. goalie Mike Dunham hung his head and stood motionless. Defenseman Brett Hauer slammed his stick against the boards.
Brian Rolston in the final 8:37.
There was a positive side for the Americans only because French goalie Petri Ylonen, who otherwise played a splendid game, misplayed long shots by Peter Laviolette and
It was a disappointing opening night for America's Olympic hockey team. It went 0-for-3 on disputed goals, 0-for-7 on the power play, handed the French three late goals and needed their generosity to salvage yesterday's 4-4 tie.
Ylonen was so angry he blew France's upset bid that he countered the reactions of Dunham and Hauer by pounding his goaltender's stick on the ice.
While Ylonen made 28 saves to Dunham's 10, the American goalie preserved the tie in the final 2 minutes with France on a power play.
Peter Ferraro put the United States up 2-1 after one and the Americans appeared to have taken a two-goal lead at 8:22 of the second when Ted Crowley's slap shot deflected off the skate of U.S. center Peter Claviglia. However, replays showed that Claviglia kicked the puck into the net and the goal was disallowed.
Later, Ferraro stuffed the puck under Ylonen's pads. But Lepaus
immediately signaled "no goal" because he had blown his whistle after losing sight of the puck when it was momentarily under the goalie.
And at 7:48 of the third, France scored short-handed. Benoit LaPorte poked the puck away from David Sacco at the blue line, and Serge Poudrier gained control at center ice to feed Pierick Maia for the 4-2 lead.
The short-handed goal merely added to the frustration of the U.S. power-playunit.
OLYMPICS: Speedskater Dan Janssen tries for gold. Page 14.
Early in the third, David Roberts coughed up the puck in front of the net to Benjamin Agnel, who lifted a shot over Dunham's right shoulder.
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SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, February 14, 1994
13
Men swim circles around Cornhuskers
By Andrew Gilman
Kansan sportswriter
A 14-yearlong stranglehold by the Nebraska men's swimming team was released in dramatic fashion Saturday as the No. 13 Jayhawks defended the No. 21 Cornhuskers 149-91 in front of a full house at Robinson Natatorium.
The No.16 Jayhawk women were not as fortunate. They were defeated by No.21 Nebraska 133-110.
The streak was over, and coach Gary Kemp went in. The pool, that is.
"They took about five years off my life," Kempf said after being thrown in the pool. "We were consistent, competitive, and we raced."
Kansas finished first, second and third in the 50-yard freestyle. Senior Scott Townsend touched out junior Marc Bontrager by 20.68 to 20.69. Senior Curtis Taylor finished third to
complete the sweep.
Converging in the middle of the pool after the finish, Townsend, Bontrager and Taylor embraced. At that point the Jayhawks lead ballooned to 47-27, and the men never looked back.
Townsend and Bontrager repeated their earlier victory by finishing first and second in the 100-yard freestyle as well, making the score 85-46.
But they were not done yet. Townsend, Bontrager and Taylor teamed with freshman Erik Jorgensen to win the 400-yard freestyle relay by almost six seconds.
"We're the best sprinters in the country," Townsend said. "We're swimming like a nationally ranked team should swim."
But Kempf was quick to give Nebraska credit.
"They're the defending Big Eight Conference champions," he said. "Until you beat the champion you've
got to consider them the favorite."
Although the Jayhawks bea. Nebraska in 1993 at the NCAA meet the Kansas men have not won a Big Eight championship since 1979.
"I told my guys, 'You have awoke a sleeping giant,'" Kempf said. "This was the battle before the war, and there's no doubt we'll be ready in two weeks."
The women, after defeating Nebraska four consecutive times, fell short Saturday.
"Our ladies got beat by a better team today," Kemp said. "We need to swim with more heart and more desire."
Kansas will be competing at the Big Eight Championships Feb. 27 in Oklahoma City, OKa.
One bright spot was freshman Rebecca Andrew.
Andrew won the 200-yard butterfly with a time of 2:05.99 and was part of
the 400-year freestyle relay team,
which finished second.
But Andrew was confident in her team for the Big Eight Championships.
"It was a life best," Andrew said of her time in the butterfly. "Coach was telling us that we needed to step up, but it didn't work out."
"We'll be working on licks and turns and just trying to sharpen everything," she said. "I'm excited for Big Eight's I think we'll win."
Although the women lost, the day belonged to the men's team and the seniors, who were swimming in their last dual meet.
Senior diver Tim Davidson finished first in the one-meter diving and second in the three-meter event, and senior distance swimmer, Dan Querciagrossa, finished first in the 500-yard freestyle.
Jayhawks win one, lose two
By Andrew Gilman Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas baseball team started its season with a victory but ended up 1-3 this weekend at the Olive Garden Classic in Kissimmee. Fla.
Sophomore pitcher Jamie Splitori
three six innings, allowing only three
hits and no earned runs. It was his first
victory, and it helped the Jayhawks to
a 9-6 victory against North Carolina
State on Friday.
"I thought Jamie pitched well today," Kansas coach Dave Bingham said. "He went through some tough times in the middle innings, but he was persistent and held the game together."
Senior pitcher, David Meyer, 0-1, gave up five runs and six hits in three plus innings of work and was charged with the loss.
The Jayhawks scored single runs in the first three innings and built a solid lead against Tennessee. 1-3, in the second game of the day for Kansas but saw their lead quickly vanish. The Volunteers sent 15 men to the plate in the fourth inning and scored 11 runs in the frame. Tennessee went on to win the game 14-4.
Senior outfielder Darryl Monroe went 4 for 5, including hitting his first home run of the season, in the loss.
Central Florida, 3-1, scored three runs in the eighth inning and added four more in the ninth to hold off the Jayhawks 13-8 in the third game for Kansas in the classic.
Central Florida scored four runs in the top of the first inning and one more in the second off of losing pitcher sophomore Clay Baird, 0-1. The Jayhawks responded with five runs in their half of the second inning to tie the game at 5.
The Knights scored one more run in the fifth inning and never trailed again. Kansas scored three runs in the ninth inning, but it was not enough as Central.Florida held on for the victory.
The Jayhawks played North Carolina State in the consolation finals yesterday in a rematch of the first game and lost 7-3.
SPORTS in brief
Doubles action helps men beat Washington surprise Minnesota
The Kansas men's tennis team upset No. 27 Minnesota 4-3 in the first place match of the Minnesota Invitational Saturday in Bloomington, Minn.
The victory helped the Jayhawks erase a defeat they suffered to the Golden Gophers last season. The tennis team earned the right to play Minnesota after defeating the Washington Huskies 5-2 Friday.
Doubles play proved to be Kansas' biggest ally, Kansas and Minnesota each had won three singles matches going into doubles play. Kansas was able to preval in doubles, winning two out of the three matches to capture the Minnesota Invitational crown.
In singles competition, sophomore Reid Slattery was upset by Minnesota's Paul Pridemore, 6-4. However, sophomores J.P. Visssep, Michael Isroff and Victor Fimbres all were triumphant for Kansas.
The victory improved Kansas' record to 7-0 overall in dual match competition. The Jayhawks' next match is next weekend at the Indiana Invitational. Along with Kansas, the tournament includes West Virginia, Indiana and Vanderbilt.
Women's tennis defeats Notre Dame
The No. 15 Kansas women's tennis team had a successful road trip this weekend in South Bend, Ind. The Jayhawks trounced No. 18 Notre Dame 8-1 on Saturday, and then defeated William and Mary 7-2 on Sunday.
The Fighting Irish had a two match winning streak against the Jayhawks, but this time Notre Dame only could manage one victory while at the No. 6 singles spot.
Against Notre Dame, Kansas' No. 17-ranked junior Nora Koves, playing in the No. 1 singles spot, defeated Notre Dame's Wendy Crabtree 6-4, 6-3. She improved her overall match record to 11-1. Senior Mindy Weiner, who is ranked No. 35, won both her matches and improved her season record to 19-5.
The Jayhawks do not have much time to enjoy their success as the team returns home for a 1 p.m. match tomorrow against Texas, who is the No. 1-ranked team in the country. The match will be held at the Alvamar Racquet Club.
In doubles competition, the tandem of Koves and junior Rebecca Jensen, ranked No. 10 in doubles competition, defeated Crabtree and Lisa Tholen, who are ranked No. 20.
Kansas track competes at Nebraska
The Kansas track team competed with more than 30 schools Saturday at the Husker Invitie in Lincoln, Neb.
Senior distance runner Michael Cox continued his winning ways with a victory in the mile run. Cox won the mile for the third time this year with a time of 4:02.56.
Senior John Bazzoni jumped 16-4 in the pole vault for a second place finish, his worst performance of the year. It was the first time he didn't win this season.
The women's distance medley relay team of Amy Cook, Katrina Lawrence-Case, Kristi Kloster and Melissa Swartz took second in the race, but more importantly they claimed a provisional qualification for the NCAA meet in March.
The provisional qualification does not guarantee the team of racing in March, but it does assure them that someone has to beat their time for them not to go.
The Jayhawks will travel to Manhattan next week to compete at the KSU Invitational.
Pippen named NBA All-Star MVP
MINNEAPOLIS — You could never really be sure about Scottie Pippen, not as long as Michael Jordan was around. Take Jordan away from the ChicagoBulls, the reasoning went, and Pippen might wilt under the pressure.
Wrong.
Any doubts that might have lingered about Pippen were erased yesterday when he emerged from his retired teammate's considerable shadow by scoring 29 points, grabbing 11 rebounds and making four steals to lead the East over the West 127-118 in the NBA All-Star Game.
Pippen was a unanimous choice as the game's most valuable player, an award Jordan won only once in eight All-Star appearances.
"It wasn't a statement, but maybe it was a past-due judgment," Pippen said. "With Michael on the club, it overshadowed some of the guys like Horace (Grant), B.J. (Armstrong), and to some extent myself. It's time we were all recognized as All-Stars."
Although the East roster included seven players making their first All-Star appearances, three regulars — Pippen, New York's Patrick Ewing and Cleveland's Mark Price — showed why they knew making the team
Ewing and Price each scored 20 points, and they combined with Pippen and first-year All-Star John Starks to stop a West rally that reduced a double-digit East lead to one point midway through the fourth quarter.
It was the first time an All-Star team had three 20-point scorers since Tom Chambers, Rolando Blackman and James Worthy did it for the West in 1987.
Compiled from Kansas staff reports and The Associated Press
The Malaysian Student Association of Kansas University
Surrounded by too many "Bills"?
Pay 'em off with a part-time job on campus.
The Department of Student Housing offers convenient part-time student jobs in the university's residence halls. These positions have flexible schedules with wages beginning at $4 25 per hour. Stop by the Student Housing office in Corbin Hall, or call 864-7203 for more information.
Division of Student Affairs
proudly presents
Malaysian Cultural Night'94
OnSaturday,19thofFebruary.
the Malaysian students will take you on a trip to a land 10,650 miles from here Together, WE WILL JOURNEY TO OURLAND
Featured presentations;
IONDANCE
DIKIR BARAT (a Malay chanting ceremony)
CEREMONIAL SONGS
CHINESE DANCE CEREMONIAL SONGS
TRADITIONAL MALAY WEDDING CEREMONY
MALAY DANCE
A TRADITIONAL COSTUM PARADE
GREETINGS AND GRANDENDAY
and last but not least, AN ETHNIC DINNER prepared by the students.
VENUE: ECUMENICAL CHRISTIANMINISTRIES (ECMChurch Bldg.)
VENUE: ECUMENICAL CHRISTIANMINISTRIES (ECMChurch Blld.) 1024 OREAD (across the street from Crossings)
TIME:6:00PM
DATE: SATURDAY, FEB.19TH
Tickets available at SA office. Adult: $8 Children: $4 or call Winston 842-4663 Kim 832-7233 Co-sponsored by STUDENT SENATE
Hear Ye! Hear Ye!
Kansan
Correspondents
A new program aimed at first-year students who are interested in reporting, editing or photojournalism
Join us!
6:30 p.m.Wednesday, Feb.16, 1994 Room 206 Stauffer-Flint Hall Call or write Christine Laue 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4810
815 New Hampshire 841-7286
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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---
11
Monday, February 14, 1994
COME MEET CONDOM MAN
Mon., Feb.14
3-6:00pm
C
- Free Red & White Condoms
- Free T-Shirts for the First 25 in the Door
- Condom Keychains
Egypt
- Music by KLZR Jocks
CLEOPATRA'S Hours:
Sun 12-5
Mon - Wed 10-6
Thurs - Sat 10-8
a unique boutique 743 Mass. St (913) 749-4664
PLANNED PARENTHOOD GRAND OPENING
1420 Kasold Dr. • Orchards Corners Lawrence • 913-832-0281
PRE-BUSINESS STUDENTS Who meet the minimum admission requirements:
Tuesday, February15 in 206 Summerfield
OLYMPICS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Applications are available in 206 Summerfield 864-3844
Admission to the School of Busi
Applications for Spring and Summer 1994
OLDE offers:
12-18 month paid training program
Potential six-figure income
Excellent benefits
OLDE, America's Full Service Discount Broker $ ^{\mathrm {SM}} $ is looking for motivated people to establish a career in the brokerage business.
--or send resume to:
OLDE Discount Stockbrokers
National Recruiting
751 Griswold Street
Detroit. MI 48226
If you possess excellent communication skills, general market knowledge and the desire to excel, sign up for an on-campus interview on February 16, 1994 in the Career Center.
Campus Interviews February 16, 1994
If you are unable to arrange an interview call: 18003276066
OLDE
DISCOUNT STOCKBROKERS
Member NYSE and SIPC
An Equal Opportunity Employer
Jansen seeks medal in fourth Olympic speedskating attempt
By Hal Bock The Associated Press
LILLEHAMMER, Norway — Dan Jansen looks at the times and knows he is the best speedskater in the world at 500 meters.
Now he must prove it in the Olympics.
Jansen blazed to a world record 35.92 seconds for the distance — the equivalent of a 4-minute mile on ice — on the indoor oval at Hamar in January. Then, just to show it was no fluke, he chopped the record to 35.76 seconds two weeks ago at Calgary, where he reached speeds of 33 miles per hour.
Now, at age 28, he is back for his fourth and final run at Olympic hardware — the missing link in an otherwise brilliant speedskating career. His first shot at these Games comes today in the 500-meter, one of three gold medal events on the schedule.
No Olympic athlete has experienced more disappointment at the Winter Games than Jansen. Twice he
has finished fourth, tantalizingly close to a medal. Twice he has fallen, once when he was leading the race and closing in on the victory.
He was the subject of sorrow at Calgary when his sister died on the eve of his first race. He was sabotaged by soft ice at Albertville, France, where he seemed to be skating in mud.
Something always seems to happen to him.
Jansen ran into trouble again before these Olympics when he finished third in a World Cup race and complained about the ice at Hamar, where the indoor rink usually is considered perfect.
He insisted the episode did not shake his confidence.
"I feel good going in," he said. "An Olympic medal would be great to have. I know I am best or certainly one of the best three and have been for the past couple of Olympics, but for whatever reasons, it didn't happen.
"I want it for me."
With Germany's Uwe-Jens Mey,
who won the 500-meter gallen at Cal
gary and Albertville, now retired, Jansen's chief competition should come from two Japanese skaters, Hiroyosu Shimizu and Manabu Horii, as well as Igor Zheleznyski of Belarus.
After yesterday's first runs in the huge, American Duncan Kennedy was fourth and teammate Wendel Suckow was eighth. Defending Olympic champion Charger Hackl held the lead, just one hundredth of a second in front of Markus Prock of Austria. Arnold Zoggeler of Italy was third.
Hackl, trying to become the first man to win consecutive golds in the luge, broke his own track record with a time of 50.296 seconds during today's runs but simply could not shake Prock, who finished second to him at Albertville two years ago. Lillehammer is seven hours ahead of Lawrence.
Kennedy, a disappointing 10th at Albertville, was satisfied with his showing into today's final round.
Russians sweep technical program
No American has ever won a huge medal.
By Barry Wilner The Associated Press
HAMAR, Norway — The Russians didn't invent pairs skating, they simply perfected it.
Eygenia Shishkova and Vadim Naimov were fourth, just behind world champions Isabelle Brasseur and Lloyd Eisler of Canada.
Ekaterina Gordeeva and Sergei Grinkov, the 1988 gold medalists, won the technical program yesterday at the Olympics, finishing just ahead of 1992 Olympic champions Natalia Mishkutenik and Artur Dmitriev.
Easily the class of a field that includes six couples with medals
from world championships, the top Russians were sensational.
Grinkov had slight trouble on an individual spin, but he and Gordeeva more than made up for it with exquisite pairs spins, an impressive lift and fine footwork. Their performance, to Spanish folk music, earned Gordeeva and Grinkov five marks of 5.9 out of 6.0 for artistic impression. Their technical marks ranged from 5.6 to 5.8, placing them first with six judges.
"It's the epitome of what pairs skating should be," said U.S. coach John Nicks.
It was no surprise the four-time world champions, who turned pro in
1990, were in front. Except for the 1988 world championships, they had not lost a major event from the 1985 junior world championships through 1990. And they appeared sharper than ever after a two and a half-year absence to skate on the pro tour and almost another year off to have a child.
Mishutienok and Dmitriev actually received louder applause and cheers. With Gordeeva and Grinkov watching
gling — and clapping — the defending Olympic champions put on a splendid show. Their spiral was exceptional, as was their lift, which included a backward flip in the exit. Judges from Australia and Germany had them first.
MATHEMATICS PRIZE COMPETITION
Junior Level: Open to all undergraduates
of non-senior standing
First prize--$100
Second prize--$50
Senior Level: Opento all undergraduates First prize $150
Both exams will be given on March 17 7-10 pm in room 301 Snow
To participate you must register in 405 Snow by noon, March 17
COPIES OF LAST YEAR'S COMPETITION ARE POSTED OUTSIDE 405 SNOW
❤
Beary Special Valentine..
CHEEKY PANDA
Palace Cards & Gifts
8th & Mass.
843-1099
Get one 18" Valentine Balloon and a precious Valentine Bear or Jelly Belly Jelly Beans for $500 or less
Stop in for our many gift ideas!
Open: Mon.-Wed. 9:30-6; Fri.-Sat. 9:30-7;
Thurs. "till 8:30, Sun. 12-5
POST-SEASON BASKETBALL
ATTN:STUDENTS
BIG 8 CONFERENCE
APPLICATIONS FOR KUMEN'S BASKETBALL POST-SEASON TOURNAMENT ACTION ARE AVAILABLE NOW AT THE ATHLETI C TICKET OFFICE LOCATED IN THE EAST LOBBY OF ALLEN FIELDHOUSE.
TICKETS TO SEE THE KUWOMEN'S BASKETBALL TEAM IN THE BIG EIGHT TOURNAMENT ARE AVAILABLE. CONTACT THE TICKET OFFICE (864-3141) FORDETAILS.
WOMEN'S FINAL FOUR
194
RICHMOND
NCAA
FINAL FOUR.
1994
CHARLOTTE
864-3141
Don't miss out on your chance to see the Jayhawk Men & Women in action during:
*Big 8 Tournament
*NCAA Regionals
*Final Four
Application Deadline: Feb.18, 1994
ATHLETIC TICKET OFFICE
EASTLOBBY-ALLENFIELDHOUSE
8:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M.
864-3141
Basketball
Classified Directory
100s Announcements
108 Personal
110 Business
Personal
120 Announcement
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
20s Employment
Help Wanted
Professional Services
Tuxedo Services
235 Typing Services
Classified Policy
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for房源 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
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 dis-
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are paid.
100s Announcements
I
105 Personals
Dear Mr. Marks,
Dear Mr. Marks,
Just a little note that I'll be dreaming of you and those SUNDAES on Valentine's Day.
Missing you,
Miss you,
110 Bus. Personals
Jayahwai Spirit
20% OFF Gecko Merchandise
Thur end of February
935 Massachusetts
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
307 Want to Buy
-Kansan Classified: 864-4358
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
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 8:40pm-4:30pm
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Saturday 8:30am-12:30pm
Sunday 11am-9pm
KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services
1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, February 14, 1994
15
Holiday Inn, Steamboat Springs, Co. Party with someone you know. Free beer and appetizers every night from 9 p.m. to 5 p.m. when you stay with the group. Parking: 1-800-654-3890 or book your Spring Break today.
Unique Sterling Silver Jewelry!
Hoops, Pendants & More!
For Girls & Cals
For Kids
928 Mass, Downtown
120 Announcements
HAUSAU: America's New Spring Break Hot Spot,
Lake Havau, AZ, is throwing America's largest party!
Top name Concerts, Comedians, and
Musicians Lake Will Riar Will '94! CALL 800-
8HAVAU
Tax preparation: Short Form B15, Long Form B27
Dd evening & weekend hours call. Available.
B88
SPRING BREAK 94
Cancun $439
With R/T oil
South Padre $159
with outrageous
party/mix package!
Florida $79
Sand, sun and cheap!
Bahamas/Cruise $329
includes some meal!
Cell immediately.
With an Airfare
Maupintour:
749-0700 or 843-0050
Daily Kansan. The World Ours to Share. Recycle Your
13th YEAR!
SOUTH 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-A-D-O
STEAMBOAT
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK
BRECKENRIDGE/KEYSTONE
N-E-V-A-D-A
LAS VEGAS
S·O·U·T·H C·A·R·O·L·I·N·A
HILTON HEAD ISLAND
--in NY, PA and NEW ENGLAND. Instructors needed for: Tennis, Basketball, Baseball, Hockey, Swimming/SWI/Lifeguards, Sailing, Water-skiing, Windsurfing, LaCrosse, Gymnastics, Ceramics, Jewelry, Volleyball, Soccer, Outdoormats, Piano Accompaniment, Eds. Majors, Nurses, Chef's, Call Arlene at: 1-800-433-6428 now!
RESERVATIONS AVAILABLE NOW
CALL TOLL FREE FOR FULL
140 Lost & Found
CALL FULL FREE FOR PULL
DETAILS AND COLOR BUCHREU!
Call Joan at 865-5611
FOUND: Lawrence HS ring, class of 91. Call 842
4444.
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
300 SUMMER CAMP OPPORTUNITIES
in NY, PA and NEW ENGLAND. Instruction
Part-time temporary and permanent openings.
Flexible schedules around class. $9-10 to start.
Positions need to be filled by 2/16/94. Please call
842-8313 for more info.
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:
420 Florence St. Palo Alto, CA 94301
800-999-2287
ACADEMIC
PROGRAM
COORDINATOR
Academic Program Coordinator (APC) vacancies for 1994-95 *50%* position, working to facilitate academic progress, encourage good study skills, and provide a variety of training opportunities. Not a live in position. Required: Graduate student *in good standing at KU taking no more than 9 hours per semester*. Preferred: Residence hall living and supervisory experience; knowledge of community outreach commitment is not possible; candidates must be able to commit at least two evenings per week to the position. Salary and benefits: $62.50 per month, from August 1, 1994 through May 31, 1995. Some meals provided when visiting campus. Eligible for application to tuition rates. To Apply: Submit a letter of application outlining interest and relevant experience; resume; plus names, addresses, and telephone numbers of 3 references to KU Department of Education; 422.811.1078; Hill Court, Lawrence, Kansas 60045. Designed: march 18, 1994. EEO/AO/
ASSISTANT COMPLEX DIRECTOR
Assistant Complex Directors (ACD's) hold live-in, 10月, 75% positions, managing student personnel as a residence unit housing between the student and facilitating resident's personal and academic development, adjustment to university environment. Complex Director with student personnel functions including supervisory responsibility for the student staff and facilitating resident's personal and academic development, adjustment to university environment. Referral services to university and community resources. Required: At least one year of residential group living experience. KU graduate enrolls in a program offered by the university. Preferred: Residence Life staff experience. Residence hall supervisory experience. Experience with payroll, budgeting, and administrative duties. Microcomputer experience. Salary range $42,000-$63,000 per apartment including utilities provided plus meals when cafeteria is serving. ADS and spouses eligible for staff tuition rates. Employment from the University or an institution submitting letter of application outlining interest and relevant experience; resume; plus names, addresses, and telephone numbers of a references to the KU Department of Student Housing, 622 West 10th Street, New York, NY 10019. Deadline: March 18, 1994. EEO/AO/
Baby sitters needed for 3-month-old in our home.
Mon: 1:45, 4:35 pm and/or Wed & Friday: 8:45,
10:45 am. No need to work all shifts. Pls call 843-
3205. Ask for Nicolas/Katha. $2.50 per hour.
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camp. Teach: swimming, canoeing, sailing, water skiing, gymnastics, dance, juggling, basketball, camping, crafts, dramatics, OR riding. Also provide maintenance, SATary $150 or more plus RB, GWC/WC/GWC Mhild, NLP, 8009, 740-444-244.
WRITERS WANTED
Major film production company
seeks new talent. Send us your
sample screenplays.
(301) 515-2060
Counselors/Support Staff-Children's Camps/Northeast-Top salary, MHP/BD/Laundry, travel allowance. Must have skill in one of the following: basketball, dance (jazz, tap, ballet), drama, drums, field hockey, football, golf, guitar, gymnastics, ice skating, lacrosse, mature photography, pioneering, rockery, rollerblading, ropes, sailing, scuba, swim team, tennis, theater, technicians, kitchen steward, cooks, bus drivers, maintenance, nurses, secretaries. Men call or write: Camp Wink for Boys. 2584 Glades Rd. Suite 102, Lincoln Park, Chicago, IL 60611 K
Cruise line, entry level, onboard positions available, great benefits. Summer or year round (813)
Delivers needed. Doe Munds Bilingual Hispanic newspaper needs dependable people to distribute paper through Lawrence. Transportation necessary. Good pay. Call 10-818-221-4747. East West Records is looking for a college rep in the Lawrence market. You are if you are enthusiastic and know alternative music, this might be for you. Call 10-818-221-4747. Retail and radio. Call Petel or Ivan (121) 275-880
GREEKS & CLUBS
EARN
$50 - $250
FOR YOURSELF
FOR YOURSELF
plus up to $500 for your club!
This fundraiser costs nothing and lasts one week.
1-800-923-5528, Exit. 65.
1-800-923-5528, Exit. 65.
Help wanted: Maintenance person. 62 unit plum-
complex, 15-20 hrs p/w. Duties include plum-
carpentry, & minor electrical. Call anytime 834-
8230. Ask for Chris or Susan
Hiring students to attend Alumni: 4:55 - 4:58 p.m.
Tues. and Thurs. $4,90/rn. startting week. February
15-April 28. Please call Marie Adams Young or
Lyda Hawks at 844-820-12-1 and 1-S. M-F.
Jayhawker Towers
Assistant Manager
A 12-month, half-time, live-in position, the Assistant Manager is responsible for coordinating activities and enforcing policies for residents in our community. The Assistant Manager assists the Complex Manager to develop a sense of community through programs and training, shares office duty and provides after-hours service to residents and supervision of school activities. The Assistant Manager experience plus KU enrollment as a graduate student for no more than 9 hours per semester. Preferred: Residential management experience or Jayhawer Towers residential experience. Microcomputer experience. Experience working with students. Required: Furnished two-bedroom apartment with utilities plus $520 mo. To Apply: Send letter outlining relevant experience, a resume, plus names, addresses, and telephone numbers of 3 references. Please send resume and reference to 11th Suite DSH, Lawrence, Kanada 6045. Readline: March 18, 2014, EEO/AO
Journalism student wanted for Bi-michy pieces of 100 words at $ 07 per word; we assign. Write including phone number to: QA P.O. Box 9009 Austin, Tx 78766
Nannies Wanted. Positions nationwide, summer or yr-run, exp. not req. Great pay and benns.
Nap room aide needed for child care center. Mon- Tues. 12: 3 - 10. Contact 842-3582.
Need person for general office work plus showing
resume and/or references to full-time. Must be a KS student majoring in business
or accounting and be enrolled at KU in at least
4 semesters with a GPA at 1.02. Call 841-6803-603
9-M, F-1.
Super night supervisor for janitorial firm. Sun-Bunon Mon-Thrs. 7:11pm or 5:39-8:39pm. Requirements. Graduate student, leadership-training skills. Commit to training, or commitment 7.00-rm. Call Nire 624826.
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
KU Student Housing announces SHD vacancies for 1994-95, 75% live in position, to facilitate academic progress, help plan a balanced diet by purchasing food items for residents, coordinate physical activities with students, provide demic community. Required: Undergraduate degree and graduate enrollment; no more than 9 hours per semester; group living experience. Preferred: Experience in menu planning, food preparation, budgeting and bookkeeping, interpersonal skills. Req'd salary and Benefits: $720, for first-year staff. Furnished apartment with utilities provided plus meals when the hall is serving. SHD's and spouses eligible for staff tuition rates. Employment from KU Department of Student Housing, mit a letter of application outlining interest and relevant experience; a resume, plus names, addresses, and telephone numbers of 3 references to: KU Department of Student Housing, 422 West Jefferson Avenue, Kansas City 60405. March 18, 1994. DEFOG
SCHOLARSHIP
HALL
DIRECTOR
SENIOR STAFF ASSISTANT
SEAMSTRESS WANTED to work for small alterations business. Flexible hours. 841-6531.
Sax player wanted for working R&B variety band.
Jeff at 841-1555 or 841-9797.
The SSA holds a 50%, live-in position with the KU Department of Student Housing performing administrative, programming, and coordination function in a conference hall, working under supervise. In conjunction with the KU Department one year of residential group living experience, 92 or more credit hours, and KU enrollment. Salary and Benefits for furnished apartment and utilities are based on cost of rent. The SSA is eligible for staff tuition/fees and is paid $38.50 monthly. Appointment extends from August 1, 1994 through May 31, 1995. How to Apply: www.ku.edu/schools/salaries/SSA.html and relevant experience; resume; plus names, addresses, and telephone numbers of 3 references to KU Department of Student Housing, 423 Wentworth Avenue, Knoxville, Tennessee 69035. Deadline: March 18, 1994. EOE/AO
Top private girls resident camp looking for athletic trainer. 6/20/19-8/20/19. Excellent salary, RM/BD / laundry, travel allowance. Women call or write: Camp Vega for Girls, P.O. Box 1771, Duxbury, MA. 62332 (617) 654-636. We will be on campus in the student union at 11am on 4pm and
Work study eligible student assistant needed at international Student Services. Good typing & filing skills. Macintosh experience. Apply at 2 Strong Jail by Feb 14. fom
Work study positions available in community agencies. Apply only if work study qualified. applications available in Student Office state in pusan Union. 8463719 for Julie or Shanda.
Party photographers needed for Spring and Fall semesters of 1994. Prior 35mm experience is preferred. To apply, call 865-129 and leave your name on the application form. Send a reply, due to the fact that nobody was contacted.
ONEIDA FACTORY STORE filling several part time positions. Weekday afternoons, evenings, and weekends available. 15-20 hours/wk, Summer. Monday to Saturday. Suite 103-104 pm weekdays. 749-601-8028
225 Professional Services
$Premiere Tax Service $2$
040EZ - $10; 140; $10 plus extra fee for other
terms to be filed with 140. State returns $-$8
Will pick up and deliver. Call Brian at 256-372.
TRAFIC-DUI'S
Fake I.D.'s & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole
Sally G. Kelser
16 East 13th
842-1133
For a confidential, caring friend, call us.
For more information about Birthright 345-8211, pre-free pregnancy testing
Driver education offered through Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 yrs. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749.
BRAXTON B. COPLEY
Attorney at Law
General Practice
Traffic Tickets, Meadmanes,
Landlord Tenant,
Permanent Income Tax
19 Massachusetts
749-5333
DV-1 green card Program Sponsored by 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 Services, 2021 Stagg St., Canoga Park, CA
INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS We transfer
Videos from US mode to your system or from your
country to US mode #25 includes tape and mailing
World-Wide Video Transfer, PO Box G, Ottawa,
KS 60677; Call 1-242-6955 or 1-800-665-6855
MATH TUTOR EXPERIENCE TEACHING EXPERIENCE,
EXCELLENT CREDITALS $8/HOUR
84-1528 Leave a Message
Tel; (818) 998-4425; Fax; (818) 882-9681
Rick Frydman, Attorney
823 Missouri 843-4023
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense For free consultation call
VIDEO EDITING AND PRODUCTION SERVICES
A/B row production with EDL.
3D computer animation
His field production package.
Award winning screen writer.
PRIMAL SCREEN COMMUNICATIONS
Tutoring avail. for college primary and secondary.
English, Spanish, Math, Science, Call 843.3011
235 Typing Services
*lider-Woman Word Processing. Former editor*
*of quality Eyes.* 842-2935
quality Eyes. 842-2935
Beacon Publication Services-Quan. word processing, (including typing, grammar, proofing, resumes, laser printing), call MARY. 843-2674
*Looking for a good type*
*Papers; printers; charts; Charts*
*Laser printing to WOW! your profs*
*Grammar and spelling free*
*18 years experience*
*call Jack*
*Makin' the Grade*
Word processing, applications, term papers, dis-
tributions. Master's degree. Rush jobs apply. Masters Degree. 84-124.
X
Words by Chris Word Processing.
High quality papers and printing, spell check
techniques.
BEER ON TAP! =Keg cooler for sale $0 o.b.a
Holds full or taps. Comes with one emg key.
no more deposits. Save $$$. Call John 841-8397.
leave message.
300s Merchandise
GT85 GT PANTHER 19 'BURR RED T650 AU5
W/ CMRO FORK SUNWATER XT-LD3 DERAILERS
W/ CMRO FORK SUNWATER XT-LD3 DERAILERS
+ LEVERS TOGPA SYSCIO THORES ASKING $MESSAGE 0.0 B. O CHIR 84-40 LEAVE MESSAGE $MESSAGE 0.0 B. O CHIR 84-40
Black leather jacket. Excell cond. Hardy been
born. Horse netting. "95" Size. Mf/F/8
17-23".
305 For Sale
*LIVING ROOM SET, safa, love seat and chair*
Pitch high back chair in plastic, cost $1500
Base price of frame 746-4224 or 746-4230
*BRASS BED, firm, orbipodic mattress set and frames,
or fabric cost, $1000, $33 cash deal,
$499.50
For Sale Mac Class II 4-80 with 40.5 MB + MS
86-342-9599 OWL OBCM.OCall
86-342-9599 day, 86-919-9599 night
Clarinet-100; axi-4175; T-bone-100; great cond
Makes a Great 2nd instrument for band
Call 977-343-6280
Build a new body! Four month membership to
the school at last year's price! Call Jennifer at 846-7217.
MAC PLUS 4-meg RAM, 30-meg hard drive, and
printer. 400-1-832-162, O.P, KS.
340 Auto Sales
FOR SALE: MODEL XG-1 w/45mm f2 lens auto-
man. $125.00 obo call Mike at 749-3349.
3 Bedroom/ 2 full bath kit now available on bus route. Microphone & dishwasher $800.
1988 Honda Accord. 4 Dr. 5 Spd. carc, A/C
Honda Honda cassette. Great condition. Call for details
at (212) 376-2120.
SNOW SKIS 175 Rosignol + bindings + case +
poles 875. RADAR DETECTOR. Whistler Spectre.
SEE $40. CD PLAYER, playon Pansonic,
$60. All in excellent condition. 841-6531.
Peavy T-4 Bass with Hardshell. Peavy TNT 195
mil. clean. Caps $20, each. $35 for bundle. 749-318.
HOME
1900 Mazda RV4 GXL, red, 46 Km. power sunroof.
10,000 call 780-1048.
4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished,
9824-101 Interested? Interested! 811-5355, 740-0445 or
9824-102
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
1 Bedroom Apt. available now! Call 841-1212.
Appcroft Apt. aval, April 1, bdmr. 1, bath fully equipped ktch Dishwasher, dishwater, disposal heat, air, water, trash paid. On bus route. No pets. Call anytime 843-820. Ask for Chris or Susan.
3 dbrm town home, fp, vaulted ceilings, all appl.
& wi hookups in bathroom. Gaworthen house.
Available at West Hills Apa. Spacious 1 bed unfitted apt: 328 per month. Water pd. Great location near campus. 1012 Emery Ed. No pets. 841-3800, 542-3884.
3 BDRM LUXURY TOWN HOME
durm house town home
available March 1. Two bedroom townhouse 1½
sath, walk to campus, pool $435 per month, b414
sath.
meadowbrook FALL '94
---
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. Call Kathy or Shana at Meadowbrook 842-4200.
842-4200.
15th & Crestline
Mon - Fri 8-5:30
Sat 10-4
Sun 1-4
Sorry no pets
Available now, two bedroom at 912 Tennessee
WD hookups, micro, basement 400 plus utilities.
Forgot about Valentine's Day? It's not too late to send a VOICECARD, the fun new way to send a greeting card that is only a phone call away. Samples 1-400-360-9093.
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
VILLAGE
SQUARE
apartment
*Close to campus*
*Spacious 2 bedroom*
*Laundry facility*
*Swimming Pool*
*Waterbed allowed*
9th & Avalon 842-3040
Furnished room for rent with shared kitchen and
parking from KU. Off street parking.
No pets. 841-5900
Hanover Place Apt. for call Near Campus.
$370/MO. MOU 841-1212.
House for rent 2 bedroom no pets, newly remodeled call 843-2033
Leasing for June and August. New 4 bedroom, includes washer, dryer, dishwasher, refrigerator, 1500 sqft feet and covered parking avail. Early sign-up specials. For more information call Dave at 841-7849
SUNSET
SUNRISE
VILLAGE
660 Gateway Ct.
(Behind Sonic)
Now Leasing for Fall
Mon.-Fri. 10-12, 1-5
*Luxurious 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
Lorimer townhouses
now renting for June and August, 1, 2 and 3 bdrmss, dishwasher, microwave, W/D, fireplace, ceiling fans, cable pdl. Call 841-7849 for appl.
Rooms, apartments, and well kept, older homes, available now. 841-STAIR (2822)
one bedroom apartment for sublease. Water and
trash paid free in February free $345/mo. Now
CALL 849-1649
Sublet available March 1. $394 a month, W/D,
microrowave, trash, DW, refrigerate, stove, fireplace.
Cable paid. On golf course. Close to KU. Call 855-
0658.
HANOVER
Studio,1,2,3,&4 bedroom apartments and townhomes
MASTERCRAFT
Offers Completely Furnished
Park25
We are now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature studio 1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. We also have 3 bedroom, $2 \frac{1}{2}$ bath townhomes.
841-1212 : 14th & Mass.
REGENTS COURT
749-0445 : 19th & Mass.
CAMPUS PLACE
841 1420 1155 Liaoning
- On KU Bus Route
SUNDANCE 841-5255 : 7th & Florida
- 2 Pools
- 2 Laundry Rooms
TANGLEWOOD 749-2415 : 10th & Arkansas
- Volleyball Court
with 4 Stops on Property
Spacious i bedroom apt very close to campus. Furnished. Avail. immediately. Call 841-1212. Ask about Coldwater fm 44. Streetcar i bedroom apt on bus route. Low utilities, water
Open Daily 9AM - 5PM
- Some Washer/Dryer Hookups
ORCHARD CORNER
749-4226 : 15th & Kasold
Call or stop by today.
2401 W. 25th, 9A3
842-1455
(sorry no pets)
842-4455
MASTERCRAFT Professional Management and Maintenance Company
Sublase large one bedroom on ap. bus route. Low
wiring large water pump, PET ORK, AVAILABLE ASAP,
$329 per room.
430 Roommate Wanted
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
1 Roommate, non-smoker for 3 bdrm cond. $175
2 Roommate, new campus. Dwry/Drycai
Grove. 749-183-98
Female non-smoking roommate wanted to
partner with our apartment close to campus for
me.
How to schedule an ad:
2 furnished bedroom in home, close to campus.
3 furnished bedroom in home, 2 1/2 bath, $105
call. Mat Seltah at 811-929-6998
Roommate needed for big beautiful 2 bdm apt.
close eupartment $187.50 + /util = no
roommate needed for big beautiful 2 bdm apt.
close eupartment $187.50 + /util = no
Male/Female room needed immediately to
camp. Call 832-9620. $187.50 +1 walk. Use
camp. Call 832-9620.
Female roommate wanted NOW For $3 1h Room.
Room in campus. W/D, pics $150 moll. Call
Lindsia 843-269-2222
Have your own room, occupied parking, private
rooms. Have a cell phone, for etc. for only
170/mm² + ulls call 798-423-5000.
- - Mail: 119 Starfor Fliet, Lawrence, KS. 68045
Roommate Wanted. 3 bedroom apartment; very nice.
On bus route. Feb. free. Phone: 859-0629.
Roommate needed to share huge b2.8m 2 bath apartment. Water paid, share electric and gas. Lease ends in May. In quiet neighborhood, on day and night bus routes. $240/mo. #83-2026.
ROOMMATE NEEDED (to share two bedroom
ROOM118/mo. + /utilities Call Dawn 864-309-3500
Roommate to share a bldm plumper, fenced yard,
Petal. Cald. 1483 mts. + 1/3 utility. Feb. paid.
Petal. Cald. 1483 mts. + 1/3 utility. Feb. paid.
Ads phone in may be called to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
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Calculating Rates:
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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
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110 business personals
120 annoncements
130 entertainment
Please print your ad one word per box:
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140 lt test & found 365 for sale
285 help used 440 make sales
292 presentment services 368 micropolitan
285 jvies services
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Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
370 want to buy
485 for rent
438 roommate wanted
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The University Dalby Kannan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, I, tawrence, KS. 660454
The University Dalby Kannan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, I, tawrence, KS. 660454
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1984 FeWorks Inc. All rights by Universal Press Syndicate
2-14
"Sorry, Kevin, but my friends have all advised me not to run with you anymore."
16
Monday, February 14, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
KU
KU
KU
KU
KU
KU
Kansas & Burge Unions' Valentine's Day Open House
Hawks & Kisses
Today 10:30 am to 3:30 pm
A FULL DAY OF FREE FUN AND ACTIVITIES ALONG WITH SPECIALS AND DISCOUNTS IN YOUR UNIONS
from Student Union Activitiesfrom Candy & Information Counter-
- CREATE YOUR OWN VALENTINE CARD
- DECORATE PUZZLES & BOXER SHORTS
- LOVESCOPE READINGS
- PICK-UP LINE CONTEST
- CANDY COUNT
- SWEETHEART ROSES
- ALL VALENTINE GIFT ITEMS 35% OFF & FREE CARNATION WITH PURCHASE OF A VALENTINE ITEM*
from KU Bookstoresfrom Candy & Information Counter-
- 10% OFF EVERYTHING IN THE STORE**
- FREE HERSHEY'S COOKIES 'N' MINT BARS*
from Union Food Servicesfrom Candy & Information Counter-
- COOKIE BOUQUETS
- SWEETHEART SALAD BAR $1.80 LB.
- FRUIT & SOFT PIES 75¢
from KU Concessionsfrom Candy & Information Counter-
- HUGS & KISSES AT WESCOE TERRACE
- CANDY HEART COUNT
- LOOK FOR "50¢ OFF" HEART STICKERS
- VALENTINE CANDY JARS
- CANDY BARS 40¢ EACH
THE KANSAS & BURGE UNIONS OPERATE THE FOLLOWING AREAS ON THE LAWRENCE CAMPUS: KU BOOKSTORES,UNION FOOD SERVICES,SUA KU CONCESSIONS AND JAYBOWL.
MOST ACTIVITIES ARE FREE, WHILE SOME ITEMS ARE FOR SALE.
*ALL GIVEAWAYS ARE SUBJECT TO AVAILABILITY WHILE QUANTITIES LAST. **10% OFF INCLUDES EVERYTHING
IN THE KU BOOKSTORES EXCEPT SALE ITEMS, COMPUTER HARDWARE, TEXTBOOKS.
MAY NOT BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH COUPONS OR DISCOUNT CARDS.
JAYHAWK LOGO IS A TRADEMARK OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS. UNAUTHORIZED USE IS PROHIBITED.
©1994 THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS MEMORIAL CORPORATION
√
SPORTS: American speedskater Dan Jansen fails for a fourth time to win a medal in the 500-meter race. Page 12.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
KANSAS STATE
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA KS 6612
VOL.103,NO.101
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1994
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
Small brush fires near the southeastern shore of Clinton Lake sent clouds of smoke throughout the University campus. The fire spread one-and-a-half miles north and east of its origin. Wakarusa Elementary School was evacuated when the flames neared the building. News of the oncoming blaze interrupted coverage of the Olympic games.
458
1 1/2 mile north
Rancho Verde Apartments
1 1/2 mile east
Origin of fires
(1053N 900E)
SCHOOL
Wakarusa Elementary School
County plagued by grass fires
Micah Laake/ KANSAI
Yesterday's blazes cause little damage are easily contained
Source: Douglas County Sheriff's Department
By Liz Chadwick
Kansan staff writer
Firefighters from seven counties worked nonstop yesterday to control five grass fires around Douglas County.
The largest fire began at approximately 11 a.m. on the McDonald property, 1053 N. 1050 Road, according to the Douglas County Sheriff's Office. The fire burned one-and-a-half miles north and one-and-a-half miles east of its origin.
The nearby Wakarusa Valley Elementary School was evacuated yesterday afternoon as a precaution in case the fire spread.
"The fire has been contained," Deputy Garry Squires of the sheriff's office said this afternoon as he worked to redirect traffic on Highway 458. "Our main worry now is about it restarting."
The largest fire had been contained by 1:45 p.m. yesterday.
"We believe the fire was started when a gentleman burned some brush yesterday, and his fire was reignited today by the winds," said Louie McElhaney, chief of the Wakarusa Fire Department.
McElaney said there already had been approximately 16 grass fires this year.
The road block four miles west of US Hwy 59 stopped and redirected the constant stream of traffic to the many homes along that stretch of road.
Bernard Heeney, who lives near the roadblock, came out to observe and photograph the fire. He
said he was concerned about the fire spreading to his home.
"The area is populous with lots of homes around here," he said. "Twenty-four hours a day there is a lot of traffic."
Many of those helping to put out the fires were volunteers. Most of the fire departments in the townships surrounding Lawrence are staffed by volunteers. Lawrence has the only paid fire department in the area.
At 5 p.m. firefighters still were at work at four other locations around Douglas County.
Brian Hoffman, a volunteer for the Wakarusia Fire Dept., said that a report of a rekindling near Clinton Dam had been filed at approximately 5 p.m. yesterday. Two volunteers and a chief went to investigate. The rest of the department was standing by at that time.
Man charged with murder of infant son
The sheriff's office reported minor damage to one home and one shed.
By Denise Nell Kansan staff writer
A 25-year-old Lawrence man was charged yesterday with first-degree felony murder and child abuse in connection with the death of his 3-week-old son.
Stephen Edwards hid his face in his hands as Judge James Paddock set a $200,000 bond at the request of Chris Kennev. assistant district attorney.
Brandon Edwards died Sunday afternoon at Children's Mercy Hospital in Kansas City, Mo., where he had been since Thursday night.
Edwards was taken into police custody vesterd morning.
At yesterday's hearing, Kenney requested that Edwards receive psychiatric evaluation.
"They are now concerned about his well-being, whether or not he will hurt himself." Wells said.
Jerry Wells, district attorney, said that the Douglas County Sheriff's office had alerted his office that Edwards might be suicidal.
Wells would not comment on how Brandon Edwards was killed. An autopsy will be performed today and Kris Perry, a Atlanta forensic pathologist Atlanta, will be in the investigation.
Paddock ordered that Edwards be evaluated by a therapist from the Bert Nash Community Mental Health Center. If the therapist finds that Edwards could endanger himself, Edwards could be transported to a mental health facility. Wells said.
"Often times in a child's death we call in someone with forensic expertise." he said.
Edwards' preliminary hearing is tentatively set for Feb. 22, but both Paddock and Wells said it was unlikely the hearing would take place that soon because of the serious nature of the crime.
An attorney was not appointed for Edwards at yesterday's hearing because he had not filled out the appropriate financial affidavits.
The required sentence for first-degree felony murder is life imprisonment, Wells said. The sentence for child abuse can be anywhere from 31 to 68 months, depending on the defendant's history.
A BED OF ROSES AND BOXERS
James Wilcox / KANSAN
CAMERONS
Left: SUA volunteer Monique Modee-irna, Tulisa, Okla, junior, wraps roses in tissue for the Valentine's Day flower sale in the Kansas Union.
Above: Mike Ada, Fort Scott junior, designs a pair of Valentine's Day boxer shorts for his sweetheart. SUA sold the boxer shorts for $3 and provided dye and puffy paint for the designing. In addition to selling the boxes, SUA sponsored a Valentine's Day flower sale and card-making table yesterday at the Kansas Union.
James Wilcox / KANSAN
Expensive classes eat students' funds
By Heather Moore Kansan staff writer
Some courses are so costly that students sacrifice some food and fun to make budgets
Laurie Riley, Lawrence senior in industrial design, has sacrificed many things in her life in order to get a good education, including good food.
When book-buying time rolls around, different professors and majors control a student's financial well-being.
Architecture and industrial design are two of the most expensive majors at the University of Kansas. In addition to the cost of required textbooks, students must pay for materials for their projects. A future problem for architecture majors is the cost of computer use.
Riley said she spent $80 on every project she did.
"Every time we do a project, I need something new," she said. "I buy a little bit of everything, and it ends up really expensive."
Riley said that even with financial aid and her on-campus job, she had trouble making ends meet.
"I have to limit myself, I can't go all out for things," she said. "I grocery shop once every two months and live on Ramen noodles."
"If you don't spend that money, the project may not look as good as it should or as other student's projects do," he said.
But Rake said the cost of projects was offset because design students didn't need to buy books.
Lance Rake, associate professor of design, said spending a lot of money on classes was a reality.
"I've had people say that they couldn't do all they wanted on a project because of money," he said. "I hope that students don't have to spend a lot."
Brower Burchill, associate vice chancellor, said KU did not have any policy to keep professors from requiring students to spend large amounts of money on books.
"I hope that books would be appropriate for the student's use," he said. "I wouldn't know how to set a limit for different majors."
Course crunch
Approximate cost of new books for some of the most expensive classes:
Biology 540 (General invertebrate zoology) - $281.45
Business 510 (Financial accounting)
II - $180.35
Education psychology and research 805 (Practicum in individual intelligence testing) - $175.70
Architecture 803 (Graduate design studio) — $167.80
studio) - $167.80
*Civil engineering 877 (Water treat-
ment plant design) - $164.50
*Chemical and petroleum engineering
523 (Mass transfer) - $151.85
*Biology 302 (Human anatomy dissection
lab) - $139.99.
Source: The Jayhawk Bookstore KANSAR
"It's very expensive, and it adds up quickly," he said. "Basically, everything is for architecture projects."
Michael Paxton, Clinton, Mo., sophomore in architecture, said he spent as much as $800 each semester on books and supplies.
Paxton said his parents and loans paid for his education.
"There's no way I have time for a job," he said. "Sometimes I feel guilty because I spend money that my parents could use for something else. I go through cycles of guilt."
Architecture professors said many factors were to blame for the high cost of the classes.
Steve Padget, associate professor of architecture, said that costs varied from studio to studio, so students concerned about the cost of classes should be aware of what individual instructors expected on projects.
"It's a student's elective in terms of who they take because each has a reputation for the type of projects and production they expect," he said.
Business majors may not have huge project costs, but the prices of their textbooks can make up for that.
Jamie Cutburth, Hillsboro, Ore., senior in business, said that this semester had been the worst for him.
INSIDE
See EXPENSES. Page 5.
A Familiar Face
P
Oscar Marino, a native of Venezuela, has stood guard at Robinson Center for nine years. Page 3.
Planned Parenthood helps promote National Condom Week
By Ashley Schultz Kansan staff writer
What's six foot three, wears a red cape and a reservoir-tip cap?
Condom Man popped in on yesterday's grand opening of the Planned Parenthood, 1420 Kasold Dr., to encourage visitors to use "condom sense."
As Condom Man passed out the first of what he estimated would be 1,000 red and white condoms, two anonymous mothers braved the wind with poster board signs that said "Mr. Condom is a Failure" and "Stop Planned Parenthood — Condoms for Kids."
It's Condom Man!
But Condom Man was not without his detractors.
Some passersby near 15th and Kasold Streets honked in support. Others flipped them off.
the protesters, who refused to give
their names, said they were concerned that Planned Parenthood sent out the message that sex with a condom was safe sex. No condom can prevent all sexually transmitted diseases, and condoms have a significant failure rate, said one protester, a registered nurse.
Valentine's Day, the first day of National Condom Week, was fitting for Planned Parenthood's grand opening, said Tamara Morris, director of marketing. The clinic has been open since the beginning of November.
People began lining up for the opening as early as 2 p.m., Morris said. By the time the doors were opened at 3 p.m., the crowd had grown to more than 50 people, she said.
Scott Custer, Leawood junior, was listening to radio station KLZR as he drove past the clinic. He stopped by to see Condom Man and received two free condoms and one free compact
disc from KLZR.
Custer had a brief chat with Condom Man.
Tests at other Planned Parenthood sites usually are limited to regular customers, said Morris.
"He told me not to put my condoms in my wallet or my glove compartment." Custer said. "And I asked him, 'What do you do with a condom?' and I felt pretty stupid after that."
Barb Houser handles HIV and AIDS training with the Kansas Department of Health and Environment and is helping the clinic prepare to offer tests this spring.
Houser said that AIDS has become the leading killer among men aged 25 to 44 and has moved into the top five killers for women of that same age group.
"We are not just talking about preventing births anymore, we're talking about preventing deaths," Condom Man said.
[Image of a doctor in a white coat sitting at a desk, holding a telephone receiver and speaking to another person. The desk is covered with papers, and there are two statues or sculptures on the desk.]
Wait, the first one looks like a human figure, and the second one looks like a statue. It's hard to tell if they are actually people or just statues without further context. But given the setting, it's likely that they represent doctors and nurses.
James Wilcox / KANSAN
Disc jockey Charlie "Jay Charles" Watson, of radio station KLZR, does a call-in interview with Condom Man.
2
Tuesday, February 15, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
CLEOPATRA'S CLOSET a unique boutique 743 Mass. St. (913) 749-4664
The University DailyKansas (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. 68045.
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 PDIC
Leader ID 8004609
Equal Opportunity Leader
Put a 'HAWK in your Pocket.
FIRST BANK CARD CENTER
5198 0004 2345 5726
CARD NUMBER
5198 0004 2345 5726
/00 CV
VISA
ON CAMPUS
No annual fee Starting February 14
The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an information table on study abroad in Denmark from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. today at the Kansas Union. For more information, call Nancy Mitchell at 864-3742.
OAKS—Non-Traditional Students Organization will have a brown bag lunch at 11:30 a.m. today at the Rock Chalk Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Gerry Vernon at 8647317.
The Lied Center and the Dance Division will sponsor "Examining Artistic Collaboration" at 2:30 p.m. today at 240 Robinson Center. For more information, call Janet Hamburg at 844-4264 or 844-5186.
The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an informational meeting about study abroad in French speaking countries at 4 p.m. today at 4049 Wesson Hall.
KU Karate Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at 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
Inspirational Gospel Voices
Native American Student Association will meet at 7 tonight in 3012 Haworth Hall. For more information call Johnnie Young at 864-4351.
The Advertising and Publishing Committee of the Japanese Student Association will meet at 7 tonight at the Big 8 Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Kesike Imaat at 864-5738.
will meet for choir rehearsal at 6 p.m. today in 328 Murphy Hall. For more information, call Kim at 749- 3819.
KU Fencing Club will meet at 7:30 tonight at 130 Robinson Center. For more information at Jen Snyder 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 more information, call Hugh Wentz at 841-2647.
Original Klub of KU Looney Tunes will meet at 7:30 tonight at Alcove G in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Julie Dblinkes at 864-1233.
LesBiGay SOK encourages anyone who is lesbian, gay, bisexual or unsure to call Headquarters at 841-2345 or KU Info at 864-3506 about confidential meetings.
Clip and Save with Daily Kansan Coupons !!!
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| ^-843-0900 • 843-0900 • 843-0900 • 843-0900 • 843-0900 • 843-0900 | - |
Check Us Out!
Sponsored by the Kansas Alumni Association
Modernism
Studying Abroad?
Spring Break?
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RIVER CLUB
- River City Travel Co. is located on the KU bus route 1 —
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 65°/40°
Chicago: 40°/20°
Houston: 65°/40°
Miami: 76°/60°
Minneapolis: 35°/15°
Phoenix: 68°/35°
Salt Lake City: 45°/22°
Seattle: 49°/35°
Omaha: 46°/20°
LAWRENCE: 53°/26°
Kansas City: 51°/23°
St. Louis: 52°/30°
Wichita: 55°/25°
Tulsa: 60°/30°
TODAY
Tomorrow Thursday
Mostly sunny with light winds
High: 53°
Low: 26°
Partly cloudy
High: 57°
Low: 30°
Partly cloudy
High: 59°
Low: 35°
Source: Alan Denton, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
TRAVEL CO.
WEATHER
Omaha: 46/20°
LAWRENCE: 53'/26°
Kansas City: 51'/23°
St. Louis: 52'/30°
Wichita: 55'/25°
Tulsa: 60'/30°
Omaha: 46/201
Sunny
Partly cloudy
High: 59'
Low: 35'
Sunny
ON THE RECORD
■ Money totaling $125 was stolen at approximately 12:30 p.m. Saturday from a cash register in the bowling alley on the lower level of the Kansas Union, KU police reported.
fer Place apartments and charged with striking his wife, KU police reported.
A man was arrested at approximately 7:40 p.m. Sunday at Stouf-
A KU student was arrested at approximately 2:45 a.m. Saturday in Oliver Hall and charged with marijuana possession, KU police reported.
I
University
udio
2319 Lousiana 841-3775
1234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789
THEREMATCH
VS.
KU
SUNDAY,FEBRUARY 20,1994 2:45PM ALLEN FIELDHOUSE
IZZOU
MIZZOU
DON'T MISSOUT ON YOUR OPPORTUNITY TO SEE YOUR JAYHAWKSMEN'S BASKETBALL TEAM CLASH WITH THE ARCHRIVAL MISSOURI TIGERS.
STUDENT'S TICKETS STILL REMAIN FOR THIS FIERCE INTERSTATE BATTLE. COME TO THE ATHI. ETIC TICKET OFFICE IN THE EAST LOBBY OF ALLEN FIELDHOUSE (8:00-5:00) TO PURCHASE YOUR TICKET FOR THIS BIG GAME. TICKETS COST ONLY THREE DOLLARS ($3).
** Students with coupons may still redeem those for this game as well.
Students with coupons may still redeem those for this game as well. **You must have a red SPRING 1994 fee sticker on your KUID to purchase tickets or redeem coupons.
TICKETSSTILLAVAILABLE!
A trade worth making!
Authorized Apple Service Proriders
Do you have a veteran Macintosh that is still in decent shape, but just doesn't get the job done anymore? Well, for a limited time you will have the opportunity to trade that feeble old-timer for a new power-hitting Mac at the Union Technology Center. Here's how:
Macintosh plus
Macintosh LC473 8 160
1B
MAC LC 475
POWER HITTERS
Step 1: Call 1-800-992-0796 and speak with a representative who will estimate worth of your old system.
Step 2: Set up an appointment with the representative between February 22nd and February 25th. On these dates representatives will be at-the Union Technology Center to evaluate your old machine.
Step 3: Receive a voucher for the amount of money your system is worth as determined by the representative, good toward any Macintosh system offered by the Union Technology Center.
Step 4: Bring your voucher in to the Union Tech Center before March 31st, 1994 and use it toward the purchase of any new Macintosh Computer.
So, take advantage of this great trade and treat yourself to a powerful new Macintosh at the Union Technology Center, because a trades like this don't get any better, and systems like yours aren't getting any younger. So call
1-800-992-0796
Macintosh. It does more. It costs less. It's that simple!
Macintosh. The Power to be your Best at KU!
union
technology
center
KU
Academic Computer Supplies, Service & Equipment
Burge Union • Level 3 • 913.864.5690
CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, February 15,1994
3
FACES
ROBINSON SECURITY IN ABLE HANDS
10
Guard battles with forgotten KUIDs, misbehaving lifters
By Jennifer Fround
Kansan staff writer
Oscar Marino is a familiar face to students who work out at Robinson Center, but many don't know what he does.
"I make sure that everyone's behavin'. Marino said. "I make sure they bring their I.D.s, and I'm also responsible for the weight room."
Marino, who has been working as a security guard at Robinson for nine years, said that his job included checking for KUIDs at the door and supervising the weight room.
The problem he most often encounters is students forgetting their KUIDs, he said.
"People try to give excuses about forgetting their I.D.s. Marino said, "They say, 'I left it at my girlfriend's house,' or 'I left it in my car.' Some guys even try to get in with girls' I.D.s." he said.
Marino, a former KU student, is originally from Venezuela, but he is now a U.S. citizen and plans to stay in Lawrence
Marino is married and has three children, Michelle, 7; John Francisco, 5; and Michael, 2. He also has a daughter and an ex-wife who live in Venezuela.
"The most interesting thing is probably how I chose Lawrence," Marino said. "I had a list of universities, and KU won because it's near a pro baseball team."
"The Royals are what motivated me most," he said. "It was the lid on the jar."
Marino said that he had friends who used to get him ticket but that he didn't go to any games this year because he was too busy.
Although he enjoys his job at Robinson, he said that he currently was looking for another job.
Marino said that if he couldn't find a job in Kansas, he wanted to move to Texas.
"In Texas, everything's big," he said.
But even in Texas people recognize him.
"I was at this mall in Houston, and this guy approached me. He said he knew me from Robinson," Marino said.
Marino said that he knew some students on a first name basis but that he
didn't know most.
"They mostly know me," he said.
But some students don't.
"I just see him standing around," said Debbie Faber, Wichita senior. "I never talked to him, and he's never checked my LD. or anything." she said.
Some students are scared of the man who stands in the weight room.
"He's a big mystery," said Sonja Garcia, Wichita junior. "He looks intimidating. I'm afraid of guys with beards, and he's big, and that's why I never go up and say hello."
Miss Black Kansas finds strength in family
By Denise Neil Kansan staff writer
Lorna Cable attributes her success in life to the strength passed down through the generations of women in her family.
Cable, a Topeka sophomore,
expressed this belief when she
performed "We've Come This Far By
Faith," ask she wrote about her family,
in the talent portion of the Miss
Black U.S.A. pageant in Washington,
D.C., over the weekend.
Cable, who is Miss Black Kansas,
was chosen as one of 12 finalists Sunday
night, the final night of competition
at the Miss Black U.S.A. pageant,
but did not place in the top five. She
was one of 22 women from across the nation competing in the pageant.
Cable said that competing in the talent portion of the competition Friday night was something she always would remember about the pageant.
"When I got out there, it really hit me how much that piece meant to me," she said.
In the skit, Cable portrayed her great-grandmother, grandmother,
mother and herself. She wrote the skit with the help of her mother, JoAnn Cable.
"We went back and looked at how the things she's inherited from her family have been through faith in God,"JoAnn Cable said.
Lorna Cable said her great-grandmother had been a migrant farm worker in Georgia. She raised eight children and four grandchildren alone in a one-room house.
Cable's grandmother dreamed of becoming a teacher and passed this dream down to Cable's mother, who graduated from college and became a teacher despite having to drop out of school in the sixth grade.
JoAnn Cable said that her daughter had worked at as a volunteer at a Topeka rescue mission and an elementary school. Most recently, Gov Joan Finney named her to a special committee that travels the state studying issues facing juvenile
Today, Loma Cable is attempting to continue living the dream of her grandmother. She is majoring in elementary education and said she hoped to become a teacher after she graduated.
offenders.
"I see her caring about people," JoAnn Cable said.
Lorna Cable qualified to compete in the Miss Black U.S.A. pageant after winning the Miss Essence pageant sponsored by the Black Student Union in December. As the winner of that pageant she was automatically named Miss Black Kansas.
Topeka sophomore Jacue Hill, Cable's roommate who competed against her in the Miss Essence pageant, said she thought Cable was deserving of the title. The two became friends when they attended Topeka West High School together.
"If I didn't win, I couldn't have prayed for anyone else to win but Lorna," she said. "She's a really good girl. She's kind of silly sometimes, but she's got a real good heart."
"It's a chance for me to express my ideas on different things," she said. "I've learned to be confiding in myself and to know I'm a strong, beautiful Black woman."
Cable said the experience of competing in the pageant taught her about herself.
MRS.
Lorna Cable, a Topека sophomore, was one of the 12 finalists in the Miss Black U.S.A. pageant.
Technology links classes, professors
Televisions allow Strong Hall's interaction with Regents Center
By Gennifer Trail Kansan staff writer
This is the kind of classroom to which students in the televised class Special Education 725 have adapted.
OVERLAND PARK - The setting is dramatic: pairs of large televisions in every corner of the ceiling, a brightly lit stage in the front of the room and large cameras suspended from the ceiling to catch every movement.
The class, Introduction to Psychology and Education of Exceptional Children and Youth, is broadcast between Strong Hall and the Regents Center from 4:10 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. every Thursday.
The class is taught from Strong Hall by Alice Ann Darrow, associate professor of special education and music education and music therapy, and Nancy Peterson, head of the special education department and professor of special education. Cameras broadcast live from both classrooms, so students at the two campuses can see each other.
In order to hear each other, the students at Strong Hall use microphones, which are placed at each desk, and the Regents students pass a phone around the classroom when they want to talk with the Lawrence class. The professors at Strong Hall and at teaching assistant at the center wear body microphones.
Gail Schwartz, Overland Park graduate student, took the class at the center last semester. She said she did not like using a telephone.
"The mechanics of passing the phone back and forth created awkward lags," she said.
But Lisa Porter, Kansas City, Mo., graduate student at the center, said that the method of instruction helped to make up for the awkwardness of the phone.
"The interactive style of teaching that's used keeps us on our toes," she said. "For instance, if they ask us a question from Lawrence, the camera zooms in, and you have to be prepared to answer. It's a fun change of pace."
Darrow and Peterson also credit their interactive teaching for the success of the class.
"A challenge of this class is really working on getting the Kansas City students involved," Peterson said. "TV is easy to tune out on. Teaching on TV really changes the way we teach."
Peterson said that a large amount of the class' success was due to her and Darrow's adventurous spirits.
"I am proud of our willingness to explore media and to utilize equipment," she said. "We have produced some great classes that are very creative."
The professors have put class material on video tapes, combining sources such as interviews, pictures, panel discussions and music. Darrow said that after three semesters of teaching the class, she and Peterson could now edit together the best from each semester to create improved materials.
Beverly Worster, Lawrence graduate student, took the class in Lawrence last semester. She said the professors used technology skillfully.
"The greatest value of the class was having audio-visual components at every class," she said. "They have mastered the technique of televised teaching."
Chris Sheridan, Lawrence senior and director of the Lawrence technical crew, said that the class kept his interest while he was filming and that the professors took advantage of everything the TV format had to offer.
Currently, two other classes are broadcast from Lawrence to the center: Corrosion Engineering and Construction Equipment, both of which engineering classes.
Bruce Lindvall, assistant dean of the center, said he thought more classes should be televised.
"If more classes were taught using this system, we could allow greater choice and flexibility to the students here who can't drive to Lawrence," he said.
INTRAMURAL TABLE TENNIS TOURNAMENT
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4
Tuesday, February 15, 1994
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
unveil
VIEWPOINT
Day on the Hill should receive senate funding
Student Senate may not have another chance to help finance this spring's Day on the Hill. But if a chance comes its way this week, Senate should seize it.
Recently, the Senate Finance Committee killed two bills that would have boosted the Day on the Hill budget, which historically has been between $15,000 and $17,000. The committee killed both bills, one that requested $5,000 and one for $3,200.
Opponents of the bills say that Senate already has overspent its budget and has dipped into an "unallocated" fund of $20,000. All but $3,716 of that has been spent.
Committee members such as Brian Poeschel, one of the leading opponents of the bills, have pledged fiscal responsibility and should be commended for their commitment. Poeschel says Senate simply cannot afford to finance the event. Bill opponents also rightly request that Student Union Activities, the organizer of Day on the Hill, better plan its budget requests each year and that SUA make the requests earlier, before the Senate funds are depleted.
However, Senate still has a responsibility to Day on the Hill. The future of the event, which is growing in credibility and popularity, is at stake. An average of 12,000 people attend Day on the Hill. Student Senate finances many campus groups and organizations that benefit fewer people. For a $3,200 contribution, Day on the Hill is a good buy for Senate.
Student Senator Paul Wolters, sponsor of the $3,200 bill, and Travis Harrod, head of Student Senate Executive Committee, have said they will ask StudEx tomorrow to consider bringing another Day on the Hill bill to the Senate. Wolters also said that SUA was pursuing campus organization sponsors, such as the Association of University Residence Halls. Campus organizations should sponsor this campus event, and sponsorship should begin with Student Senate.
BEN GROVE FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
THE KANSAN EDITORIAL BOARD: SAMANTHA ADAMS, J. J. ANDRE,
MARGARET BECK, RICHARD BOYD, CARSON ELROD, SEAN FINN,
BEN GROVE, DONELLA HEARNE, MATT HOOD, DAN JANOUSEK,
CHRIIS LIVINGSTON, COLEEN McCAIN, NATHAN OLSON, GERALDO
SAMOR, DAVID ZIMMERMAN.
NATIONAL PERSPECTIVE
Sexual orientation not a threat to national security
Feb.4
A study should be undertaken to ascertain whether, as we suspect, there are little or no grounds for the present discrimination against homosexuals seeking security clearances in certain federal agencies. U.S. Rep. Barney Frank says he expects the Clinton administration soon to ban such discrimination. The new policy would cover the Central Intelligence Agency and the National Security Agency, both of which have long rejected homosexuals on the theory that they could be risks. The Justice Department has already drafted related legislation for its operations, which include the FBI.
Traditional societal attitudes understandably have caused many homosexuals to fear exposure of their sexual preference. So there has long been
concern by security agencies that these citizens might be vulnerable to blackmail. There may well have been some validity to that concern.
But times probably have changed enough to warrant the elimination of a barrier that on its face seems very unjust. For that matter, it's good to remember that people can be blackmailed for many things.
We suspect that a more enlightened society, and a healthier openness by homosexuals about who they are, have probably made the threat of blackmail passe.
It would take clear proof of national security damages to convince us that U.S. citizens should be deprived of government employment because of their sexual preference. Their experience, character and behavior in their public roles are what should matter.
Providence Journal-Bulletin Providence, R.I.
KANSAN STAFF
BEN GROVE, Editor
LISA COSMILLO, Managing editor
TUM EBLEN
General manager. news adviser
BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator
JUSTIN GARBERG Business manager
JENNIFER BLOWEY Retail sales manager
Editors
Aest Managing Editor ...Dan England
Assistant to the editor ...J.R. Clairborne
News ...Krietl Foster, Katie Greenwald
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
Editorial ... Colleen McCann
... Nathan Olsen
Campus ... Jesa DeHaven
Sports ... David Dorsey
Photo ... Doug Hesse
Features ... Sara Bennett
Business Staff
Campus sales mgr ... Jason Eberly
Regional Sales mgr ... Troy Terwater
National & Coop sales mgr ... Robin King
Special Sessions mgr .. Shelly McConnell
Production mgrs .. Laura Guth
Gretchen Koothelserlinch
Marketing director .. Shannon Reilly
Creative director .. John Carton
Classified mgr .. Kelly Conneally
Tearsheas 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 Illinois can use plain text.
Guest columna should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
Generation X is looking more like its baby-boom parents every day
One of the few interesting moments in the depressing (to me) spectacle that was Super Bowl XXVIII came during the Pepsi commercial depicting a possible 25th anniversary of Woodstock. Imagine 500,000 balding yuppies, dreams of BMW's and stock options dancing in their heads, their pagers going off like crickets in the night, gettin' down and funky to music that they think still matters. This commercial is fresh on my mind as I sit down to write this column about Generation X, or whatever they're calling us these days.
When talking about my generation, few writers and commentators can resist the urge to take a few shots at the previous one. This is, to an extent, wholly justified. The baby boomers have taken all the jobs, wrecked the economy, ruined the environment, run up the deficit and yet still find the time to admire themselves endlessly in movies and on TV.
PAUL HENRY
COLUMNIST
But now, in the '90s, the ravages of time have taken their toll on the children of the '60s with horrifying results: They are becoming just like their parents. They no longer understand the music. They are gravely
concerned about the social and sexual trends of the time, and they wish the young folks would just quit whining, cut their hair and get real jobs. Many of them vote Republican. The Big Chill Generation is becoming the Geriatric Generation.
We live in a time when Keith Richards is eligible for membership in the AARP and Pete Townshend has indeed gotten old before dying. When we as young people think about the tragic plight of this self-satisfied generation of baby boomers, the folks who once made love on stony beaches with abandon but who now are paying ever closer attention to the Depends commercial, our natural response as sympathetic and compassionate fellow human beings is to laugh until we throw up.
We can't laugh too hard, though. We should view the ossification of our parents not with amusement but with horror, as it is just one more example of a principle that has proven itself true for thousands of years. And as a moment's thought will indicate, this leads one to an inescapable conclusion: It will happen to us, too.
This is what we can look forward to: 1999: The first signs come when the Classic Rock stations stop playing Herman's Hermits and start playting the Police and Cyndi Lauper. Generation X doesn't notice, though, because they all got brand new babies to take care of.
2021: R.E.M., the Sugarcubes and Soul Asylum are now in regular rotation at the Lite Rock station, "playing more of your mellow favorites."
■ 2015: A 45-year-old corporate executive takes his 25-year-old trophy girlfriend to the Midlife Crisis bar, where they run into several of her friends from school. He selects Nirvana's "Smells Like Teen Spirit" from the jukebox and starts doing the Old Guy Dance. The girls all giggle because gosh darn it, he's just so cute
2101: President Quayle finally invades Mexico, to the delight of 58 percent of Americans age 35 to 44.
2026: The hit movie down at the Multi-Cine Googol-Plex is a period coming-of-age romance set in 1992, 10,000 Maniacs' "These Are Days" plays over the opening credits while all the college kids snicker at the dopey clothes their parents used to wear.
when he does that.
2032: Eddie Vedder of PearlJam is nominated for President by the Republican Party on a platform to restore basic American values to today's youth.
It's inevitable. The sooner we accept it, the sooner we can learn to deal with it. It won't be so long before Generation X cuts its hair, moves out of the house and goes to work for corporate America. And then it will be our parents' turn to laugh, and they will say, to paraphrase Harry Chapin, my kids have grown up just like me. Whoomp! There it is.
Paul Henry is a Tacoma, Wash., graduate student in Journalism.
HOOD UDK 1994
OLYMPIC
COMMITTEE
בַּקְשָׂרוֹל
TONYA'S TORCH LIGHTING CEREMONY
Grammar question? Ask Mr. Language
It's time once again for Ask Mister Language Person, the award-winning column by the world's foremost leading word expert, who was recently chosen Official Grammarian of the U.S. Olympic Team (motto: "Hopefully, Nobody Will Break Their Leg").
Our first grammar question comes from reader Martha Booth, who writes: "I heard on NPR that President Clinton and Pope John Paul II met and exchanged a few words. Do you happen to know which ones they exchanged? And can you please tell me what is sometimes seen hanging off the bottom of the 'c' in 'facade?'
A. Scientists believe it is a parasite. As regards the word exchange. Clinton gave the pope a handsome matched set of "parameters" and in return received the traditional papal "Quod Sic Et Cetera Pluribus Per Annum."
A. "There is a bologna in my carburetor."
Q. What does that mean?
COLUMNIST
Q. According to a Tampa Tribune article sent in by Dorothy Ladd, what did University of Florida associate athletic director Greg McGary say
COLUMNIST
DAVE
BARRY
about allegations of abusive fan behavior at UF football games?
A. He said: "In no way are we turning a deaf shoulder."
A. This statement means that the person can FIND his car keys, but he cannot SEEM to find them.
Q. Please explain the statement: "I can't seem to find my car keys."
A. The apostrophe is used primarily as a punctuation mark in certain Lesley Gore songs, such as "Judy's Turn to Cry," where the apostrophe and the "s" indicate that "Judy" is possessive, which is why she tried to steal Lesley Gore's boyfriend, "Johnny" away.
Q. Please review the basic purpose of the apostrophe.
Q. What is song's best verse?
A. The one wherein Lesley saw Judy and Johnny kissing at a party, so, to make Johnny jealous, she (Lesley) kissed another guy, and then;
"Johnny jumped up and he hit him
'Cause he still loved me, that's why."
Q. What an attractive couple.
A. Yes.
Q. What is the purpose of the hyphen?
A. The hyphen is used to connect congestive nouns to their precipitate adjutants, as we see in this example:
"That Zsa-Zsa is a weiner-head!"
The hyphen also is used at the end of a line when there is not enough room to finish a word:
A. "Police said (the man) told them he had been playing a game that involved banging his head against a wall when he decided to swim across
"Marsha moaned as Brad thrust his throb-uh oh we're out of room."
Q. Please quote a sentence from Aug. 12, 1993, Dayton Daily News report, sent in by Lou Copits, concerning the rescue of a man who nearly drowned while attempting to swim across a river.
the river."
A. Probably golf.
Q. What game is that?
Q. What game is it?
Q. According to Dale Stephens, what does the sign on the main road into Bolivar, W. Va, say?
A. It says:
A. It says.
WELCOME TO BOLIVAR
PLEASE COME BACK
Q. Did Stephens also relate an anecdote about his friend John Pharis?
A. Yes: One time Pharis saw his 3-year-old daughter picking her nose and then sticking her finger into her mouth. He told her, "You know, I don't think I'd want to put anything in my mouth that came out of my nose." And she said: "You should try it. It's good."
TODAY'S WRITING TIP: In writing, an advertising slogan, always go with your strongest "selling point."
WROGN: "Tastes like goat drol."
RIGHT: "Proud to be your Bud."
GOT A QUESTION FOR MISTER
LANGUAGE PERSON? The answer
is: "No."
Dave Barry is a syndicated columnist for the Miami Herald.
Kansan opinion pages are 'barron wasteland'
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
The University Daily Kansan opinion page, which once seemed to me an engaging forum for the exchange of ideas and the occasional humorous anecdote has become a barren wasteland.
It seems readily apparent to me that the University, with such a wide and varying degree of experiences among its students, should not have to scrape the bottom of the barrel in such a degrading manner to find something worthy of being published in a nationally recognized student newspaper such as the Kansan. In comparison to the rest of the Kansan, the balance of the columns on the opinions page are
Most students that I have asked today tell me they do not even bother to read the opinion page except when there is a nationally syndicated columnist or a political column with a controversial headline included on the page. The situation has come to the point at which students merely glance at the cartoons, which also tend to be embarrassingly standard.
[sic] nothing less than an embarrassment to the fine student writers that grace the University and Sports sections.
I understand that the Kansan is a student newspaper, and as such should be compelled to publish student work. However, I do not think that it is to the advantage of anyone to have such ludicrous attempts at writing published merely because
they are the works of students. I would hope that the Kansan would exercise a bit more judgment when choosing what writing to include on these pages. The ridiculous attempts at entertaining writing that I have read on these pages by the likes of columnist Alisha Arora should be sent back to the author without apology.
Creative and intelligent opinion writing is not an easy task, and I admire those students who choose to step up to bat with their writings and attempt to have them published in a public forum. I encourage more students to do so. Perhaps if more writing was received by the Kansan, more interesting, engaging and/or jocular articles would appear on these pages for our entertainment and intellectual stimulation.
I would suggest that in the future the Kansan reserve its opinion space for discussion of University, national and international news instead of including half-baked attempts at humorous columns that only serve to decrease the standing of an excellent newspaper. The frivolous scribblings of half-brained Dave Barry wannabes that possess less intelligent creativity than the average flea-bitten mongrel that picks refuse out of the back bins of Stauffer-Flint Hall have no place on the opinion page. Those trash cans should be the resting place for any future Alisha Arora columns detailing the evils of "CC" and "Big Dream Daddy" or any other such aimless "journalistic" wanderers.
Nick Pivonka
Oakland, Calif., sophomore
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, February 15, 1994
5
Injunction on abortion law lifted
The Associated Press
PHILADELPHIA - A federal judge yesterday lifted a five-year-old injunction that had prevented Pennsylvania's restrictive abortion law from taking effect.
A state spokesman said parts of the law could take effect immediately.
U. S. District Judge Daniel Huyett III lifted a ban after a week U.S. Supreme Court Justice David Souter rejected an appeal by abortion providers.
"As the attorney general has said, enough is enough," said Robert Gentzel, spokesman for Attorney General Ernie Preate Jr.
Jacquelyn Brinkley, a spokeswoman for Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pennsylvania, one of the plaintiffs, declined comment yester-
day, saying she hadn't seen the order
The 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals had ordered Huyett to lift the injunction after Souter's ruling.
The law requires women to receive counseling about alternatives to abortion and then wait 24 hours before undergoing the procedure. Unmarried women under 18 must get permission from a parent or a judge.
Huyett delayed implementation of the law in May, saying abortion rights advocates deserved a chance to prove their argument that it posed an "undue burden" to women seeking abortions.
He also imposed an injunction on the law in 1988 when abortion providers first appealed the Abortion Control Act.
The 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals rejected a final appeal on Jan. 14, ruling that the law must go into effect before it can be challenged under the undue burden standard.
it ordered Huyett to lift the injunction within a "reasonable" time period. Souter upheld the appeals court ruling three days later.
Some parts of the law will take effect immediately and "it should take a matter of days" before all provisions are enacted, Gentzel said.
Huyett's order yesterday prohibits the state from enforcing part of the original law which would have required married Pennsylvania women to notify their spouses before ending a pregnancy. The appeals court and the Supreme Court both rejected the spousal notification provision.
EXPENSES: Costly classes empty wallets
Continued from Page 1.
"I spent over $200 for books," he said. "I bought a $70 brand-new law book, and we will only use 10 of the 40 chapters. It has been more than I anticipated. I have one semester left, and I'll have to make some money this summer."
Betsy Goss, assistant professor of business, said that the best way to keep book costs down was through the publishers but that the school was willing to loan books to students who could not afford them.
"If a student is in financial trouble, we can lend them whatever (books) they need," she said.
Amy Rose, Overland Park graduate student in education, said she spent $350 on textbooks and supplies this semester.
In addition to the expense of buying books, engineering majors pay a $15 per credit hour fee.
Galen Suppes, assistant professor of engineering, said he didn't like to have students buy books that cost more than $90.
"This semester it's a big chunk of money since I didn't have a scholarship," she said.
"There are far more important things to consider when selecting books, such as if it is a good learning aid for the subject," he said.
Susan Bergstrom, Belleville graduate student in health services administration, said she was taking eight credit hours and spent $210 on books this semester.
"I have a four-year-old son, and I have to prioritize things in my life," she said. "Recreation, eating out and buying new toys are low on my list, but school is a top priority."
KU student reports sexual assault Friday Kansan staff report
An 18-year-old KU student reported being sexually assaulted by two men outside a party she attended Friday night, the Lawrence police reported.
Police Sgt. Rick Nickell of the Lawrence police said that the woman reported she went outside a party at the Kappa Sigma fraternity, 1045 Emery, around 11:30 p.m.
The woman told police that, after leaving the fraternity, two unidentified men sexually assaulted her but ran off when other people walked by, Nickell said. No arrests have been made.
Most women deny risk of STDs
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — American women are in a state of denial about their risk of getting one of the 13 million cases of sexually transmitted diseases reported every year, a new survey indicates.
The survey said that 84 percent think "it won't happen to me," even if they're at high risk. The survey was released yesterday by women's health advocates who urged the government to educate people about sexually transmitted diseases just as it has about AIDS.
"We don't merely want tracking of the problem," said Joan Kuriansky of the Campaign for Women's Health. "We want action and prevention."
Sexual diseases are at epidemic levels, with 13 million non-AIDS infectetions each year. One of the most dangerous, syphilis, is at its highest level in 40 years.
Women get sexual diseases more easily than men, experience more severe complications and often go undiagnosed until permanent damage is done. As a result, more than 1 million get pelvic inflammatory disease, become infertile or develop life-threatening ectopic pregnancies, according to the Alan Guttmacher Institute.
Yet the institute last year discovered most federal funding for treating sexual diseases goes to 4,000 special clinics where two-thirds of the patients are men.
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IF YOU THINK WAR IS HELL YOU SHOULD SEE IT IN WINTER
War is Hell, but in winter it's worse. Right now, victims of war in the former Yugoslavia are suffering a second, deadly winter. Bosnia's cruel tragedy -- its murder, its sickness and its hunger -- has been doubled by severe shortages of food, medicine and fuel.
Now is the time to help. The University of Kansas Hillel Foundation is inviting friends of all faiths to join us for BosniAid : An Evening of Hope. Uniting with campuses around the world, we will raise awareness about Bosnia's tragedy and contribute to humanitarian relief funds for all its victims.
Professor William J. March, Department of Russian and East European Studies, Slavic Languages and Literature, University of Kansas
Join us for a panel discussion featuring:
Sakir and Jasminka Hadzimejlić, Bosnia
Anna Pavichevich Harkins, National Coordinator, Serbnet: Serbian American Information Network
BOSNIAID
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6
Tuesday, February 15, 1994
NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina
U.N. commander gives Serbs week to give up guns
The U.N. commander for Bosnia stepped up the pressure on Bosnian Serbs who control most of the artillery encclring Sarajevo, saying yesterday that the heavy guns must be given up this week.
The statement by Lt. Gen. Sir Michael Rose after a meeting with Bosnian Vice President Ejup Ganic apparently closed a gap between conflicting plans developed by the United Nations and NATO to stop the bloodshed in Sarajevo.
"The total exclusion zone for heavy weapons around Sarajevo will be implemented" by the end of this week, Rose said. "And any heavy weapons there will be either under U.N. control or subject of an air attack."
He said that applied both to Bosnian Serb weapons and those controlled by the out-
gunned Bosnian government.
Rose gained a cease-fire agreement for Sarajevo on Wednesday just hours before NATO told Bosnian Serbs to remove their heavy weapons by Feb. 20 or face air strikes. While the NATO plan called for the weapons to be removed from Sarajevo, Rose's plan simply called for them to be placed under U.N. control.
The ultimatum was issued shortly after a mortar attack slammed into a Sarajevo market, killing 68 people and wounding 200.
WASHINGTON Task force wants change
The National Gay and Lesbian Task Force called for changes in President Clinton's health plan yesterday to ensure that gay people are not discriminated against either as doctors or patients.
The group applauded Clinton's commitment to universal coverage, but expressed concern that his bill "does not make the health-care system safer for lesbians, gay men or bisexuals."
It said the Clinton plan "discriminates financially against non-traditional families" by defining a family as a married couple or a single parent with children.
A gay couple with a child and big health bills could wind up paying $4,500 in deductibles compared with $3,000 for a traditional family, the task force said.
DURBAN, South Africa Zulus demand territory
The Zulu king demanded independence and new territory yesterday, further complicating attempts to bring all of South Africa's factions into the transition to democracy.
King Goodwill Zwelithini made his call before a crowd of 15,000 people in this northeast port. The crowd, some carrying spears and shields, grew during a four-hour meeting in city hall between Zwelithini, his chief minister Mangosuthu Buthelezi and President F.W. de Klerk.
At one point, after Zulus fired volleys of
Police said one person was shot to death and another injured outside city hall. It was not clear if they were hit by stray bullets or deliberately attacked.
shots into the air, the king interrupted his talks to appeal for calm.
Clashes broke out between ANC and Inkatha Freedom Party supporters overnight around Durban as Zulus from all over the country arrived to pay their respects to Zwelilhini. An entire block of a workers' hostel was destroyed in a fire bombing.
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. Settlements proposed
Three leading health care companies said yesterday they had agreed to pay more than $3.7 billion as part of a proposed settlement for women claiming that silicone breast implants harmed or threatened their health.
The settlements, including more than $2 billion from Dow Corning Corp., would be paid out as the companies' share of a $4.75 billion fund to compensate implant users.
A Dow Corning representative said that the company, which was the nation's leading maker of the implants before they were taken off the market two years ago, would pay for research on remaining questions about the devices and contribute $2 billion over more than 30 years if the proposed settlement was finalized.
Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. would contribute up to $1.2 billion over the 30 years under the proposed settlement, representative Francine Gingras said.
Baxter Healthcare Corp., a division of Baxter International Inc., said it would contribute about $556 million.
Lawsuits over implants have been consolidated in Birmingham, where U.S. District Judge Sam Pointer is overseeing the negotiations between about 20 corporations and attorneys representing hundreds of thousands of implant recipients who claim their health is threatened.
According to attorneys involved, the settlement would compensate women for everything from discomfort to disfigurement.
Briefs compiled from The Associated Press
Office of Minority Affairs
University of Kansas Presents in honor of African American History Month,1994
"African American Students and KU"
Guest Speakers: Christie Landers, Law
Guest Speakers: Christie Landers, Law Curtis Jones, Architecture Eva McGhee, Microbiology Jonathan Allen, Public Administration Karen Blackwell, Organismal Biology Terry Bell, Civil Engineering Amber Reagan-Kendrick Higher
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Fun on the Phone
Some students find giving and receiving prank calls an entertaining passtime. But new technology threatens to number the days of drunk dialing and telephone tomfoolery.
By Cathleen Siechta
Kansan staff writer
Heidi Crites, Wichita junior, has many ways of putting off her homework. She polishes her nails. She plucks her eyebrows. She cleans out her desk.
She makes prank phone calls.
"It's amazing how many people will talk to me on the phone for a couple of hours and tell me their life stories," Crites said. "All of my roommates get a kick out of it because we'll use the speaker phone so everyone can hear."
HAPPY
Crites' favorite prank is picking names randomly from the phone book and engaging those who answer in conversation. Occasionally she calls friends and acquaintances and disguises her voice.
Crites said she never has harassed the people she called; she just enjoyed the conversations.
Ryan Moore, Paula junior, also said he enjoyed making prank phone calls. He
USM
said he often "drunk-dialed" after a night at the bars.
Photo illustration by Jenny Zeiner / KANBAN
"I'll call people up and act like I've known them all my life," Moore said. "Either that, or I'll call someone and ask them why they haven't picked me up at the airport yet. If you sound real panicky some people actually buy it."
Some people, however, may not appreciate such telephone high jinks, especially if the calls disturb their sleep or are perceived as threatening.
Photo illustration by Jenny Zeiner/ KANSAN
"Most generally, the students that ask for help have received phone calls that are threatening in nature," said Sgt. Rose Rozmiarek. "Some calls can be biased in nature, and some can just be annoying, like constant hang-ups. Whatever the case, there's usually something said or insinuated that creates an elevated concern in the student, and the calls have been going on awhile before they come to us."
According to the KU police department, 54 telephone harassment complaints were filed by students in 1993.
Whatever their intentions, prank callers, if caught, could face a maximum penalty of a 500 fine or one year in jail.
Rozmiarek said students who lived on campus could file a report with campus police. They then must go to the KU Telecommunications Department to set up a phone trap.
Students who live off campus must use their own resources to have their phone lines monitored.
"Once a student signs a release form, we keep a log of all calls made to their campus line," said Elizabeth Pesek-Shields, a customer service representative for Telecommunications. "If we put a trap on their line, we can keep a log of the exact time and place from which a call originated."
Southwestern Bell Telephone, the Lawrence area's local phone company, offers services like Call Return and Call ID that can help prank victims catch phone junkies in the act.
Call Return, also known as "star 69," reconnects the customer with the last local number that called his or her line. This connection is made by pushing the star key and the number 69. If the line is busy, Call Return will monitor it for 30 minutes and let the customer know when the line is free with a special patterned ringing. This service costs $2.55 per month.
Mike Scott, Lawrence area manager of external affairs at Southwestern Bell, said that Lawrence was the first community in Kansas to receive the Call ID option. This service, which costs $6.50 per month, features a unit that displays the phone number of the person trying to reach the customer's line. This unit costs $50-$60 if bought separately, but some telephones come with the display unit built-in.
Another option, Call Trace, is a $1 monthly service that traces the origins of prank calls and bills $10 for each successful trace. It usually is reserved for cases of threatening or obscene phone calls. After receiving the call, the customer pushes the star key and the number 57. The harasser's number is sent to area law enforcement agencies. Customers are then asked to call their Southwestern Bell Service Center to discuss the trace details.
With so many ways of catching dialing delinquents, one might think the practice of pranking would become more rare. But some students say the occasional prank call can offer a welcome diversion from studying.
"Every once in a while, it's kind of fun," said Jason Nestleroad, Wichita senior, who has received calls from someone claiming to be Charo's sister. "If the call is entertaining, I don't mind it at all. I'll just play along."
Crites said that since the point of her prank calls usually was entertainment, she was not worried about getting caught.
"With all the new technology and options like star 69, you have to keep on top of things so people don't beat you at your own game," Crites said. "But I never do or say anything to hurt anyone, and no one has ever gotten mad at me. It's just something fun to do late at night with friends."
Special treatment for student athletes a myth
Because athletes are so valued at schools like KU, some people may believe the stereotype that they receive special favors in the classroom.
By Kevin Hoffmann
Kansan staff writer
A common stereotype about athletes on college campuses goes something like this: they go to class whenever they want. If they don't turn in an assignment, it's no big deal. If they score an F on an exam, it will be changed to a passing grade. Instructors worship them.
"I think that many student athletes, especially the big name ones, could get away with stuff other students couldn't," said Bill Green, Lawrence junior. "When you have an advantage like that, I'm sure you're going to use it."
Not at KU, said Paul Buskirk, assistant athletic director for student support services. The potential may exist at some schools for athletes to be given academic privileges because sports are highly valued on college campuses.
"I could see a small percentage of instruc
tors, who are enthusiastic about athletics, as feeling some pressure to treat student athletes different," he said. "Hopefully that doesn't happen on this campus."
Mike Cormack, a graduate teaching assistant in the philosophy department, said he has had at least one student athlete in each of his courses since he began teaching five years ago. Cormack said anyone who labeled the academic efforts of a student athlete as different from the efforts of other students was wrong.
Many student athletes and instructors say that athletes don't get any special favors at KU. Many say that stereotype is inaccurate and unfair.
"The majority of the student athletes have not been any different than any other students," Cormack said. "If anything, they can be more motivated because of the other pressures they face."
Cormack, who also taught in the Western. Civilization program for four years, said that he often has had to adjust a due date for an assignment because of an athletic conflict but that it was not unlike the treatment given to other students.
Cormack said that some students may not realize that student athletes make up assignments that were missed.
"I have found that most of them are very good about making up a missed assignment right away or even before it's due," he said.
Some may think that athletes who play for a high-profile team are worshipped by instructors who are willing to give them special consideration. But Malcolm Nash, St. Louis senior and former men's basketball player, said the treatment he received in the classroom stayed the same after he stopped playing for the team.
Nash said that playing for the basketball team that won a national championship didn't lead to any special privileges in the classroom.
"It's basically the same," Nash said. "They didn't treat me any different."
I can't get anything given to me," he said.
Nash said it would be unfortunate if any athlete would receive special treatment.
"I didn't get anything given to me," he said.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
FEBRUARY 15.1994 PAGE 7
KULIfe
People and places at the University of Kansas.
WEIRD
In January in Montreal, Quebec, Judge Raymonde Verreault sentenced a 37-year-old man to only 23 months in prison for a series of sexual assaults from 1989 to 1991 on his stepdaughter, who was 9 years old when the attacks started. Verreault, who is female, said the mitigating factor for the light sentence was that the man had "spared the victim." Said Verreault, because the assaults had been by sodomy and not "normal" intercourse, "(the victim) retained her virginity, which seems to be a very important value in their (Muslim) religion."
LEAD STORY
FRONTIERS OF SCIENCE
-South Korea's Samsung Electronics Co. announced in November that it had invented "Bio Television" - a TV set that converts a television's ordinary electromagnetic beams into waves that have an effect similar to that of sunlight on nearby plants and animals. In tests, the longevity of fish and the freshness of flowers increased by 50 percent to 100 percent when they were near the Bio Television.
-In the December Behavioral Neuroscience journal, researchers at Rotterdam's Erasmus University reported that injecting a certain hormone into young heterosexual male rats made them attempt to mate with males each day at dusk, but not at other times.
-In December, the Associated Press reported on research conducted by James Dabbs, a psychology
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See WEIRD.Page 8.
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professor at Georgia State University, to determine personality by examining hormones. Dabbs prefers using hormones found in saliva rather than in blood because it is easier to get subjects to spit. "Dr. Spit," as Dabbs is known, said he is a pioneer in the field because other researchers might view working with spit as "unseemly."
WEIRD: Pens as suicide tools
Neurologist Angelika Hahn of the University of Western Ontario told the Associated Press in November that a genetic cause had been found for "startle disease," which makes victims overreact when startled, even to the point of becoming stiff and falling over. Because victims are unable to break their falls, they are vulnerable to bone fractures.
grance of "cow's breath" as the lure. Building on research from Africa, Lamire installed 42 traps containing the synthetic chemical Octenol, which mosquitoes evidently find irresistible. Within the first month, "millions" of mosquito carcasses were found in the traps.
-In July, research entomologist Gene Lamire of Naples, Fla., set up the nation's first mosquito-trapping program that uses the tantalizing fra-
Continued from Page 7.
CRIES FOR HELP
-In a recent medical journal article, five Phoenix physicians reported the case of a 34-year-old man who, in an apparent suicide attempt, manually forced a ballpoint pen through his right eye soogat only about one inch of the pen stuck out. The physicians' literature search yielded a dozen other cases of "self-inflicted, nonmissile, penetrating, intracranial injuries," involving nails, a steel spring, a hook pin and awl.
LEAST COMPETENT REACTIONS TO WINTER
-George Gibbs, 23, suffered second- and third-degree burns on his head in Columbus, Ohio, in January. He had diagnosed his car's problem as a frozen fuel line, which he thought he could correct by running warm gasoline through it. He then tried to heat a two-gallon can of gasoline on a gas stove.
-To thaw the frozen pipes in his house in Farmingville, N.Y., in January, John Porter backed his car up against an open window so the exhaust could warm up the base-ment. Shortly afterward, Porter, his wife and their three children were rushed to the hospital suffering from carbon-monoxide poisoning.
Celebrity directors trying their hands at shorter films
Bv John Hor
By John Hor AP Entertainment Writer
PARK CITY, Utah — Daryl Hannah doesn't say a word in her new movie — and she's not playing a mime.
Matthew Modine is nowhere to be seen in his latest film — and it's not some remake of "The Invisible Man."
Instead, Hannah, Modine and several other high-profile actors are stepping behind the cameras to direct their own motion pictures.
But unlike the big-budget features directed by actors such as Clint Eastwood and Steven Segal, or moderate features directed by the likes of Robert De Niro, this new crop of performers-turned-filmmakers is focusing on economy-sized films running less than 30 minutes.
"I knew that I'd be crazy to make a feature film," said Rob Morrow, star of TV's "Northern Exposure." His first film, "The Silent Alarm," comes in at 28 minutes.
Short movies have paid off for at least one actor-director. Peter Weller's 30-minute film, "Partners," received an Academy Award nomination Wednesday for best live-action short.
All five shorts are stylish, frequently witty and cinematically proficient. And all played at last month's Sundance Film Festival, the film industry's premier showcase for independent movies.
Nevertheless, the audience for short films is limited sharply. And the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences nearly eliminated short films from Oscar consideration. Outside of cable-TV networks such as Showtime, short films are not widely shown.
Actor Ethan Hawke's "Straight to One" punches the clock at 20 minutes, and Modine's "Smoking" is 13 minutes. Hannah's "Last Supper," made as part of a six-week New York University film class in 1992, lasts all of 12 minutes.
"I wanted to make something that was sort of concise, funny and said something," she said.
That puts these well-known actors in the unusual position of playing to an empty house. Since all but Weller spent their own money, there's no fat pay-check, either.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, February 15, 1994
9
Kansas to lock horns with Texas
Women's tennis ready for battle
By Matt Siegel
Kansan Sportswriter
Confidence is one thing that the No. 15 Kansas women's tennis team won't be lacking when it faces the No. 1-ranked Texas Longhorns.
The Jayhawks will play at 1 p.m. today at the Alvamar Racquet Club, 4120 Clinton Parkway.
Kansas coach Chuck Merzbacher said he liked his teams chances against the No.1 team in the country.
"I told the girls to wake up expecting to win," he said. "For them to come into our place is a great opportunity for us to get a big win and show our stuff."
Kansas is coming off two wins last
weekend in South Bend, Ind. The Jayhawks trounced Notre Dame 8-1 and then defeated William & Mary 7-2. Junior Nora Koves, playing in the No. 1 singles spot, is No. 17 in the nation and 11-1 overall. The doubles duo of Koves and junior Rebecca Jensen is ranked No. 10 in the nation. Senior Mindy Wiener is ranked No. 35 in singles and she and teammate senior Kim Rodgers are ranked No. 15 in the nation in doubles.
Although the Jayhawks are playing well, Merzbacher said he knew they would be tested against the Longhorns.
"They have the No. 1 singles player in the country in Lucy Ludigovara," he said. "At No. 2 they have Kelly Paste who is the No. 3 player in the country. At every position they are solid."
Kansas players know they can defeat top teams in the country. Koves and Jensen already have defeated Texas' No. 8 doubles team
this season and recently defeated the top team in the nation from California. Koves defeated Wendy Crabtree of Notre Dame who, according to the latest Intercollegiate Tennis Association poll, holds a No. 13 ranking. Kansas has a 3-0 dual match record and has not lost a doubles match all season." We're going to be fired up," Jensen said. "There is a lot of pressure on them because they are No. 1, and they are playing Kansas which isn't known for tennis. Whether you are No. 2 or No. 8 you still have to perform."
The Longhorns have many ranked players. Along with carrying the No. 1 tag, they have four players ranked in the ITA poll. For added incentive, the Jayhawks will be trying to avenge a defeat they suffered at the hands of Texas last year in Austin.
"I felt like last year we were up and down." Weiner said. "Last year, I wasn't too confident at every position, but this year we know what we can do."
Merzbacher said he felt that Kansas' top four players matched up with Texas well. He said Kansas just needed to play good matches at every other spot. Last season, the Jayhawks lost to Texas 2-5. Kansas' only victories came at the No. 6 singles and the No. 3 doubles positions. Jensen promised a different result this year if Texas was not prepared.
"If they don't come in here ready to play, they are not going to pull through," she said.
Freshmen Bianca Kirchhof said she was looking forward to competing against the No. 1 team in the country. But even Kirchhof couldn't contain her excitement and perhaps summed up the team's overall attitude the best.
M
KANSAN FILE PHOTO
Senior Mink Weiner, who ranked No. 35 in the country in singles, will try to lead the No. 15 Jayhawks against the No. 1 Texas Longhorns today.
KANSAS 20
KANSAN FILE PHOTO
Kansas senior guard Steve Woodberry drives past Missouri junior forward Marlo Finner and Missouri senior guard Mark Atkins
Temple coach's outburst results in 1-day suspension
The Associated Press
PHILADELPHIA — Temple University suspended basketball coach John Chaney for one game yesterday, a day after he publicly threatened to kill Massachusetts coach John Calipari.
Chaney apologized after his outburst Sunday following Temple's 56-55 loss to thenNo.13 Massachusetts, but Temple president Peter Lacouras still suspended Chaney from Wednesday night's game at St. Bonaventure
"Coach Chaney overstepped the line this time," Liacouras said in a statement. "I believe the university must pursue the highest standards in competition, and even his sincere apology, he agrees, is insufficient in these circumstances."
It was the first time Chaney has been disciplined in 12 years, during which he led the Owls to nine NCAA tournament appearances.
In a statement released by Temple's athletic department yesterday, Chaney extended his apology "to everyone for (Sunday's) unfortunate incident following the basketball game — to the Atlantic 10 Conference, the University of Massachusetts, the teams, those persons who were present and those who witnessed the incident."
Temple spokeswoman Harriet Goodheart said Liacouras would not comment beyond his one-and-a-half-page statement.
Chaney planned no further comment, said assistant sports information director Gerry Emig.
Chaney burst into Calipari's postgame news conference after Sunday's loss and accused Calipari of trying to intimidate the officials.
Chaney then charged the podium where Calipari stood. Three Massachusetts players moved quickly to intervene, and Chaney was restrained before reaching Calipari.
Tigers eye conference title
"I'll kill you." Chaney was plainly heard to say. "You remember that."
He also added he would have his players confront Massachusetts players when the teams play again in Philadelphia on Feb. 24.
"Some things never cease to amaze me," Calipari said when order was restored. "And I am going to leave it at that. I am not going to comment any further either here or on radio or television."
It wasn't the first time the two emotional, highly successful coaches have tangled. The two had to be separated in 1990 in Amherst, Mass, after getting into a showing match at midcourt during a triple-overtime game.
Last month Chaney was part of a controversy over a threatened boycott by the Black Coaches Association over what it perceived as unfair treatment of African-American students through scholarship reductions and admissions standards.
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sport(swriter
Men's basketball teams in the Big Eight Conference are wondering whether Missouri can be knocked from the top with a 9-0 conference record.
The No. 12 Tigers are first in the conference, two games ahead of No. 4 Kansas. Kansas coach Roy Williams said that he was not surprised by Missouri's performance but that he was surprised that the Jayhawks were ranked ahead of Missouri.
"I've been Missouri's biggest fan since the beginning of the season," he said. "That's been the most amazing thing to me this basketball season. It's strange because we started by winning the NIT with all the media coverage, and people have hauged us on that."
Missouri is 18-2 overall, but a 120-6 non-conference defeat against Arkansas cost the Tigers some national respect, Williams said.
"Everybody put so much stock in that Arkansas game," he said. "Arkansas could have beat some NBA teams that night the way they were playing."
Iowa State coach Johnny Orr said Missouri was a strong defensive team. Missouri will play the 11-9 Cyclones tomorrow.
"They're playing lights out
right now," Orr said. "I think Melvin书 is a great player. He is doing the things on his team that have to be done."
Missouri senior guard Booker was named Big Eight Player of the Week for the 26 points he earned against Oklahoma State in the Tigers' 72-70 victory Saturday.
"Having been in this for a number of years, I've learned that, with young people, anything is possible," Missouri coach Norm Stewart said.
Oklahoma State coach Eddie Sutton said no one thought Missouri would be defeated at this point in the season.
"I told my team before the season that I really felt an 11-3 record would win the Big Eight," Sutton said. "I don't know if Missouri will lose three more ball games, but they still have to play in Lawrence and Manhattan, which will be tough."
The Cowboys are 16-7 and 5-3, making them third in the conference. Sutton said he was not worried about the polls or Oklahoma's chances for an invitation to the NCAA tournament.
Nebraska and Oklahoma possibly could be on the bubble for receiving a tournament
"We're in a position to win our last conference games," he said. "But with the balance in the Big Eight, we could lose the rest of them."
bid. Oklahoma defeated Nebraska 115-11 last night in Norman. Nebraska coach Danny Nee said he was trying not to think about the tournament.
"We really have to buckle down, and we really have to win our home games," Nee said.
Despite the Big Eight's 83-19 record against non-conference opponents, the conference may have only three teams in the NCAA tournament. Williams said the conference had to make a better showing in the tournament to get national respect.
"Missouri is running away and hiding." Williams said. "It makes it more difficult for everybody else. But if you can go 7-7 in this conference and do well in a tough nonconference schedule, there's no way anyone can keep you out of the tournament."
"I'm still of the opinion that North Carolina and Arkansas are a little better than everyone else," he said.
"It's going to be a strange championship," he said. "And I think a team that no one expects is going to win it."
But when it came to picking a front-runner for the national championship, Williams didn't have a definite answer.
Orr said this could be the most wide-open tournament in recent history.
Men's AP Top 25
Kansas moved up one spot in the poll to fourth after defeating Kansas State. Missouri continued its climb in the polls to 12th.
rank team record pts. pr
1. Arkansas (54) 18-2 1,579 3
2. N. Carolina (2) 20-4 1,436 1
3. Connecticut (3) 21-2 1,402 6
4. KANSAS (1) 21-3 1,367 5
5. Louisville (2) 20-2 1,345 7
6. Duke 17-3 1,315 2
7. Michigan (2) 17-4 1,118 11
8. UCLA 17-2 1,099 9
9. Purdue 20-3 1,068 10
10. Mass. 19-4 972 13
11. Kentucky 18-5 946 4
12. Missouri 18-2 927 15
13. Temple 17-4 863 8
14. Syracuse 16-4 814 14
15. Arizona 19-4 771 16
16. Indiana 15-5 754 12
17. Florida 19-4 475 20
18. Saint Louis 19-2 431 17
19. California 16-5 407 18
20. Minnesota 17-7 386 23
21. Ala.-Birm. 18-4 295 19
22. Marquette 16-6 232 22
23. Cincinnati 16-7 147 —
24. Wisconsin 15-5 138 21
25. Georgia Tech 13-9 83 —
Other receiving votes: Wake Forest 66,
Texas 58, New Mexico St. 49, Penn 35,
Xavier, Ohio 35, Boston College 34, New
Mexico 30, Maryland 28, Oklahoma St. 27,
Illinois 16, Virginia 14, Mississippi St. 9,
Brigham Young 8, Alabama 7, Georgia 70,
Evanville 3, W. Kentucky 3, Murray St. 2,
Wis. Bay Green 1.
Source: The Associated Press
Women's AP Top 25
KANSAN
Kansas remained at No. 10 despite victories against Iowa State and Nebraska this weekend. Colorado jumped two spots to third.
rank team record pta. p
rank team record pts. pr
1. Tennessee (64) 23-1 1,744 2
2. Penn St. (6) 19-1 1,652 1
3. Colorado 19-3 1,555 5
4. Connecticut 20-2 1,455 6
5. North Carolina 20-2 1,425 3
6. Virginia 20-2 1,355 9
7. Southern Cal 17-2 1,353 4
8. Texas Tech 19-3 1,350 7
9. Purdue 19-3 1,223 11
10. KANSAS 18-3 1,116 10
11. Iowa 15-4 996 8
12. Louisiana Tech 19-3 968 13
13. Stanford 15-5 865 14
14. Vanderbilt 17-6 836 12
15. Washington 16-4 762 15
16. Seton Hall 19-3 631 18
17. Alabama 16-5 495 20
18. Florida Int. 18-2 451 16
19. Boise St. 19-3 423 21
20. Rutgers 14-4 364 17
21. Montana 18-3 341 22
22. Auburn 16-6 243 19
23. W. Kentucky 17-5 204 24
24. Southern Miss. 18-2 173 —
25. Toledo 18-2 87 23
Others receiving votes: Mississippi 84,
Florida 68, UNLV 57, San Diego St. 48,
Texas 43, Northwestern 41, Hawaii 37,
Maryland 37, UCLA 34, Ames T&M 30, N. Illi
nities 23, Virginia Tech 22, Santa Clara 21,
Ohio St. 18, Bowling Green 16, Notre Dame
16, Oregon 12, Georgia 11, SW Missouri
10, Stephen F. Austin 9, Pittsburgh 8
Source: The Associated Press
Texas Tech fans sue after postgame fight
The Associated Press
LUBBOCK, Texas — Two Texas Tech basketball fans sued Texas & M coach Tony Barone Sr. and three players yesterday, alleging "wanton, willful and malicious" attacks during a post-game mele that took place Feb. 5.
The plaintiffs asked for punitive damages of $1.375 million and actual damages between $500 and $100,000.
Barone and his co-defendants — Tony Barone Jr., Joe Wilbert and John Michael Jungers — were at practice yesterday and were unavailable to comment immediately.
The plaintiffs are Charles Ewing Jr, and his cousin, 16-year-old Christopher Ewing, who is represented by his mother, Mary Catherine Ewing, in court documents because he is a minor.
KANSAN
A five-minute scuffle erupted as Barone and several Aggie players attempted to leave the court after their 89-88 victory over the Red Raiders.
The lawsuit says the victorious Aggies, on their way to the locker room, were "taunting all the gentle souls in the stands."
The suit claims Jungers, without provocation, hit Christopher Ewing in the chest and sent him sprawling.
Tony Barone Sr. then punched Charles Ewing in the face when he tried to help his cousin, the lawsuit says.
Charles Ewing began backing away but was pursued by Wilbert, who hit Ewing twice in the face, according to the lawsuit. The coach then grabbed Ewing by the hair and head and held him in a headlock
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
IOC president leaves Norway for Sarajevo
LILLEHAMMER, Norway—IOC President Juan Antonio Samaranch left the Olympics yesterday and headed for besieged Sarajevo to pay tribute to the city that hosted the 1984 Winter Olympics.
The International Olympic Committee withheld details for security reasons, but United Nations relief officials said Samaranch would arrive in Sarajevo tomorrow aboard a U.N. flight from the Croatian port city of Split.
During the one-day visit, Samaranch is expected to tour sports facilities that have been damaged or destroyed in the 22-month-old Bosnian war. He also will meet with Bosnian Olympic Committee officials and confer with government, U.N. and relief agency representatives.
Ibrahim Slipicav, director of the 10-man Bosnian team in Lillehammer, said Samaranch's visit would provide a lift to the people of Sarajevo.
"It's very important that the world sports family is thinking about Sarajevo, 10 years after we hosted the Games," he said. "Just his presence will mean a lot."
The trip is the centerpiece of Samaranch's initiative for an "Olympic Truce" coinciding with the Lillehammer Games. He has appealed to warring factions around the world, especially in Bosnia, to lay down their arms in line with an ancient Greek Olympic tradition.
1994 Winter Olympic Games
Some IOC officials had advised Samarack against going to Sarajevo for security reasons. But he was adamant about making the trip, and the go-ahead came after U.N. peace-keeping forces and Bosnian officials gave their authorization.
Gosper assumed the duties of IOC chief in Samaranch's absence.
The Olympic Truce initiative was endorsed in October by the U.N. general assembly and received the formal backing yesterday of French President Francois Mitterrand.
"Everything must be attempted to put an end to the drama that is strangling Bosnia," Mitterrand said in a written message to Samaranch. "Nothing should be neglected that could stop the horror."
At Saturday's opening ceremony in Lillehammer, Samaranch called for a moment's silence for the people of Sarajevo and said, "Please stop the fighting. Please stop the killing. Drop your guns, please."
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LILLEHAMMER, Norway — Bobsled driver Gerhard Rainer was kicked off the Austrian Olympic team after testing positive for banned anabolic steroids, the national Olympic committee announced yesterday.
Bobsledder tests positive for drugs
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Rainer, driver of a two-mile-sled, was sent home from Lillehammer Wednesday after being confronted with results of a doping test administered in Austria, the committee said.
The Associated Press
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Rainer was replaced by Markus Einberger, who is paired with Hubert Schloesser in the Austrian bob entered in two-man event starting Saturday.
POST-SEASON BASKETBALL ATTN:STUDENTS BIG8 CONFERENCE
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A listing of countries winning medals in the Olympic games.
Country Gold Silver Bronze
Norway 2 3 0
Russia 1 2 0
Italy 1 2 1
United States 1 0 0
Canada 0 0 1
Netherlands 0 0 1
I
The tally
Source: The Associated Press
Dave Campbell / KANMAN
CBS 6-8 a.m.
Today's Olympic TV Schedule All Times CST
7-10:30 p.m.
TNT noon - 5 p.m.
12:07-1:07 a.m.
Rentco USA
EVENTS: Freestyle skiing (men's and women's moguls); figure skating (pairs free program); alpine skiing (women's super-G report); luge (woman's singles report); hockey (U.S. vs. Slovakia report); cross-country skiing (women's 5k combined)
EVENTS: Freestyle skiing (men's and women's moguls); figure skating (pairs free program); alpine skiing (women's super-G report); luge (women's singles); hockey (U.S. vs. Slovakia, highlights)
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Compiled from The Associated Press.
EVENTS: Hockey (U.S. vs. Slovakia, live and TBA); figure skating (pairs free program, live); alpine skiing (women's super-G report); freestyle skiing (men's and women's moguls); cross-country skiing (women's 5k combined); luge (women's singles)
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All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise any pre-ventive race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or dis
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200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
1989 EXPANSION
Part-time team and permanent openings
Flexible schedule for $491 to $10
Positions need to be filled by 2/16/94. Please call
843-831 for more info.
04 WINTER 2019/2020
CONFERENCE SUPPORT SPECIALIST American Telecommunication Services is searching for a few unique individuals to support our expand-abilities program. The candidates will possess outstanding language and interpersonal skills; must have a high level of energy and be able to handle a fast-paced environment; computer skills and attention to detail are required. Applications will be received you will be rewarded with an excellent salary and benefit package which includes some unique features. Interested candidates are invited to submit resumes.
Director of Human Resources American Telecommunications Services, Ltd. 10653 Lowell, Suite 600 Overland Park, Kansas 66210
300 SUMMER CAMP OPORTUNITIES in NY, PA and NEW ENGLAND. Instructors need 90 hours of tennis, basketball, Baseball, Hockey, Windsurfing, Laundering, Water skiing, Windsurfing, Lacrosse, Archery, Gymnastics, Ceramics, Jewelry, Volleyball, Soccer, Outdoormen, Piano accompanist, Phys. Ed Majors, Nurses, Chefs, etc. Call Arlene at: 1-800-4624-6028
PROGRAM
COORDINATOR
Academic Program Coordinator (APC) vacancies for 1994-95 **50%** position, working to facilitate academic progress, encourage good study skills, and develop competencies. No live in-position. Required: Graduate student in good standing at KU taking no more than 9 hours per semester. Preferred: Residence hall living and supervisory experience; working knowledge of college courses. Significant outside commitments are not possible; candidates must be able to commit at least two evenings per week to the schedule. Salary and Benefits: $625.50 per month, from August 1, 1994 to December 31, 1994; the dining center is serving. APC's a spouses eligible for staff tuition rates. To Apply: Submit a letter of application outlining interest and relevant experience; resume, plus names, addresses, and contact information; three references to KU Department of Student Housing. Wear jacket, Orca Club, Lawrence, Kansas 60048 Headline: March 18, 1994/EOA/AA
ASSISTANT COMPLEX DIRECTOR
Assistant Complex Directors (ACD)'s hold live-in 10,75% positions; management student personnel roles of a residence unit housing between two Duties include assistance with complex Complex Director with additional functional functions including supervisory responsibility for the staff student and facilitating resident's personal and academic development, adjustment to university life, and referral services to university and community resources. Required: At least one year of residential group living experience. KU graduate enrollment in core curriculum plus a senior semester. Preferred: Residence Life at the residence. Residence hall supervisory experience. Experience with payroll, budgeting, and administrative duties. Microcomputer experience. Salary range from $20,000 to $40,000 per apartment including utilities provided plus meals when cafeteria is serving. ACD' s and spouses eligible for staff tuition rates. Employment from an employer within the University. Submit letter of application outlining interest and relevant experience; resume; plus names, addresses, and telephone numbers of 3 references to the KU Department of Student Housing. 422 University Drive, Kansas City, KS 68040. Deadline: March 14, 1984. FEO/IA
Baby-sitter needed for 3-month-old in our home.
Mon: 1:45 - 4:35pm or /& Wed & Fri: 8:45 -
10:45am. No need to work all shifts. Pls call 843-
3205. Ask for Nicola/Kathie $2.50 per hour.
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camp. Teach: swimming, canoeing, sailing, water skiing, gymnastics, camping, crafts, dramatics, OR riding. Also kitchen, maintenance, Salary $150 or more plus RB&C. Camp LW/CWC /GWC Nildap, MNl. ID
Children's counselor, activities instructors, busdriers, cooks, nannies, kitchen mgt, kitchen help for mountain summer camp. PO BOX 711
Boiler. CO 80306. 303-442-4557.
Cruise line, entry level, on-board positions avail-
ability benefits. Summer and year round (818)
229-6478
229-5478
East West Records is looking for a college rep in the Lawrence market. If you are an educator, enthusiastic and know alternative music, this might be for you. Call Cake or Ian (I) 212-758-2800, retail and radio, Call Cake or Ian (I) 212-758-2800,
Help wanted: Maintenance person, 62 unit apti
complex, 13-20 hrs. pw, wkDites including plum-
carpentry, & minor electrical. Call anytime 843-
832. Ask for Chris or Susan
Hiring students to contact Alumni. 5:49-9:45 p.m.
Tues. and Thurs, $4.90/hr. starting wage. February
15-April 28. Please call Marie Adami-Young or
Lyda Hawas at 8644-6012-12 and 1-M-F.
Jayhawker Towers Assistant Manager
A 12-month, half-time, live-in position, the Assistant Manager is responsible for coordinating activities and enforcing policies for residents in the Complex Management area. The Assistant Manager assists the Complex Manager to develop a sense of community through programs and training, shares office duty and provides after-hours service to residents and supervision of school activities. You will have experience plus KU enrollment as a graduate student for no more than 8 hours per semester. Preferred: Residential management experience or Jayhawker Towers residential experience. Microcomputer experience. Experience working with students. Experience with salary and benefits. Furnished two-bedroom apartment with utilities plus $520 each. To Apply: Send letter outlining relevant experience, a resume, plus names, addresses, and telephone numbers of 3 references. Send a cover letter of interest and salary and benefits. 11th, Suite DSH, Kansas 60045. Deadline: March 18, 1994. EEO/AA
Need person for general office work plus showing
proficiency in computer use and full-time. Must be a KS resident majoring in business or accounting and be enrolled at KU in at least
12 hr with GPA of at least 2.0. Call 841-6400-bouns
for information.
Male companion for a semi-invail man. Light
travel and afternoon Man-Fri.-Fri.
$79 per week. Call 645-821-3020.
Nap room aide needed for child care center. Mon.-Thurs. 12-3. 30-Contact 845-3582.
Nannies Wanted. Positions nationwide, summer or yr-under, exp. not req. Great pay and benne.
KU Student Housing announces SHD vacancies for 1994-95. 75%, live in position, to facilitate academic progress, help plan a balanced diet by purchasing food items for residents, coordinate physical activities with students, support the democratic community. Required: Undergraduate degree and graduate enrollment; no more than 9 hours per semester; group living experience. Preferred: Experience in menu planning, food preparation, grocery shopping, and group facilitation skills and experience. Salary and Beneffits: $7,200 for first-year staff. Furnished apartment with utilities provided plus meals when the hall is serving. SHD's and spouses are required to attend on August 1, 1994 through May 31, 1996. To Apply: Submit a letter of application outlining interest and relevant experience; a resume, plus names, addresses, and telephone numbers of 3 references from KU Student Housing or Student House, 22 West 11th, Lawrence County, Kansas 60055. March 18, 1994 EEO/AAO
Sas player wanted for working R&B variety band.
Jeff at 841-1555 or 841-9797.
SCHOLARSHIP
HALL
DIRECTOR
The SSA holds a 50%, live-in position with the KU Department of Student Housing performing administrative, programming, and coordination duties. Students are required vision of the Complex Director. Requires: At least one year of residential group living experience, 92 or more credit hours, and KU enrollment. Salary will be based on employment at the dining center as serving the SSA is eligible for staff tuition/fees and is paid $323.50 monthly. Appointment extends from August 1, 1994 through May 31, 1995. How to Apply: Visit www.ssa.edu/sa/find/ask. Contact relevant experience; resume; plus names, addresses, and telephone numbers of 3 references to KU Department of Student Housing, 423 West University Ave., Knoxville, Tennessee 37813. Deadline: March 18, 1994. EOE/AA
SENIOR
STAFF
ASSISTANT
SEAMSTRESS WANTED to work for small alterations business. Flexible hours. 841-6531
EARN CASH
ON THE SPOT
WALK-INS WELCOME!
NABI Biomedical Center
816 W24th 749-5750
By donating your life saving blood plasma WALK-INS WELCOME!
$15 Today $30 This week
Super night supervisor for janitorial床 Sun-bon Mon-Non Thurs. 7-11pm or 5-3:39pm. Requirements: Grad student, leadership-training skills, Master's degree or yr commitment @ 9:00/hr. Call Nurez R628-8422.
ONEIDA FACTORY FACILITY filling several part time positions. Weekday afternoons, evenings, and weekends available 15-20 hours/wk, Summer 10-14 weeks, Spring/Summer 10-14 weeks. Suite 103-106 on weekdays. 749-802. COB.
Picture photography needed for Spring and Fall semesters of 1994. Prior 35mm experience is preferred to apply call bell 885-1428 and leave your name on the calendar. Please send a message due, the fact that nobody was contacted.
'94
▼COVER LETTERS
▼INTERVIEW TRAINING
RESUMÉS
KU
SENIORS
RESUMÉ SERVICES
Top private girls resident camp look for training. trainer. RB/landyday, travelallowance. Women call or write: Camp Vega for Girls, P.O. Box 1717, Durbury, MA. O.2532 (617) 934-8538. We will be on 1am from Iam-4pm to 7/24, Regional Reem.
832-8100
SUMMER JOBS OUTDOORS
Over 10,000 jobs!
National Leadership Crews,
Send Stamp for Free Details.
dian's, I3 E. Wemery, Kalispell, MT 99010.
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: Camp Vega, P. O. Box 1771, Duxbury, MA 02332 (617) 834-6538. Men call or write: Camp Winnadu, 255 Glades Rd, Suite 400E, Boca Raton, FL 33921. We will be on campus in the student union from 11am to 6pm in 6/13 in Great and Regional restroom!
Tennis Jobs-Summer Children's Camps North.
Tired of summer work in Kansas? Check out an opportunity to make $600 on average and get some great resume experience in another state. Call 865-5702.
225 Professional Services
1040EZ- $10; 1040 - $15 plus extra fee for other forms to be filed with 1040. State returns $5-450.
Drafts of returns $25-$75. Forms $35-$85.
Driver education offered through Midwest Driving School, servicing KU students for 20 yrs. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
For a confidential, caring friend, call us.
We're here to listen and talk with you.
Birthright #841-4821. Free pregnancy testing
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
X
INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS
DV1. green card Program Sponsored by the U.S.
nent resident status, Citizens of almost all
nents are allowed to take part. Students, tourists,
anyone may apply. For info and more. New Era
Services, 2021 Stag St., Canoga Park, CA.
Rick Frydman,Attorney 823 Missouri 843-4023
Tel; (818) 999-4425; Fax; (818) 982-9681
INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS! We transfer Videos from US mode to your system or from your country to US mode $25 includes tape and mailing. World-Wide Video Store, PO Box G, Ottawa K 66076 Call: 1-422-6955 or 8-000-6955
TRAFFIC.DUIS
FRAUDERS
Fake ID & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
MATH TUTOR * TEACHING EXPERIENCE,
LICENSEDENTIALS * $HOUR.
*
Tutoring avail. for college primary and secondary.
English, Spanish, Math, Science. Call 839-3301
Donald G. Strohe Sally G. Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
235 Typing Services
305 For Sale
Not ready for boring old life style? Want to want? Read! Life is an Odyssey, Guide to Meaningful Careers and Unique Lifestyles. For more info call 1-800-893-7424.
*BRASS BED, firm, orbicum mattes and
frameed, fixed, cost $100, sell $326 cash,
deal $249.
1 + word processing, resumes, letters, term-
paper, PDFs, #8-4794 a&f 8:30 p.m.
wknding wknds
VIDEO EDITING AND
PRODUCTION SERVICES
A/B roll out of production with EDL
3D computer animation.
His 5 field production package.
Award winning screenwriter.
PRIMAL SCREENWORKS UNICATIONS
913-841-9000.
300s Merchandise
*d-IR Women Word Processing*. Former editor
*d-IR Women Word Processing* for accurate pages of letter
quality type. **$83-$99**
BRAXTON B.COPLEY
Attorney at Law
General Practice
Traffic Tickets, Misdemeanors,
Landlord/Tenant,
Individual Income Tax
19 Massachusetts 749-533
*LIVING ROOM SET, safa, love seat and chair*
high base hardwood in plastic; cost $1500
furniture set; rug $300
749-5333
GT PANTEA 19* BRIGHT RED 706 ALUM
W / WCRM OPUNT SORTUX TC-LD DERAILERS
85 + LEVERS TOGA PHY
CHOOTES ASKING 5 O. B. C ORI
LEAVE MESSAGE
leather jacket. Excell. cond. Hardy been worn. bought new Aug. 15. fits M/F. jacket. New Aug. 15. fits M/F.
FOR SALE Minola X-16 / w4m8 f1 lens automan.
$13.00 oob call Mike L/ 748-349-349
For Sale Mac Classic J48 with 40.5 MB + MS
Sierra and Pagetaker and Quark, $990.00 OBQ.
To buy, call (212) 336-2670.
printer. 483-1-1823-632. P, O, KS.
MACINTOSH Computer. Complete system includ-
Looking for a good type?
•Papers, Applications, Spreadsheets, Charts
•Laser printing to WOW! your profs
•Grassman and paper free
•18 years experience
call Jack at
Makin't the Grade
Peavy 4" Bass with Hardshell Peavy TNP 195
watt amp, Crown $200, each $350 for 79-315
$450.
Word processing, applications, term papers, di-
filing, web composition, design, rush
job roles available. Master's degree or
pharmacy.
340 Auto Sales
"84 Dodge Ormli. Runs well, reliable, $600. Leave message at 843-2342
SNOK SKIS 175 Rosignol + bindings + case +
poles $75, RADAR DETECTOR. Whistler Spectrum SEE,
$60, CD PLAYER, portable Panasonic,
@30, All in excellent condition, 841-6531.
99 JEEP WRANGLER in good condition. New tires.
7 $7500 if interested call 748-9098.
by Chris Word Processing.
1988 Honda Accord 4 Dr. 5 Spd. cruise, A/C/M/FAM cassette. Great condition. Call for details.
1990 Mazda Rx7 GXL, 46 Km l. power sunroof.
$10.00 cup, 78-1640
Words by Chris Words Processing.
High quality papers and printing; spell check
Writing.
405 For Rent
400s Real Estate
1 Bedroom Apt. available now! Call 841-1212.
3 Bedroom/ 2 Full bath apt now available on bus route. Microwave & dishwasher $500.
4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished,
Intercall? Call 814-7311, 790-4458 or
842-8450.
Applecroft Apt avail. 1.2 bdrm. 1 bath fully equipped ktch dishwasher, micro disposal, heat, air water, trash paid. On bus route. No pets. Call anvite 843-8220. Ask for Chris or Susan.
Available at West Hills Apt. Spacios i bed unfirmed apt. 329% per month. Water pd. Great location near campus. 1012 Emery Rd. No pets. 841-3600. 542-3884
Available bath. T. Two bedroom townhouse.
Bath, walk to campus, pool. 435 per month.
Kitchen, laundry room.
Trailridge Apartments
new leasing for Summer and Fall
Studies, Apts., and Town Homes
KU Bust Rooftop, Basketball,
Tennis Court, 2 pools!
Call Today for more information
843-7333 2500W.6th
Available now, two bedroom at 912 Tennessee
Suite #3, $400 plus utilities,
small pets O-K. 79-768-5911
Furnished room for rent with shared kitchen and
living room from KU. Of street paring,
no pets. 841-650-6988
Hanover Place Apct for rent. Near Campus.
$370/MO. Call 841-1212.
meadowbrook FALL '94
You remember the time spent, the frustrations, the hassles. Do It Now How? Glad you asked. Call 842-4200 & we'll send our complete pro gram to you immediately. Call Kathy or Shana at Meadowbrook 842-4200.
15th & Crestline Mon - Fri 8-5:30 Sat 10-4 Sun 1-4
Sorry no pets
House for rent 2 bedroom no pets, newly remodeled call 843-2033
townhouse
townhome
now renting to
laundry, microwave,
W/D, fireplace, ceiling
dishwasher,
refrigerator
MORNING STAR
Rooms, apartments, and well kept, older homes available now. 841-STAR (7827)
trash paid. Rest of February free. $345/mo. Now
until Aug. Call 843-0145.
One bedroom apartment for sublease. Water and
Part25
We are now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature studio 1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. We also have 3 bedroom, $2 \frac{1}{2}$ bath townhomes
HANOVER
Speakia 1 bedroom bed very close to campus. Please
call 841-2123. Call 841-2123.
About Coldwater flat 44.
Offers Completely Furnished Studio,1,2,3,&4 bedroom apartments and townhomes
SUNDANCE 841-5255 : 7th & Florida
with 4 Stops on Property
MASTERCRAFT
JONEYBALL COURT
* On KU Bue Routes
Sublease large one bedroom lodge on tuna route. Low
price paid, PET OR Available ASAP.
830-945-8048
830-945-8048
841-1212 : 14th & Mass.
REGENTS COURT
749-0445 : 19th & Mass.
- Volleyball Court
- 2 Pools
- 2 Laundry Rooms
- On KU Bus Route
TANGLEWOOD
749-2415 : 10th & Arkansas
CAMPUS PLACE
841-1429 : 1145 Louisiana
- Some Washer/Dryer
- Hookups
- Some Washer/Dryer
ORCHARD CORNER
749-4226 : 15th & Kasold
Call or stop by today.
2401 W. 25th, 9A3
842-1455
(sorry no pets)
Open Daily 9AM - 5PM
MASTERCRAFT
*professional Management and Maintenance Company
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
*1 and 3 Bedroom Apartments Available
*Quiet Location
*2 blocks from KU bus route
*Call Gina at 843-4754
*2040 Heathwood
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Sublet available March 1, $394 a month. W/D,
microwave, trash, DW, fridge, stove, fireplace.
Cable paid. On golf course. Close to KU. Call 865-272-3001.
430 Roommate Wanted
- Byphone: 864-4358
How to schedule an ad:
3 furnished bedrooms in home, close to campus
2 furnished bedroom, DW, AC, 2/2 bath. $196 mo.
Call Sesh 801-825-7400. DW, AC, 2/2 bath. $196 mo.
Roommate needed for big beautiful Bkrm apm!
close公寓 + downstreet $187.50 + \uudll no phone
or text
Female non-smoking roommate wanted share lease for 12 bedroom apartment close to campus for housekeeping duties.
Male/Female roommate needed immediately to buy the apartment. kip $187.50 + 1\% walk. To买公寓。kip $187.50 + 1\% walk.
1 roommate for 4 bdrm townhouse 840 p/m no utilization 749-7603
2 roommate, not rented
1 Roommate, non-annieker for 3 bdrm. cardio. $75
per month. Near campus. Washers/Dryers/Cleaners
$20 per month.
Female roommate wanted NOW For 3 br house.
1:16 bake from campus W/D, w/Pets 150 mc. Call
080-749-2888
ROOMMATE NEEDS to share two bedroom
house $179/mo + $10 needed. Call Daven
864-359-3698
Roommate Wanted. 5tep apartment; verry nice. On bus route. Fb.elec. Free call 865-0629
Roommate to share $3 bdm duplex, fenced yard,
DW and AC $38 $10m + 5/12 utilities. Fob paid.
Roommate to share $3 bdm duplex, fenced yard,
DW and AC $38 $10m + 5/12 utilities. Fob paid.
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.
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140 lbs & Found 865 for sale
180 kg mounted 840 mat sale
235 lightweight services 860 miscellaneous
250 jute services
379 want to buy
405 for rent
438 roommate wanted
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The University Daily Kansas. 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 60445
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1994 FarWorks, Inc/Dist. by Universal Press Syndicate
2-15
Beverly Hills of the North Pole
12
Tuesday, February 15, 1994
Camera America ONE HOUR PHOTO
Lawrence's Largest Supplier of Darkroom Materials 1610 West 23rd Street 841-7205
Heaven for Lounge Lizards
Futon Couches Starting at $119
BLUE HERON
Futons & Home Furnishings
937 Mass.. 841-9443
Barb's Vintage Rose M. 927Mass,841-2457
M 927Mass.841-2457
A. *BeadsInAllColors* C
*Feather Masks* A
R Feather Masks A
*Masks On Sticks* B
D *Masks On Sticks* R
I *Make-up N
I *All Your Party Needs I
For Guys And Gals*
GRAS VAL
COSTUMES
DON'S AUTO CENTER "For All Your Repair Needs"
*Complete Auto Repair
*Machine Shop Service
*Parts Department
841-4833
920 E. 11th Street
THE HARBOUR LIGHTS
the Harbour 57 years of downtown tradition
1031 Massachusetts
Downtown
PERSONAL HEALTH CARE FOR WOMEN CONFIDENTIAL ABORTION SERVICES
- Complete GYN Care • Pregnancy Testing
• Depo Provera & Norplant • Tubal Ligation
COMPREHENSIVE 345-1400
health for women OUTSIDE KC AREA
4401 W, 109th (I-435 & Roe) 1-800-227-1918
Overland Park, KS TOLL FREE
- Licensed Physicians/Caring Staff - Modern State-Licensed Facility PROVIDING QUALITY HEALTH CARE TO WOMEN SINCE 1974
OLYMPICS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
-Roy Williams
"Fellow Jayhawks if you are looking for a quality place to live, check out Leanna Mar Townhomes."
Insurance plans accepted
MasterCard
at
BRIAN FREDERICKS
New4 Bedroom/3 Bath
Leanna Mar
Townhomes
featuring:******Early sign up specials offered****
*Washer/Dryer
*Microwave
*Trash Compactor
*Dishwasher
*Energy Efficient
*Ceiling fans
*1500 Sq. ft.
*Covered Parking
*Walk in Closets in all rooms
Located at 4501 Wimbledon Dr. (OffClinton Pkwy@Inverness)
For More Information or Appointment Call 841-7849
Speedskater slips past another Olympic medal
By Alan Robinson
The Associated Press
HAMAR, Norway Dan Jansen was almost home.
Sailing down the backstretch in the 500-meter speedskating sprint, his strides were strong, fluid and fast.
But as he rounded the third turn, Jansen's left blade caught an edge, ice shavings flew up, and he nearly went down. To keep from falling, he touched his left hand to the ice, but the time lost was a medal lost.
Oh, no. Not again.
He now has skated in four straight Olympics, finishing without a medal each time. At Sarajevo, as an 18-year-old not expected to medal, Jansen finished fourth. Then came the heartbreak of Calgary. Then the disappointment of Albertville.
"Sometimes," the 28-year-old Jansen said, "I think maybe it's never meant to be."
This time, though, he was supposed to be a lock.
Instead, Jansen slipped to eighth — his worst placing in any 500 Olympic race he's finished. Instead, Aleksandr Golubev and Sergel Klevchena completed a history-making 1-2 sweep for Russia, and Manubu Horii of Japan won the bronze.
Golubve, only 14th in the world sprint championships in Calgary two-and-a-half weeks ago, won in an Olympic-record 36.33 seconds — more than a half-second off Jansen's world record of 35.76.
"I'm sure I would have won by quite a bit if I didn't slip. I tried to get out of it and get back as soon as possible." Jansen said. "But I lost momentum."
"The rest of his life, he's going to wonder what happens in an Olympics," five-time Olympic champion Eric Heiden said. "He looked good at the start, he was right on the mark, but then he got tight again."
As soon as he skidded, Jansen's wife, Robin, turned away. Seated midway down the stretch among nearly two dozen family members and friends, she reached up and hugged
Jansen's older brother, Jim. She never saw the end of the race.
Great as yesterday's disappointment might have been, it hardly compared to the sorrow Jansen felt six years ago at the Calgary Games, when his sister, Jane Beres, died of leukemia on the morning of his 500-meter race.
When it came time to skate, he fell Four days later, he fell again, in the 1,000-meter race. At Albertville two years ago, he skated tentatively through the third turn when a sprint to the finish might have won the race; He stayed on his skates, but finished fourth.
This time it didn't appear that anything could stop Jansen. He came to Lillehammer owning the four fastest times in the world at 500 meters and was the only man ever to have gone the distance in under 36 seconds.
"I don't know what it is about the Olympics — maybe there's too much emphasis about these few races," said Gerry Jansen, Dan's mother.
Luge crash ends American's hopes
By John Kekis
The Associated Press
LILLEHAMMER, Norway — Duncan Kennedy was on the run of his life, careening through the labyrinth of the 16-turn Hunderefossen course. The sound of his steel runners reverberated through the frigid morning air as he approached the final stretch.
Suddenly, in a flash of steel and ice, Kennedy's sled bounced off both walls, and the ride was over on Turn 13. So were America's hopes for its first huge medal.
"Ithought, 'Oh no. No!' I knew it was over." he said.
tightly and managed to glide to a stop, but his Olympic hopes were in tatters, like his new blue racing suit.
"I'm still in shock," Kennedy said. A bronze medal seemed to be within Kennedy's reach after Armin Zoggeler of Italy, who was third Sunday, brushed the wall at the start of his first run, losing valuable time.
Kennedy, who was in fourth place after Sunday's first two runs, lost control of his sled on his third run yesterday as it neared the bottom of the course at an 80 mph clip. He held on
"I carried too much pressure into 13," Kennedy said after he limped off the track. "It caught up with me on the straightaway.
"I was going for the track record. I knew the track was fast, and I knew it was going to be tough to beat Hackl and Prock. That's the way it goes."
World champion Wendel Suckow's fifth-place finish was the best U.S. showing since Kennedy's 10th-place finish at the 1992 Games in Albertville, France.
Kennedy was confident and composed after Sunday's runs, his best performance in three Olympics.
Germany's Georg Hackl and Austria's Markus Prock shattered the track record in their duel for the top spot. Hackl emerged with the gold, Prock the silver.
"My attitude going into the race was to attack, and I did that," said Kennedy, the U.S. team leader from Lake Placid, N.Y. "It's really hard to say what happened. Maybe I tensed up a little bit."
Runner-up to Prock on the World Cup tour this year, Kennedy became something of a hero when he was beaten up by racist thugs last fall in Oberhof, Germany, while trying to protect his black teammate, Robert Pipkins.
The Malaysian Student Association of Kansas University
proudly presents
Malaysian Cultural Night'94
On Saturday, 19th of February,
the Malaysian students will take you on a trip to a land 10,650 miles from here.
Together, WE WILL JOURNEYTOOURLAND
Featured presentations:
LION DANCE CHINESE DANCE
CHINESE DANCE
DIKIR BARAT (a Malaychanting ceremony)
TRADITIONAL MALAY WEDDING CEREMO
A TRADITIONAL COSTUME PARADE
CEREMONIAL SONG
NY MALAY DANCE
GREETINGS AND GRANDFINALE
and last but not least, AN ETHNIC DINNER prepared by the students.
VENUE: ECUMENICAL CHRISTIAN MINISTRIES(ECM)Church Bldg.)
1204 OREAD (across the street from Crossings)
DATE: SATURDAY, FEB. 19TH
DATE:SATURDAY,FEB.19TH
TIME:6:00PM
TIME: 6:00PM
Tickets available at SUA office. Adult: $8 Children: $4 or call Winston 842-4663 Kim 832-2733 Co-sponsored by STUDENTSENATE
NEW EXTENDED HOURS for your convenience
ANNOUNCING
Sat. 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Fri. 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
Sun. 12:00 p.m.-4:00 p.m.
Mon. - Thur. 8:00 a.m.-7:00 p.m.
S
Jayhawk Bookstore
1420 Crescent Rd.·Lawrence, Ks. 66044
(913)843-3826
only at the top of Naismith Hill!
STUDY ABROAD in Copenhagen
-Where Europe is a little different!
- Excellent academic programs taught in English
- KU credit for courses in:
Humanities and social sciences International Business Architecture and Design Marine Environmental Studies
- Meet the DiS Director, Anders Uhrskov
- $1,000 DiS Scholarships and KU financial aid available
Monday and Tuesday February 14th and 15th 10a.m.-4p.m. Informational Table Kansas Union Talk to KU Program Returnees
DiS Denmark's International Study Program
333
Affiliated with the University of Copenhagen
For more information: Contact KU office of STUDY ABROAD-203 Lippincott
FEATURES: College-age women may be avoiding health-care precautions that could change their lives. Page 9.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.103,NO.102
KANSAS STATE
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA KS 66612
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1994
Student faces expulsion from hall
Anti-homosexual signs trigger action
Dan Murrow did not think that he should have to move to a different residence hall for openly expressing his feelings.
By Susan White
Kansan staff writer
"I stood up for my beliefs, and now I am being forced to relocate to Oliver Hall," said Murrow, Kansas City, Kan., freshman.
But Murrow's feelings led to his posting anti-homosexual drawings on his door in Templin Hall in response to having a homosexual resident assistant — and the Department of Student Housing says such drawings violate housing codes.
Morrow said the department had ordered him on Thursday to leave Templin after
finding signs on his door Nov. 16 and Dec.9 that expressed negative feelings toward homosexuals.
"The first sign said 'Homosexuals suck,'" he said. "The second sign, which I did not hang up, said, 'For Abolishing Gay Guys of Temple,' and had a supposed sexually graphic illustration on it. They are also saying that the first letters of each word stand for something."
But Murrow said he did not think that the department had justification for moving him from Templin. He said the charges filed against him violated rights guaranteed to him by the Student Bill of Rights, which is printed in the Spring 1994 Timetable of Classes. He said the Freedom of Protest article assured him the right to peacefully protest within the University community if he was not obstructing the safety of others.
Murrow also said that the bill guaranteed him the right to a fair hearing to respond to
the charges filed against him.
He said he did not have that hearing. Instead, Murrow said, he was instructed to meet with Jim Schmaedeke, director of Templin, during finals week in December to discuss the issue.
On Thursday, Murrow received a letter from Jonathan Long, assistant director of Templin, stating that he would have to move out Friday because of the Dec. 9 incident. However, he said, he was not notified of being on probation for the Nov. 16 incident until the same Friday.
According to the Student Housing Handbook, the University does not tolerate racial or sexual harassment, such as explicit signs, at any time. But students are
"I received the letter telling me that I was on probation on the same day that I received the reprimand for the Dec. 9 incident," he said. "Being kicked out came as a shock to me."
guaranteed a disciplinary meeting to respond to any harassment allegations placed against them.
The Department of Student Housing declined to comment yesterday.
Tom Berger, associate director of the Office of Affirmative Action, said that he could not discuss the Murrow case but that in most sexual harassment cases his office would do one of two things.
"If we were handling the case, we would try to solve things at the lowest possible level," he said. "If the situation was being handled by another administrative entity, we might help or just be supportive."
Murrow had planned to appeal his case to the department today, but because of administrative scheduling problems, the hearing was changed to a later date. Murrow will be allowed to stay in Templin until further notice, according to a letter he received from the department.
Jonathan Conrad, St. Louis senior, proposed to Kelly Reynolds, St. Louis junior, in an advertisement that was printed Monday — St.Valentine's Day — in the Kansan.
The couple in the image are seated closely together, facing each other and kissing. They appear to be in a relaxed, intimate setting with a modern architectural background featuring large windows and brick structures. The lighting is soft, highlighting their expressions and the details of their clothing.
Martin Altstaedten/KANSAN
A PERSONAL AD THAT GETS RESULTS
Proposal answered with definite 'Yes'
By Cheryl Cadue
Kansan staff writer
For Jonathan Conrad, St. Louis senior,
placing an ad in the newspaper may never
get the same results.
Conrad's ad, which ran in the Kansan on Monday — St. Valentine's Day — said, "Kelly, please be mine forever! Will you marry me? I will love you forever, J.B.P. S.
Look in your backpack."
However, Conrad did not get immediate results from the intended reader.
"He asked if anything interesting was in the paper, and I said, 'No, not really,'" said Kelly Reynolds, St. Louis junior. "He opened up the paper, and I just died."
Conrad said he had waited for Reynolds
Reynolds said that they had chosen the ring, which he had hidden in her backpack, about a year ago but that she did not know when Conrad would pop the question.
"I had a lot of ideas," Conrad said. "I thought this one would surprise her the most, and she was very surprised."
after her astronomy class to see whether she had read the ad.
Conrad once had a wafer surprise her with her birthday gift by coming to the table with her gift on a platter, Reynolds said. But the ring was a bigger surprise.
"I didn't see it," Reynolds said. "I even looked at the picture that was next to it and read the caption. I was really happy. I didn't expect it at all, and I was kind of crying."
"On Friday, he bought me a new dress and suggested we have dinner Saturday night to celebrate Valentine's Day," Reynolds said. "I thought for sure he would ask me then, but he didn't. I was
really down, and when I'm down I try not to let myself set that excited again."
Reynolds said she and Conrad, who had been dating for about three years, had known each other since the third grade.
"We went to grade school, junior high and high school together, but we never met until a friend's high-school graduation party," Reynolds said. "We started talking, went out and fell in love."
Reynolds said the wedding would take place in the summer of 1966 after she and Conrad graduated. "I think we're both a little nervous but very happy," Reynolds said. "I think we'll be together for a long time."
Hillel group shows support for BosniAid
By Jamie Munn Kansan staff writer
A video of Sarajevo 10 years ago showed the glory of the 1984 Winter Olympics.
But a few frames later, the video showed a Sarajevo where athletic fields had become battlefields.
About 50 KU students and Lawrence citizens gathered last night in silence to watch the video and a panel discussion for BosnAid, a humanitarian relief fund for refugees in the former Yugoslavia. The fund is sponsored by the Hillel Foundation, a national Jewish student organization.
Hillel raised more than $100 for BosnAid at the discussion, said Steve Jacobson, president of KU Hillel.
Jacobson said the basis for BosniAid was to provide a respectful and informative discussion about the events in the former Yugoslavia.
"In this war, as in any war, there are victims on every side of the conflict." he said.
Jasminka Hadzimejim, a member of the panel who was born and grew up in Sarajevo, said that she didn't like talking politics but that it was difficult to avoid when talking about the conflict.
"Bosnia, as a multicultural region, still exists," Hadzimejlic said. "I hope it will endure this and remain tolerant and open for humanity and human relationships."
Jasminka's husband, Sakir, said he agreed. He said Bosnians were tired of the fighting.
William March, assistant professor of Russian and Eastern European studies, said the vast majority of people in the former Yugoslavia got along.
"It's up to you to say 'No' to fascism, or you will be next," he said. "Now is the time to fight; there is no more time."
He compared the rebel Serbs to extremist racists in the American South.
"This war has been about ethnic cleansing, but I can see the light at the end of the tunnel," March said. "But mark my words, the war has been won by those who want a multiethnic society."
He also said that the tide had turned in the fighting and that he expected that trials for war crimes would be extensive.
"We, I, Serbians condemn all these atrocities of the perpetrators," she said. "Yet, at the same time, we all wonder, 'Where is the regard for the Serbian victims?'"
But Pavichevich Harkins, national coordinator of the Serbian American Information Network, criticized the lack of fairness in the media coverage of the conflict.
Harkins said Serbs had been blamed for much of the conflict's ethnic cleansing but that they had been driven from their homes, too.
"The most tragic thing that has happened in this conflict is that it never had to happen," she said.
Hillel still is accepting donations for BosniAid.
Week named for Rock Chalk
Kansan staffreport
The Lawrence City Commission last night proclaimed the week of Feb. 20 to 26 "Rock Chalk Revue Weck."
Julie Thies, Overland Park senior and executive director for Rock Chalk Revue, said the show provided both entertainment and benefits for the community and the University.
"All the money raised goes to the United Way," Thies said. "Support of the show is support for the community."
Greek houses, scholarship halls and residence halls perform stage shows during the annual threeday run of Rock Chalk, the ticket sales from which go the United Way of Douglas County. Rock Chalk has donated more than $10,000 to the United Way, and its participants have completed more than 25,000 hours of community service in the last three years, according to the Rock Chalk organization.
Rock Chalk will run Feb. 24, 25 and 26 at 7:30 p.m.
INSIDE
18
Almost, but not quite The No. 15 Kansas women's tennis team lost to the No.1 Texas Longhorns yesterday 6-3.
Page 11.
Speedy tax refunds can tax students' checkbooks
By Cheryl Cadue
Kansan staff writer
Quicker responses mean higher prices for returns
Getting an income tax refund can be quick, but some may find the quick refund costly.
"The faster you want your refund, the more expensive filing will be," said Pat Derksen, office supervisor for H&R Block Executive Tax Service, 738-C New Hampshire St. "It really depends on the person's circumstances, how much they're getting back and how much they need it."
Derksen said the quickest way to get a refund was through a Refund Anticipation Loan—or Rapid Refund, as it is commonly known—and then filling the return electronically.
Depending on how complicated a customer's tax returns are, the fee for completing the returns varies. At H&R Block, the cost for completing simple forms ranges from $25 to $30, Derksen said.
With Rapid Refund, the anticipated amount of the refund is loaned by a bank to the customer for a set fee. The Internal Revenue Service then sends the customer's actual refund check to the bank, Derksen said.
A bank will not loan money if the anticipated return is less than $300 or more than $3,000. Derksen said. H&R Block's fee for electronic filing is $30, and the bank's fee is $29.
Without Rapid Refund, electronic filing takes from two to three weeks before the refund check is available, Derksen said.
"About 85 percent of the returns we've done have been electronically filed, and an awful lot of people do the Rapid Refund," Derksen said.
With electronic filing, Taylor said, the refund check can be deposited directly into the customer's savings or checking account if the customer filed electronically in the past.
Chris Taylor, employee at The Mail Box,
3115 W. Sixth St., said that for most people
who filped electronically, the cost was about
$30.
"Electronic filing might not be best if you're not getting a lot back or if you don't need it," Taylor said. "In some cases, you might as well put a 29-cent stamp on your return and mail it."
Taylor said that between 30 and 40 people have filed electronically this year at The Mail Box and that he expected the number to double before the April 15 income tax deadline.
Because most people find electronic filing easier than mailing the return, the IRS encourages electronic filing to reduce the amount of paper used. Derksen said.
Lesstaxing
1040 1993
14.6 KWh Per Unit Income Tax Rates
For no consultation charge, KU students looking for help filling out income tax forms can find help at:
Penn House—1035 Pennsylvania St. Open Monday, Wednesday and Friday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
**Indian Center of Lawrence**
= 1423 Haskell Ave, Open
Tuesday and Thursday from
11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
School of Law — Green Hall.
Open Sunday through Thursday from 7 to 9 p.m. and Saturday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Help for international students is available.
KANSAN
2
Wednesday, February 16, 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-FintHalt, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
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ON CAMPUS
OAKS — Non-Traditional Students Organization will have a brown bag lunch at 11:30 a.m. today at Alcove in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Gerry Murray at 864-7317.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today at Danforth Chapel
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a Catholic law student discussion group following Mass at 1:10 p.m. today at Alcove B in the Kansas Union. For more information, call the center at 843-0357.
The Office of Spanish Study
Abroad will sponsor an informational meeting at 3:30p.m. today at 4048 Wescoe Hall. For more information, call Ellen Hart Strubert at 864-3742.
The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor a Rotary Foundation Scholarship Information meeting at 3:30 p.m. to today at 109 Lippincott Hall. For more information, call Mary Debicki at 864-3742.
The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an informational meeting about study abroad in Great Britain at 4 p.m. today at 3 Lippincott Hall. For more information, call Nancy Mitchell at 864-3742.
The Office of Study Abroad/ Western Civilization Program will sponsor an informational meeting about study abroad for Western Civilization credit at 4 p.m. today at 2085 Wescoe Hall. For more information, call Nancy Mitchell at 864-3742.
Anthropology Club will meet
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.
Literary Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at Alcove B in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Juliu Miluna at 864-258-259.
KU Environs will meet at 6 p.m. today at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Amy Trainer at 841-4484.
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 Water Polo Club will meet at 7 tonight at Robinson Natatorium. For more information, call David Reynolds at 841-6475 or Nick Pivonka at 841-6197.
KU Sailing Club will meet at 7:30 tonight at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Tom Conrad at 841-4597.
- 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 tonight at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Ena Wheeler at 865-2459.
Weather around the country:
WEATHER
Atlanta: 59'/40'
Chicago: 40'/20'
Houston: 65'/45'
Miami: 79'/67'
Minneapolis: 37'/14'
Phoenix: 81'/52'
Salt Lake City: 50'/26'
Seattle: 55'/45'
Omaha: 53'/21'
LAWRENCE: 58'/26'
Kansas City: 58'/28'
St. Louis: 51'/28'
Wichita: 60'/27'
Tulsa: 60'/36'
TODAY
Tomorrow Fridav
High: 58*
Low: 26*
Sunny and warmer
High: 62° Low: 35°
Sunny
Source: Jeff Brandberg, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
KANSAN
ON THE RECORD
- Someone knocked a toilet paper dispenser off a bathroom wall on the sixth floor of Malott Hall around 8 a.m. Monday, KU police reported.
There was a false report Sunday of a GMC four-wheel drive vehicle being stolen, KU police reported.
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DON'T MISSOUT ON YOUR OPPORTUNITY TO SEE YOUR JAYHAWKSMEN'S BASKETBALL TEAM CLASH WITH THE ARCHRIVAL MISSOURI TIGERS.
STUDENT'S TICKETS STILL REMAIN FOR THIS FIERCE INTERSTATE BATTLE COME TO THE ATHLETIC TICKET OFFICE IN THE EAST LOBBY OF ALLEN FIELDHOUSE (8:00 - 5:00) TO PURCHASE YOUR TICKET FOR THIS BIG GAME. TICKETS COST ONLY THREE DOLLARS ($3).
** Students with coupons may still redeem those for this game as well.
** You must have a red SPRING 1994 fee sticker on your KUID to purchase tickets or redeem coupons.
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CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, February 16, 1994
3
Arabic students band together
Coalition strives to bring culture language to KU
By Denise Nell
Kansan staff writer
Samer Sawalha wants the Arabic language to be taught at the University.
Last semester, Sawalha and a few friends decided to band together to make themselves heard about the issue. They called the group they formed the Coalition of Arab and American students.
"We were looking around, and there were all kinds of organizations for other international groups," said Sawalha, Amman, Jordan, senior and president of the group. "We thought it was a good idea. We have goals we want to achieve, and the only way to achieve them is to be heard by the University."
Tatiana Nasser, staff member for the Athletic Department and a member of the group, is a first-generation Arab. She said that because she had grown up in the United States, she needed a way to explore her heritage and language.
"I feel kind of at a disadvantage for not knowing how to speak it," she said. "I should know how to speak it fluently, and I don't. The more you know about where you came from, the prouder you can be of it."
Nasser said the group soon would start a petition asking the University to offer a basic course in Arabic. She said the group already had contacted graduate students who would be interested in teaching the course. Now, she said, the group has to prove that there would be student interest in such a course.
The group tries to raise student interest in the Arabic culture by providing an information table every Friday on the fourth floor of the
UNITED TO BE HEARD
Kansas Union. At the table, members pass out information about Arabic countries and filers that show the basics of the Arabic language.
But providing the money to pay for these fliers has proven difficult for the group. Luai Alahmad, Amman sophomore and the group's treasurer, said the group had been denied financing by Student Senate because it was too similar to the Middle East Club, which already had been financed.
The group had to install a $5 a year membership fee to help cover expenses. Since those funds are being depleted quickly, costs for photocopying often come out of the members' pockets.
Alahmad said the group had submitted another proposal to Senate and would try to get financing for the fall semester.
In addition to working toward language classes, Sawalha said, the group also works to make students who come to the University from Arabic countries feel more comfortable. The group will help students who have difficulties with things such as housing and language. Recently, he said, the group arranged overnight lodging for two Arabic students who commute daily from the Kansas City area and had missed the bus home.
The group contributed money to help finance last semester's speech by Lella Diab, a Palestinian woman who advocates women's rights. Now, the group is trying to organize an information table for the Festival of Nations celebration, which will take place later this semester.
Nasser said the main goal of the group was to educate people about the Arabic culture.
"We want people to grow aware of the Arab world," she said. "A lot of people don't know about different countries and cultures. They just lump together. It's not out of being mean, they just don't know."
50
Martin Altstaedten/KANSAN
Jon Holmberg, Lawrence sophomore, enjoys the weather while reading for pleasure. Yesterday's warm weather enticed students to take a minute to relax between classes.
Pleasure reading
Desire to help elderly inspires man
A. M. ROSNER
60-year-old earning his doctoral degree
Martin Altstaedten/KANSAN
By Heather Moore Kansan staff writer
Gary Burdsall, Lawrence doctoral student, is nearing completion of his doctorate in exercise physiology with a concentration in gerontology.
It's like winning an Olympic medal, but Gary Burdulsall couldn't be farther from Norway.
This medal wasn't for skating or skiing but for realizing his long-time goal — helping the elderly.
"For me, getting a Ph.D. is like winning the gold," said Burdals, who will be earning his doctorate this year in exercise physiology with a concentration in gerontology.
Burdils, however, has a different leap to make — because he chose to return to the classroom when he was 60 years old.
He said that he had chosen to go back to school because he wanted to work with the elderly. He was encouraged by Wayne Osnes, head of the department of health, physical education and recreation.
"When I first decided to come back, I talked to Dr. Osness, who encouraged me," Burdsall said. "Dr. Osness was pleased that an older person would choose to come back to school. I felt that I
should get as much education as the University could offer."
"He had an idea to provide for the physical health of the elderly, and he achieved it," he said.
Burdsl said that his friends had never thought that he would
"I didn't think it would be difficult," he said. "I shot for a goal, and I achieved it. It was unusual to be back in class. Other students looked like they wondered what I was doing there."
go back to school.
In September, Burdsallbegana program with elderly people in Wellsville, Richmond and
Ottawa. Burdsall said that he had developed the course and had tailored it to educate the elderly. The program consisted of one hour of education in nutrition, fitness, accident prevention and medical self-care. The participants applied what they had learned during the other two hours of the program.
Burdsall said that he had a lot of pride in the people whom he had helped.
"In all the cities, people have a greater desire to exercise with others and on their own," he said.
Burdssall said that elderly people often didn't realize their physical needs.
"I'm trying to stimulate older people and to help them watch their own health," he said. "I got the idea from President Clinton talking about preventive education."
In the future, Burdsall said, he wants to continue to work with the elderly.
"Ihope to teach the elderly and design a lifestyle-training program for them," he said. "I want to educate the elderly on what to do with themselves and on the importance of physical exercise. If we can keep one person from falling down, then we've accomplished what we wanted."
Alternative funds sought for expansion of Watkins
By Ashley Schultz
Kansanstaffwriter
Graduate Student Senate yesterday moved to make a recommendation at tonight's full Student Senate meeting to see whether an alternative to the proposed $15 Watkins Memorial Health Center expansion fee was possible.
The $15 fee, which would be added to student fees, would finance an addition to the facility. But one graduate senator said he was worried that the fee, coupled with fee proposals, might overwhelm students.
Gardner said that each fee should be considered separately but that all the fees would add up.
Some graduate senators said they were hesitant to act because they felt underinformed about the proposal.
If the motion is not seconded at the Senate meeting, the graduate senate is considering drafting a bill that would put the fee proposal to a student referendum vote.
But Arthur Yudelson, graduate student senator and a member of the student health advisory board, said that if the bill were put to a referendum vote in the current economic climate, it would be killed.
The current student fee responsible for Watkins was a result of a student referendum more than 20 years ago.
Lynette Penya Sharp, president of the graduate senate, said that it was her impression
that Senate would pass the expansion bill. She said that alternative fund-raising efforts had raised money for other building construction projects.
Other concerns raised at the meeting included the possible effects of the proposed Kansas Health Plan and the impending Clinton health-care plan. The possibility that financing for Watkins may change if the health plans pass also was considered.
Gardner also questioned the need for the expansion, given the fall semester's Watkins satisfaction poll, which registered an approval rating of more than 95 percent for the health center.
The Jan. 26 finance committee meeting gave Jeff Bottenberg, graduate senator and a member of the finance committee, the impression that, although there is no pressing need for expansion, there will be in the future.
"If we don't plan now, then we are going to be stuck in the future. And they want to take advantage of the interest rates," he said.
Taking advantage of today's low interest rates for the project would mean savings of millions, according to the finance committee.
The bill is unlikely to appear on the agenda of tonight's Senate meeting. The intent of the delay is to allow the expansion bill and a bill for women's and non-revenue athletics to go before the Senate at the same time, said Tonya Cole, sponsor of the Watkins bill.
After tonight, the next Senate meeting will be March 2.
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Wednesday, February 16, 1994
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Trade restrictions hurt Japan and United States
Watch your head. The United States and Japan once again are throwing rotten eggs at each other over the latest trade dispute. Unfortunately the citizens on both sides are caught in the crossfire.
The latest disagreement came after trade talks between the world's two largest trading nations ended abruptly Saturday. Both countries are right, but both countries are also wrong.
The United States claims that Japan unfairly restricts trade into their island nation. This is largely true. Subsidies and trade restrictions put rice prices seven times higher in Japan than in the United States. Similar restrictions hold true for a variety of goods ranging from vegetables to electronics.
However, the United States is wrong to demand that Japan buy certain numbers of cars, parts and other goods. Forced trade really is not trade at all. The best example involves car sales to Japan. When President Bush went to Japan with the Big Three automotive presidents, they demanded that Japan buy more U.S. cars. Too bad the U.S. companies were not building any with the steering wheel on the right side. Otherwise the Japanese might want them.
For a nation based on trade, Japan should not have such extreme trade barriers. However they should not be expected to abide by the forced trade guidelines that the United States is demanding.
Both sides need to adjust their position and move closer to "true" free trade. This means a reduction or elimination of trade barriers by both sides as well as eliminating the so-called "numerical indicators" that the United States demands.
If these changes are made the impending trade war will be avoided. Otherwise the consumers of both nations will pay the price, with egg all over their faces.
RICHARD BOYD FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
War crimes must wait; ending war is priority
Most people know of the horrors in Bosnia. More than 200,000 people dead. Rapes and executions of civilians. One response by the United Nations is the establishment of a war crimes tribunal. Unfortunately, the tribunal is wallowing in its own internal problems.
In February 1993, the U.N. Secretary Council unanimously voted to establish the tribunal. Its hope was to redress the wrongs incurred by victims of the war and to punish those responsible for the "ethnic cleansing."
A year later, the tribunal lacks a chief prosecutor. Its compromise choice, Ramon Escovar Salom, quit before beginning the job. In addition, the tribunal has no investigators and no final budget.
The problems cut deeper when the tribunal is compared with the last War Crimes Tribunal, which took place in Nuremberg after World War II. The investigations involved about 1,000 prosecutors and investigators. The present tribunal has an initial staff of 45. A more general problem with the tribunal concerns timing. How will the accused be brought to trial while war continues? It is doubtful that criminals will emerge peacefully and wait to be sentenced to life in jail.
Also, who is to be tried? Evidence suggests that war crimes in the Bosnian conflict have been committed on both sides. Do we punish both sides, or only the side that loses?
No one would dispute the notion that war crimes need to be punished. But spending time and money on issues that cannot be resolved effectively until after the war does not help end the war.
NATHAN OLSON FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Belching is an art form for some, but others don't have the talent
COLUMNIST
Greetings, fellow Earthlings. As you may have noticed by now, our Biosphere is in the grip of a deadly social malaise, a faux pas that is as widespread and common as pocket lint. You know what I'm talking about. Yes, it's The Belch.
Belches are apparently man's way of expressing his innermost feelings and something akin to armpit noises. There is the self-satisfied, resounding belch; the disgruntled, angry belch; the surprised, amused belch (which is usually higher in pitch than the other two), and so on and so forth. But belches are not confined to the masculine sphere. Women can do the deed as well as men no matter how hard Miss Manners pleads.
ALISHA
AROR
Belches can make or break a relationship. I know of a rocky relationship that finally broke up over belching habits. She did, and he didn't.
I personally am a nonbelicher, much to my gastrointestinal relief. I cannot make myself "expel gas noisily from the stomach through the mouth," as the American Heritage Dictionary
being modest. You can't just learn something like that. You've got to have it in you. And she definitely has something.
defines the occurrence.
My roommate, on the other hand, is an avid belcher. She belches whenever she can, honing her talent and transforming it into an art form. No less dedicated than Picasso, no less prolific than Shakespeare, she zealously coaxes her digestive tract into bubbling, melodious expulsions of gas that vary dramatically in tone and pitch. My roommate is the only person in the world that I know who can burp the ABCs. She said that she learned it from a childhood friend and that anyone can do it. She even offered to teach me. But I think she's
I remember one particular morning when my Marvin the Martian alarm clock couldn't blast through the dense fog surrounding my skull. My roommate, irate at being woken up two hours early by a little Martian belowing, "WAKE UP EARTHLING! YOU HAVEN'T GOT ALL LIGHT YEAR!" screamed at me (politely, I'm sure) to turn it off. I still didn't wake up.
So my ever resourceful roommate opened her mouth and let loose a belch loud enough, deep enough and long enough to leave cracks in the walls and a funky smell in the closets. I woke up.
Another friend of mine has the most amazing ability to let forth horrendous belches without even being aware of it. I don't think Fred notices because he doesn't even let it break his rhythm if he burps while he's talking.
FRED: Yeah, I was so hungry, I ate two bags of stuff from Taco Bell in B-E-L-C-H less than a minute. Ahh.
ME (cringing) : Oh. Did it taste?
good?
FRED : B-U-R-P. Are you kidding? I didn't taste any of it. Wait, now I kind of do.
It's not that I don't enjoy hurrying people's stomach contents gurgling in the recesses of their digestive tracts. I realize, that eructation, as the sport is called by the National Belching Association, is a natural process. $ ^{4} $
I suppose that belching contests may be a vital form of entertainment in parts of the world where eating utensils are unknown. But it just tends to startle and disgust me.
I guess the problem is that I'm jealous. I cannot belch effectively, and that makes me feel like less of a per son around believers. So, I'll stop complaining now. I've got a date with a six-pack of Dr. Pepper.
Allisha Arora is an Overland Park freshman in biology and English.
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Lack of integrity an inexcusable trait
The integrity, or lack thereof, of a future commander-in-chief was not on my mind as I lay on a tank's frontal armor. I wanted to get some sleep before the predawn attack, and I had wrapped my poncho around myself to stay warm. The Mojave Desert's cold night wind tugged at me. The tank's gunner worked quietly. He was making sure the gun and sight were properly aligned.
COLUMNIST
The gunner also had a little radio set up so I could hear, appropriately enough, U2's "The Joshua Tree." In the distance we could hear the muffled booms of artillery simulators exploding in an attempt to make the pre-attack artillery barrage as realistic as possible.
ALLEN TIFFANI
Another soldier walked over, and we started talking. He told me he was from Wisconsin. After I told him I had attended KU in the early '80s, he said he knew a woman who had gone to school there. I was surprised to find out that I knew her well. We agreed that she was an impressive person who everyone had liked. He told me she had been on their high school's student council. I was not surprised.
This woman had a long and consistent record of honesty and integrity.
A few months later, I was sitting in Berlin's Olympic Stadium watching the Germans around me cheering the cheerleaders on the sidelines of one of the NFL exhibition games. I was there with an old friend who was working in Berlin. He asked me if I knew a certain fellow who had gone to KU many years ago. I was surprised to find that, again, I did. He bluntly stated that he had no respect for this man. He said that my old alumnus was a liar, was unreliable and, apparently, an alcoholic. I reported that the fellow had not changed much. The man we were talking about had a long and
These experiences reaffirmed several things I have long believed. First, people are not inclined to change their basic nature. It also reminded me that when a person compromises his or her integrity, there is little prospect of salvaging one's reputation. This is especially true precisely because it is such a small world.
More important and to the point, lying and unethical conduct by adults can never be tolerated or reinforced.
consistent history of sordid behavior.
So, I am perplexed by those who thought that Bill Clinton would change his nature once in office. Many people have told me they voted for Slick Willie because he was the least distasteful of the three major candidates last time around. Though I find that argument compelling, it does not excuse the wishful, nearly delusional thinking of those who thought Clinton would inherit a greater degree of integrity and intellectual fidelity when he inherited the Presidential Seal.
Now, the question must be whether Clinton is capable of intellectual integrity. He seems no more wedded
to any philosophy than he is to his wife. It seems the only thing Clinton, like Bush before him, may believe is that it is acceptable to do whatever it takes to remain in power.
Whether you agree with the particular policies of the candidates from the party you normally support, I think it an inexcusable act to vote for one who is known to lack integrity. Though I normally vote for Libertarian candidates, I would not vote for a Libertarian I knew to lack integrity. It is my hope that in future elections such embarrassing individuals as Clinton will not be elected.
What we need in this country is some good, old-fashioned intolerance for those who transgress basic ethical standards. And I am not talking about some sophisticated, complex and convoluted, culturally- or religiously-defined ethical paradigm. It seems to me the succinct, good, old-fashioned standard will do: "I will not lie, cheat or steal. Nor will I tolerate those who do."
Allen Tiffany is a Lawrence graduate student in English.
KANSAN STAFF
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TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
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Letters should be type, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Alabama will be required to submit proofs of identity.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Karan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Karan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
Format changes don't serve KJHK's purpose
I join the growing numbers of students, faculty, staff and community members who are appalled by the policy changes affecting KJHK's play list. Jay Berberick, program director, stated in the *Kansan*, "We have to pay attention to the LAZER [KLZR], but we don't have to let them tell us how to program." It seems to me that Jay has misunderstood the popularity of the LAZER and is in fact allowing it to influence KJHK's programming.
The LAZER plays Top 40 alternative-lite music. Nothing offensive, nothing thought-provoking. The success of KLZR is due to the ground breaking college radio stations have done in the last 15 years to bring alternative music to the mainstream.
Ispoke with Jay about the play list.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
and he told me KJHK cut it to single out "the best of the best alternative music." (Hmm, like the LAZER?) College radio should not be following commercial radio's lead. It is the other way around.
Jay's defender, Scott Parks, stated in the Feb. 10 Kansan, "He [Jay] is forced to compete with the newly-found cross-town rival KLZR for the 'alternative market.' I'm not sure I understand why would we want two similar "alternative" stations playing the best of the best.
To further his case, Scott also states that KJHK "should be a model for the students of what they may find on the outside, a world where the program directors tell you what song to play and when..." Wait a minute. When was college ever like the real world? Where does individual expression, experimentation and, oh yes, learning come into the college experience?
The disc jockeys are the people
who put Lawrence and KJHK on the map. Each DJ has brought to the station personal preferences, moods and dissimilar backgrounds that made them grow into individuals with style. (And by the way, adults capable of making choices for listeners.)
To strip the play list at KJHK is to lose the very essence of college radio, the non-commercial freedom enjoyed by the DJs to play a lot of music no one has ever heard before.
If you also disagree with the new
I understand you're working hard Jay, but if you want to run a radio station, perhaps you should go get a job in the real world where you can, as your friend Scott put it, ".tell [DJS] what to play and when, what to say and how to say it."
I may bit a bit biased in all this, being a radio-television-film graduate and an avid listener for 15 years, but I believe these new policies have no place on a progressive campus.
programming, let someone know.
Drop a line to the general manager,
Tim Mensenick, at 2073 Dole, or
call 864.0603
Let KJHK remain the sound alternative.
Laura Green
Academic User Services Consultant, Computer Center
Ploy to deflect attention from gun control 'clever'
It is not so bizarre for Bob Dole to advocate gun buybacks. Gun buybacks deflect the average citizen from the real problem, which is needed gun control.
The Republicans can point to the way gun buybacks seem to be working so well and therefore, there is no need for gun control. Very clever.
Ann Blackhurst
Lawrence resident
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, February 16, 1994
5
No coupon needed: Stores offer discounts for KUIDs
By Heather Moore Kansan staff writer
Students no longer need coupons to get discounts at some Lawrence businesses.
Now, all they need are their KUIDs.
University Affairs, a Student Senate committee that represents all students, created a task force in October that called Lawrence businesses and arranged discounts for KU students. Now, about 30 businesses offer discounts.
Lisa Golzar, liberal arts and sciences senator and a volunteer for University Affairs, said the service was easy to use.
Golzar said she hoped that the service would grow in the next few years. Jennifer Edwards, University Affairs member, said the KUID discount would be something students could use for a long time.
"Anything that helps the student is good," she said.
"We decided to put out a pamphlet that would offer student discounts without having to carry coupons
around," she said. "You always have your ID, so you always have a discount. It's also a little free advertising for the businesses."
Jessica Bobker, Numemaker senator, said this was an easy way to give something to students. She said the service would help low-income students as well as those who just want to save money.
Bobker said the businesses that didn't support the discount already had offered other discounts to KU students.
"It benefits students because they aren't exactly well-off," she said. "Students need a break. We all look for the cheaper stuff anyway."
"Most of them were at least polite and understand the plight of students," she said. "If they couldn't help, they already had coupon offers."
Sherman Reeves, Interfraternity Council senator and University Affairs chair, said the group would produce a pamphlet in the next few days that would explain which businesses offered discounts.
Pamphlets will be available at the
Kansas Union, in newspaper distribution boxes around campus and in student housing facilities. Reeves said.
"Students spend a lot of money in Lawrence," he said. "We wanted to find out what businesses realized this and would give students a break."
The pamphlets will be paid for out of Senate's internal budget. Reeves said.
Reeves said that there had been problems with some businesses.
"Businesses are inundated with requests for discounts and coupons," he said. "They were concerned with us being another coupon scheme."
"We plan to print about 500 pamphlets to begin with," he said. "The amount depends on responses and needs."
Village Inn Pancake House Restaurant, 821 Iowa St., offers a 10 percent discount for students when they show their KUIDs. Sunshine Loyd, a hostess at the restaurant, said students used the discount often.
"We do this to show our appreciation for students," she said.
Media giant acquires Paramount
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Viacom clinched a hard-fought victory yesterday for Paramount Communications, sending rival sponsor QVC Network into defeat after a five-month takeover brawl.
But Viacom Inc., a cable-channel operator, now faces more problems — running the huge entertainment and publishing company while completing a planned merger with video-retailer Blockbuster Entertainment Corp.
Viacom's victory was a significant personal achievement for its steely chairman, Sumner Redstone, who vowed from the outset that this corporate marriage would "never be torn asunder."
He defeated a tenacious Barry Diller, who once ran Paramount Pictures and is resolved to build his own interactive multimedia empire using QVC Network Inc., a cable shopping channel, as his base.
Viacom's victory came at great cost. It will have to borrow billions more than originally planned to buy Paramount Communications Inc., which owns a film studio, Simon & Schuster books, Madison Square Garden, the New York Knicks and New York Rangers.
Paramount and Viacom agreed in September on an $8.2 billion cash and stock merger, including about $1.1 billion in cash. The final price is about $10 billion in cash and stocks.
Viacom, owner of MTV, Showtime and Nickelodeon and other cable channels, said that nearly 91.7 million Paramount shares, or about 74.6 percent of the total, were tendered as of midnight yesterday under terms of its buyout offer.
That was well above the 50.1 percent required for Viacom to gain control.
QVC said that its bid had attracted only 10.4 million shares and that it had dropped its tender offer in compliance with bidding rules.
Analysts say Viacom faces a daunting task of reversing the recent disappointing performance of Paramount's moviemaking division and with getting management to refocus after the distraction of watching a bidding war that began just after Labor Day last year.
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Retaliation against Japan planned in trade dispute
U. S. officials made clear that the retaliation planned in the telephone case was just the first in a series of hard-line actions that would be taken following the breakdown of market-opening "framework" talks Friday.
WASHINGTON — The Clinton administration accused Japan yesterday of a "clear-cut and serious" violation of a cellular phone trade agreement and took the first step toward imposing millions of dollars of punitive tariffs.
The Associated Press
U. S. Trade Representative Mickey Kantor refused to discuss what other retaliation was being contemplated, but he left no doubt that the administration planned to keep pressure on Japan to lower its $60 billion trade surplus with America.
"All we're asking for is a two-way street, that their markets be comparably open to our markets," Kantor said.
In the cellular case, Kantor said he had determined that Japan had failed to live up to the terms of a 1989 agreement in which it had
promised to open its cellular phone market to Motorola Inc.
Motorola President Christopher B. Galvin estimated that his company was suffering from $250 million to $300 million annually in lost sales because of Japan's barriers. He praised the administration's actions and expressed hope that Japan would relent so that sanctions would not be necessary.
Kantor said the United States would publish in the next 30 days a list of Japanese products that could be subject to punitive tariffs of up to 100 percent. He refused to say what products would be targeted but said the total would be "several hundred millions of dollars" equal to the sales lost by Motorola.
The higher tariffs would not go into effect until American consumers had a chance to comment on the proposed product list. This will give U.S. and Japanese negotiators a second chance to reach agreement, but U.S. officials say if the issue is not resolved in the next two months, the trade sanctions will take effect.
North Korea to allow review of nuclear work
The Associated Press
VIENNA, Austria — Bowing to increasing international pressure, North Korea agreed yesterday to allow outside inspections of its declared nuclear program under conditions set by a U.N. watchdog agency.
$
But the deal did not cover two sites that Western intelligence agencies suspect are doing nuclear work, and inspectors cautioned that meant that they could not settle the debate about whether North Korea was developing atomic weapons. Negotiations on that issue have made no headway.
The hard-line Communist regime in Pyongyang contends its nuclear program is devoted to peaceful uses of atomic power. But suspicions about North Korea's refusal to allow inspections have increased tensions with South Korea and raised fears of a military confrontation.
The inspection agreement was announced by the International Atomic Energy Agency a week before its board of governors was expected to advise the U.N. Security Council to invoke sanctions on North Korea.
Hans Meyer, representative for the Vienna-based U.N. agency, said North Korea's agreement came after
North Korea had argued that only it should determine when and how inspections be conducted at the seven sites it has identified as part of its nuclear program. The U.N. agency has always made those decisions for inspections in other nations.
months of little progress in talks over terms for the inspections.
"This appears to be a step in the right direction," White House Press Secretary Dee Dee Myers said.
The Clinton administration, which conducted much of the negotiations with North Korea, urged quick inspections to ensure the North Koreans do not secretly divert fissionable nuclear material to weapons work.
"It is a necessary step for the agency to be able to reassure the international community that there has been no diversion of nuclear material," said Michael McCurry, the State Department representative.
He said North Korea also must resume discussions with South Korea about ensuring that nuclear weapons were kept off the Korean peninsula before Washington would resume talks on political and economic ties.
Less formal talks between the United States and North Korea were to resume later yesterday in New York.
ECUMENICAL ASH WEDNESDAY SERVICE
February 16 Danforth Chapel
11:30am
4:30pm
8:30 am
12:30 pm
IMPOSITION OF ASHES WILL BE OFFERED.
Sponsored by American Baptist Campus Ministry, Canterbury House (Episcopal), Ecumenical Christian Ministries, Lawrence Mennonite Fellowship, Lutheran Campus Ministry, United Methodist Campus Ministry.
The jewelry specialists Did your repair take too long? Did your repair cost too much? Come give us a try
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Teller's Italian and American cuisine
Wednesday's Zima $1.50
746 Massachusetts 843-4111
Open for Lunch and Dinner
SUA
Spring Break 94
Destination:
Panama
City
Beach
FLORIDA
Presented
by:
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUAX
THE UNIVERSITY OF SAN DIEGO
9th & New Jersey 841-8244
Destination:
Panama
City
Beach
FLORIDA
Friday, March 18 to Saturday, March 26
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUAS
THE UNIVERSITY OF BANKSAS
ONLY $190
Trip includes:
Beach Front Condos
Two Bar-B-Ques
Volleyball Tournaments
KU Final Four Party
All Kinds Of Fun!
Sign Up Now! Call 864-3477
The University of Kansas
PanamaCity Hurry, Space is filling up fast!
V
Music and Dance
University Symphony Orchestra
KUSO
Brian Priestman, conductor Gregory Hamilton, cello soloist
7:30 p.m. Friday, February 18, 1994 Lied Center
Incidental Music to Goethe's Play *Egmont*
Cello Concerto in A Minor
Variations on an Original Theme (*Enigma*)
For general admission tickets, call the KU box offices (Murphy: 913/864-3928; Lied: 913/864-ARTS). KU student tickets are available through the SUA Office, Kansas Union; public $6, students $3, senior citizens $5; VISA/MasterCard accepted for phone orders.
Beethoven Saint Saëns Elgar
THE LION BLOOD PRODUCTION
BIG8 CONFERENCE
POST-SEASON BASKETBALL
ATTN: STUDENTS
TICKETS TO SEE THE KUWOMEN'S BASKETBALL TEAM IN THE BIG EIGHT TOURNAMENT ARE AVAILABLE. CONTACT THE TICKET OFFICE (864-3141) FORDETAILS.
APPLICATIONS FOR KUMEN'S BASKETBALL POST-SEASON TOURNAMENT ACTION ARE AVAILABLE NOW AT THE ATHLETIC TICKET OFFICE LOCATED IN THE EAST LOBBY OF ALLEN FIELDHOUSE.
WOMEN'S
FINEST
MUSEUM
94
RICHMOND
NCAA
FINAL FOUR.
1994
CHARLOTTE
Don't miss out on your chance to see the Jayhawk Men & Women in action during:
*Big 8 Tournament
*NCAA Regionals
*Final Four
ATHLETICTICKETOFFICEEASTLOBBY-ALLENFIELDHOUSE8:00A.M.-5:00P.M.864-3141
TENNIS
Application Deadline: Feb. 18, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
10 20 30 40 50 60 70
Wednesday, February 16, 1994
7
THE NEWS in brief
SARAJEVO, Bosnia Herzegovina
NATO escalates efforts to demilitarize Sarajevo with threats of strike
But the commander of Bosnian Serb troop ringing Sarajevo talked tough, saying his artillery would not be withdrawn despite a NATO threat to stage air attacks if the heavy weapons remain after midnight Sunday.
That appeared to leave the diplomats and U.N. military commanders only one option to avert bombing; ensuring that the Serb guns are under U.N. control before the deadline. Howitzers and mortars held by the Muslim-led defenders of the city also are supposed to be turned over to U.N. peacekeepers.
The United Nations has a big stake in the effort to demilitarize Sarajevo. If it succeeds in ending the threat of daily shelling and sniping for Sarajevans, the plan could serve as a model for other parts of Bosnia where fighting has raged in the six days since guns fell silent around the capital.
NATO's credibility is equally at stake. With its ultimatum to the Bosnian Serbs Feb. 9, the Western alliance threatened the first offensive action in its 40-year history.
NATO sources said the alliance's military commander, U.S. Gen. George Joulwan, would go to Zagreb, Croatia, this week to discuss developments in Bosnia with U.N. and NATO officers. The sources spoke on condition they not be identified.
So far, only about 40 heavy weapons around Sarajevo have been moved to U.N. monitoring points. Most are from the Serb side, which is thought to have about 500 guns. The outgunned government has far fewer.
Navy's top officer to retire early
WASHINGTON
Adm. Frank Kelso II, the Navy's top uniformed officer, said yesterday he had requested early retirement so the Navy "can finally close this difficult chapter" of the Tailhook sex abuse scandal.
Kelso, at a news conference in his Pentagon office, said he would retire April 30 — two months earlier than scheduled — because he believed that the issues associated with Tailhook were resolved and that top Pentagon leaders had backed his integrity and honesty.
Kelso, speaking to a room filled with reporters and television cameras, said, "As the chief of naval operations, I had a responsibility to lead the Navy through the process of changing the climate which allowed this incident to occur."
Kelso said that he had taken the step on his own and that he had not been asked to resign by Defense Secretary William Perry and Secretary of the Navy John Dalton.
However, Rep. Patricia Schroeder, a Colorado Democrat and a member of the House Armed Services Committee, charged that "the military's bad-faith handling of the Tailhook scandal shows that we are a government of admirals."
Kelso's announcement came a day after the four-star admiral opened a public push
not of laws."
to rebut a Navy judge's finding issued last week that Kelso had known about sexual misdeeds at the 1991 Tailhook aviators' convention and had interfered with the investigation of the sex abuse scandal.
TULSA, Okla
Employee wounds six in shooting
An angry employee walked through a fast-food restaurant and opened fire yesterday, wounding three co-workers and three high school students there for lunch, police said.
The gunman later surrendered to police at gunpoint in the parking lot.
Police identified the gunman as Muriel Marcus Thompson, age 26 or 27, whom a co-worker said had worked about two months at the Wendy's Old Fashioned Hamburgers restaurant. No charges were immediately filed.
"He was real weird. He didn't have any friends. He was a loner," said co-worker Krystal Shaw, who was not in the restaurant during the shooting.
At least three victims were rushed to surgery for gunshot wounds to their abdomens. Two of those were in stable condition. The other's condition was not immediately available. One person was in serious condition, and one was in fair condition. A sixth person was treated and released.
The shooting occurred on a fast-food row in east Tulsa. It was the second time in less than two years for a multiple shooting at a restaurant in Tulsa. In August 1992, four restaurant employees died in a late-night robbery at a fast-food chicken restaurant about four miles from the scene of yesterday's shooting.
GAINESVILLE, F1a
Prisoner pleads guilty in murders
A drifter already serving life in prison entered a surprise plea of guilty yesterday in the 1990 murders of five college students, saying, "There are some things that you just can't run from."
Danny Harold Rolling, 39, of Shreveport, La., now faces a sentencing hearing to determine whether he will be sent to the electric chair.
The plea came just as the court was preparing to pick a jury. Starting tomorrow, a jury will be selected to hear the penalty phase of the trial and recommend the sentence for Rollery.
Relatives of the victims quietly wept during the plea and while the prosecutor gave a chilling account of each of the crimes, which included one decapitation.
They later issued a plea for privacy through Police Detective Sadie Darnell.
"They need this time to process the information," she said.
Rolling's plea covered 11 counts — five of first-degree murder and three each of sexual battery and armed burglary.
"Your honor, I have been running from first one thing and then another all my life. Whether from problems at home or with the law or from myself," Rolling told Circuit Judge Stan R. Morris.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
What are you going to do with your life?
I'm going to be somebody! I'm going to join STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Don't Miss Your Chance!
Student Union Activities is looking for Coordinators and Committee Members for the 1994-95 school year.
Coordinators/Committees: Feature Films, Fine Arts, Forums, Live Music, Public Relations, Special Events, Spectrum Films, and Recreation & Travel.
Coordinator applications are available now in the SUA office and are due by 5 p.m., Monday, February 28.
Committee Member informational meetings will be held
Tuesday, April 5, in the Southwest Lobby of the Burge Union at 7:30 p.m., and
Wednesday, April 6, in the Frontier Room of the Burge Union at 7:30 p.m.
Applications for committee members will be available only at these informational meetings.
For more information call 864-3477.
I Can't Believe It'S Yogurt!
I Can't Believe It's Yogurt! Proudly Serves Fresh Roasted Coffee from the BayLeaf
I Can't Believe IVs Yogurt! Proudly Serves Fresh Roasted Coffee from the BayLeaf FREE Cup with this Coupon! Bring your books and study with us Louisiana Purchase
23rd & Louisiana
843-5500
I Can't Believe It's Yogurt!
Expires 02/28/94
Orchards Corners
15th & Kasold
749-0440
---
"We're the Clean Little Tattoo Shop That you have always been looking for"
SKIN ILLUSTRATIONS
- Bring in your favorite Jayhawk Tattoo and receive 10% off.
- Bring a friend and you both receive 15% off Tattoo or Body Piercing
We also specialize in Greek Lettering, (Frat Tats)
Get your Tattoo and Piercing now and show them off on the beach during Spring Break
9970W.87th St.
Overland Park, KS (913) 642-7464
- Mention this ad and receive 10% off
- Discounts do not apply to jewelry
Introducing
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Legal Services for Students
148 Burge • 864-5665
STUDENT
SENATE
ST EVERY
FRESH LEAN
SPARE
RIBS
128
LB.
FULL SLAB
SMALL 3-5 SIZE
ALL BABY DIAPERS
1 PER DIAPER OVER CHECKERS
INVOICE COST EVERYDAY
DAILY SPECIAL
Single Item, $1.24 & Multi-Item, $1.24 & 7-day
BANANAS 19¢
MILLER GENUINE DRAFT
BEER 99¢
2 PACK
130Z CANS
LIMIT 1
ADDITIONAL PURCHASES
MILLER DRAFT CHECKER'S EMPLOYEE ID
LEAN BONE IN
PORK STEAK
118
LB.
FAMILY PACK
I.Q.F.
COD FILLETS
199
LB.
FAMILY PACK
WESTPAC CORN,
PEAS,
BROCCOLI
GREEN BEANS
OR MIXED
VEGETABLES
78¢
LB.
FRYER
DRUMSTICKS
37¢
LB.
5 LB. PACK
FRESH CHILEAN PLUMS
NECTARINES OR PEACHES
78¢
LB.
FRESH CRISP
SALAD MIX
68¢
1 LB. PACK
U.S.
NO.1
RUSSET
POTATOES
118
10 LB. BAG
FRESH VINE RIPE
TOMATOES
48¢
LB.
BEEF SIRLOIN
TIP ROAST OR
STEAK
178
LB.
FAMILY PACK
T.V. FROZEN GRAPEFRUIT
JUICE
78¢
1 LB. ZAN
CRYSTAL FARMS SWEET CREAM BUTTER
90¢
LB. QTRS.
FROM THE DELI WILSON'S VIRGINIA SMOKE HAUNT
IMPORTED FROM NORWAY JAHLSBURG SWISS CHEESE
$5.98
12" SIZE
FARMLAND SAUSAGE
88¢
1 LB. BELL
FRESH BAKED ENGLISH MUFFIN BREAD
88¢
DAF
FRESH BAKED CHERRY PIÈ
$1.00 OFF
on one 34-pack case of Coop-Cole products
Expires 8/22/94
ALL NATIONAL BRAND OOZ &
CAT FOOD
18LB.
1 LB. OVER
INVOICE COSTI
Checkers
LOW FOOD PRICES
23RD & LOUISIANA LAWRENCE
OPEN 44 HOURS EVERY DAY
AMBASSADOR CANADA
25% OFF
EVERYDAY
FRESH KANSAS
RAISED BRUNOAL DAILY
FRANCE EXPECTATIVE FEBRUARY 9
FRYER DRUMSTICKS
FRYER DRUMSTICKS 37¢ LB. 5 LB. PACK
ERS
IECKERS
YDAY
70%
LEAN
GROUND
BEEF
88¢
LB.
SLB. OR
LARGER
FRESH CHILEAN PLUMS NECTARINES OR PEACHES 78¢ LB.
BEEF
SIRLOIN
TIP
ROAST OR
STEAK
178
LB.
FAMILY
PACK
MOOSE BROTHER'S
PIZZA
GARDEN FABRIC TRADE
MARKETING AND CUSTOMS
12" SIZE
$1.00 OFF
on one 24-pack cane of Coca-Cola products
Expires 8/22/94
California, Colombo, Costa Rica and Puerto Rico are all Coca-Cola stores.
May 18, 1994, P.O. Box 6788, San Jose, CA 95103.
This is a special offer on your purchase of two Coca-Cola products with pay per unit.
Your customers have completed their purchase by the date set in the advertisement.
Stock may be affected if stock levels are low.
Stock may be purchased when valid sales prevail, based on market demand.
For more information, call 718-252-8314 or visit www.coca-cola.com.
Coca-Cola Bakehouse Company Inc., Los Angeles,
California 90022. All rights reserved.
---
8
Wednesday, February 16, 1994
fifi's
THE N HARBOUR LIGHTS
1031 Massachusetts
Brampton
fifi's 925 IOWA 841-7226 Lunch & Dinner Great Food
Dickinson
Cinema 6
Schindler's List® 4:00*; 8:00
I'll Do Anything® 14:20*; 7:10; 9:45
Blink A-25*; 7:15; 9:40
Blank Check® 4:30*; 7:00; 9:30
Grumpy Old Men® 13:20
Shadowlands® 4:05; 9:45
Ace Ventura - Pet Detective® 14:00*; 7:20; 9:35
3 Primetime Show (1) + Meeting Daily
Senior Citizen Availability + Inspired Stories
Nominated for 6 Academy Awards
Including: BEST PICTURE/ACTOR
IN THE NAME OF THE FATHER(R)
(4:30) 7:00 9:45
642 Mass 749-1912 Theatre 11 is accessible to all persons
Nominated for 4 Academy Awards
Including: BEST PICTURE/ACTRESS
THE PIANO® (5:15, 8:00 Thursr
DR. STRANGLEY
Tuesday 7:00 pm
Wednesday 9:30 pm
Tuesdoy, Feb 15-Thursdoy, Feb 17
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA FILMS
1991: THE YEAR PINK BOOK
Tuesday 9:30 pm
Thursday 7:00 pm
LA DOLCE VITA
Wednesday 7:00 pm
Thursday 9:30 pm
Crown Cinema
BEFORE 4 PM ADULTS $1.00
(URBAN TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
VARSITY
VISUAL MEDIA WORK $2.97
The Getaway $ ^{R} $ 5:00
7:15,9:30
ALVIN'S
Jurassic Park PG-13 5.00,
7.20, 9.45
Age Of Innocence PG 5.00, 8.00
My Girl 2 PG 5:08
My Father, The Hero PG 5:09
Mrs. Doubtfle PG-13 7:10,9.30
Tombstone R 7:20,9.45
The Fugitive PG-13 4:45
Philadelphia PG-13 4:45
Philadelphia PG-13 7:15,9.45
DISCOVER
MasterCard
Cost Kutter IGA
*Check Cashing
*Post Office
*Carry Outs
843-2313
9th & Iowa
- Dell
•Bakery
•Videos
VISA
Sprite
Coke
Accepted
Coke, Sprite $499
24 Pack
Limit 1 with $10 purchase
Northern Bath Tissue
4 Roll Pkg. 4/$300
MACARONI &
CHEESE
MACARONI &
CHEESE
Kraft Macaroni & Cheese 7oz box 3/$100
QUARTED NORTHERN QUARTED NORTHERN
Maxwell House Maxwell House
Maxwell House Coffee 2/$300 13 oz. can
Blue Bunny Ice Cream 1/2 gal. 2/$400
COCONUT TART
IGR
IGA Orange Juice
IGR
IGA Orange Juice
IGA Orange Juice 3/$400 12 oz. can
Keg Beer $3999
STATE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
16 gal.
call 843-2313
Prices goodthru Feb. 22
MEN'S BASKETBALL TICKETS
REDEMPTIONPERIOD
FEBRUARY16-FEBRUARY18 8:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M.
GROUP#7
FEB.26 - COLORADO BUFFALOES
MARCH3 - IOWASTATE CYCLONES
GAMES:
Athletic Ticket Office
8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
East Lobby - AllenFieldhouse
**YOUMAYONLYREDEEMONECOUPONPERPERSON.
**YOUMUSTHAVEAREDSPRING 1994FEESTICKER ON YOURKUID TORECEIVE YOUR TICKETS.
** WE ARE NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR LOST OR STOLEN COUPONS.
Senate bill could link Washburn to Regents
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — The Senate Ways and Means Committee agreed yesterday to introduce a bill that would bring Washubum University into the Board of Regents system.
Inclusion of Washburn, the nation's last municipal university, into the state system is one of Gov. Joan Finney's legislative priorities during her last year in office.
Under the bill, the Washburn Board of Regents would continue to govern Washburn until June 30, 1997. The state Regents would assume control of the university July 1, 1997. The Washburn board would then serve as liaison with the state board during a one-year transition period.
"We introduced the bill as a courtesy to the governor," said Sen. Gus Bogina, R-Sawwee, chairman of the Ways and Means Committee. Hearings will be held later in the session, he said.
Past efforts to make Washburn a state school have met with a high degree of legislative resistance, particularly from lawmakers who represent cities where one of the six Regents universities is located.
"I think the acceptance was higher at the beginning of the session
than it is now," Bogina said. "I think it's eroding, from talking to senators."
The state Regents supports the proposal, as do the Washburn regents.
Finney has tied bringing Washburn into the state system with a plan to increase faculty salaries. The Partnership for Excellence program would use a combination of tuition increases and state tax dollars to improve pay.
Student leaders from Emporia State University and Fort Hays State University have lobbied lawmakers to oppose the proposal, Bodina said.
Opponents content that with the inclusion of Washburn, Kansas would have four state universities within a 60-mile radius of Topeka. The other three are Kansas State University, the University of Kansas and Emporia State.
David Monical, executive assistant to the president at Washburn, said the bill was designed to end objections of the past.
The Legislature adopted a resolution to enact Miller's plan. The vote in the House was 95-28, and senators approved it on a voice vote.
He also said the creation of the graduate center would ensure that there was no duplication of graduate programs. Some graduate programs offered by Washburn could be phased out, Monical said.
Legislature plans altered work session
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — Legislative leaders have fiddled with the schedule of the 1994 session in hopes of finishing its work within 90 days.
Normally, the Legislature breaks its session into two parts, the regular session and the wrap-up session. It separates the two of them with a break lasting up to two weeks.
House Speaker Bob Miller, R-Wellington, is pushing a plan under which the Legislature would adjourn, return, adjourn and return again. The idea is to have the full Legislature out of session for five days in early April.
The regular session is supposed to last 87 days and the wrap-up session, three days, to comply with the constitution's guideline that sessions should last 90 days in all.
Now, the session will be broken into three parts.
The first part will end April 1. The Legislature will return April 7 for two days of work.
Then, the Legislature will return April 27, for a three-day wrap-up session.
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ASHWEDNESDAY-FEBRUARY16
CROSS EXAMINATIONS: discover the meaning of the cross of Christ in your life.
Special Worship Services: 7:00 am and 7:30 pm. with Holy Communion & Imposition of Ashes available at both services
+ +
IMMANUEL LUTHERAN CHURCH & UNIVERSITY STUDENT CENTER-15TH & IOWA
KULCON.
LAWRENCE'S ONLY COMIC BOOK/SCI-FI GAMING CONVENTION April 22,24.1994
HolidayInn Lawrence, Kansas
GAMING GUESTS OF HONOR:
JEANRABE. TSE. Game designer and Polyhedron Editor.
BRUCENESMITH, TSR. Game Designer and Creator of RAVENLOFT.
TOMDOWD, FASA Game Designer and Designer of Shadowrun and Earthdawn.
TOM DOWLF, FASA Game Designer and Designer of Shadowwun and Earthdawn.
WIZARDS OF THE COAST. Creators of the popular Magic the Gathering card game.
FRED FIELDS, Exclusive Illustrator for TSR
Role-Playing events include: Champions, AD&D, Call of Chulu, Cyberpunk, Vampire, Star Warm StarTruck and more!
16 RPGA events, including three Living City events, a Feature, Masters, a special RAVENLOFT Benefit, and more!
Benefit, and more!
COMIC BOOK GUESTS OF HONOR:
TIMOTHY BRADSTREET,Freelance artist of X, Aliens,and Dark Horse. Also additional guests of honor.
WAIT,THERE'S STILL MORE:
Wizards of the Coastpresent a Magic the Gathering Tournament
Pagan Publishing's Multimedia Live-Action Call of Cthulu
Charity Auction, including autographed memorabilia from the Chiefs and Jayhawks
Autograph Sessions, Dealer's Room, Seminars and Art Shows
Three Full Tables of Board, Strategic, and Miniature Gaming
New Game Demos: Inferno, Periphery, Prime Directive, and TSE's Dragon Strike Genie On-Line Computer Gaming. Dinner with convention guests. Blood Eowl Pro Bowl Game
$17.00 Pre-reg. bu 3/25/94 $22.00 On Site Registration
$2.00 off for KUGAR, RPGA, RPGof KC, KU Champions Club, and Sentegar Members.
A Comic Book Package is available and entitles you access to the Dealer's Room Only.
$3.00 on one day, $5.00 for two
FOR MORE INFORMATION, CALL 864-7316
health
You're never too young
Some college-age women may be avoiding important health precautions that could possibly save their lives.
Some college women avoid having a
yearly gynecological exam.
Some feel embarrassed or uncomfortable. Some think they don't need a checkup because they are not sexually active or because they think they are too young.
Some women simply do not know that such an exam can save their lives.
"It's this whole feeling among youths that they are indestructible," said Kathleen Stone-Kaseff of the Women's Health Care Group, 3211 Clinton Parkway Ct. "But once a woman starts menstruating, she needs to have a breast and pelvic exam. There could be many abnormal conditions present whether the woman is sexually active or not. The only one who knows how to find those conditions is an obstetrician-gynecologist."
One condition that is common among women during their reproductive years is ovarian cysts. These cysts are fluid-filled sacks, similar to blisters, that grow on the ovaries. Although most are harmless, ovarian cysts can cause a woman to experience abdominal pain and irregular vaginal bleeding.
"When I first started having pains from my cyst, I thought it was either cramps or sore muscles from playing sports," said Stephanie, a Leawood senior who preferred not to give her last name. "I was only a senior in high school, and I wasn't sexually active, so I hadn't ever had a gynecological exam. When it got so bad that I went to the doctor, my doctor discovered that I had an ovarian cyst three inches in diameter."
Stephanie's doctor gave her a prescription for birth control pills. The estrogen hormone in the pills has been known to help shrink ovarian cysts. However, the treatment was not successful in Stephanie's case.
"As my body grew, the pill just stopped working on the cyst," Stephanie said. "Two years later, I
started having the pains again, and I knew what it was, but I put off going to the doctor. When I finally went, they said they were worried about it and that they were going to have to do surgery to remove it.
"I remember thinking, 'No way.' I'm 21 years old,
this doesn't happen to people my age,' she said.
Stephanie said her doctor removed the hardened tissue from the cyst, but left the balloon-like sack that had held the tissue because it was connected to her ovaries. Stephanie's doctor told her that after she had her first child, the sack would go away.
"It still fills up with fluid right before my period," Stephanie said. "I can feel it every month, but at least it's not growing anymore."
Stone-Kaseff said that most ovarian cysts were monitered before the decision was made to remove them.
Cysts also can occur in the breasts, causing concern about another well-known women's health issue: breast cancer. One way of detecting cysts and potentially cancerous tumors is through regular breast self-examinations.
"It should be fundamental that every woman knows and practices the breast self-exam," Stone-Kaseff said. "That and seeing your obstetrician-ygecologist or physician regularly is the best line of defense for prevention of breast cancer."
Some young women develop fibroids in their breasts. Fibroids are benign tumors made of fibrous and muscular tissue. Although these harmless lumps may make a young woman desire a mammogram to examine the tissue inside the breast, doctors do not recommend mammograms for women under 30 years old.
"Most college women are too young to do a mammogram on because their breasts have denser tissue than women at age 30 or 35," said Henry Buck, Watkins Health Center gynecologist. "It's like looking at breast tissue through a fog."
Buck said it was rare for younger women to develop cancerous tumors in their breasts though it has been known to happen. Most women develop cancerous tumors after the age of 30.
"The risk of breast cancer in college-age women is
there," said Kathy Guth, nurse practitioner at Watkins. "And that can be very scary. But the more women get used to what their bodies are doing through self-examination and get used to that routine, the easier it is to notice a difference in their bodies."
Buck said that women were less likely to develop either cancerous or non-cancerous cysts in the breasts or ovaries if they were taking birth control pills. He also stressed the need for annual gynecological exams for early detection of threatening growths.
"The biggest risk in women's health now is sexually transmitted diseases," he said. "The two major STDs are human papilloma virus, also known as genital warts, and chlamydia. If they are on the cervix and not detected early, genital warts can be precancerous. Chlamydia is an infection involving the fallopian tubes and ovaries that can cause sterility."
Sexually active women are instructed to practice safe sex and see their gynecologist annually. It also is strongly suggested that all women receive a pelvic exam after their first period, Stone-Kaseff said.
"All your ObGyn wants to do is make sure everything is normal," Stone-Kaseff said. "Women should have a pelvic exam for peace of mind, if nothing else. It only takes a few minutes."
Stephanie said she agreed.
"Everyone should get a gynecological checkup yearly," she said. "You don't have to have sex to have those kinds of problems. Cervical cancer, cysts and things like that aren't venereal diseases. They're biological diseases."
Story by: Cathleen Slechta
Kansan staff writer
$$
How to Conduct a Breast Self-examination
Standing. Raise one arm. With fingers flat, touch every part of each breast, gently feeling for a lump or a thickening. Use your right hand to examine your left breast, your left hand for your right breast.
Lying down Place a towel o pillow under your right shoulder and place your right hand behind your head. Examine your right breast with your left hand.
Monthly breast self-examinations are vital to maintaining a woman's health. All women of child-bearing age should do these exams. They are the best way to insure early treatment of threatening growths.
How to Conduct a Breast Self-examination
Standing. Raise one arm. With fingers flat, touch every part of each breast, gently feeling for a lump or a thickening. Use your right hand to examine your left breast, your left hand for your right breast.
Before a mirror. With arms at your sides, look carefully for changes in the size, shape and contour of each breast. Look for puckering, dimpling or changes in skin texture.
Before a mirror. Repeat breast exam with your arms raised.
Lying down. Place a towel or pillow under your right shoulder and place your right hand behind your head. Examine your right breast with your left hand.
How to Examine. Fingers flat, press gently in small circles, starting at the outermost top edge of your breast and spiraling in toward the nipple. Examine every part of the breast. Repeat with left breast.
Standing. With your arm resting on a firm surface, use the same circular motion to examine the underarm area. This is breast tissue, too.
Lying down.
Place a towel or pillow under your right shoulder and place your right hand behind your head.
Examine your right breast with your left hand.
Source: Albert Einstein Healthcare Foundation
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
W Gunderman/KAMBAN
FEBRUARY 16,1994 PAGE 9 KULife
People and places at the University of Kansas.
calendar
EXHIBITIONS AND LECTURES
Exhibition - "Imagery and Form," Feb. 15. March 10 at The Lawrence Arts Center, 200 W. 9th St.
Closing Show- "Art Wake" by Artists En
Masse, Feb. 12-Feb. 27 at Artists En Masse,
803 1/2 Massachusetts St.
Hallmark symposium - Sheila de Bretteville, design educator at Yale University, Monday, Feb. 21 at the Spencer Museum of Art.
Lecture - artist Phoebe Adams on her work, 2 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 23 at Spencer Museum Auditorium.
Program - "Female-Male Relationships," 7 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 22 at the Kansas Room in the Kansas Union.
Tour du jour · Mark Roeyer, Spencer Museum of Art exhibition designer on exhibition design, 12:15-12:45 p.m. tomorrow at Central Court in the Spencer Museum of Art.
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 - Sacred and Profane: Two Books In Black and White, Jan. 23-March 20 at the Spencer Museum of Art.
Exhibition - "By a Clearer Light: Commemorating the 75th Anniversary of the National Park Service - Photographs by David Halpm," Jan. 31.Feb. 19 at the Kansas Union Gallery.
PERFORMANCES
The Renegade Theatre Company presents "East Side Comedy Shop," 8 p.m. Friday, Feb.
18; 7 and 10 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 19 at the Renegade Theatre, 518 E. 8th St. $5 public.
Concert - Lawrence Chamber Players, 7 p.m.
Sunday, Feb. 20 at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St. $5 public, $4 senior citizens
and students. $3 children.
Concert - The University of Kansas Symphony Orchestra, 7:30 p.m. Friday, Feb.18 at the Lied Center. $6 public, $3 students and $5 senior citizens.
New Directions Series - The Lewitzky Dance Company, 8 tonight at the Lied Center. $16 and $14 public, $8 and $7 students, $15 and $13 senior citizens and other students.
Student Recital - Christopher Lair, tuba, 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 19 at Swarthout Recital Hall.
Faculty Recital - Deborah Clark, harp, 7:30 p.m. Feb.21 at Swarthout Recital Hall.
Faculty Recital - Oread Baroque Ensemble,
7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Feb.22 at St. Lawrence Catholic Student Center.
Doctoral Recital - Ann Waldhart, plano, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 23 at Swarthout Recital Hall.
---
10
Wednesday, February 16, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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MC, DJ, Movie Screen
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KU vs Colorado @ 1:00pm
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Jayhawk Bookstore only at the top of Naismith Hill!
1420 Crescent Road Lawrence, KS 66044
843-3826
Kwanzaa representative Todd Moore, Junction City senior, explains kwanzaa principles and symbols. Kwanzaa, an African-American celebration of culture and enlightenment, began Sunday and continues through the week.
843-3826
Kwanzaa celebrates culture
By Kevin Hommann
Kansan staff writer
Moore has helped to arrange Kwanzaa activities for the past three years.
Todd Moore was tired of seeing African Americans depicted negatively. On television they commonly were portrayed as criminals or as people with troubled childhoods who struggled through school.
"It seemed like something so positive," Moore said. "Sometimes this campus looks at African Americans in a negative way."
Kwanzaa, derived from a Swahili word meaning "first fruits of the harvest," was started by Maulana Karenga, executive director of the Institute of Pan-African Studies in Los Angeles, in 1966.
Searching for a way to add a positive image to his heritage, Moore read about the African-American holiday, Kwanzaa.
After learning of the holiday, Moore, a Junction City senior, became active in coordinating Kwanzaa activities on the KU campus.
The holiday provides an opportunity for African Americans to celebrate their heritage as well as improve their community and daily life, Moore said.
The holiday, which is usually celebrated nationwide from Dec. 26 to Jan.1, is observed in February on the KU campus to coincide with Black History Month.
Kwanzaa is based on seven principles that focus on relating to others and rebuilding the African-American image in society, Moore said.
He said the seven principles are: unity, self-determination, collective work and responsibility, cooperative economics, purpose, creativity and faith.
She said she hoped the celebration would leave people with the feeling that they could help to improve their quality of life.
Mary Myers, assistant director of Organizations and Activities, will speak on the principle of creativity tomorrow evening. She said she hoped the celebration would educate people about Kwanzaa's principles.
"If you incorporate the principles into your daily life, they will make you a better person and your community a better place." Myers said.
Moore said the lighting of the mishumazaao was a common image from a Kwanzaa celebration. The mishumazaao is made up of seven candles—three green, three red and one black. These represent the colors of Africa.
Moore said Kwanzaa had a small beginning on the KU campus.
"It started out in somebody's house with just a few guys getting together and celebrating," he said.
Students interested in joining the celebration can attend a gathering at 6:30 p.m. today at the McCollum cafeteria, where Sherwood Thompson, director of Minority Affairs, will give a speech on "Nia," or purpose.
Today, Kwanzaa is a celebration held in the McCollum Hall cafeteria that features different speakers.
The Karamu, Swahili for "great feast," will offer different soul foods at Mrs. Z's, inside Lewis Hall, from 6 to 7 p.m. Thursday evening.
Tickets are available from the Black Student Union and through the McColllum front desk for $3.
Kwanzaa activities are open to anyone interested in learning more about African-American heritage, Moore said.
Moore said he hoped the Kwanzaa celebration would continue to grow, both nationally and on the KU campus.
"I'd like to see it get to where someone said Kwanzaa, and everybody knew what it meant," he said.
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Lied Center Presents A New Directions Series Event
LEWITZKY
Dance Company
8:00 p.m.
Wednesday,
February 16, 1994
Lied Center
"One of the authentic voices of America modern dance!"
--International Herald Tribune
THE LION BENTH GARDENS
Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office (864-ARTS);
Murphy Hall Box Office (864-3982); and any ticktmaster outlet (913) 234-4545 and (816) 931-3330; public $16 and $14, KU, Haskell and K-12 students $8 and $7, senior citizens and other students $15 and $13; KU student tickets can be purchased through the SUA office, Kansas Union; phone orders can be made using MasterCard or VISA; all seats reserved.
Tickets to all New Directions Series events half-price for KU students!
Partially funded by the National Endowment for the Arts, Mid-America Arta Alliance, KU-Student Senate Activity Fee, Friends of the Lied Series, and the Kansas University Endowment Association. Special thanks to this year's Very Important Partners: Hallmark Cards, Inc., Kiera Audio and Video, Payless ShoeSource and W.T. Kemper Foundation, Commerce Bank Trustee.
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, February 16, 1994
11
Women's tennis proves it's a match for Texas Longhorns
Team displays strength in loss
The official score book from yesterday's women's tennis match between No.15 Kansas and No.1 Texas reads: Texas 6, Kansas3.
However, that tells only part of the story.
"If they're the No. I team in the country, then I don't think we are that far behind." Kansas coach Chuck Merzbacher said.
Merzbacher said he felt that way because the matches had been so close, especially the No. 1 and No. 4 singles matches. Junior Nora Koves, playing in the No. 1 singles spot for Kansas, had the ardous task of trying to defeat the No. 1 player in the nation, junior Lucid Ludivgova. She almost pulled off the upset, falling 6-2, 4-6, 4-6. Likewise, senior Kim Rogers, playing at the No. 4 spot, had opportunities to win against Texas' sophomore Jill Craybas before succumbing in two set tiebreakers 6-7 (6-7), 6-7 (5).
"Kim had set points in the first set and was leading in the second," Merzbacher said. "Nora's match was very winnable. If we win those, it's 3-3 heading into doubles play."
Doubles play it turned out, was the area in which Kansas had the most success. Coming into the match, Kansas had not lost a doubles match all season. Though that streak was broken, the team of senior Abby Woods and Rogers, playing in the No. 2 doubles spot, beat the fourth-ranked doubles team in the nation. And Kansas' No. 1 team of Koves and junior Rebecca Jensen beat the No. 8 doubles team in the nation.
"Ihad to win something today," Koves said. "We played them pretty even. It seemed like all the little points went Texas' way today. But I guess on this level the little points make a big difference."
Kansas came into doubles play knowing it could not win the overall match because it trailed 5-1. The lone victory in singles came from Jensen, who played in the 3. spot. She defeated Texas senior Joe Miek 6-0, 6-3. With her doubles match victory, Jensen was the only Kansas player who did not lose. But the team's loss soured some of her personal accomplishments.
"I could do no wrong during my singles
match," Jensen said. "I was on fire. But I'm disappointed that we lost the match. We're better than the No. 15 team in the nation. We're at least in the top eight. You have to come here to play, or you're going to go home with a loss."
Texas came to play. The Longhorns showed the kind of determination and mettle that earned them the No.1 ranking in the nation.
"We had heard about how well they did against Notre Dame and how pumped up they were to play us," Cribs said. "That pumped us up."
Merzbacher said Kansas would take the day off tomorrow and then prepare for the weekend's matches, which include a match against No. 9 Mississippi.
"We showed a lot of character and picked up some great doubles wins," Merzbacher said. "Nora and Rebecca beat Moe and Kelly Pace last week. I always say it is hard to beat a good team twice. Rogers and Woods beat No. 4 Ludvigova and Taylor. Ludvigova is tough to beat anywhere, she is like a pro. The girls are excited to be playing because we are playing so well, but we still have a lot to prove."
LA MADRID
Richard Devinki / KANSU
Kansas junior Nora Kove, who was ranked 17th nationally going into yesterday's match against Texas, lost to Texas junior Lucie Ludigova, who is ranked first in the nation, 6-2, 4-6, 4-6.
Cowboys to battle injured Jayhawks
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
Injuries continue to plague the No. 4 Kansas basketball team as it prepares for its game against Oklahoma State at 7 tonight in Stillwater, Okla.
The game will pair the second and third place teams in the Big Eight Conference. Oklahoma State is 16-7 overall and 5-3 in the conference. The Jayhawks are 21-3 and 6-2, but they may be without senior forward Richard Scott for the second consecutive game. Scott sat out the Kansas State game Saturday and continues to be hampered by a shoulder injury he suffered in a practice Jan. 24.
Kansas coach Roy Williams said he and the trainers would look at Scott before the game and would make a decision on whether he would play.
"We're coming in a little wounded," Williams said. "We're a little banged up right now."
Scott's injury is not Kansas' only worry. Kansas forward Patrick Richey and guard Steve Woodberry, both seniors, also suffered injuries in previous games.
Woodberry is the team's leading scorer, averaging 15.6 points a game, but he too has been stung by the injury bug. Williams said Woodberry was having back problems.
"Patrick injured his ribs in the Nebraska game," Williams said. "But he did a heck of a job for us. He got nine rebounds, but he beat up a little bit."
"He was in quite a bit of pain Friday afternoon in practice before the Kansas State game," Williams said. "We're just trying to get him better every game."
Besides injuries, Kansas will have to deal with an Oklahoma State team that is first in the conference in three-point shooting percentage. Oklahoma State senior guard Randy Rutherford made eight three-pointers against Oklahoma on Feb. 7. The Cowboys won 86-68, and Rutherford set a new Cowboy's single-game record.
Kansas tried to recruit Rutherford during Williams' first year as coach. Williams said he had liked Rutherford's abilities back then but that he really liked them now.
"He has improved since then," he said.
"He can handle the basketball and shoot from the outside."
Combine the Cowboys' outside shooting with their inside game, namely junior center Bryant Reeves, and it adds up to a tough game on the road for Kansas.
When these two teams played Jan. 26, Kansas defeated Oklahoma State 62-61 in overtime on a last-second three-pointer by Woodberry in Allen Field House.
Oklahoma State coach Eddie Sutton said he was happy with the play from his 7-foot center, nicknamed "Big Country."
"The area where he continues to improve, and people don't give him much credit for, is defense," Sutton said. "He becoming a much better defensive player."
Sutton said both Oklahoma State and Kansas played basically the same type of team defense.
"Roy sprinkles in a little more zone defense than we do," he said. "But the man-to-man philosophies are pretty much the same."
Reeves always has been dominant in the middle on offense, which causes problems for most teams. Big Country is averaging 20.5 points and 9.8 rebounds a game.
"I continue to be amazed at the double and triple teaming he gets," Sutton said. "And he still scores about 20 points a game."
The game will showcase the conference's two tallest players in Reeves and Kansas junior center Greg Ostertag at 7-2. In the teams' previous game, Ostertag scored nine points, grabbed 11 rebounds and held Reeves to 13 points.
Williams said that Ostertag had received some undue criticism from the media for not playing every game as intensely as he did against Oklahoma State. He has recorded double-digit points and rebounds in seven games this season.
"He has quite a few of those double-doubles this season," Williams said. "I think he gets a bad rap sometimes. Yeah, there have been times that I've been unhappy with Greg's performance, but then there have been many times when I've been ecstatic."
"There are two big guys in this conference," Oostert said. "I just wanted to show that he wasn't the only 7-footer in the league."
OKLAHOM
50
STATE
KU
KANSAN FILE PHOTO
Kansas junior center Greg Ostertag blocks a shot by Oklahoma State junior center Bryant Erenes. Kansas won 62-11 in overtime during the game Jan.26 in Lawrence.
Big Eight, SWC linked by possible TV football deal
By Andrew Gilman
Kansan sportswriter
The Big Eight Conference is in the midst of settling a new television contract for the 1996 football season with the Southwest Conference that is estimated at $60 million.
Although the two conferences have decided to merge on the television set, it does not mean that the two will form one conference.
"The TV contract does not require a change in conferences," said Bob Frederick, athletic director. "It may come later, whether that's weeks, months or years, we don't know."
Kansas has received between $800,000 and $1
million from the contract a year, Fredrick said.
With its current contract, the Big Eight Conference receives an average of $7.5 million a year from the College Football Association.
"Starting in 1996, we won't have that money in place," Frederick said. "This will help keep us in business."
The Big Eight and the SWC have no actual deal in place at the moment, Frederick said.
"At this point we're in the information stage," he said. "Right now we're looking for the best offer. We're dealing with ESPN and ABC."
The proposed merger with the SWC comes on the heels of the Southeastern Conference breaking away from the College Football Association.
"The CFA is no longer a viable TV entity beyond 1996," Frederick said.
CBS will be televising SEC games.
The Big Eight also was dealing with both the Atlantic Coast Conference and the Big East Conference, as far as TV was concerned, Frederick said. But he said that they have zone their own way.
The ACC is no longer affiliated with the association and has agreed to terms with ABC, ESPN and Jefferson Pilot from 1996 to 2000.
The Big East has agreed to terms with CBS, but the terms of the contract were not announced.
The Big Eight and the SWC merged for television to make their position more attractive, Frederick said, but he was quefk to add that a merger on television did not necessarily lead to a merger on the field.
"The first thing we'll address is the TV situation," he said of the Big Eight athletic directors.
Frederick said that the Conference was not discussing a league change or a realignment at this time.
The Associated Press contributed information to this story.
MATHEMATICS PRIZE COMPETITION
Junior Level: Open to all undergraduates of non-senior standing
of non-senior standing
First prize-$100
Second prize-$50
Senior Level: Open to all undergraduates
Both exams will be given on February 24 7-10 pm in room 302 Snow
To participate you must register in 405 Snow by noon. February 24
NOTICE: This Date is a correction from the date given 2/14/94.
COPIES OF LAST YEAR'S COMPETITION ARE POSTED OUTSIDE 405 SNOW
1029 Mass.
phone 841-PLAY
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SPORTS
The University of Kansas NCAA Certification Self-Study
You are invited to a Public Information Meeting
What Do You Think About Athletics?
3:30 - 5 p.m. Friday February 18 Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union
An overview of the certification process
The university community is invited to ask questions and make comments about KU's intercollegiate athletics programs.
12
Wednesday, February 16, 1994
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tournament to open softball season
By Andrew Gilman Kansan sportswriter
The No. 11 Kansas softball team will open its season Friday in Arlington, Texas, at the Arlington Invitational.
"This tournament gives us a reference point of where to look at the team from," Coach Kalum Haack said. "There's really no significant meaning, just a point to look at."
The Jayhawks will be competing against some high-quality competition at the tournament, including Big Eight Conference rival Oklahoma State.
The tournament is broken into two pools of five teams. Other teams in Kansas' pool are No. 3 Oklahoma State, No. 14 Texas & M, Stephen F. Austin and Northwestern.
The other pool has conference representatives Nebraska and Oklahoma, as well as Creighton, Tulsa and host Texas Arlington.
Looking beyond the tournament, Haack said the conference would be strong this season.
Haack said the tournament would be the first of about 60 games for the Jayhawks. This season's schedule has Kansas playing between five and eight games a week.
In addition to Kansas and Oklahoma State being nationally ranked, Missouri is No.20.
Besides being nationally ranked, the Jayhawks are No. 2 in the Midwest region. Oklahoma State is No.1. Texas A&M is No.3 and Missouri is No.4.
"Missouri will be a decent ball club," Haack said. "But I think that OSU and KU are a little stronger than the rest of the field."
Haack said leadership was a concern for this year's team. Kansas has a young team — a team that has only two seniors on its 12-woman roster.
"To me the big key is to get leadership," he said. "If we get it, we'll be much stronger. It doesn't matter where it comes from as long as we get it."
Senior Kim Newborn, who plays third base, agreed.
"The responsibility this year is spread out," she said. "Each player needs to help themselves."
But the main concern for the Jayhawks could be injuries, Newbern said.
"We have a lot of people playing hurt
and playing with injuries," she said. Haack agreed.
"Another key is for us to get Katie Morgan back in the lineup," Haack said of the sophomore infielder who has a detached ligament in her left thumb. "She won't be able to do anything until at least spring break."
But now the Jayhawks will have to play whether or not they're ready.
"I expect us to do well," Haack said.
"I want to see how we keep our intensity after seven or eight consecutive games.
"We'll need to improve and cut down on mental mistakes."
Newbern said she was confident of the team's ability.
"Coach puts the responsibility on us," she said. "If we want it, then it's there."
Void Through July 31, 1997
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Fantastic Sam's • 2223 Louisiana • 749-1976: 15% off any regular price service or product
NailTique • 2449 Iowa, Ste 0 • 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 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 Dan Kansan • 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall • 864-4358: 10% off any private party classified advertisement
The Auto Medic • 3631 W 10th St • 842-0384: 20% off any service call
Terms and conditions. The following terms and conditions relate to candidate for use in the University Dayan Kumroi Card (DRC) at Participating Merchants (PM). If 11 DRC must be issued to be valid, it is non-transferable, and PM may request identification, certification, or a copy of any other than the DRC. Candidate for use in the DRC shall constitute a member by be bound to the条款 and of the Director of Drices 21 DRC Special Offer Discounts (d) are not valid with the specific listed merchandise of PMc. d may be discarded, on a PM basis, on discounted merchandise of PMc. d may be discuss
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
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against or groups of persons based on race, age, sex, appearance, nationality, or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law.
Classified Policy
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise 'any print, broadcast or electronic race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to such preference, limitation or discrimination.'
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available.
105 Personals
Dear Mr. Marks.
Just a little note that I'll be dreaming of you and those SUNDAYS of Valentine's Day.
Melissa-did you really like the cassette?
Missing you
Pistachio
110 Bus. Personals
Holiday Inn, Steamboat Springs, Co. Party with someone you know. Free beer and appetizers every night from 8 p.m., when you stay with someone special. Call 1-806-654-3499 to book your Spring Break today!
Unique Sterling Silver Jewelry
Hoops, Pendants & More!
For Guys & Gals
The Ec. Show
928 Mass. Downown
---
SpringBreak1994
CANCUN from $439
SOUTH PADRE from $159
Other destinations available
Lowest price guaranteed
Call865-1352
Recycled Soundscapes
12th & Oread
841-9475
No Need To Carry Cash
Toronto In Your City
Milice
TRADE BUY SELL Cd's Lt's & Tapes
Pay Cash for CD's
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
Wednesday 9am-6pm
Saturday 11am-2:30pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services
FRANZIA
- Cabernet 5.0 $13.99
Cusinet 8.0 $18.99
•Chardonnay5.0 $13.99
Southern Play 5 $0.11
- White Zinfandel 5.0 $11.99
Bud& BudLight $11.99
Coors & CoorsLight $11.99
800 West 23rd Street
841-2277
WEBB'S
HAVASU: America's 'New Spring Break Hot Spot,
Lake Havasu, AZ, is throwing America's largest party!
Top name Conerts, Comedians, and
Musicians Lake Wille Ril Harr in '14!' CALL 800-
4H-84VL
TIME MANAGEMENT
& STUDYSKILLS
WORKSHOP
120 Announcements
Learn to excel academically; techniques to increase concentration, improve retention, control time
Thursday, February 17, 7-8:30 pm
4057 Wescoe
FREE!
Presented by the Student Assistance Center
SPRING BREAK 94
With R/T all South Back
Seam Fade
With outrageous
party/meal package
Florida $79
food, food and entertainment
South Padre $159
With outrageous
Cancun $439
With R/T air
party/meal package
Florida $70
Bahamas/Cruise $329
749-0700 or 843-0050
Spring Break
Daytona Beach from $129
*7 nights
*Beachfront Hotel
*All taxes and tips
*Central Location
Daytona's Beach is 23 miles long. Don't let a bad location ruin your Spring Break
Dale 842-9129
Protect Yourself Against Attackers
With a
TIME MANAGEMENT AND STUDY SKILLS Workshop. Learn strategies to help you excel academically; techniques to increase concentration, improve retention and control time. Thurs, Feb 17, 8:39 pm, 405 Westcock. FREEL: Presented by the Student Assistance Center.
130 DECIBEL Personal Alarm
- Fits in the palm of your hand
- 2wayaction
- Available for only $24.50,
postage pd.
Allow 3 weeks if paying by check, 2 if paying by M.O.
Send check or money order, with name and mailing address to:
Mom's House
PO Box 1837
Lawrence, Ks
66044-8837
THE NEXT VICTIM
130 Entertainment
Thursday
Squib Cakes
8.25 Draws
18 & over
Friday
Thursday
BENCHWARMERS
Freddy Jones Band &
HardSoul
Poets
$2.00Teas
18 & over
Saturdav
November
Turquoise Sol
2 for 1 Wells
18 & over
$1.00 shot of the day
everyday!
140 Lost & Found
FOUND: Lawrence HS ring, class of 91. Call #86
4444.
Last calc_cat as of 2/7 Reward_,please call 768
3717
男厕 女厕
200s Employment
205.4Help Wanted
1994 EXPANSION
1994 EXPANSION
Part-time and permanent openings
Flexible schedule and class $49.00 to $18
Positions need to be filled by 2/16/94. Please call
843-8531 for more info.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, February 16, 1994
13
CONFERENCE SUPPORT SPECIALIST American Teleconferencing Services is searching for a few unique individuals to expand our expanding business requirements. These successful candidates will have the interpersonal skills; must have a high level of energy and be able to handle a fast-paced environment; computer skills and attention to detail are required. Interested candidates will be rewarded with an excellent salary and benefit package which includes some unique features. Interested candidates are invited to submit
Director of Human Resources
American Telecommunications Services, Ltd.
10056 Lowell, Suite 900
Overland Park, Kansas 66210
300 SUMMER CAMP OPPORTUNITIES in NY, PA and NEW ENGLAND. Instruction needs handwriting; Boating; Swimming/WSL/Lifeguards, Salary; Gymnastics, Windsurfing, LaCrosse, Salary; Gymnastics, Ceramics, Jewelry, Volleyball, Soccer, Outdoorsmen, Piano Accompanist, Phys Ed Majors, Nurses, Chefs, etc. Call Arlene at: 1-800-452-6283 now!
ACADEMIC
PROGRAM
COORDINATOR
Academic Program Coordinator (APC) vacancies for 1994-95, *50%* position, working to facilitate academic progress, encourage good study skills, and promote student involvement. Inquire. Not a live-in position. Required. Graduation must be in good standing at KU taking no more than 9 hours per semester. Preferred: Residence hall living and supervisory experience; working knowledge of currently-available computer applications. Significant experience. Candidates must be able to commit at least two evenings per week to the salary. Salary and Benefits: $683.50 per month, from August 1, 1994 through May 19, 2006. Some meals provided when visiting campus. Applicants should be eligible for staff tuition rates. To Apply: submit a letter of application outlining interest and relevant experience; resume; plus names, addresses, and telephone numbers of 3 references to KU Department of Education, Housing, 622 West Ileith, Icorin Hall, Lawrence, Illinois 60048. Deadline: March 18, 1994/EOA/XX
ASSISTANT COMPLEX DIRECTOR
Assistant Complex Directors (ACD's) hold live-in, 10 month, 75% positions, managing student personnel 350 and 850 students. Duties include assisting the Complex Director with student personnel functions including supervisory responsibility for the student staff and facilitating resident's personal life, and conduct-providing counseling and referral services to university and community resources. Required: At least one year of residential group living experience. KU graduate enrollments in the summer. Preferred: Residence Life staff experience. Residence hall supervisory experience. Experience with payroll, budgeting, and administrative duties. Microcomputer experience. Salary range up to $24,000 per department including utilities provided plus meals when cafeteria is serving. ACD's and spouses eligible for staff tuition rates. Employment from the Department of Education. Submit letter of application obtaining interest and relevant experience; resume; plus names, addresses, and telephone numbers of references to the KU Department of Student Housing, 422 West 10th Street, Suite 604, Kansas City,KS 6045. Deadline: March 18, 1984. EEO/AI
CAMP COUNSELERS want for private Michigan-boys/girls summer camps. Teach: swimming, canoeing, sailing, water skating, gymnastics, camping, scuba diving, campfire camping, crafts, dramas, OR riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance, SALI9185 or more. CAMP/CWC/WCW 1765 Maple, Nld, IL 6003, 7008-464-244.
Children's comedors, activities instructors, bus-
drivers, cooks, nannies, kitchen munch, kitchen
help for mountain summer camp. PO BOX 711
Boulder. CO 80366. 303-424-4557.
$15 Today $30 This week
By donating your life saving blood plasma
WALK-INS WELCOME!
NABI Biomedical Center
816 W 24th 749-5750
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
Counselors/Support Staff-Children's Camp/
Northeast-Top salary, MBA/DL/Bundle, travel
allowance. Must have skill in one of the following:
ballboard, basketball, baseball, basketball,
dance (jazz, tap, jab, ballet), dackhoek, football, golf, guitar, gymnastics,
hockey, horseback-riding-hunt seat, karate,
crosse, mature, photography, piano, pioneering,
swimming, diving, ropes, scouting, cuba, soccer,
swim team, water sports, track, video, water ski, WSI, wind surfing, wood.
kitchen steamer, cooks, bus drivers, maintenance,
nurses, secretaries, call or write;
Suite 802, Boca Raton, FL 34331 (407) 963-6386 call or write; Camp Vega for Girls, P.O. Box 1717,
Duxbury, MA 03233 (617) 963-6386. We will be on campus in the student union from 11am-4pm on
07/63 in the Oread and Regional Rooms. Cruise line, entry level, on-board positions available,
great benefits, Summer or year round. (813)
'94
KU
SENIORS
• RESUMES
• COVER LETTERS
• INTERVIEW TRAINING
RESUME SERVICES
832-8100
RESUME SERVICES
832-8100
**help wanted:** Maintenance person, 62 unit ai-
complex, 15-20 hrs. p/w. Duties include plum-
carpentry, & minor electrical. Call anytime
483-820. Ask for Chris or Susan
Jayhawker Towers Assistant Manager
A 12-month, half-time, live-in position, the Assistant Manager is responsible for coordinating the daycare center and the Jayahawk Towers complex. The Assistant Manager assists the Complex Manager to develop training programs for students in a training, shares office duty and provides assistance to residents and supervision of school employees. Required: At least 1 year of group living experience. Requires at least 4 hours of student for no more than 8 hours per semester. Preferred: Residential management experience or Jayahawk Towers residential experience. Micro-manage persons from other cultures. Salary and Benefits: Furnished two-bedroom apartment with utilities including electricity, water, cable and relevant experience, a resume, plus names, addresses, and telephone numbers of references to KU Department of Student Housing, 22 West Hill Drive, UNF School of Human Sciences, K6045失学日; March 18, 1994. EEO/AA
Looking for capable, creative and committed individual, to be a mother's helper. If interested, please send name and number to Staci, P. O. Box 721 Lawrence, KS 60044
Male companion for a semi-invalid man. Light
responsibility. 2 hours every Monday-Mon-
fri.
Juicers Showgirl's Explore the horizons of making $1000 + weekly, working at Lawrence's top adult night spot. Now hiring attractive dancers and waitresses 18+ Excellent working atmosphere. Apply in person, 913 N. Second, Lawrence, 7 p.m.-2 a.m., or call 841-4122 after 7 p.m.
Nannies Wanted. Positions nationwide, summer
travel required. not req. great pay and benns
free travel (12).
- room aide needed for child care center. Mon.
Thurs. 12:30 . Contact: 842-3882.
Need instructor to give beginning organ lessons to my daughter in my home. Call 841-3484 after 5pm. Needed part-time, dependable person. Apply Norge Village, 24th and low. No phone calls. ONEIDA FACTORY FACILITY filling several part time positions. Weekday afternoons, evenings, and weekends available 15-20 hours/wk. Summer days. Website: www.oneidafactory.com. Suite 103-160 weekdays. 749-4612. EOE
McDonald's
JOINOURTEAM
This Saturday, February 19,
from 11:00am-2:00pm at our
6th Street location, we will be
providing job information and
conducting open interviews for
positions in all our restaurants.
Sas player wanted for working R&B variety band
Jef at 814-1555 or 814-9797
SCHOLARSHIH
HALL
DIRECTOR
KU Student Housing announces SHD vacancies for 1994-95, live in position, to facilitate academic progress, help plan a balanced diet by purchase of necessary maintenance, and help develop a cooperative academic community. Required: Undergraduate degree and graduate enrollment; no more than 9 hours per semester; group living experience. Preference will be given to planning, food preparation, bedding and bathroom facilities and group facilitation skills and experience. Salary and Benefits: $7,200 for first-year staff. Furnished apartment with utilities provided plus meals when the hall is serving. SHD's and spouses receive full amenities from August 1, 1994 through May 31, 1995. To Apply: Submit a letter of application outlining interest and relevant experience; a resume, plus names, addresses, and telephone numbers of 3 references. Shd Student Housing 822, W194, Lawrence, Kansas 6600, March 18, 1994 deadline. EEO/AA
SEAMSTRESS WANTED to work for small alter- antes business. Flexible hours 841-631.
HELP WANTED
Gourmet Bistro Restaurant Now Hiring (apply in person)
• Terrace Server
• Waiters & Waitresses
• Bus Person
• Host & Hostess
Minimum wage + tips
Minutes from Lawrence
THE CAFE SOCIETY
6920 W. 105th St
Overland Park, KS
(913)648-1101
The SSA holds a 50% ,live-in position with the KU Department of Student Housing performing administrative, programming, and coordination duties for the KU School of the Complex Director. Required. At least one year of residential group living experience, 92 or more credit hours, and KU enrollment. Salary and benefits: Apartment and utilities fee; full-time employment; SSA is eligible for staff tuition/fees and is paid $82.50 monthly. Appointment extends from August 1, 1994 through May 31, 1995. How to Apply: www.sa.edu/school/admissions/SSA IS
Spend your summer in Maine!
Top private campers look for salable trainer, 8/20-9/30 and RM/BD/laundry, travel allowance. Women call her:
write: Camp Vega for Girls, P.O. Box 1771,
Duxbury, MA. 02323 (617) 845-6536. We will be on
3/3/34, Regional 7am-4pm or
3/3/34, Regional 11am-4pm.
SENIOR
STAFF
ASSISTANT
Sullivan's, a113 E. Wyoming, Kailappi, MT 99001.
Tired of summer in Kansas? Check out an opportunity to make $500 on average and get some experience resume another state. Call 866-5702.
225 Professional Services
SUMMER JOBS OUTDOORS
Over 10,000 openings!
National Parks, Forests, Fire Crews,
Send Stamp for Fire Details
Purchase Tax Service $3
1040EZ - $10, 1040 - $15 plus extra fee for other forms to be filled with 1040. State returns $-$10. Will pick up and deliver. Call Brian at 258-2572.
INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS
DV-1 graduate and C program sponsored by the U.S. government and Program Sponsored by the U.S. resident nest station, Citizens of almost all countries are allowed to take part. Students, tourists, anyone may apply. For info & forms: New Eria School, 20215 Stagli San, Canoga Park, CA 91308
Tel; (818) 998-4425; Fax; (818) 862-9681.
Driver education offered through Midway Driving School, serving KU students for 30 yrs. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749.
For a confidential, caring friend, call us to be here to listen and talk with you. We are here to help you.
TRAFICF-DUI's
Fake ID s & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal and civil matters
The lawofies of DUIs
www.traficf.com
INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS We transfer
INTEGRATION from US mode to your system or from your
country to US mode. 265 includes tape and mailing
issuing, copying, shipping, and delivery to
Ottawa. K6907. Call 1-848-555-9111 or 1-840-690-7697.
G. Strobe
Donald G. Strobe
16 East 13th
842-1133
MATH TUTOR • TEACHING EXPERIENCE,
EXCELLENT CERTIFICATIONS & $HOUR
COURSE DUE NOVEMBER 17, 2016
Not ready for boring life style? Want to travel?
Read! Life as an Odyssey, Guide to Meaningful Careers and Unique Lifestyles. For more info call
- 800-893-7424.
BRAXTON B. COPLEY
Attorney at Law
General Practice
Traffic Tickets, Midemeaners,
Landlord/Tenant
Personal Income Tax
719 Massachusetts
749-5333
tutoring aval. for college primary and secondary
English, Spanish, Math, Science (Phill 849,300).
turing W421 Thr. Magee Princess,
English, Spanish and French.
VIDEO EDITION AND
SECONDARY EDITION
PRODUCTION SERVICES
A/B roll video tape editing suite with EDL.
3D computer animation.
Hill field production package.
Award winning screen writer.
PRIMAL SCREEN COMMUNICATIONS
813-941-0600
235 Typing Services
Rick Frydman, Attorney
823 Missouri 943-4023
Criminal Defense
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
T
s1 + word processing, resumes, letters, termp,
etc, s2 | cp s1 $4.pp748 -30:50 mpkw3
s1 + word processing, resumes, letters, termp,
etc, s2 | cp s1 $4.pp748 -30:50 mpkw3
1-der Women Word Processing. Former editor
transforms scritches into accurate pages of letter
formats.
Beacon Publication Services-Quality word processing (include typing, grammar proofing, and proofreading).
- Looking for a good type?
* Paper, Applications, Spreadsheets, Charts
* Laser刻录 to QWKB profs
* Grammar and spelling free
* 18 years experience
* call Jack at
* Makin' the Grade
Word processing, applications, term papers,
dissertations, resumes. Editing, composition, rush
X
Words by Chris W Word Processing.
High quality papers and printing; spell check
manuals.
300s
Merchan
305 For Sale
*BRASS BED, firm, orthopedic mattresse and frame, never used, cost $100, $33 cash deal, demand & storage only.*
LIVING ROOM SET, sfa, afa seat and chair,
plastic, plastic, cost $150,
1472 chafé set, 472 chafé set,
1472 chafé set, 472 chafé set
695 GT PANTHER A9 'BRIGHT RED 7063 ALUM
W/ CMSO FORK SOURT K307 DUALDERALS
W/ CMSO FORK SOURT K307 DUALDERALS
TOGAS PHOTOSYRIES ASKING 8575 O. B. OCH
LEAVE MESSAGE 8575 O. B. OCH
black leather jacket. Excel. cord, hardy been
black. Bought in 1995. 93 size fits M/F
size. Bought in 1996. 84-93-105
Bought in 1997. 84-93-106
Classical Guild, Guld SP w/case, 400 & 832-821
For Sale: 600 Classical CD - Case
Classical CD's excellent selection call 841-0893.
Mirrored MX600. 6mm Twin Lens.
FOR SALE: Minola XG-1 w/45mm f2 lens amplifier 8125.100 cd ooff call Mek at 749-3498
MAC PLUS 4. me-mRG 30.meg hard drive, and printer
4400. $183.1-682. O.P. KS.
340 Auto Sales
3 free sew-on letters (with purchase)
through the end of February
935 Massachusetts
84 Dodge Omni. Runs well, reliable, $600. Leave message at 843-2342
MACINTOSH OSCH Machine. Complete system including printer only 500; Call Sirch 829-388-5685.
SNOW SKIS 75. Rossiogolf + bindings + case + poles 75. RADAR DETECTOR. Whistler Spectrum SEUM, 60. CD PLAYER, portable Panasonic, 60. All in excellent condition. 814-6531.
PRINT 9604/1993, OS, PS
MACINTOSH Computer, Complete system includ-
ed
89 JEEP WRIANGLER in good condition. New tires.
7 $7500 If interested call 749-008.
1990 Mazda Rxr GXL, red, 46 K mi. power sunroof.
$10,000 call www.mazda.com
405 For Rent
1988 Honda Accord. 4 Dr. 3 Spd. carc, A/C,
1987/89 TM cassette. Great condition. Call for details
www.honda.com
3 Bedroom/ 2 full bath apt now available on bus route. Microwave & dishwasher $500.
2 bdms / w/sunroom and plenty of storage space, 2 bathrooms, D/W, D/W, central air, fire place and on. On KU bus route, $550 + utilities, avail. March 1. Melissa 1.897-665
400s Real Estate
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished,
Interested? Contact 81-435-3235, 704-045 or
849-455.
1 Bedroom Apt. available now! Call 841-1212.
Available March 1. Two bedroom townhouse,
1/2 bath, walk to campus, pool. 483 per month.
$67,000
Available at West Hill Apis. Spacius b bedunf
apst. apts $9 per month. Water pdr. Great location
near campus, 1012 Emery Rd. No pets. 841-
3800, 543-3884.
Appletapple Apt. avail. 1.4.1 brrd 1.bath fully equipped ktf, dishwasher, micro, disposal heat, air, water, trash paid. On bus route. No pets. Call anytime 843-8202. Ask for Chris or Susan.
A&C S
MANAGEMENT SERVICES
*1 and 3 Bedroom
*Apartments Available
*Quiet Location
*2 blocks from KU bus route
*Call Gina at 843-4754
LOOKING FOR A PLACE TO RENT?
841-5454
RENT REFERRAL
2040 Heatherwood
FREE SERVICE
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
VILLAGE SQUARE apartments
- Close to campus
•Spacious 2 bedroom
•Laundry facility
•Swimming Pool
•Waterbed allowed
9th & Avalon 842-3040
Available now, two bedroom at 912 Tennessee.
$450 plus utilities. $450 per small P.O. K. 746-756.
Furnished room for rent with shared kitchen and bath. Two short blocks from KU. Off street park.
Hanover Place Apt. for Near Campus
MO. Cell 841-1212
House for rent 2 bedroom no pets, newly remodeled call 843-2033
---
meadowbrook FALL '94
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. Call Kathy or Shana at Meadowbrook 842-4200.
15th & Crestline
Morr - Fri 8-5:30
Sat 10-4
Sun 1-4
Sorry no pets
Now renting for June and August, 1.2 amd 3 bdrma,
diswasher, microwave, W/D, fireplace, ceiling
fans, cable pd. Call 841-7849 for appt.
MORNING STAR
Rooms, apartments, and wells
Rooms, apartments, and well kept, older homes available now. 841-STR (7827)
Nice 2 Bdmr. duplex, central air, off street parking on bus route. No pets. Available March 1, call 749-0749 or 843-9274.
One bedroom apartment for sublease. Water and
paid bath payable 84% $35/mo. Now mov-
ing to 849-314-0293 Call 849-314-0293
RAINBOW SUNSHINE
SUNRISE
VILLAGE
660 Gateway Ct.
(Behind Sonic)
Now Leasing for Fall
Mon.-Fri. 10-12, 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
*Luxurious 2 3 & 4*
Spacious 1 bedroom apt very close to campus. Furnished, Avail. immediately. Call 841-1123. Ask for details.
Sublease large one bedroom on bus route. hot utilities, water paid, PET ORI Available ASAP.
Part25
MASTERCRAFT
We are now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature studio 1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. We also have 3 bedroom, $2 \frac{1}{2}$ bath townhomes.
Volleyball Court
* On KU Bus Route
with 4 Stops on Property
HANOVER 841*1212 : 14th & Mass.
Offers Completely Furnished
HANOVER
Studio,1,2,3,&4 bedroom apartments and townhomes
- On KU Bus Route
- 2 Laundry Rooms
- 2 Pools
- Volleyball Court
Call or stop by today.
2401 W. 25th, 9A3
842-1455
(sorry no pets)
REGENTS COURT
749-0445 : 19th & Mass.
CAMPUS PLACE
841-1429 : 1145 Louisiana
SUNDANCE
841-5255 : 7th & Florida
TANGLEWOOD 749-2415 : 10th & Arkansas
- Some Washer/Dryer Hookups
ORCHARD CORNER
749-4226 : 15th & Kasold
Open Daily 9AM-5PM
MASTERCRAFT Professional Management and Maintenance Comman
Trailridge Apartments
New leaving for Summer and Fall
Studies, Apes, and Town Houses
KU Bldg. 103-104, Tennille Court,
twin Court, 3 rows.
Call Today for more information
843-7333 2500W 6th
842-4455
Sublease. Big 1 Br. W/D Hookups, CA/CH, DW,
Cable pd. 1 block from KU. Available March 1. 789-306.
430 Roommate Wanted
1 N/S for 4 bedroom apt. New campus, 2 full baths
$144 per month + 1/4 utilities. 983-4445
1 roommate for 4 brm townhouse $140/p m noUtilities.
Col. Millennium
Penman, rostrate wanted (New F or 3 U)
House. 1/2 biks from campus. W/D, pets
$150 mo. Call Linda 843-9382
Female non-smoking roommate wanted to share lease for 2 bedroom apartment close to campus for next fall. Must be a student. Call 833-2999.
Broadway Business, 104 N. Broadway, New York, NY 10024.
I Kommatai non-smoker for $18 bdm corder. $17 per month. Near Campus. Washer/Dryer. Catered meals.
$ furnished bedrooms in home, close to campus,
Carparked parking, W/D, DW, AC, 2%/half, $15.00
per night.
- Byphone: 864-4358
I HAVE TO MOVE TO K.C.I. ( female needed to share 3 bdmr. spacious apt $200/mm. + utilities, on bus route, convenient location, no smokers or pets, call 842-7647 in the evening.
How to schedule an ad:
Roommate needed for big beautiful 2 blemm to close a apartment + downstairs $19.50 + /\nno until the next day
Roommate to share 3 dripm duplex, fenced yard,
$185 per month / $120/unit. Feb. paid.
Pcal. Call: 612-784-5999
ROOMMATE NEEDS / need to share two bedroom house $18/mo + / needed. Call Dave 864-330-398
Roommate Wanted. 3 bedroom apartment, very nice. On bus route. Feb. free. Phone: 865-4829
- By Mail: 119 Staffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 80405
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THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
2.16
© 1994 farWorks, Inc./Ost by Universal Press Syndicate
10th Annual
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For the most part, the meeting was quite successful. Only a slight tension filled the air, stemming from the unforeseen faux pas of everyone wearing the same dress.
14
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America takes second skiing gold
By John Nelson The Associated Press
29 $ ^{th} $ Mass. St Topeka 233-8288
Mon - Sat
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RINGEUBU, Norway — Diann Roffe-Steinrotter already had waited nine years. And now she had to wait another 90 minutes.
Roffe-Steinrotter erased nearly a decade of futility yesterday by winning the women's super-giant slalom at the Olympics. The victory came two days after Tommy Moe's victory in the first Alpine event, the men's downhill.
The score on the mountain now:
USA 2, everybody else 0.
"What an inspiration," Roffe-Stein-
roter said. "He skied brilliantly, and I
said, 'I can do that, too.' ... This is hot,
pretty hot."
But when she flew down the Kvift-jell course in 1 minute, 22.15 seconds, the first of 57 racers, she had no way of knowing just how hot her time was.
Starting after breakfast, she wouldn't be assured of victory until past lunchtime.
"I have to wait," she repeated as teammates, coaches and reporters tried to congratulate her.
She had not won a big race since the giant slalom at the 1985 world championships. Then, she was 17. Now, she was 26 and in her final season before retiring.
She leaned on her ski poles, her face expressionless while she watched the scoreboard. Occasionally, she chatted with a racer from another country. Some Norwegian folk singers senaded her, and a trio of guys in troll suits did a lig by the finish area.
Finally, the last skier with a chance to beat her finished, and Roffe-Steinrotter had the gold.
Two teammates lofted her onto their shoulders and paraded her around the finish area — a 5-foot-4 inch, 132-pound trophy of petulance, persistence and determination.
"I think this is the best day of my career," she said.
Svetlana Gladisheva of Russia took the silver in 1:22.44, and Isokst-Iose
ner of Italy won the bronze in 1:22.45.
Roffe-Steinrotter knew that her time might not hold on the 2,035 Kvitjell course. Still to come were defending World Cup overall champion Anita Wachter of Austria, defending Olympic super-G champion Deborah Compagnoni of Italy, German downhill star Katja Seizinger, and Bibiana Perez, another red-hot Italian.
"I was very nervous with bib No. 1," she said. "Yesterday, it was so icy I crashed, just free skiing. My stomach was killing me."
Wachter's time was 1:23.01, Safe, so far. Then came Compagnoni, skiing fifth. The 23-year-old Italian star was all over the course and had some trouble with a small jump near the bottom. Her time was 1:23.54.
Still, there was no smile on Roffe-Steinrotter's face.
Seizinger got turned around and slid backward past a gate with about 30 seconds gone in her embarrassing run. She was out. Perez sat back on
"I still have teammates at the start. I have to wait," Roffe-Steinrotter said, still refusing to accept congratulations.
her skis, lost control and blasted through a gate at about the same spot.
At the halfway timing spot, Dovzan was. 42 seconds ahead of Roffe-Stein-rotter. The crowd roared for the young Eastern European.
Pernilla Wiberg of Sweden, battling for this year's World Cup lead, came down in 1:22.67. Another bullet barely dodged, then little-known Slovenian Alenka Dovzan burst out of the gate.
A big-screen TV by the finish area showed it all. With Roffe-Steinrotter watching, Dovzan stood up on her skis and drifted off the course. In an effort to catch the American, she had built up speed she could not control. A gate flashed by her on the wrong side, and she quit, disqualified.
Finally, Roffe-Stinroter smiled.
She was a champion at last.
Hockey team satisfied in salvaging tie
By Mike Nadel
The Associated Press
GJOVIK, Norway — Less than six minutes away from a catastrophic loss that probably would have meant an end to its medal hopes, the U.S. hockey team sprang to life.
Peter Ciavglia and John Lilley scored 1:36 apart last night as the United States staged its second- straight third-period rally to salvage a 3-3 tie with Slovakia.
"A loss would have killed us. We had to get at least a point out of this," U.S. captain Peter Laviolette said. "It was a good sign of our character to come back, but we've got to come out sharper. It would be nice to come out and get a lead. Once."
In their Olympic opener, the Americans needed two late goals to rally for a 4-4 tie with 10th-seeded France.
"We must be something of a highwire act to people watching our games. It certainly is exciting and hectic," U.S. coach Tim Taylor said. "Youthful enthusiasm is one of our best weapons, and it has to be there at the start of a game. It cannot be called on in reserve at the end."
For the first time since 1984, the United States has failed to win at least one of its first two games. In '84, the Americans opened with losses to Canada and Czechoslovakia and eventually finished seventh.
"We have very high expectations," said Civiaaglia, whose team meets Canada, 2-0, tomorrow. "I don't think we're happy at all with the results and our overall play."
Nevertheless, there was a different mood after this tie than the first. American players wore smiles, and rock music blared out of the locker
room.
"Two ties are a lot better than two losses," said U.S. goalie Garth Snow, who made 30 saves in his Olympic debut. He replaced Mike Dunham, who managed only 10 saves against France. "We had to come through, and we did. Slovakia is a good team."
Laviolette said, "They are not a France or an Italy. They are one of the best teams in the world."
The Slovaks are the lowest seeds in the 12-team field only because they had to play in a qualifying tournament
they had not gained their national independence until after last year's World Championships.
Slovakia opened the Olympics by tying gold-medal favorite Sweden. Yesterday, it outshot the United States 33-18 and controlled play most of the game.
The United States had been 0-for-11 on Olympic power plays, including 0-for-4 yesterday, before Ciavaglia tipped in Mark Beafaut's goal-mouth pass with 5:37 to go to make it 3-2.
lift after former NHL star Peter Stastny was assessed seven minutes in penalties with 8:50 to play for high-sticking Craig Johnson and shoving Laviolette.
"He does a thing that has a great influence on the game," Slovakia coach Jan Mitosinka said of Stastny, who as the 17th-leading scorer in NHL history has a reputation for scoring and not slashing. "It was not intended, but it did cost the team. We are fortunate not to lose."
Trailing 3-1, the U.S. team got a big
Then, with Stastny still in the penalty box and the teams skating four-side, Lilley beat goalie Eduard Hartmann with a slap shot from the right faceoff circle. There was 4:01 left.
TRENDSTREET
1994 Winter Olympic Games
The tally
Gold Silver Bronze
Country Good work better Russia 2 3 1 Norway 2 3 0 Italy 1 1 2 United States 2 0 0 Finland 0 0 2 Germany 1 0 0
Source: The Associated Press
Dave Campbell / KANANA
Today's Olympic TV Schedule
All Times CST
6-8 a.m.
EVENT
EVENTS:
Luge (women's singles report);
speedskating (men's 1500m); freestyle skiing (men's and women's moguls finals report)
7-10 D.m.
EVENTS: Speedskating (men's 1500m); freestyle skiing (men's and women's moguls finals); luge (women's singles); figure skating (men's preview)
11:37 p.m.-12:37 a.m.
EVENTS: General report.
TNT
EVENTS: Hockey (Norway vs. Finland —live and TBA); luge (women's singles); speedskating (men's 1500m); freestyle sking (men's and women's moguls finals)
12-5 p.m.
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JOIN OUR TEAM
This Saturday February 19 from 11:00am-2:00pm at our 6th Street location, we will be providing job information and conducting open interviews for positions in all our restaurants.
FEATURES: Interest in film and video production is increasing at the University. Page 7.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
KANSAS STATE
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA KS 66612
VOL.103.NO.104
THURSDAY FEBRUARY 17,1994
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
Students see discipline in Lent
By Cheryl Cadue
Kansan staff writer
Renee Tetuan, Topeka freshman, said that she would give up red meat during Lent — but that her main goal was to try to improve herself.
"I've always been told that during Lent, I should try to make myself better," Tetuan said. "Giving up meat is something I wanted to try, but I'm also trying not to cuss as often."
The Rev. Vince Krische, director of development at the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Road, said Lent, which started yesterday. Ash Wednesday, was a time when the entire Catholic Church entered into
penitence for personal spiritual growth. He said it was a time to pray to encourage people who are entering the Catholic Church.
"Lent is the springtime of the Church," Krische said. "It is a time of new life. Millions of people all over the world will be entering or re-entering the Church."
NEWS: 864-4810
Monique Garcia, Wichita senior,
said that because Lent was a time of
self-sacrifice, she would try to cut
back on sweets.
some bad habits I've developed over the year."
"I was thinking about giving up sweets, but I think that's kind of hard for me to do because I have a big sweet tooth," she said. "I'm also going to try to do things right and clear up
Jami Burke, Dodge City freshman, said she would not be giving up anything for Lent.
"Ijust want to discipline myself better," she said. "I'll go to church and get my homework done."
"We do emphasize the discipline of living the Christian life," he said. "In the Baptist church, we emphasize individual responsibility. If a person
The Rev. Dean Dixon of the First Baptist Church, 1330 Kasold St., said he considered Lent to be a time for spiritual preparation. Members of the First Baptist Church do not give up anything for Lent.
accepts personal discipline, it is a personal matter that is usually not made public."
The Rev. Kenneth M. Kueker of the Immanuel Lutheran Church and University Student Center, 2104 W. 15th St., said his church would have a reading every Wednesday until Easter on the meaning of the cross.
"In the past, more emphasis was placed on giving up something for Lent to remind ourselves that Jesus Christ suffered for us," Kueker said. "We don't do that so much anymore. No one goes around with a frown on their face, but it is a more somber time. On Easter, we rejoice because Christ is alive again."
MADISON, MARY A. - CALLING ALL TO SUPPORT THE EDUCATION OF CHILDREN.
The Rev. Vince Krische marked a cross on Chad Browning, Scott City senior yesterday at an Ash Wednesday service at the St. Lawrence Catholic Center
Brian Vandervliet/ KANSAN
Teachers-to-be may face delay in certification
State board recommends two-year training period
By Roberta Johnson Kansan staff writer
By 1997, School of Education graduates may need to wait two years before becoming certified to teach by the state of Kansas.
Last week, the regulation committee of the Teaching and School Administration Professional Standards Advisory Board of the Kansas Board of Education unveiled a proposal that would change certification standards for new teachers.
Under the proposed change, teachers would have to prove their competence in the field for a year or two before becoming fully licensed. So instead of earning certification immediately after graduation, students would have to spend an additional two years as paid, full-time teachers.
"It would be a different state perspective upon completion," said Richard Whelan, acting dean of education and a member of the committee. "The graduate would receive a conditional license for two years to show they can do the outcomes.
"If they successfully complete it, then they receive a regular license and renew it at five-year intervals."
School districts and the board of education would provide a support system for some graduates who teach the additional two years but fall to do an adequate job. Other graduates simply would be denied a teaching certificate.
"This would be more rigorous than any other profession." Whelan said. "We won't rely on pencil-and-paper tests. They would have to show they can do what's required for the job."
The certification changes would not change the school's current five-year program, Whelan said. Students still must complete a bachelor's degree during the first four years. In the fifth year, the student must complete a six-week student teaching period in the fall and a full internship in the spring.
Recommendations
The Kansas Board of Education is considering a proposal that would change teaching certification requirements. Richard Whelan, acting dean of the School of Education, said that the requirements could go into effect as soon as 1997.
Current requirements: Students from the school earn four-year degrees and spend a year as student teachers to earn certificates.
Proposed requirements: In addition to the current program, education graduates would spend two years in full-time, teaching positions before certification.
KANSAN
Source: The Associated Press
Whelan said that the school evaluated graduates at one-, three- and five-year intervals and spoke with principals and superintendents with the permission of the graduates.
The board of education probably will not adopt the plan until 1997, Whelan said. The proposal would apply to anyone who is not certified. He also said that the regulation committee still was developing the list of teaching goals.
Charlotte Armentrout, Topeka sophomore, said she was against the proposal.
"The program here at KU is already a five-year program," she said. "It's too much additional work to ask from a teacher."
"Some people that come out of college with high grades and high recommendations from their professors get in the field, and they can't handle it," he said. "You can't get the full scope of the job in half a year."
But Eric Schneider, Basehor freshman, said he thought the change would be a good idea.
Whelan said the proposal would be a positive change.
"This is a two-year, paid-contract experience," he said. "It's similar to students out of medical school having a residency."
KINGSTON
Heather Lofflin/ KANSAN
'X' marks the spot
Patrick Maher, Lawrence junior, and Eric Wydeven, Lawrence senior, play tic-tac-toe near Wescoe Terrace. They were passing time between classes yesterday. The two meet every Monday, Wednesday and Friday at lunchtime to talk or spend time together.
Student leaders share KU experiences
By Denise Neil
Kansan staff writer
Karen Blackwell got the feeling her future roommate did not know that she was African-American when she talked to her over the phone before the beginning of her freshman year.
"My biggest fear was walking in the dorm room and wondering, 'What will she think when she sees me?'
Blackwell said she had arrived at the residence hall early and had left her roommate a note that read, "I'm Black. Here's a picture of me. Tell me what you think. I'll be back and see you later."
When she returned to her room, her roommate already had been there but had left a note in return.
"It's okay that you're Black. You look cool," the
"I'll be back and see you later."
Blackwell and the other students expressed concerns and shared stories about their personal strug
Blackwell, Chicago sophomore, was one of six African-American student leaders who spoke about their experiences at the University on Tuesday night at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
BLACK HISTORY MONTH
gles to feel comfortable at the University, where only 2.7 percent of students are African-American
Curtis Jones, Kansas City, Mo., senior, had an experience similar to Blackwell's when he first arrived at the University. His roommate was his first white friend, and he was his roommate's first African-American friend.
"We were each of lost," he said. "We had to educate each other. Being Black at the University of Kansas, a majority Euro-American campus, is a little different. It has its advantages and it has its disadvantages."
Dealing with people who are ignorant about other cultures is one disadvantage. Jones said.
"The only time on this campus I've ever been called a nigger straight to my face was by a European American," he said. "I was hurt at first. But
then I talked to him about it."
Jones said he had taken the student aside and had asked him why he had said that. The student told him that he had been raised in an area of Chicago where that type of language was the norm. Jones said he had explained to the student how his ancestors had fought so that he would not be called that name.
"A semester later he came back and told me, 'You touched me like nobody else at the University of Kansas has.' From that day on, he quit saying that word," Jones said.
These types of problems could be solved at the University, Jones said, if all African-American students take an active role in changing things and adopting positive attitudes.
Sherwood Thompson, director of the Office of Minority Affairs, said that listening to the panel had assured him that African-American students in general felt comfortable at the University.
"Those students seemed to think that KU is fantastic," he said. "However, there are concerns. We're concerned about expanding resources and improving the environment so more inclusion is practiced."
INSIDE
Super Sampson
Page 9.
Kansas sophomore guard Charisse Sampson does it all: scores, rebounds and buys shoes.
Regents to vote on residence hall renovations
PORTLAND 3
Bv Jamie Munn
Kansan staff writer
Three KU residence halls may move into the future with the help of renovation funds from the Board of Regents.
The Regents will vote today to allocate almost $1.3 million to continue renovations in Corbin Hall. $50,000 also could be allocated to a renovation study of Lewis and Templin halls.
If approved, the student housing system would finance a second phase of renovations for Corbin, the oldest residence hall on campus.
Built in 1923, Corbin has been under extensive interior remodeling for several years. Ken Stoner, director of student housing, said this phase of the renovations
would concentrate on exterior work but also would include some internal renovations for students in wheelchairs.
"Right now, we're firming up the outside of the building," he said.
The phase also would include replacing wood windows with metal frames and installing better outside lighting.
He said that internal renovations would include improved accessibility in a first-floor wing that would be specially designed for movement-impaired students.
Stairs also will be added inside Corbin where there are dead-end corridors, Stoner said.
However, Corbin is not the only hall with new blueprints for the future.
David Schaecher, program manager for capital improvements, said Lewis and Templin would be used in the renovation study as prototypes for other halls on campus.
"We'll be providing what students are getting in the private sector but with the convenience of living on campus," he said.
Schaecher said the study would provide options for apartment-style housing that would replace the traditional suite-rooms built in the early 1960s.
By studying the financial and architectural feasibility of the project, the Department of Student Housing could determine the likelihood of future hall renovations, Schaecher said.
Improvements would include more storage options, computer and audio-video
support and semi-private bathrooms.
Funds for the new renovations probably will come from revenue bonds, Schaecher said.
Although the limit for the study is $50,000, Stoner said, he didn't know whether the amount would cover the study. However, he said it would provide an example to architecture firms that might become interested in the project.
Stoner said that when the Regents selected an architecture firm to study the renovations, a proposed plan could be ready in 90 to 120 days.
"There's already a number of prototypes we've already put together," he said.
When a design is selected, the renovations could begin in 1995. Stoner said.
2
Thursday, February 17, 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-Flint Hall, Lawrence, KA 66045.
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ON CAMPUS
International Student Services and Student Legal Services will sponsor a tax workshop for international students and scholars at 3:30 p.m. today at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union.
The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an information table from 9:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. today at in front of Wescoe Hall, Call Debra Brodsky at 864-3742.
The Office of Study abroad will sponsor an informational meeting on study abroad in Great Britain at 4 p.m. today at 3 Lippincott Hall. Call Nancy Mitchell at 864-3942.
Canterbury House (Episcopal/Anglican) will celebrate Holy Eucharist at noon today at Danfort Chapel.
KU Karate Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at 130 Robinson Center. Call Brad Bernet at 832-2157.
International Student Association will meet at 6 p.m. today at the Governor's Room in the Kansas Union.
Latin American Society will sponsor a "Rice and Beans Presentation" at 6 p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
Student Senate will sponsor a "Center for Community Outreach" meeting at 6 p.m. today at the International Room in the Kansas Union.
InterVarsity Christian Fellowship will meet at 7 tonight at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union. Call David Zimmerman at 864-7117.
Icthus Christian Outreach will meet at 8:30 tonight at the Big 8 Room in the Kansas Union
KU Students for Slattery will meet at 9 tonight at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union. Call Jeff Bottenberg at 832-8350.
The Student Assistance Center will sponsor a workshop, "Time and Study Skills," at 8:30 onnight at 4057 Wesco Heal, Cal 814.446.464
LeSbIGaySOK will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. Call Scott Manning at 864-3091.
Jayhawker Campus Fellowship will meet at 8 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. Call John Dale at 864-1115
Amnesty International will meet at 8 tonight at the Glass Onion,624 W.12th St.
Psi Chi will meet at 7 tonight at 547 Fraser Hall.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a House/Hall contacts meeting at 9 tonight in the lobby at McColum Hall. Call Wendy Doyle at 843-0357.
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KANNAN
TODAY
Cooler and chance for rain
High: 52'
Low: 33'
WEATHER
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 64°/43°
Chicago: 56°/35°
Houston: 69°/42°
Miami: 75°/66°
Minneapolis: 39°/21°
Phoenix: 67°/54°
Salt Lake City: 56°/38°
Seattle: 47°/45°
Omaha: 80°/25°
LAWRENCE: 65°/38°
Kansas City: 61°/35°
St. Louis: 68°/40°
Wichita: 63°/35°
Tulsa: 66°/43°
TODAY
Tomorrow Saturday
Partly cloudy and very windy
High: 65°
Low: 38°
Partly sunny and mild
High: 67°
Low: 49°
Cooler and chance for rain
High: 52°
Low: 33°
Source: Alan Denton, KU Weather Service; 864-3300
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, February 17, 1994
3
SOME EDUCATION EXISTS
THE IGNORANCE
Heather Lofflin / KANSAN
The writing is on the wall
Kathy McDavitt, Wichita senior, and Jenny Pauls, Lawrence graduate student, sat by Wescoe Terrace between classes and enjoyed yesterday's springlike weather. Graffiti on the wall behind the students read, "Some say education is expensive — try ignorance."
Community promotes Rock Chalk Revue
By Frank McCleary Kansan staff writer
Before Rock Chalk Revue can entertain its audiences, its organizers have to make sure that people know about it.
An important part of the process is promotions, said Kristi Klepper, Ellinwood senior and promotions coordinator for the annual variety show.
Klepper said the organizers budgeted about $1,700 to promote Rock Chalk. Most of the money is donated by Rock Chalk's sponsors: the Jayhawk Bookstore, 1420 Crescent Road, and the Lawrence Journal-World.
The money used to promote Rock Chalk does not affect the amount donated to the United Way of Douglas County, Klepper said.
ROCK CHALK REVUE 1994
"The majority of donations come from ticket sales," she said.
Several Lawrence businesses other than the sponsors help promote Rock Chalk.
Molly McGee's, 2429 Iowa St., will serve a "Rock Chalk Reuve" burger starting Monday.
Jack DePrima, manager at Molly McGee's, said the restaurant had supported Rock Chalk in the past.
"Business is usually pretty good during the show," he said. "Supporting the show is something we wanted to do."
Klepper said about 40 restaurants in Lawrence had agreed to display cardboard advertisements to help support the show.
The city of Lawrence also has recognized Rock Chalk for its community service.
The Lawrence City Commission on Tuesday proclaimed the week of Feb. 20-26 "Rock Chalk Revue Week."
Rock Chalk will be presented at 7:30 p.m. Feb. 24, 25 and 26 on the Lied Center. Tickets cost $8 for the Feb. 26 show, $10 for the Feb. 25 show and $15 for the Feb. 26 show. Anyone interested in ordering tickets should call the Rock Chalk Revue Office at 864-4033.
Survey aimed at graduates
Questionnaire intended to help Graduate Senate address student issues
By Heather Moore Kansan staff writer
Graduate Student Senate has created a graduate experience survey that would give graduates students better representation at the University of Kansas.
Michelle Violanti, administrative assistant for the Graduate Senate, said that the survey would look at the professional development of graduate students, their financial resources, their social life and their views on departmental and University structure.
"This will give the graduate school a graduate student's perspective, which will show if changes need to be made," she said.
Violanti said graduate students would benefit from the survey in two ways.
"In the short-term, it will give them access to the administration that they don't have individually," she said. "When it comes from a body, it carries more weight and a sense of community voice. In the long-term it could change issues of concern for graduate students, such as child-care and research resources."
The survey also would point out graduate students' positive experiences, Violanti said.
She said that graduate students needed a voice for their concerns.
"Graduate students are often scattered and don't come together," she said. "Graduate Senate is one way to come together."
Jeff Gardner, Graduate Senate executive chair, said that graduate concerns differed from those of undergraduates.
"It becomes apparent when you're a graduate student that your interests,
needs and demands differ," he said. "Student Senate is effective with undergraduates but really doesn't focus on graduate needs. It's not a matter of division. There is not hostility between graduates and undergraduates."
Gardner said Graduate Senate did not want to end its ties with Senate.
"Splintering is considered a bad precedent that will build and undermine the undergraduate Senate," he said. "Those in the undergraduate Senate know we have joint committees."
Gardner said that having good graduate students was in the best interest of all undergraduate students because many graduate students teach undergraduate courses.
"For KU to have a graduate representation,this attracts good graduate students when they shop for schools,"he said.
More than 2,400 graduate students will receive the survey, which will be released no later than the week of Spring Break. The results will be compiled and released this summer. The Endowment Association, the Graduate Senate and the graduate school are financing the survey.
Lynette Sharp Penya, executive director of the Graduate Senate, said that the survey would help Graduate Senate better represent graduate students.
The results of the survey would reflect graduate concerns and the goals of Graduate Senate in addressing these concerns, Penya said.
CAMPUS BRIEFS
"If you get the survey, send it back, or all of our efforts are in vain," she said. "Without a 40 percent return rate, the representativeness of the survey is destroyed."
Asian festival to get funds from Senate
Student Senate passed a bill last night that gives the Asian American Student Union $2,755 for a performance by Jude Narita, an Asian American performance artist, at its annual festival in March.
Atits Feb. 2, meeting. Senate voted down the group's original request for $4,832 to finance Narita and four speakers. The group then introduced the new bill, which eliminated two speakers. The group has
raised $7,326 on its own.
Kuo-Jen Tsao, off-campus senator and organizer of the festival, said the group still hoped to invite the two speakers who had been eliminated
"I think the problem we ran into last time was that Senate was in a bad situation with budgeting the bills on the floor," Tsao said. "By passing the bill, I feel like the Student Senate is showing support for these types of events that promote multicultural awareness."
Workshop offers tax help
International students can clear up confusion about taxes today at a workshop sponsored by International Student Services and Legal Services for Students.
The program will explain U.S. income tax laws to international students. The students can find out if they are obligated to pay income tax on their earnings and if they are entitled to refunds. Information about how to file income tax returns also will be provided.
The program is being offered from 3:30 to 5 p.m. today at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union.
ROTC places at drill meet
The KU Naval ROTC, under the command of Midshipman Robert Kudelko, took second place in the 22nd annual drill meet Friday at Tulane University in New Orleans.
Illinois Institute of Technology
took first in the competition. Twenty-six teams competed, including Texas A&M University, University of Notre Dame, the University of California at Los Angeles and Tulane University.
The competition included manual rifle drills and marching elements. The Fourth Division Marine Corps of New Orleans graded each team and its drill commander on their performances and used their combined scores for the final team grade.
In addition to the Naval ROTC competition, the Naval, Army and Air Force ROTCs marched Saturday in the City of New Orleans Krewe of Irish Parade, which was a part of the Mardi Gras celebration.
The Associated Press
House may begin debate on proposed term limits
TOPEKA — The House might debate term limits after all.
Supporters of a proposal to impose term limits on state legislators are set to try to pull the measure out of the Committee on Governmental Organization and Elections. The committee has yet to act on it.
Rep. Richard Alldritt, D-Harper, notified his colleagues yesterday that he would ask them to pull the proposal out of committee. His motion will need 70 of 125 votes to prevail.
There are two term limits proposals, both of which supporters would like to pass this session.
The first is the proposal relating to state legislators. It is a proposed constitutional amendment and would limit lawmakers to serving 12 years in the state House and 12 years in the state Senate.
The second is a bill that would limit Kansans to serving six years in the U.S. House and 12 years in the U.S. Senate.
The Committee on Governmental Organization and Elections had endorsed the second proposal.
Alldritt wants to debate the first measure, the proposed constitutional amendment to put term limits on legislators.
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Thursday, February 17, 1994
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Waiting period restricts legal access to abortion
A federal appeals court recently upheld a North Dakota law restricting access to abortions. This law, based on the Pennsylvania law upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court, places an undue burden on rural women and minors and should have been found unconstitutional. Both laws require a 24-hour waiting period for women seeking abortions.
In the words of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, who wrote the dissenting opinion in the Pennsylvania case, an undue burden exists if it is "a substantial obstacle to a woman's choice to undergo an abortion."
"Informed consent" is a misleading term to use in describing North Dakota's law. Requiring the state to provide information about fetal development and abortion alternatives, as North Dakota's law does, is one thing. Putting up a substantial barrier to access to an abortion is another.
It is impossible to interpret this waiting period as anything other than an undue burden for rural women and minors.
The legal waiting period is intended to allow a woman a period of reflection before she receives an abortion so she is less likely to make a rash decision. However, few women arrive at the decision to undergo this procedure without giving it a lot of thought.
The state cannot ensure that women reflect properly on their decision to undergo an abortion. Instead, the waiting period will only ensure that some women are less able to exercise their constitutional right to choose.
Abortion is legal. It must be accessible if it is to be a choice. Policies that restrict its accessibility to certain groups of women are unfair and should be avoided.
MARGARET BECK FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
States need help coping with immigration deluge
California Gov. Pete Wilson's demands for illegal immigrant benefits may seem like an unnecessary SOS. But due to shrinking budgets and growing immigrant populations, other states also need bailing out. Until immigration reform occurs, all states deserve federal help with their social program stowaways.
From coast to coast, states with large immigrant populations are struggling with the problem of how to provide for both legal citizens and immigrants. Florida, one of the first states to challenge Washington, has begun denying foster care to undocumented aliens. Now the California earthquake has brought the question to the national stage, and more states are expected to demand payment for services given to illegal aliens.
And why shouldn't they? The United States government provides both emergency and humanitarian aid to other countries on a regular basis. But it does little to address changes in immigration patterns and even less to help its own states cope with the approximately 500,000 illegal aliens who enter this country each year
Unlike legal immigrants, who must have special job skills or a relationship to an American citizen or be seeking political amnesty, undocumented aliens are often unskilled and financially dependent. Plans are underway to curtail illegal immigration, but no concrete solutions have been suggested to help states deal with those already here.
Until Congress overhauls our outdated immigration laws, the floodgates will remain open. It's time Washington stopped expecting the states to cope with the deluge on their own.
KANSAN STAFF
SAMANTHA ADAMS FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
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
Editors
Editors
Asst Managing Editor...Dan England
Assistant to the editor...J.R. Clarborne
News...Kristi Fogler, Katie Greenwald
...Todd Seifert
Editorial...Couture Nicola
Nathan Olean
Campus...Jess DoHaven
Sports...David Dorsey
Photo...Doug Hesse
Features...Sara Bennett
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
Business Staff
Business Star
Campus sales mgr...Jason Eberty
Regional Sales mgr ...Troy Tervawer
National and Coop sales mgr...Robin King
Special Sections mgr ..Shelly McConnell
Production mgr ..Lara Guth
Gretchen Kootterlehrind
Marketing director ..Shannon Reilly
Creative director ..John Carlton
Classified mgr ..Kelly Connelys
Teacheats mgr ..Wing Chan
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address, and contact information affiliated with the University of Florida, or someone on behalf of the university, or faculty or staff.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Staffer Flint Hall.
Daily picketing by Rev. Phelps no laughing matter in Topeka
When Jerry Berger entered the restaurant business, he never thought that he would draw theire of picketers. Nor did he think that he would someday be a lightning rod for hate and bigroot. But, as he and his wife, Patti, have learned, no one is immune to the effects of homophobia.
COLUMNIST
From his downtown Topeka office last week, Berger reflected on events that have drawn national attention and shame, much to the consternation of Topekans.
The Bergers started like many restaurantes do, with a dream of independence and a commitment to customer service. They purchased China, crystal and nice tablecloths. Their goal was a steak house with a broad menu and a personal, home-style touch. They leased space in the Gage Center shopping mall in Topeka and in 1990 opened the Vintage Restaurant and Lounge.
COLUMNIST
GREG
THONEN
"We care about our customers," Berger said. "If you come into our restaurant, you'll understand why we've been successful."
The Berger's hard workpaid off, and the Vintage became a popular gathering place for state legislators and
"It was a very tranquil existence, we just ran a restaurant like everyone else," he said.
When Berger's restaurant manager, a lesbian, was appointed to the Topeka Gay and Lesbian Task Force, fax machines across the city lit up. They called for the resignation of the "Lesbian-whore" restaurant manager. The once-tranquil period for Berger was about to turn chaotic. Sending these messages was the Rev. Fred W. Phelps, Topkea's controversial opponent of homosexuality.
business people.
The word was out, according to Phelps. He threatened to picket the restaurant if Berger didn't fire the manager. Berger refused. A skimish
at the restaurant last year between counter-demonstrators and members from Phelps' congregation at the Westboro Baptist Church led to a vow by Phelps to picket the Vintage every night. He has since kept his pledge.
Then came the pickets.
"They want to affect your life, they want to hurt your business," Berger said. "He has said on national television that he wants to put me out of business."
Phelps faces several harassment charges as the result of his inflammatory demonstrations. As many have noted, however, this is the type of attention Phelps seeks — being portrayed as a victim.
"They try to reach their goal by intimidation and fear. It's a real blight on the community," Berger said. "I
So begin the evenings in front of the Bergers' beleaguered restaurant. Between 6 p.m. and 7 p.m., every night, Phelps and his congregation arrive to preach their message. Carrying signs with defamatory statements, they march up and down the sidewalk. They taurt, harass and hurl epithets at Vintage customers and employees. The most invective of which matters little whether it's directed at an elderly woman or a family with children.
don't know if they expect me to just* run away and hide?"
Employees at the Town Crier bookstore, which is next door to the Vintage, have learned to ignore the picketers. To them, it's no longer a gay issue but one of power and manipulation.
The Bergers have no intention or, giving up their dream or giving in to hatred. They have, for the most part, taken all of this in stride. At one point, they even advertised a "Picketer's Special" — a ribeye steak dinner for $9.95 — on the marque in front of the restaurant.
But humor can go only so far when you're dealing with hateful minds.
"It's something I would never wish" upon anne. "Berner said."
upon anyote, Berger said.
Last week marked the first year of Phelps' daily intimidation campaign against one small business. I can assure you, no one in Topeka is laughing.
"Today it's me, who knows who it will be tomorrow. Who's the victim here, is it him, or is it us?" Berger asked.
Greg Thonen is a Kansas City, Kan. senior in journalism and sociology.
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Offensive speech detracts from learning
Many Americans react to any suggestion of speech restrictions with a gut-level revulsion. Anyone can say anything on campus, right? Hardly. Speech restrictions are unavoidable. Your physics professor, for example, cannot teach students that the world is shaped like a burrito.
Many believe that the proper boundary lies between "sensitive" and "insensitive" speech. Mohammad was taken to task on precisely those terms. At Brown University, where he was scheduled to speak as part of Black History Month, Jewish students wanted him banned because his
Does Mohammad have a right to express his reprehensible views on American college campuses? If he does, then our universities are in big trouble — not because they are harboring racists or promoting offensive speech but because Mohammad and others of his ilk demean the goals of reason and intellectual discourse to which our universities are dedicated.
When Nation of Islam representative Khalid Abdul Mohammad delivered a wildly anti-Semitic and racist speech at Kean College in New Jersey on Nov. 28, the wrath of congressional and civil-rights leaders was justly visited on him and his organization. But few commented on the fact that the speech was given at a university under the auspices of free expression and Mohammad's supposed contribution to higher learning.
Speech codes exist on every campus, for better or worse. These codes prevent students from verbally abusing each other. Even KU's new consensual relations policy may be seen as a restriction of free expression. There are boundaries between acceptable and unacceptable speech. The question is, where should those boundaries lie?
COLUMNIST
BRIAN
DIRCK
If Mohammad wants to shout these things on a street corner or appear on a talk show, fine. Those are appropri-
anti-Semitism offended them.
It is easy to sympathize with these students, and I agree that Mohammad ought to be prevented from speaking on campus. But not because he is insensitive. A "sensitivity" test for speech is premised upon the mistaken belief that no student should ever feel offended.
The issue is not sensitivity, but intellectual legitimacy. Mohammad's speech was not just repulsive: It was ignorant in the sense that it lacked any pretense of proof. He raved against Jewish "bloodsuckers" and the "cracker" pope, making no attempt to persuade with evidence, facts or logic. He simply indulged a penchant for infantile name-calling.
The university is under no such obligation. In any event, it is impossible to enforce because it is just too easy to shade from a standard that prevents, say, a drunken student from giving offense by shouting racial epithets to a limitation of unpopular, politically incorrect views.
ate settings; the university is not.
The university ought to be a free marketplace for ideas, good or bad, conservative or liberal. But it is not a landfill for unsubstantiated verbal garbage. Surely there is some point at which a statement ceases to be an expression of an idea and becomes mere refuse. Identifying that point is the real issue at stake in the Mohamad controversy and should be the subject of a serious discussion on American campuses.
Such a discussion would produce sharp disagreement. But disagreement about a thing does not mean that the thing itself does not exist or cannot be found. And surely the dialogue itself would possess intrinsic worth.
Let us not cavil about whether or not it is possible to distinguish between legitimate and illegitimate discourse. Of course it is. If not, let us stop pretending that the University of Kansas or any other university is a source of higher learning. Higher than what? Khalid Abdul Mohammad? I hope so.
Brian Dirk is a Conway, Ark. graduate student in history.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Renovated Kansas Union offers improved seating
I've been passing through the renovated Kansas Union all year, but it was only recently that I noticed the little additions that make it such a great place. Oh sure, I noticed the evolution of the Jayhawk on the Union floor immediately, the new Alderson Auditorium and the art gallery, but what I'm talking about is how much comfort there is — from the seats in the lounge area to the seats on the toilets.
First of all, the chairs in the main lounge area are very cozy — I've slept on one more than once. But the most improved feature of the Union has to be the toilet seats.
These seats are streamlined and contoured in comparison to the leg-numbing seats of Strong Hall, Wescoe Hall and Burge Union. They're light and easy to raise, and the color is a traditional china white. Yes, I'll admit it, I'm one of the nameless (not anymore) people who enjoys reading in the bathroom, and this new addition has created a better study environment for me.
So, I would like to formally thank those people who designed and installed the lounge chairs and the toilet seats in the Union. By the way, I also enjoy playing with the new motion-sensor faucets. So, I hope that everyone will see (or seat) for themselves and experience the wonder of high-tech comfort in the
Brian Masilionis Topeka sophomore
The right to bear arms should not be denied
Union. Oh, and if I'm there playing with the faucets and handing out paper towels, don't forget to leave a tip.
In an article in the Feb. 9 Kansan in the "Fighting Back" series, a disturbing trend is documented by the remarks of Sandra Albrecht, professor of sociology. She was quoted as saying that she would never have guns in her home and that she believes that all guns should be banned. Not even the wildest of progun supporters advocate that those
who do not wish to own guns be forced to have them.
Yet those who oppose the possession of guns wish to deny a constitutional right to those who do desire to possess them. One could argue that the freedom of expression guaranteed in the First Amendment of the Constitution should be denied. Indeed, such rights have been denied in the past. If Albrecht wishes not to have guns in her home, that is her prerogative, but it is not her prerogative (or anyone else's) to deny Second Amendment rights to law abiding citizens.
Bruce Cutter Director, KU Electronic Microscopy Lab
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, February 17, 1994
5
THE NEWS in brief
WASHINGTON
Kansas plant to benefit from Saudi plane deal; thousands of jobs saved
Saudi Arabia will purchase 50 planes from the American aerospace industry for $6 billion, an exultant President Clinton announced yesterday. He called the hard-fought agreement "a gold medal win for America's businesses and workers."
Clinton, speaking in the Roosevelt Room, said the purchase would be financed by the U.S. Export-Import Bank and would support tens of thousands of jobs in Washington, California, Kansas, Missouri, Utah, Arkansas and several other states.
The commercial planes will be built for the oil-rich kingdom by Boeing Co. of Seattle and McDonnell Douglas Corp. of Long Beach, Calif., proving "that we can compete," Clinton said in a splashy White House ceremony.
Rep. Dan Glickman, a Kansas Democrat whose district includes a Boeing plant at Wichita, told Clinton: "We thank God it is our job."
Saudi Arabia chose the American firms over foreign competitors. Britain, France and Germany all had lobbied in behalf of Airbus Industrie, the big European consortium.
Just how many Americans will be hired or kept on jobs they were apt to lose in a weakened industry was impossible to know for sure. Commerce Secretary Ron Brown estimated 100,000, saying every billion-dollar increase in exports means 20,000 new jobs for Americans.
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa Mandela offers concessions
Nelson Mandela offered concessions yesterday to white and black conservatives who want regional autonomy, saying the ANC is doing everything possible to avert civil war.
There was no immediate reaction from the conservatives, but Mandela's gesture did not meet their demand for independent homelands. The groups have vowed to boycott the first election to include South Africa's Black majority and are raising threats of political violence.
Mandela said that leaders of the African National Congress had approved drafting a constitutional provision allowing consideration of a white homeland and that they had dropped demands for a single-ballot system in the April 26-28 election.
The ANC remains opposed to establishing territories based on race, but Mandela said he was willing to discuss white fears and try to work out a solution.
"The matter is on the agenda, and we are prepared to hammer out a solution which is agreeable to all parties." he said.
Allowing two ballots — one for Parliament and another for regional legislatures — would give regionally based groups such as the Zulu nationalist Inkatha Freedom Party a chance to establish power bases. A single ballot would likely give the huge ANC control of national and provincial legislatures.
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina Surrender of guns is pledged
U. N. commanders announced pledges by Bosnia's warring parties yesterday to move their heavy guns from Sarajevo or put them under U.N. control by NATO's deadline of midnight Sunday.
NATO threatened last week to order air attacks on any howitzers, mortars or anti-aircraft guns not withdrawn from the city. Members of the alliance have indicated it would accept the weapons being put under strict U.N. control that prevented combatants from retaking possession.
Gen. Jean Cot, chief of U.N. peacekeepers in former Yugoslavia, said he received pledges to meet the deadline from leaders of both the Bosnian Serbs, who have besieged the city for 22 months, and Bosnia's Muslim-led government:
"There are guarantees that as of the 20th of February, weapons from the Serb side and the Bosnian side will be under our control," Cot told reporters at Sarajevo's airport.
But there were few outward signs of compliance. U.N. officials confirmed no new weapons had been placed under their control since Sunday, when 36 were reported to have been surrendered.
U. N. officials said the Serbs moved some guns away from Sarajevo but would not give any figures.
WASHINGTON ACLU charges bias in testing
The American Civil Liberties Union charges that girls are being denied their fair share of National Merit Scholarships because the qualifying test is biased against them.
A complaint was filed Tuesday with the Education Department by the ACLU's Women's Rights Project on behalf of the National Center for Fair and Open Testing.
The center, known as FairTest, is a Cambridge, Mass-
based organization that is critical of standardized testing.
It charges the Educational Testing Service and the College Entrance Examination Board with violating U.S. education law that bars recipients of federal funds from discriminating on the basis of sex. The college board sponsors and the testing service administers the Preliminary Scholastic Aptitude Test-National Merit Scholarship Qualifying Test.
Surveys done by FairTest show that boys account for about 60 percent of the National Merit Scholarship semifinalists and winners.
The College Board said it had not seen the complaint and could not comment on its specifics. But it said that on the basis of FairTest's news release it considered the charges without merit.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
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For a small pizza
$3.49+tax
additional toppings .75 each
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just call or come in!
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Kansan card offer good carry out only
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additional toppings .75 each
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Tuesday, Feb 15-Thursday, Feb.
DR. STRANGELOVE
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Wednesday 9:30 pm
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---
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Mar. 12 Sa 9 a.m.2-30 p.m.
Time
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- Call for other destinations include the Caribbean Areas are roundtrip from Chicago and subject to charges. Taxes not included, respects apply
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10
Does your Mac need service?
1-800-992-0796
Even the best technology can have occasional needs. So if your apple computer requires some pampering, there is no reason to despair. Union Technology Center is now authorized by Apple to cater to all your computer needs. The convenience of a campus location combined with the low student rates and quality service makes the
Union Technology Center the only logical choice for your service needs. Whether your computer refuses to turn on, the hard-drive won't cooperate, or you splash Perrier in to the computer's circuitry, the UTC would be more than happy to alleviate the problem. So, if your Mac
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union technology center
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Burton University & Lehigh & 818-964-5000
6
Thursday, February 17, 1994
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TOMBSTONE MUSEUM
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Hours: Mon.-Sat. 10-6
we buy & sell hardback books
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What Do You Think About Athletics?
The University of Kansas NCAA Certification Self-Study
You are invited to a Public Information Meeting
3:30 - 5 p.m. Friday February 18 Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union
An overview of the certification process
The university community is invited to ask questions and make comments about KU's intercollegiate athletics programs.
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1009 Mass 843-9032
Mon.
&
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SPECIALS
$2 $^{50} Schooners Irish Ale & Anchorsteam
MEN'S BASKETBALL TICKETS
ATTN: STUDENTS REDEMPTIONPERIOD
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FEBRUARY 16-FEBRUARY 18
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NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Associated Press
Tokyo officials try to cool simmering trade conflict
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TOKYO — As Washington turns up the heat with charges about closed Japanese markets, Tokyo officials are playing it cool, apparently worried that harsh words would raise the likelihood of a damaging trade war.
**WE ARE NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR LOST OR STOLEN COUPONS.
After U.S. Trade Representative Mickey Kantor used harsh language in accusing Japan of breaking promises to open its cellular phone market, the word for the day in Tokyo yesterday was "reise" — literally "cool and quiet."
"From the standpoint of preserving and developing friendly U.S.-Japan relations, our country believes both Japan and the United States should react coolly and quietly," said a statement by telecommunications minister Takenori Kanzaki.
Kanzaki disputed Kantor's accusation Tuesday that Japan had not lived up to a 1989 pact to give Motorola Inc. access to its cellular phone market.
But chief government representative Masayoshi Takemura said Tokyo would do nothing until the United States decided on specific sanctions on Japanese products because of the phone dispute.
About the farthest Japanese officials said they were ready to go was to appeal any U.S. retaliatory steps to the world free trade body, the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade.
The Motorola case was separate from the broader talks that collapsed Friday over Japan's refusal to accept a demand for numerical goals to measure success.
Japan continues to reject that demand. But Prime Minister Morihiro Hosokawa said yesterday that Japan had the responsibility to take the initiative in trimming its nearly 860 billion trade surplus with the United States.
"We would like to find the way toward a compromise as quickly as possible." Hosokawa said.
That surplus still is getting bigger, according to figures announced yesterday. Japan's overall trade surplus in January rose 17 percent over the same month a year earlier to $6.11 billion.
In Washington, congressional sources said they expected the administration to announce today that it was resurrecting a lapsed U.S. trade law allowing for retaliatory tariffs against countries deemed to be "unfair traders."
Robert Fiske met with U.S. District Judge Stephen Reasoner and later told reporters "it made sense" to empanel a special grand jury "because of the importance of this investigation and the importance of doing it as quickly and as thoroughly as possible."
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — The prosecutor in the Whitewater investigation asked a federal judge yesterday for a special jury to look into President and Mrs. Clinton's real estate investment.
Jury is requested for investigation of Whitewater Co.
The Associated Press
After the 40-minute meeting with Reasoner, Fiske said he hoped the special grand jury could be formed "as soon as it reasonably can be."
Fiske noted that a grand jury currently at work in Little Rock, Ark, meets only two or three days a month.
A new grant jury would work exclusively for up to 18 months on Fiske's probe of Whitewater Development Co. and the failed Madison Guaranty Savings and Loan.
Fiske said his investigation had been under way since late last month — and that three lawyers had been on board for the past two weeks.
"I will be in position, I believe, by Tuesday to make an announcement" of a staff that will total between five and 10 lawyers, he said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press.
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LITTOROWINZ & ROBIN U. ROSSIN PRODUCTION SILVEN SAGAL JOHN HIS HASSON A KOMAN HI STILVEN SAGAL
OPENS EVERYWHERE FEBRUARY 18
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entertainment
Capturing the reel world
Moviemaking is gaining interest in Lawrence. Could KU produce the next Fellini or Spielberg?
1234567890
Photo by Hisham Aba Husayn, special to the Kansar
Brian Wicks, Irvine, Calif., freshman, films the cast of a short mystery film that is still in production. The student-made film is directed by Hishua Aba Husavim, Rhdad, Squid Arabia junior.
By Kevin Hoffmann
Kansan staff writer
Lon Teter's filmmaking career began with his parents' lack of technical knowledge.
"It all started back,when my parents bought a movie camera," said Teter, Wichita freshman. "They didn't know how to use it, so I began playing with it to figure it out."
Soon Teter began using the camera for his own entertainment.
"I started making spoofs of "Saturday Night Live" and things like that," he said.
Today, Teter is fully entrenched in the filmmaking process. He recently directed his first film, "McKillum Hall," a short horror movie that takes place in McColium Hall.
Hisham Aba Husayn, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, junior, got started in filmmaking by accident.
Teter has joined many on the KU campus who are producing films and are interested in the art of filmmaking.
"I wrote the wrong number down on the registration," Husayn said. "I wanted to take an advertising course, and I ended up in an intro to television production course."
Two weeks later, Husayn, who was in a California junior college at the time, changed his major from advertising to filmmaking.
The University of Kansas offers filmproduction courses through the department of theater and film.
"In both film and video production, we offer basic, intermediate and advanced courses, as well as independent studies and internships," said Edward Small, professor of theater and film.
KU offers both a bachelor of arts degree and a bachelor of general studies degree in film studies through the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
Students interested in filmmaking can join FOKUS, or Film Organization for KU Students.
Some KU filmmakers have succeeded in making a name for themselves.
Last semester, Darrin Lile,Tulsa, Okla. graduate student, made a 45-minute film called "Eyes Upon Us," which won numerous awards — including second place at the Kansas Film Festival.
KU graduate Mike Robe directed the television movies "Return to Lonesome Dove" and "Burden of Proof."
Joseph Anderson, professor of theater and film, said that interest in filmmaking had grown on the KU campus since he began teaching more than two years ago.
"Making movies is a phenomenon of our times," Anderson said. "It is a very important part of our culture, so it's not surprising to me that so many people are getting into it."
Phillip Brown, Tulsa, Okla., sophmore, said interest in filmmaking had increased when the department of theater and film acquired Oldfather Studio, 1621 W. Ninth St., where students and
faculty can produce films.
"There are a lot more resources out there and more places to go to make a film," he said. "But, the people here are just as creative as out there."
Brown also said interest would grow when more feature films and television movies were produced in Lawrence.
One resource that often scares people away from filmmaking is expense, Brown said, but that should not prevent people from trying their hand at the art.
"The Midwest is becoming a good place — especially for television movies to be made," Brown said. "It's not going to grow unless the community allows it to grow, and Lawrence is doing that."
Husayn said that Lawrence was as conducive to filmmaking as California, an area usually associated with the film industry.
"Irecommend that you shoot on videotape," he said. "It can be incredibly cheap, and you learn things a lot quicker."
Teter said the entire expense of "McKillian Hall" was less than $10.
"We used corn syrup and red food coloring for the blood," said Teter, who wrote, directed and cast the film. "I bought a couple of knives and the videotape and that was it.
"If you want to do real quality work it can be expensive. But it's possible to make it cheap."
The hardest part of a student-made
film was getting the actors to treat the process seriously, Teter said.
"The biggest trouble is actors screwing around," he said. "Sometimes it gets frustrating."
Teter said his ultimate goal was to make movies — even though he knows that he is not the next Steven Spielberg.
"I don't care if I make it big in Hollywood or not," Teter said. "I just want to make some kind of movies, whether it's television or whatever."
Chris Batte, co-owner of The Hideaway, 106 North Park St., said he thought Lawrence residents would enjoy the creativity of student films. Batte recently began a Monday evening open film forum at The Hideaway.
"I brought in a projector, threw in some couches and pushed some tables out of the way," Batte said. "We had about 40 or 50 people in the bar, and we had a lot of fun."
"We're interested in anything creative
"We're interested in anything creative — whether it's an art film or just something somebody shot with the family camera in the back yard, as long as it's entertaining," he said.
Batte said anybody interested in having a film shown should bring it to The Hideaway.
review
'Schindler's List' leaves reviewers speechless
Sitting in the dark theater while watching the closing credits for "Schindler's List," Sludge and I finally realized that three hours and sixteen minutes had elapsed in what seemed like a heartbeat. This was probably because our hearts had stopped beating.
As we shuffled to the exits among the throng of moviegoers that had gathered to view this horrifying spectacle of fear and death, a reverent abyss of noiselessness enveloped everyone. What could possibly be said? The usual trivial post-movie small talk was out of the question. "That was good" or some other understatement, certainly wouldn't work, either. Director Steven Spielberg, recently nominated for an Oscar for his efforts on "Schindler's List," painted a picture so grim and so real that, leaving
Matt & SLUDGE AT THE MOVIES by Matt Gowen
the theater, we felt lucky just to have escaped with our lives.
Barely able to articulate my own thoughts some time afterward, Sludge's brain also was in a speechless mush. Let's just call this post "Schindler's" condition, the Bill-the-Cat Syndrome. In fact, I distinctly remember Sludge's initial reaction as simply... "Ack."
"Wow. I felt like I'd been hit with a
big bag of bricks.'
Total fear so good, Enter, Sludge:
"At least it wasn't all a complete death fest. It was hopeful there at the end, right?"
I didn't feel so good, either. Sludge.
Yes it was, Sludge. Hopeful, and a few other things: horrifying, gritty, true, raw, captivating, powerful, direct, evil, elegant and triumphant. This is truly a film that redefines cinema and Spielberg himself. Who would've thought that the master of the fantastical, the orchestrator of the largest-scale adventures in the history of film ("E.T." "Raiders of the Lost Ark," "Jurassic Park"), the believer of the unbelievable, could have scaled down his style to such a clean, efficient truth. Spielberg's signature massive crane and dolly shots were replaced with stationary, eye-level cameras. The
rousing orchestra normally associated with Spielberg movies was replaced with dark, haunting violin solos — thanks to composer/conductor John Williams, who did some scaling down of his own. The vivacious color was replaced with black and white.
"I thought the black and white was good. It was like old newsreels."
That's right, Sludge. Spielberg's newfound realism creates something of a documentary, only without the narration. The result is that you forget there is a screen, fifty years and an ocean separating you from it. You're there. On the trains, in the ghetto, in the gas chamber. You can't get away from it. You have no control over it.
See SPIELBERG, Page 8.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
FEBRUARY 17, 1994 PAGE 7
KULife
People and places at the University of Kansas.
calendar
Benchwarmer's Sports Bar and Grill 1601 W. 23rd St.
The Squib Cakes, 10 tonight, cover charge The Freddy Jones Band, 10 p.m. tomorrow, cover charge
Turquoise Sol and November, 10 p.m. Satur-
day, cover charge
These Days, 10 p.m. Feb. 24, cover charge
The Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire St.
737 New Hampshire St.
Mountain,Clyde,tonight,$4
Punkinhead,tomorrow,$4
Buffalo Tom,Saturday,$8(18 and over)
The Crossing
Bartleby, 8:30 tonight, $2
12th and Oread streets
Barleyle, 8:30 toonight, $2
Lonesome Hounddogs, 8:30 p.m. tomorrow, $2
Power and Fear, 8:30 p.m. Saturday, $2
---
803 Massachusetts St.
Tim Cross Jazz Group, 8 tonight, free
Finstein, 9 a.m. tomorrow, free
Mark Rasmussen, "Jazz Keyboard Virtuoso," 9 n.m. Saturday, free
Tom's Tuesday Thing, 7 p.m. Tuesday, free
Anonymous, 8 p.m. Wednesday, free
Tim Cross Jazz Group, 8 p.m. Feb. 24, free
TÉT
VIETNAMESE
NEW YEAR
7:00 p.m.
February 19, 1994
KANSAS BALLROOM
EVERYONE IS INVITED!!!
For more information, please
contact Cuong at 749-4065
Sponsored by: KU Vietnamese Association
Minority Affairs & Student Senate
Since WATKINS 1907
WATKINS 1907
"We Care For KU"
Busy schedule?
Watkins Pharmacy
Is Convenlently
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
SOULSHAKER
GRANADA GRANADA EST. 1924
THE GRANADA 1020 MASS.
THURSDAY FEBRUARY 17TH
8
Thursday, February 17, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SPIELBERG: Director comes of age with 'List'
Continued from Page 7.
"I hate it when I get that caught up in a movie, it wears you out."
It wore everyone out. The Jews and Oskar Schindler, especially. Schindler, played by Liam Neeson, was a reluctant hero, a German businessman who gathered Jewish investments and employed cheap Jewish labor to sustain a factory. Indulgent of alcohol and women to a Dionysian degree, he backs into her heroism when he realizes that, when the Jews are to be relocated to Auschwitz, he has the opportunity to save hundreds of lives. Through bribes and trickery and the help of his Jewish bookkeep-
er, played by Ben Kingsley, Schindler brings 1,100 Jews out of certain death at Auschwitz to work for him. The audience is never allowed to see whether Schindler's actions are a result of true human compassion or if they just make him feel better, but that point proves inconsequential to the results.
"He was a jerk at first. All he wanted was money.
But he wised up."
by Ralph Flenes, whose sociopathic and grotesque executions defined the mindless torture the Jews endured.
Fiennes' ruttless, paranoid performance is a breakthrough. With Neeson and Spielberg's nominations, as well as a nod in the best picture category, the film received a total of 12 nominations from the Academy. But they fell one short, in the supporting actor category. Kingsley's introverted, sardonic and somber portrayal of bookkeeper Itak Stern, who helped Schindler create the "List of Life," simmered with tranquil intensity. He is as deserving of an Oscar nod as anyone on the ballots.
"Schindler's List," for all the darkness and grusome pain, is a refreshing reminder of what Hollywood is still, however infrequently, capable of producing. Hollywood is for escapist adventures though, right? The kind Spielberg is famous for, like the Indiana Jones series or "Close Encounters of the Third Kind." Don't get me wrong, I've loved his films just like the rest of the world. But there is something more to Spielberg. Preceding his semi-auto-biographical film "Hook," the ad campaign posed the question, "What if Peter Pan grew up?" With "Schindler's List," that question is answered.
coffee
Coffee HOUSE
Coffee HOUSE
Bucky's
Bucky's
9th & Iowa 842-2930
Special Offer
After 5 pm
99¢
Double
Cheeseburger
Only For a Limited Time
Hockenbury Tavern 1016 Massachusetts
Thurs.-Witch Doctors
Fri.-Common Ground
Sat.-Houndogs
865-4055
Coffee House
COMEDY THURSDAY
MUSICIANS FEB. 17
PERFORMANCE ART KANSAS UNION GALLERY
POETRY READING 7:30 P.M.
SHORT STORIES SUA
Bocky's
9th & Iowa
842-2930
Special Offer
After 5 pm
99¢ Double Cheeseburger
Only For a Limited Time
Pancho's
MEXICAN RESTAURANT
Come join the fiesta!
711 W 23rd 843-4044 in the Malls Shopping Center
THE HARBOUR LIGHTS
Now a full service bar after 57 years of downtown tradition
1031 Massachusetts Downtown
Are you interested in the protection and rehabilitation of Wildlife?
Students For WildCare Informational Meeting
Wednesday, Feb. 23rd
6031 Haworth 7:00 p.m.
For more info call Patrick 832-8451 or Amy 842-4055
STUDENT SENATI
KANSAS SPORTS CLUB
FAN SHOP
Lawrence's Original fan shop.
NEW!
ZENITH DATA SYSTEMS
Z-SELECT 100
Intel 486DX/33
4mb RAM, 1mb VRAM
3.5" HD Floppy Drive
170mb Hard Disk
14" SVGA color monitor
One year On-Site Warranty
MS-DOS 6.2, Windows 3.1 pre-installed
and much more! Come See It!
Jayhawk Bookstore
only at the top of Naismith Hill!
1420 Crescent Road Lawrence, KS 66044
843-3826
The Sports Authority
KJHX 90.7
The Only Radio Station in Town with Live Olympic Coverage from Lillehammer, Norway on Sports Talk
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in the Malls Shopping Center
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842-2992
KANSAS
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DISCOVER AMERICAN EXPRESS
IBM
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Stay tuned for a different guest each week!
SRS
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The Sports Authority
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The Only Radio Station in Town with Live Olympic Coverage from Lillehammer, Norway
on Sports Talk
• Every Thursday Night
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Talk
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The Honorary of Hampshire
on 14th June, 2006
at 11am
We wish you a joyous
anniversary for the occasion of
the dedication of Hampshire
to the Hermitage Monastery
on
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SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, February 17, 1994
9
COLUMNIST
CHESLEY DOHL
Bewildered fan contemplates Winter Games
In Lillehammer, Norway, there's a lot of snow and a lot of the world's best athletes competing for gold medals.
In a front row seat, compliments of CBS, with a stack of Winter Olympics sports sections and magazines right beside me, I'm hoping for some inspiration. You see, I'm attempting to write about a topic that I honestly know little about - the XVII Winter Olympic Games.
How can an admitted Winter Olympics illiterate sit down at a computer and type 1,000 words without giving you a complete snow job? (Ha! Get it?)
Well, I'm beginning to wonder just how many people in this fine country are actually watching the Olympics.
My roommate really got me thinking.
Here's a girl who digs working out, watches the Super Bowl, the World Series, and Kansas basketball and football games. I consider her an average sports enthusiast and up-to-date in sports events.
I asked Gina what she thought about this year's Winter Olympics – four days after they began. Brace yourself for this one:
"Oh, so that's what you're watching," she said. "You mean the Olympics already started? I had no idea--but I love to watch skating. Hey, how're we doing?"
Her response knocked the wind out of me. It wasn't even what she said, but the carefree matter of fact way in which she said it. Sort of as if she could care less about the whole thing.
It's hard to get psyched about sports in which we rarely get to compete - such as every event in the Winter Olympics.
In Lawrence, basketball capital of the world, you simply slip on the high tops, call your friends and go to the gym for a pick-up game. It's simple. it's fun and it's a very available, inexpensive form of exercise and entertainment.
Skiing is another story. You can't simply call your friends, slip on your skis and drive a couple blocks to the local slopes for a quick pick-up match of Alpine skiing.
Instead, when snow finally falls by the foot at the University of Kansas, students go berserk. They "borrow" trays from the cafeterias, conveniently located trash can lids and sofa cushions from residence hall lobbies. With these objects, students create bobsleds to slide down the slopes of Mount Oread and Daisy Hill at breakneck speeds.
I think that's sort of the extent of interest in Winter Olympics at the University.
Have you even heard of the luge? Not many people know about the luge, but I learned something interesting the other day that has caused me to take a particular interest in this event.
Simply stated, the luge is an event that allows an athlete to become a virtual "human bullet" traveling at speeds up to 80 mph, with the capability of severing human limbs. And I kid you not.
In December, U.S. Olympics competitor Bethany Calcaterra-McMahon ran over the leg of a German coach who slipped in her track. Going 75 mph, she sliced his leg right off. Amazing but true. Now that would be something worth watching the Olympics for.
Cowboys' defense ropes Jayhawks
Kansas falls three games back in race
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
STILLWATER, Okla. — Overtime was not twice as nice for the No. 4 Jayhawks last night as Kansas lost to Oklahoma State 63-59 in the extra period of play.
The teams' last meeting also went into overtime when Kansas senior guard Steve Woodberry won the game on a three-point shot. This time, it was the other outside shooter in the game, Oklahoma State senior guard Brooks Thompson, who was in the spotlight.
With 10 seconds left in regulation, Thompson drove into the lane and hit a 10-foot jumper over Kansas freshman guard Jacque Vaughn. That shot put the game into overtime, in which the Cowboys outscored the Jayhawks 14-10.
"We were just in our motion offense," Thompson said. "We were looking for something to happen. I saw an opening, penetrated and made
it, thank God."
Kansas coach Roy Williams said he thought that Vaughn had played well defensively against Thompson.
"Jacque's deal was he wanted to stay in front of him, and he was," Williams said. "Thompson leaned in a bit and hit a tough shot."
The victory pushed Oklahoma State into a tie with Kansas for second in the Big Eight Conference at 6-3. The Cowboys improved to 17-7 overall, and the Javahaws dropped to 21-4.
It was apparent early that Kansas had to contain Oklahoma State junior center Bryant Reeves to win at a packed Gallagher-Iba Arena.
During the first five minutes of the game, the Cowboys went to Reeves for five of their first six possessions. Although Reeves scored only two points on those tries, he usually drew two and three Kansas defenders and left a Cowboy, such as senior guard Randy Rutherford, unguarded.
"They are a tough team," Williams said. "Oklahoma State has a great combination with Reeves and the outside shooting of Thompson and Rutherford."
Reeves finished with 16 points and nine rebounds, and both Rutherford and Thompson scored in double-digits.
Oklahoma State had an early 9-5 lead, but Kansas came back behind the play of Kansas junior center Greg
Ostertag. Ostertag finished with 18 points, 13 rebounds and five blocked shots, but he was not happy with his performance.
"It's always a team loss," he said. "I could score 25 points, but if we lose, I can't enjoy it."
Both teams shot poorly in the first half, but Kansas went cold after building a 22-18 lead. The Cowboys shot 40 percent from the field, but Kansas shot only 35.7 percent. With that advantage, Oklahoma State led at halftime 30-26.
Williams said the low percentages had been caused by tough defense from both teams, not poor shooting.
"You try to do a great job on the defensive end," he said. "If you watch college basketball with these two teams, it'd defense. I'll tell you, no one in this room could have scored against these two teams tonight."
"I think what we need to do is play the entire 40 minutes," he said. "We played well in the second half, but we've got to come out ready from the start."
Vaughn said that Kansas had not come out intense enough in the first half.
The low shooting percentages continued in the second half. However, Oklahoma State was able to keep its four point lead. 41-45.
The second half turned out to be a physical one — when two Jayhawks
hit the court. Woodberry was elbowed below his left eye on a jump shot and had to be taken out of the game temporarily.
"He's got about an inch-long cut," Williams said. "It affected him, but at the same time you have to give Brooks Thompson credit on his defense."
"He really wanted to play," Williams said. "He wasn't very effective. We tried to spot him and get him the ball."
Kansas senior forward Patrick Richey collided with an Oklahoma State player. Kansas senior forward Richard Scott played 10 minutes of the game but still was bothered by his left shoulder injury.
With two minutes left in the game, Kansas took a 48-47 lead on a free throw by Richey. He later had a chance to give the Jayhawks a three-point lead but hit only one of two free-throws.
Oklahoma State coach Eddie Sutton said the Cowboys had needed the victory. Oklahoma State is unranked in the polls, and six of its seven defeats have been by less than five points.
"We had a lot of missed opportunities," Richey said. "We had a great chance to win the game, but it didn't happen tonight."
"I thought this game was bigger for us than it was for Kansas," he said. "We really needed to beat a nationally ranked team."
OKLAHOMA STATE (17-7, 6-3)
Oklahoma State 63, Kansas 59
Player fgm/fga ftm/fta tp
Roberts 3-6 1-2 7
Burley 3-10 2-2 8
Reeves 6-16 4-8 16
Rutherford 4-9 2-2 12
Thompson 5-13 6-7 18
Phillip 0-1 0-0 0
Manzer 0-2 2-2 2
Pierce 0-0 0-0 0
Sutton 0-1 0-0 0
Collins 0-0 0-0 0
Totals 21-58 17-23 63
KANSAS (21-3, 6-2)
Player fgm/fga ftm/ta tp
Vaughn 3-8 1-1 8
Woodberry 5-189 4-4 15
Richey 1-5 8-12 10
Scott 0-2 0-1 0
Ostertag 9-12 0-1 18
Pollard 0-2 1-2 1
Rayford 0-1 0-2 0
Gurley 0-2 1-2 1
Pearson 3-7 0-0 6
Williams 0-0 0-0 0
Totals 21-57 15-23 59
Halftime Oklahoma State 30, Kansas 26.
3-point goalie Oklahoma State 4-15
(Thompson 2-6, Rutherford 2-5, Roberts O-2,
Manzer 0-1, Sutton 0-1), Kansas 2-16
(Woodbury 1-6, Vaughn 1-4, Richey O-3,
Pearson 0-2, Gurley 0-1), Reboulda O-1
(Ostertag 13), Asselts Oklahoma State 13
(Thompson 3, Reeves 3), Kansas 9 (Vugriff)
4. Total fouls Oklahoma State 19 Kansas
20. Attendance 6,381
It is the shoes for sophomore star
By Matt Siegel
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas sophomore guard Charisse Sampson likes to do only one thing more than play basketball.
"I love buying shoes," Sampson said. "Coach Brown says that is all I do — buy shoes."
When she's not buying shoes, Sampson starts at the off-guard position for the No. 10 team in the nation.
"I think I'm an all-around player," Sampson said. "Offensive threat, defensive threat, whatever. I need to be more consistent. I haven't done much vet."
Sampson may be modest, but there is no getting around the numbers. She averages 12.8 points a game and is in the top 10 in scoring, rebounding and steals in the Big Eight Conference. She also is ranked No. 1 in free-throw percentage in the conference.
HUNANIS 3 OLD
As a freshman, Sampson experienced immediate success. She earned Big Eight player of the week honors in January when she led Kansas to three victories while averaging 15 points a game, six rebounds and 3.7 steals. But at the end of the season, Sampson's averages began to drop. Or as Sampson put it, she hit a wall.
KANSAN FILE PHOTO
"I heard that Angela Aycock went through the same thing," Sampson said. "When you're in high school, you're used to being the go-to player. In high school, players like Angela and myself were used to taking control."
Kansas sophomore guard Charisse Sampson drives past Colorado sophomore guard DeCelle Thomas. Kansas and Colorado are Nos. 1 and 2 in the Bief Eight Conference.
Sampson met Kansas assistant coach Renee Brown when she was in the ninth grade. At the time, Brown was an assistant coach at Stanford University. The two hit it off. When Brown came to Kansas in May of 1901, Sampson was on her recruiting list.
"I liked Coach Brown, but I never had heard of Kansas," Sampson said. "But I thought there must have been something about it if Coach Brown was going there. I decided to check it out."
Although she ranks in the top 10 in several categories this season, Sampson has once again been slowed down. Sampson hyperextended her thumb in a tournament in New York. She said that the thumb had never healed properly and that she had reaggravated the injury during a recent practice. She wears a removable cast on the thumb, and she said it probably would not heal until the season ended.
If she has trouble with the injury, her teammates have not noticed.
"I think Charisse does all the little things," freshman guard Tamecka Dixon said. "Personally, I don't think she gets the credit that she deserves. She's just a player who does everything."
The fact that she isn't averaging as many
points as she did last season does not bother Sampson. She said that if players were in basketball for themselves, they would get nowhere.
"Coach Washington says I have something special in my hands," Sampson said. "I just happen to get my hands on the balls for steals and other things. It's just natural to me."
Runners prepare for Big Eight meet
By Andrew Gilman
Kansan sportswriter
Some on the Kansas track team will be looking to accomplish a lot this weekend by doing very little.
Instead of competing at the KSU Invitational, most of the middle- and long-distance runners will stay home and prepare for the Big Eight Conference championships.
The championships will be in Oklahoma City, Feb. 25 and 26.
"There won't be too many distance runners or sprinters going," assistant coach Steve Guymon said. "Right now it's a matter of getting people rested, cutting weights and workouts."
Junior Kristi Kloster, who will be competing in the 800-meter run and the distance medley relay, is just one of those who will have the weekend off.
"Most of us distance runners have been running since August, "Kloster said. "We needed a break."
The medley relay has four distances: the 800-meter, the 400-meter, the 1200-meter and the mile.
Kloster, who won the conference championship as a freshman, was redshirted all of last year with an injury.
Kloster suffered from muscle compartment syndrome, in which the tissues around the muscles in her legs were too tight. The tissue did not allow the muscles to expand, and surgery had to be performed.
She is fully healed now, and although she set a school record of 2 minutes, 51 seconds in the 1000-meter run earlier this year at the KU-KSU-MU Triangular, she is looking forward to doing well at the conference meet.
Kloster chose not to compete at the NCAA meet after she qualified for it her freshman year. But this year her goals are different.
"I love the 800," she said. "I want to go to nationals."
Although nationals are an individual goal for Kloster, she said that the team and the coaches were ready for the conference meet.
"I think we'll give Nebraska some trouble this year," she said. "We're pretty evenly matched up. Everyone's healthy, and the coaches are excited. They see the potential is great and we're as strong as we ever have been."
One of those coming off an injury from last season is senior Daniela Daggy.
Daggy, a distance runner, said that she had been injury free since summer and that she was ready to race.
"I'll be running both the 3000 and 5000-meter runs," she said. "I'll be ready to do well."
Kloster also mentioned that there were significant contributions being made by the freshman class.
"We have some great freshmen that have come in and helped motivate the upper classmen," she said. "They bring a lot of excitement to the team."
But there was plenty of excitement shown by the upper-classmen, as well.
"I'm just as excited as they are," Kloster said.Daggy put her emotions into a familiar phrase.
"Rock Chalk Jawhawk" she said.
"Rock Chalk Jayhawk," she said.
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10
Thursday, February 17, 1994
OLYMPICS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
U.S. wins silver in women's skiing
The Associated Press
LILLEHAMMER, Norway — Donna Weinbrecht knew the situation well: last to ski down a moguls slope with victory in her sights.
But it wasn't favorite Weinbrecht up at the start line. It was another American, Liz McIntyre, who had never even won a World Cup race.
McIntyre, the surprise top qualifier from Tuesday's first round, pulled off two big leaps and earned the best style score through the hard-packed mounds of snow.
But it wasn't good enough to beat Norway's Stine Lise Hattestad, who won the gold medal with better speed and all-round scoring.
McIntyre collected silver and Russian Elizaveta Koievnikova took the bronze.
Weinbrecht, who won six World Cup races in a row this season and is close to clinching the overall title, placed seventh, her worst showing in more than two years. She won the gold medal at the 1992 Olympics.
Today's Olympic TV Schedule
All Times CST
CBS 6-8 a.m.
EVENTS: Figure skating (men's technical program preview); hockey (United States vs. Canada report); cross-country sking (men's 10k combined classic report); alpine sking (men's Super G)
7-10 p.m.
EVENTS: Figure skating (men's technical program); alpine skiing (men's Super G); speedskating (women's 3000m); hockey (United States vs. Canada); cross-country skiing (men's 10k combined)
11:37 p.m.-12:37 a.m.
EVENTS: General report.
TNT noon-5 p.m.
EVENTS: Hockey (United States vs. Canada — live and TBA); figure skating (men's technical program — live); cross-country skiing (men's 10k combined classic and women's 10k free technique combined); alpine skiing (men's Super G); speedskating (women's 3000m)
The Associated Press
1994 Winter Olympic Games
The tally
A list of the top six countries winning medals in the Olympic games.
Gold Silver Bronze
TREASURE TALENT
Source: The Associated Press
Dave Campbell / KANGAAN
Country Gold Silver Bre
Russia 3 1 2
Norway 4 3 1
Italy 2 0
United States 2 1 1
Canada 1 0 2
Netherlands 0 1 2
The game of the day
The game of the day The United States hockey team will try to win its first game today against Canada.
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*All taxes and tips
*Central Location
Daytona's Beach is 23 miles long. Don't let a bad location ruin your Spring Break
749-0700
Witha
130 DECIBEL Personal Alarm
Protect Yourself Against Attackers
Dale 842-9129
- Fits in the palm of your hand
in the Kansas Union and 831 Massachusetts
- 2way action
Mom's House
PO Box 1837
Lawrence, Ks
66044-8837
Allow 3 weeks if paying by check, 2 if paying by M.O.
DON'T BE
THE NEXT VICTIM
Call Today!
Send check or money order, with name and mailing address to:
- Available for only $24.50,
postage pd.
Maupintour
TRAVEL SERVICE
On Campus Location
We'llfind the lowest fares and best schedules.
for AIRLINE TICKETS Don't Wait
AIRPLANE
130 Entertainment
BENCHWARMERS
Thursday Squib Cakes
$ . 25 Draws
18& over
Friday
Freddy Jones Band & Hard Soul
Poets
$2.00 Teas
18&over
Saturday
November
Turquoise Sol
2for 1 Wells
18&over
$1.00 shot of the day
everyday!
everyday!
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday. February 17. 1994
11
Brother, can you spare a dollar?
Available through February 25, 1984 at the Kaanen Business office; KU Booktakers, Kaanese and Burge Unions; University Book Shop and Jayhawk Booktakers.
Buy your Kansan Card for only $1.00 today
140 Lost & Found
FOUND: Lawrence HS ring, class of 31. Call 842-
4444.
Last callcus cat as of 2/7. Reward, please call 749-
3717
男 女
Programmable calculator found Tuesday after
15th at 11am. Call to info 843-6182.
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
CONFERENCE SUPPORT SPECIALIST
American Teleconference Services is searching for a few unique individuals to support our expanding business requirements. These successful candidates must have interpersonal skills; must have a high level of energy and be able to handle a fast-paced environment; computer skills and attention to detail are required; you must be willing to work with you will be rewarded with an excellent salary and benefit package which includes some unique features. Interested candidates are invited to submit
Director of Human Resources American Teleconferencing Services, Ltd. 10855 Lowell, Suite 800 Overland Park, Kansas 66210
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
300 SUMMER CAMP OPPORTUNITIES in NY, PA and NEW ENGLAND. Instructors need Swimming/SWI/LIFEguards, Archery, Gymnastics, Windsurfing/WSI/Lifeguards, Beach Training, Ceramics, Ceramics, Jewelry, Volleyball, Soccer, Dance, Dramasics, Equestrian, Fitness, Ropes, nuneen, Piano Accompaniment, Phys. Ed Majors now, Chef's, etc. Call Arlene at 483-648-2102
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girl summer camps. Teach: swimming, canoeing, water skiing, gymnastics, hiking, skiing, camping crafts, dramas, OR riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. WALK118 or more. Gift card, G/W/CWL 7195 Magle, NdL, IL 6003, 708-464-2244.
Cruise line, entry level, on-board positions available, great benefits. Summer or year round (813) 672-3900
'94
RESUMÉS
KU SENIORS
RESUME SERVICES
832-8100
☑COVER LETTERS
☑INTERVIEW TRAINING
Gourmet Bistro now bitting terrace server, wait-
tell me, where's the cat? 8600 W. 10th Street,
Society, 9020 W. 10th St, RB 833-664-1101.
East West Records is looking for a college rep in the Lawrence market. If you are diligent, enthusiastic and know alternative music, this might be for you. Call Cassie or Ian (212) 726-2860, west and east, Call Paul Inc. or Ian (212) 726-2860.
Looking for capable, committed and individual, to be a mother's helper. If interested, please send name and number to Staci, P.O. Box 212 Lawrence, KS 60044
Nannies Wanted. Positions nationwide, summer
great travel. Great gift and pay benne,
great travel.
Male companion for a semi-invail man. Light
motorcycle airborne afternoon Mon-Pri-
ter week. Phone: 849-7052
Juicers Shougirls
Explore the horizons of making $1000 + weekly, working at Lawrence's top adult night spot. Now hiring attractive dancers and waitresses 18+. Excellent working atmosphere. Apply in person, 913 N. Second, Lawrence, 7 p.m.-2 a.m., or call 841-4122 after 7 p.m.
Need instructor to give beginning organ lessons to my daughter in my home. Call 641-3844 after 5pm. Needed part-time, dependable person. Apply Marge village, 2048 and Iowa. No phone call.
**NEEDA FACTORY STORE filling several part**
*Gime positions.* Weekday afternoon, evenings,
*weekend weeks available. 15-20 hours/wk Winter*
*weekdays. Welcome to our office! Unit 104 104*
*weekdays. 749-4612 EOE*.
his player wanted for working R&B variety band.
Sff at 814-1555 or 814-9797.
BEAMSTRESS WANTED to work for small altera-
tions business. Flexible hours 41-6531.
Spend your summer in Malie!
Top private trainee. $20/94/8-94. Excellent salary for athlete trainee. 5/20/94-8/94. Excellent salary for BK/BD/landy, travel allowance. Women call or write: Camp Vega for Girls, P. O. Box 1717, Duxbury, MA. MA. (6332) (617) 934-8336. We will be on campus in the student hour from 1am-4pm.
BUMMER JOB OUTDOORS
Over 10,000 openings!
National Parks, Forests, Fire Crews,
Send Stamp for Free Details.
sena Stamp for Free Details.
Sullivan's, 113 I. Wening, Kailspall, MT 59901
Tennis Job-Summer Children's Campus-Northeast-Men and women with good tennis background can teach children to play tennis. Good salary. w/ job offer: camp Vogel, P.O. Box (77), Duxbury, MA 06233 (817) 934-6563. Men call or write. Camp Winsipa, 225 Brides Lodge, Boca Raton, FL 34313 (407) 904-5500. We will be at campus in the Orange and Regional rooms.
225 Professional Services
1040E2 $; 110 $; 140 - $1 plus extra fee for other forms to be filed with 104. State returns $45.10. Will pick up and deliver. Call Brian at 258-357-281. Driver education offered through Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 yrs. driver's license, transportation provided. 841-7749.
BRAXTON B. COPLEY
Attorney at Law
General Practice
Traffic Tickets, Mideemenors,
Landlord/Tenant,
Personal Income Tax
719 Massachusetts 749-5333
For a confidential, caring friend, call us
We're here to listen and talk with you.
Birthright 843-4821. Free pregnancy test
INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS
DV-1青村 Department of the U.S.
Immigration Dept. green cards provide permanent resident status, Citizens of almost all countries are allowed to take part. Students, tourists, may apply for a Green Card or Form A Legal Legal Services, 2001 Stagg S.C., Ganja Park, CA 91306.
www.univer.edu
el; (818) 998-4425; Fax; (818) 682-9681
STATE
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
Rick Frydman, Attorney 823 Missouri 843-4023
INTRBNATIONAL STUDENTS! We transfer Videos from US mode to your system or from your country to US mode. $25 includes mailing and mailing. You can send videos to Hawka, OKa, KS 6007, Call 1-429-6953 or 1-800-600-6953.
MATH TUTOR TEACHING EXPERIENCE,
SAT SCHEDULE ALLS. HOURS.
42-182 Leave a Message
TRAFFIC-DUIT'S
Fake D.I.S. & alcoholoffences
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
DONALD G. STROLE
donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
Not ready for boring adult life style? Want to *vaitre* Read! *Lake as an Odyssey*, Guide to Meaningful Careers and Unique Lifestyles. For more info call 1-800-893-7424
Tutoring a驳, college primary and secondary.
English, Spanish, Math. Science. Call 843-3011
OUI, TRAFFIC, Criminal Defense, Divorce and Civil Matters
VIDEO EDITING AND
PRODUCTION SERVICES
A/B roll board capture suite with EDL
3D capture equipment
H8 field production package.
Award winning screen writer.
PRIMAL SCREEN COMMUNICATIONS
235 Typing Services
*s1* + word processing, resumes, letters, term paper,
etc. *s1* @ 85, *p4* @ 875-874-30-50 mckwm
*s2* + word processing, resumes, letters, term paper,
etc. *s2* @ 85, *p4* @ 875-874-30-50 mckwm
1-der Women Word Processing. Former editor
1-der Women Word Processing to secure pages of letter
types. #84-2063
Looking for a good type?
- Looking for a good type?
* Paper, Applications, Spreads, Charts
* Laser engraving to YOUR own' papers
* Grammar and spelling free
* 18 years experience
call Jacki at
Makin 'the Grade
work only
Resumes
- cover letters
•writing
•consultation
Linda Morton, CPWR
TRANSCRIPTIONS
1012 MASS 842-469
SUITE 201-UPSTAIRS
A Member of
P A R W
Professional Association of Resume Writers
*BASS BED, firm, orchid mattress and deck,
dehumidifier, cost $100, $33 cash deal,
$749-$762.
*LIVING ROOM SET*, nfa, love seat and chair,
shelves, wainscoting, carpet, cost $1500,
dx. dealer, cashier tk-764-222-8988
305 For Sale
X
SNOW SKIES 175 Rosignol + bindings + case and piles 873 RADAR DETECTOR. Whistler Spectrum SEUM 800, CD PLAYER. portable Panasonic, 80. All in excellent condition, 841-6531.
GT30 G PTANFRA19 'BRIGHT RED T60 ALUM.
W CRMSO FORK SUNXT WOXI-3D DERAILERS
DIACOMPE PRAKES + LEVERS TIOGA PSY-
HY A ROCKET 5757 A O CHRIUS P-SY-
HAVE MESSAGE
300s Merchandise
Word processing, applications, term papers, dis-
sentations, resumes, Editing, composition, ruil-
jobs available. Masters Degree. 841-6254.
Words by Chris Word Processing.
High quality papers and printing; spell check
included. 865-3059.
black leather jacket kicker Jacket. cond. hardy M/F
$150.0 b. kristen. #84-3130
Classical Guitar, Guild 5P Class, $400-833-824
For Sale: 50 Classical CD's excellent selection
Macintosh Classic II 480 with 40.5 MB + MS Word.
Macintosh Classic II 480 with 40.5 MB + MS Word.
Macintosh Classic II 480 with 40.5 MB + MS Word.
or 91-893-0411 or 91-893-0412
340 Auto Sales
Men's 26 inch Giant Iguana min. tn. blue like a campus use. with / control Tech ends. $300
FOR SALE: *Mobilia XC1* x/45m² f2 leaf auto-
1812.90 euro call Mike AT 749-3349
Casto Graphing Calculator.
Manual included. Excellent condition. $55
Call 841-5849
Casio Graphing Calculator.
40 K. JUHAY Decal, three color, 19287 6"x5"
for $15. WO PBox 2017 Lawrence 60046
McGraw-Hill
MAC PLUS. 4-meg RAM. 30-meg hard drive,
printer. #4001-1. 183-6823. O,P,KS.
94 Dodge Omni. Rum well, reliable, $600. Leave message at 83-24-32
MACINTYSON OSI Computer. Complete system including printer only 800. Call Cisco 899-589-6885.
**69 JEEP WRANGLER in good condition. New tires. $7,000 If interested call 748-9088.**
1988 Honda Accord. 4 Dr, 5 Spd, cruise. A/C
Honda Mustang. Great condition. Call for details.
1991 Mazda Miata 20k miles, excellent condition
Call 741-8631
1990 Mazda RXV GDL, red, 46 Km, power sunroof.
$10.00 call (800) 327-5922
360 Miscellaneous
THE CHAPMAN
Used & Curious Goods
731 New Hampshire
841-0550
Noon - 6:00 Tues. Sat.
Buy • Sell • Trade
---
405 For Rent
400s Real Estate
1 Bedroom Apt. available now! Call 841-1212
2 Bdm w/wm and plenty of storage space, 2 bathrooms, D/W, W/D, central air, fire place and On KU bus routes $500 + utilities. avail.
Trailridge Apartments
Now leasing for Summer and Fall
Study, Apk, and Town House
Study, Apk, and Town House
Study, Apk, and Town House
Call Town Court, Sooibi
Call Town Court, Sooibi
3 Bedroom/ 2 full bath apt now available on bus route. Microwave & dishwasher $80.
4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished,
Interested? Attend 841-7255, 794-0485
or 846-4055.
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
843-7333 2500W.6th
- Close to campus
• Spacious 2 bedroom
• Laundry facility
• Swimming Pool
• Waterbed allowed
VILLAGE SQUARE apartments
9th & Avalon 842-3040
Available at West Hills Apartment. Spacious bed 1 bedrmed apt. $29 per month. Water pd. Great location near campus. 1012 Emery Rd. No pets. 81-3800, 54-3884.
Available immediately at Brady Apts. 189Kenny removed the bedroom apt, water & heat pad
from the kitchen.
Applicorp Apt. avail. 1.2 april 1 bath. 1 fully equipped ktch. dishwasher, micro. dispoal. heat, air, water, trash paid. On bus route. No pets. Call anytime 843-8220. Ask for Chris or Susan.
meadowbrook FALL, '94
You remember the time spent, the frustrations, the hassles. Do It Now. How? Glad you asked. Call 842-4200 & we'll send on complete program to you immediately. Kathy or Shana at Meadowbrook
842-4200.
15th & Crestline
Mon - Fri 8-5:30
Sat 10-4
Sun 1-4
Sorry no pets
RIO DUCO
Available now, two bedroom at 918 Tennessee
building, $45 plus utilities, small path G 79-760. k9
Available March 1. Two bedroom townhouse,
1½ bath; walk to campus, pool. $435 per month.
Gas/Boiler included.
A&C
MANAGEMENT SERVICES
RENT REFERRAL
SUNRISE
VILLAGE
660 Gateway Ct.
(Behind Sonic)
Now Leasing for Fall
Mon.-Fri. 10-12, 1-5
*Luxurious 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*
--with 4 Stops on Property
Furnished room for rent with shared kitchen and laundry from KU. Off street parking. No peta. 811-565-0000
LOOKING FOR A PLACE TO RENT?
841-5454
FREE SERVICE
841-8400 or 841-1287
Part25
We are now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature studio 1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. We also have 3 bedroom, $2 \frac{1}{2}$ bath townhomes.
- 2 Pools
- Volleyball Court
- On KU Bus Route
- 2 Laundry Rooms
- Some Washer/Dryer
Hookups
Call or stop by today.
2401 W. 25th, 9A3
842-1455
(sorry no pets)
Now renting for June and August. 1, 2 and 3 bldrs,
cabins with ceiling, ceiling plates, fans, cable plen,
lights. 7890 rpw / per day.
Lorimar Townhomes
Rooms, apartments, and well kept, older
824 Dblm duplex, air off, street parking
9749 or 834-9274. Available March 1, call 748-
9749 or 834-9274.
One bedroom apartment for sublease. Water and
electricity included free $145/mo. Now until Aug.
Call 849-104-0166
One bedroom, sublease taken to campus, off
of February
$300/mo, leave message 865-128
Spacious i bedroom apt very close to campus. Pur-
fice call 811-232-1324. Ask about Coldwater flat 64.
MASTERCRAFT
Offers Completely Furnished
Studio,1,2,3, & 4 bedroom apartments and townhouses
HANOVER 841-1212 : 14th & Mass.
REGENTS COURT 749-0445 :19th & Mass.
SUNDANCE
841-5255:7th&Florida
TANGLEWOOD
749-2415 : 10th & Arkansas
CAMPUS PLACE
CAMPUS PLACE
841-1429 : 1145 Louisiana
ORCHARD CORNERS
749-4256: 12th & Kasold
Open Daily 9AM-5PM
MASTERCRAFT
Equal Housing Opportunity
Ement and Maintenance Company - 842-4555
842-4455
Sublane large one bedroom on gp, on bus route. Low utilities, watered, PET, POR available, ASAP.
Sublease. Big I 18. WD W狄拥 CACH, DH
Cable pd. 1kb from KU. Available map. 749
-
Now leasing for FALL
We're making life easier
- Weekly Maid Service
- Bus Service
- Front Door Bus Service
- "Dine Anytime" with
- unlimited seconds
- Laundry and Vending Facilities
- Free Utilities
For more information call or stop by
Come on Over For Dinner
You don't have to live here to eat here! Our "Dine Anytime" meal programs let you enjoy a huge selection of appetizing entrees, vegetables, desserts, and salads from 7am-7pm daily (11am-6:30pm weekends) With our "Punch Card" and "5 Meal" programs you can get meals as low as $2.50 Either way, you'eat it up.
NAISMITH
Hall
1800 Naismith 843-8559
NAISMITH Hall
1800 Naismith 843-8554
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
*1 and 3 Bedroom
Apartments Available
*Quiet Location
*2 blocks from KU bus route
*Call Gina at 843-4754
2040 Heatherwood
House for rent 1 bedroom no pets, newly remodeled call 843-2033
430 Roommate Wanted
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
1/4 for b &edrm apt. New campus 2 full bath.
$144 per month + /uilt/ 885-444-845
1 roommate for 4 bdrm downhouse $14 p/m no utilities.
Call Melissa 744-790-762
Female non-smoking roommate wanted to share lease for 2 bedroom apartment close to campus for next fall. Must be a student. Call 833-2299.
How to schedule an ad:
3 furnished bedrooms in bedroom 2, close to campus
2 furnished bedrooms in DW, AC, 2/4 with $195.00
Call床址 841-8299
Male roommate to townhouse at Sunrise VILLE
call Mike or John at 833-1477 for details.
Mike or John at 833-1477 for details.
Female roommate wanted NOW For 31st House.
Live from campus WD, pets $150 call Lm.
Limited 2 weeks.
1 Rommate, non-smoker for 3 bdrm condo $175 per month. campus. Washer/Dryer> Drive
798-3146-7146
Roommate needed for big beautiful 2 bdm apt.
clear to campus+township $187.50 + sdh
$45.00 + gsdn
I HAVE TO MOVE TO K.C.I. ( female needed to share 3 bmrd, spacious apt. $200/mm. + utilities, on bus route, convenient location, no smokers or pets, call 842-7647 at the night.
Stop the Kansan office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or Vita.
ROOMMATE NEEDS to share two bedroom
house $178/mo + /utilities. Call Davw 843-390
or call Davw 843-224
Adobe照片 may be in billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made. • In navigation: 119 Stairway Fillet
- By Mail: 119 Starfor Flint, Lawrence, KS. 68045
Classified information and order form
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 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 spare 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.
Item. 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 Viva, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by bank or with cash are not available.
3 Nose
4 Nose
5-7 Nose
8+ Nose
Rates
Cost per Hour per day
1Xe per kilogram for money
Cost
2-2X
4-7X
8-14X
15-28X
30+X
2.98
1.55
1.55
.65
.75
.99
1.90
1.15
.80
.79
.65
.45
1.85
1.85
.75
.65
.65
.65
.49
1.75
.99
.65
.65
.65
.25
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
110 bautheo parvronals
128 onnoncomeets
130 entertaalman
140 list & book
285 inc soda
285 inc water
272 professional services
272 microelectronics
293 jobs online
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form · Please Print:
370 want to buy
485 for rent
438 resemble wanted
1 | | | | | |
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Date ad begins: Total days in paper
Total ad cost: Classification:
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**YISA**
Method of Payment (Check one) ☐ Check enclosed ☐ MasterCard ☐ Visi-
(Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansan)
Furnish the following if you are charming your ad:
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The University Dairy Kansas, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 68045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
Here they come...Ha ha ha ha...
FAKE PICNICKERS
"Lands' Fun!"
A3 FAKE PICNICKERS
This time, his practical jokes had gone too far, and Wally was finally booted off the hill.
12
Thursday, February 17, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WINONA RYDER
ETHAN HAWKE
BEN STILLER
movie poster trust
cake set communication JOBS
RELATIONSHIPS hey that's my bike
Love channel surfing
buzz WORDS
credit cards friends
email message decaf romance
REALITY BITES
A COMEDY ABOUT LOVE IN THE '90s.
UNIVERSAL PICTURES PRESENTS A JERSEY FILMS PRODUCTION "REALITY BITES" JANEANE GAROFALO SWOOSIE KURTZ JOE DON BAKER JOHN MAHONEY MUSIC BY KARL WALLINGER MUSIC SUPERVISION BY KARYN RACHTMAN SUPERVISING PRODUCERS WILLIAM FINNEGAN AND SHELDON PINGHUK
EDITED BY LISA CHURGIN DIRECTOR OF PHOTOGRAPHY EMMANUEL LUBEZKI EXECUTIVE PRODUCERS STACEY SHER AND WM. BARCLAY MALCOLM WRITTEN BY HELEN CHILDRESS PRODUCED BY DANNY DEVITO AND MICHAEL SHAMBERG
JERSEY FILMS
BIRTH OF MATERIALS
TRADUCTION
PG-13 PARENTS STRONGLY CAUTIONED Some Material May Be Inappropriate For Children Under 13
ORIGINAL SOUNDTRACK ALBUM ON RCA RECORDS CASSETTES AND CDs
DIRECTED BY BEN STILLER
A UNIVERSAL RELEASE
@1993 UNIVERSAL CITY STUDIO, INC.
UNIVERSAL
FEATURING THE MUSIC OF LENNY KRAVITZ • THE JULIANA HATFIELD 3 • U2 • DINOSAUR JR. • WORLD PARTY AND OTHERS
OPENS FRIDAY AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU
ELECTIONS '94: Attorney general candidates gear up for the Republican primary. Page 9.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL. 103.NO.104
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
KANSAS STATE
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA KS 66612
FRIDAY FEBRUARY 18, 1994
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
Senate agrees to fund Day on Hill
SUA event would test Senate budget
Bv Heather Moore
Kansan staff writer
Student Senate sacrificed a balanced budget Wednesday night in order to fund Dav on the Hill.
Before the Senate meeting $3,716 was left in the unallocated account for supplemental funding for student organizations. Through legislation that night, Senate spent $6,347.
Day on the Hill received $3,200 from Senate, and other bills received $3,147. Because the amount of these bills was more than the Senate had left in its budget, money had to come from the reserve fund. Reserve fund money is usually kept for future projects.
SUA's originally requested $5,000 for Day on the Hill, but that amount was lowered after the Senate finance committee failed the bill on Jan. 27.
Eric Medill, finance committee chair, had
OPINION: Members of the University
**INTRODUCTION:** Members of the University community offer opinion on Senate funding of Day on the Hill. Page 5.
objected to engineering senator Paul Wolters' attempts to pass the bill at the Feb. 2 Senate meeting for $3,200 because the finance committee had not yet heard the bill for that amount. Last week, Senate finance committee failed the bill because committee members wanted to stick to the budget.
Wolters said that he reintroduced the $3,200 bill so that the entire Senate body could hear it.
"I was concerned as a senator that the finance committee wasn't fulfilling its responsibilities," he said. "My interpretation is that the finance committee should review legislation to make sure that groups have done their homework and make sure that the legislation is financially sound. They were assuming that Asian American Student Union would be funded, so they couldn't fund Dawn on the Hill."
Wolters said that SUA would give the money back to Senate if it was not used. The money provided by the bill is an extra
insurance for Day on the Hill and probably will not be used.
"This is a loan until we roll it over to Senate in June," he said. "It's a trust thing. SUA has shown that there is no way it can spend this money. That is one reason it passed so well."
Wolters said that he thought it was amazing that almost no one voted against the bill.
"It flew through," he said. "Senate was trying to be responsible. This is so beneficial in both ways. It's money to help us and probably the best advertisement for Senate."
"Regardless of what we have left, Day on the Hill is one of the most productive events held yearly," he said. "Everyone wants this and wants it to happen to the best of SUA's ability."
Medill said that he supported the bill.
Travis Harrod, StudEx chair, had brought the bill up in front of StudEx Wednesday night to discuss putting it on the agenda for the Senate meeting. StudEx decided not to put it on the agenda because of the precedent this action would set.
Harrod said that StudEx did not want to
appear to mistrust the finance committee.
"We don't want to be in the habit of circumventing them," he said.
At the beginning of the Senate meeting, Harrod suggested that Senate hear the bill. In regards to concerns about a balanced budget, Harrod said that Senate had understated the arbitrarity amount that was set.
"We're a government body and we can't foresee what our needs will be," he said. "Bills with merit, that fit the mission of this University, should not suffer because of an arbitrary amount we set."
The senators who opposed the bill did not object because they disliked the event but because they questioned whether it was Senate's responsibility to fund it.
Jeremy Haas, Senate treasureur, said that if SUA had gone through the proper channels last year, it wouldn't have a problem now.
"I'm referring to the fact that SUA knows that Day on the Hill is desired by students," he said. "I believe SUA should have realized that people expect the event and should have [set aside] money at the beginning. There was a way to do it last year, but it wasn't done."
AIRLINES
Degree cuts evoke negative response
By Susan White
Alan Denton, St. Marys senior, collects forecast information for the University Daily Kansan beneath rows of upper air and forecast charts. Denton, an atmospheric science major, said he thought the program was of a high quality and was unhappy that the major was being discontinued.
Kansan staff writer
The final word about the academic degrees discontinuance plan has been said — some people were satisfied, most were not.
Elizabeth Schultz, professor of humanities and comparative literature, said she was thrilled with the decision to keep the humanities program, but most people were unaware of the decision.
However, Schultz was not as happy with the decision made to discontinue the comparative literature degree and make it a concentration in the English department.
"I very much regret that it was recommended to eliminate the comparative literature program," she said. "I believe it is a very different degree than English."
Nicolas Shump, Lawrence senior, said he was unhappy about the decision to drop the comparative literature bachelor of arts degree and to move it to the English department.
Members of other departments also had concerns about the discontinuances
"I have to take two foreign languages and several humanities classes," he said. "It doesn't make a lot of sense. It seems like the Regents are saying if I want to major in something, not to come to KU. I just hope the English department lets people know that the option to take comparative literature is there, or the program will get buried."
Earl Schweppe, professor of computer science, said that he was disappointed that the bachelor of arts and bachelor of general sciences degrees in computer science were dropped from the University curriculum.
"There are 65 students enrolled in the program at all levels," he said. "We graduate 15 to 20 people each year."
Alex Martens, Lawrence senior, said he would not be affected by the dropping of the computer science degrees because he would graduate with a bachelor of sciences degree. But he said he understood why people would be upset by the dropping of the bachelor of arts degree.
"For people who want to double major in business and computer science, it won't be the easiest. It will hurt them a lot," he said. "The B.A. has a lot less classes than the B.S."
Jan Kozma, chair of the French and Italian department, said she argued strongly
"I am disappointed that the council did not take the recommendation of Academic Policies and Procedures Committee to keep the degree," she said. "But the program is not gone. It will continue as an option within the French degree."
for the Italian bachelor of arts degree at the discontinuance hearings, but the degree was dropped anyway.
"I will still get my degree," she said. "I applied for it before the B. A. was dropped. But I don't know how people will feel about my having a degree that no longer exists.
Anna Marasco, Omaha, Neb., senior, said she felt the Italian department was not getting a fair deal.
"I know I studied hard, and I worked hard," she said. "But people not familiar
Jeff Brandberg, Overland Park sophomore, said the loss of all the meteorology degrees except for the bachelor of sciences degree indirectly affected him.
"I transferred from the University of Georgia just for the meteorology program, then they canceled the KU program," he said. "KU students will have to go elsewhere for their master's degree."
"Without most of the programs, no new funds will be available for research," he said. "After three years the graduate students will be gone, and they do a lot of the research. There will not be the same amount of research."
with the department may be suspicious about how strong that degree is. To make Italian part of French would be like making Greek a track in Latin."
The final score
Discontinued Degrees
Comparative Literature — Bachelor of
change, change to concentration in English
dictionary.
Computer Science = Bachelor of Arts
Bachelor of Education Studies
Computer Science — Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of General Studies
Italian — Bachelor of Arts, option with Bachelor of Arts in French
Continued Degree
Atmospheric Science — Bachelor of Arts,
Bachelor of General Studies and Masters
The Scream
Continued Degree Humanities—Bachelor of Arts
"The Scream" bv Edvard Munch
KANSAN
Anti-abortion group linked to theft of 'Scream'
The Associated Press
OSLO, Norway — The theft of Norway's most famous painting, "The Scream," was linked yesterday to an anti-abortion campaign that has been seeking publicity during the Winter Olympics.
A Lutheran minister involved in the campaign said the Edward Munch masterpiece "would emerge again" if television networks broadcasted a film called "The Silent Scream," which shows a 12-week-old fetus being aborted.
In a radio interview, the Rev. Borre Knudsen refused to say he or his supporters were involved in the 50-second robbery at the National Art Museum on Saturday.
"We simply can't be too open about it," he said. "We have sent out a signal, and we hope that it will be heard, but we must be very secretive."
The painting was stolen from a Munch exhibition that was one of the highlights of a Norwegian Culture Festival put on in conjunction with the Winter Olympics in Lillehammer.
"We can't publicly state that we know what happened, but we see what happened as linked with the issue we feel deeply about," said Knudsen, an ordained minister in the state church.
Anne Diesen, deputy managing director at Norwegian television NRK, said it had not received any demand to broadcast "The Silent Scream," which was made by a former abortionist from New York.
"We would refuse it without question. We would never broadcast under those conditions." Diesen said.
Police superintendent Leif A. Lier said he listened to a tape of Knudsen's radio interview, but told the national news agency NTB he had no grounds to question Knudsen as a suspect in the theft.
A handful of Norwegian church groups and American groups such as Operation Rescue and the Christian Defense Coalition have been trying to draw attention to the anti-abortion cause while thousands of foreign journalists are at the Olympics.
"We would not engage in stealing in trying to shed light on our cause," said Bob Jewitt, spokesman for Operation Rescue and the Christian Defense Coalition. "I am not familiar with the incident. But I don't think people who engage in illegal activities are acting according to their Christian beliefs."
Twelve American anti-abortion activists, including Operation Rescue members, were deported last week after anti-abortion posters and pamphlets were seized from their luggage. Police said they suspected the activists planned illegal acts — a charge the Americans denied.
Other American anti-abortion activists have been allowed to enter the country. But there have been no reported demonstrations, except for a brief walk through Lillehammer by Knudsen on Monday evening, surrounded by news photographers.
The Norwegian High Court ruled in 1833 that Knudsen could not have his own parish because his views against abortion brought him into conflict with the state church. But he has a following among those who oppose Norway's laws allowing abortions and providing them virtually free at government clinics.
INSIDE
Med Center joins study to prevent diabetes
Eveing the tigers
Steve Woodberry and the rest of the battered Jayhawks need a victory Sunday against Missouri to stay alive in the Big Eight Conference title chase. Page 11.
Low-level insulin doses may increase immunity
By Ashley Schultz
The University of Kansas Medical Center has joined forces with about 50 other centers in a study researchers hope will spare patients from developing juvenile diabetes.
Kansan staff writer
Type 1 diabetes, or insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, accounts for about 20 percent of the nation's diabetes cases, said Wayne Moore, director of pediatric endocrinology at the Med Center.
The National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases is sponsoring the $30 million Diabetes Prevention
Trial — Type 1 with funding from the National Institutes of Health. Between 60,000 and 80,000 people will be screened before 830 are selected to take part in the five-to-seven-year study.
The number of participants is what distinguishes this study from previous trials, said Elisa Walter, an information specialist with the Institutes' information clearinghouse.
Type 1 diabetes usually strikes victims before the age of 20, Moore said. It affects about 500,000 Americans and tends to run in families.
First-degree relatives of Type 1 diabetics between the ages of 3 and 45 are being screened, as are second-degree relatives between the ages of 3 and 20, Moore said. First-degree relatives include parents and siblings, and second-degree relatives include aunts, uncles and cousins.
"We have been screening in our own patients for about three years to four years." Moore said.
About 1,000 patients already have been screened at the Med Center, Moore said.
Type 1 diabetes is thought to be caused by the attack of insulin-producing beta cells in the pancreas by disease-fighting cells in the immune system called lymphocytes. The study will be based on the assertion that if the immune system is exposed to extra insulin before diabetes develops, it could be desensitized and become tolerant of the beta cells.
Moore said that the trial was not the first he has participated in but that it was the first that had the necessary funding.
Half of the 830 participants will take low-level doses of insulin, either orally or through injections, and the other half will be in a control group.
He said the Med Center planned to take information from potential participants and set up a date in March to draw blood.
With the right combination of tests, the likelihood of a person developing diabetes can usually be determined three to five years in advance with a 95 percent certainty. Moore said.
Tests measuring the levels of the antibody will be used to screen participants. About one of every 250 close relatives will have positive antibodies. Moore said.
They will be given the First-Phase Insulin Release test, which gauges the insulin released immediately after eating, the first part of insulin secretion affected by diabetes. Moore said.
Potential trial participants can call the Med Center at 588-6236 for a free screening, or contact the coordinating center at 1-800-425-8361.
2
Friday, February 18, 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 final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
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ON CAMPUS
The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an information table from 9:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. today at Wescoe Terrace. For more information, call Debra Brodsky at 864-3742.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today in Danford Chapel.
The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an informational meeting about studying in Northern Ireland at 1:30 p.m. today at 109 Lippincott Hall. For more information, call Janis Perkins at 864-3742.
KU Nippon Kempo Karate Club will meet at 4:30 p.m. today at 207 Robinson Center.
KU Bahal Club will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Mehdi Khosh at 841-7585.
**Women's Student Union will meet at 5 p.m. today at Alcove in the Kansas Union. For more information, call 864-7337.**
KU Habitat for Humanity will sponsor a 5K Home-Run at 8 a.m. tomorrow at West Campus, Sign up to run today at Wesco Terrace. For more information, call Heather Morgan at 832-0244.
KU Gamers and Roleplayers will meet at 11 a.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Union. For more information, call John Whitmer at 749-3855.
The Astronomy Associates of Lawrence will meet at 8p.m. 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
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Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 62'/48'
Chicago: 56'/43'
Houston: 73'/62'
Miami: 79'/67'
Minneapolis: 45'/32'
Phoenix: 65'/44'
Salt Lake City: 41'/24'
Seattle: 47'/37'
Omaha: 59°/37°
LAWRENCE: 62°/43°
Kansas City: 60°/44°
St. Louis: 65°/50°
Wichita: 61°/42°
Tulsa: 64°/50°
TODAY
Tomorrow Sunday
Sunny
Mostly cloudy by afternoon and very windy with a 30 percent chance of evening showers
High: 62°
Low: 43°
Rainy Day
60 percent chance of showers
High: 55"
Low: 40"
MP3 CD MPEG 2
Source: Eric Renner, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
Mostly cloudy with
20 percent chance
of morning showers
High: 51°
Low: 36°
KANSAN
University
Audio
2319 Louisiana
841-3775
ON THE RECORD
Murphy's Liquor Store, 2100 W. 25th St, was robbed at 9:48 p.m. Wednesday. $98 was taken. Lawrence police reported.
Two round steaks, valued together at $10, were stolen Tuesday from Dillons, 1015 W. 23rd,
Lawrence police reported.
Unleaded gas worth $11.98 was stolen Wednesday from Phillips 66, 900 Iowa St., Lawrence police reported.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, February 18, 1994
3
Teen found guilty of murder in carjacking
Accomplice as guilty as shooter, says jury
By Liz Chadwick Kansan staff writer
A Topeka teenager was found guilty of felony murder and aggravated robbery yesterday by a Lawrence jury.
The jury found that Courtney Crockett, 17, took part in an attempted carjacking last September that resulted in the murder of Edward Lees, 29, of Lawrence.
The juvenile court jury deliberated approximately three hours before coming back with a guilty verdict at 2:50 p.m. yesterday.
"I don't think he ever understood being there could cause you to be as guilty as the shooter," said Shelley Bock, Crockett's lawyer, referring to Crockett being an accomplice in the carjacking.
Lawrence police reported that Lees was shot by Crockett's companion, Abraham Orr, who will be tried in Lawrence as an adult in March.
Crockett testified Wednesday that he and Orr had planned to rob Lees of his vehicle, but he said he was surprised when Orr shot the man.
Crockett described the events of Sept. 18. He said that he and Orr moved to Lees to
inquire if Lees had a car phone. Lees shook his head no and started to back away. Crockett said he turned away from Lees' vehicle, and while he was walking away, he heard a shot.
"When I heard the shot, I just stood there," Crockett said. "I started running after I heard the second shot. Abe came running up behind me, saving. 'I think I shot someone.'
Jerry Wells, Douglas County district attorney, said that although there was no evidence that Crockett planned to murder Lees, those who assisted in a crime were as guilty as those who committed the actual crime.
"If you aid and assist in a felony you can be found reasonably responsible for that felony as well as the principal actor," he said. "The second step in the judicial-thinking process is
that if you can foresee what might happen, you are responsible."
Wells said that, to the best of his knowledge, the Crockett case was the first of its kind in Lawrence — a person was found guilty of a murder, yet had not done the actual killing.
Bock said his client had never been in trouble before.
"This is every parents' worst nightmare. You raise your kid for 17-and-a-half years and through the actions of another you see him wind up in a situation like this," Bock said.
Because Crockett was tried as a juvenile, he can be made to serve time only until he reaches the age of 21.
Bock said he thought the maximum time
Crockett could get is three years, one month, and 11 days.
William L. Williams, a member of the jury, said that he struggled with his decision to convict Crockett of murder.
But Williams said that he felt the evidence to convict was conclusive.
"Me and the other jury members unanimously found Crockett guilty of the robbery charge," he said. "We spent three quarters of our time to find excuses not to convict the kid. It was obvious he didn't have a lot of opportunities to do more with his life."
"We would have done a disservice to the victim if we hadn't found Crockett guilty," he said.
Junk mail an annoyance; ends up in wastebasket
FUCK YOU! GO AWAY!
Mailing lists are prime resources
Junk mail makes up 40 percent of all mail delivered in Lawrence. Many people consider it a hassle and don't even open it, but it is an increasingly profitable business for direct mail marketers.
By Cheryl Cadue
Kansan staff writer
Photo illustration by John Gambie/KANSAN
Jeremy Patnoi, Englewood, Colo., freshman, said finding junk mail in his mailbox used to be a pleasant surprise.
"I guess when I first came to KU, I didn't get that much mail," he said. "So even if I got a little junk mail, I was kind of happy to get something."
The excitement of junk mail has worn off for Patnoi because he said now he rarely reads it.
Angela Gottlob, Winfield sophomore, said her junk mail went straight to the trash can.
"It's a waste so I don't even open up the envelope," she said. "It's a waste of paper and it could waste a lot of people's time if they read all the junk mail."
Yorka Velasco, La Paz, Bolivia,
senior, said junk mail was more of a waste of paper than a waste of her time.
Mostly, I don't look at it," she said. "Junk mail doesn't really waste any of my time because it doesn't take anything to throw it away."
Theresa Nuckels, state deputy attorney general, said that short of getting rid of the mail box, junk mail could not be stoned.
"All you can do to stop junk mail completely is to not use the postal service," she said. "You can slow it down, but you can't stop it."
Nuckolls said she sometimes misspelled her name or used her initials to trace how her name was sold.
Nuckolls said most people were unaware of the various ways their names got on mailing lists. Names are bought and sold through subscriptions to magazines, newspapers, credit cards, even through donations to charities and political organizations.
Besides writing directly to companies and asking for a name to be removed from the mailing lists, people can do several things to slow the amount of junk mail they receive. People can stop responding to telemarketers and junk mail offers and always pay in cash.
Matt Lawlor, Augusta junior, said that credit card applications were the biggest and most annoying aspect of junk mail, but that he would not go out of his way to stop them.
“It’s annoying you get my credit card applications daily,” he said. “I probably wouldn't write to get my name off a list because it’s a hassle.”
Bill Reynolds, postmaster of Lawrence, said that a small number of people complained to the post office about junk mail, but that the
U. S. Postal Service would always deliver bulk mail advertising unless people wanted to pay more for postal service.
Because bulk mail advertising makes up 40 percent of the mail delivered in Lawrence, bulk mail advertising provides postal carriers with a job even if most people do not read their junk mail, Reynolds said.
"If we lost that 40 percent, we would lose a certain percentage of our employees," he said. "It's more expensive to deliver one piece of mail than to deliver 10 pieces of mail."
Doug Patterson, sales associate at Radio Shack in The Malls Shopping Center, said Radio Shack had a database of names and addresses for the store's advertisements. But he said Radio Shack did not sell the list to other companies.
"For our mailing list, we simply ask a customer when they make a purchase for their name and address," he said. "Bulk mail advertising is a prime way of generating business. Without bulk mailing, Radio Shack would not be as profitable as it is."
To reduce junk mail
■ Direct Marketing Association,
Mail Preference Service 6 E.
43rd St. New York, NY., 10017
■ The companies who sent the
unwanted mail.
People may write and request their name be removed from mailing lists to:
Other tips to reduce junk mail:
Do not respond to telemarketers because telemarketing and direct mail industries are interconnected.
Do not respond to junk mail offers
Source: Kansas Attorney General's Office
Use cash for purchases.
Regents approve repair funds review accreditation report
By Jamle Munn
Kansan staffwriter
TOPEKA - The Board of Regents gave KU a passing grade for its accreditation report yesterday, but Allen Field House, which will receive major safety improvements, shared a less than perfect billing along with Corbin Residence Hall and campus parking lots.
However, in a blanket vote, the Regents approved money for Corbin renovations, a renovation study for Lewis and Templin halls, an increased parking repair budget and a recital hall for the Lied Center.
Chancellor Gene Budig said that all of the University's programs were fully accredited but that four had been re-examined in 1992. Architectural engineering, computer engineering, engineering physics and petroleum engineering had been cited for deficiencies at that time.
Coming attractions
"All of our deficiencies are being addressed," Budig said, "and I think the report acknowledged that."
Allen Field House
sprinkler system
$1.9 million
Allen Field House
sprinkler system
$1.9 million
Study of
Jayhawker Towers
parking lot
improvements
$17,500
Coming attractions
The Board of Regents approved the following financial allowances at their meeting yesterday:
Allen Field House sprinkler system $1.9 million
KU parking lot improvements budget increase $150,000
Study of Jayhawk Tower pedestrian lot improvements $17,500
Bailey Hall addition to the Lied Center $1.3 million
Construction
Corbin Hall renovations nearly $1.3 million for Phase II completion
Templin and Lewis Hall renovation study not to exceed $50,000
KU parking lot improvements budget increase $150,000
Study of Jayhawk Towers parking lot improvements $17,500
CONSTRUCTION
According to the Regents report, all of the accreditation concerns will be resolved before the 1995 review.
Martine Hammond-Paludan, director of academic affairs for the Regents, said the availability of computer technology often had caused the accreditation concerns for the engineering programs.
The report also said that KU's School of Law had been cited by the American Bar Association and the Association of American Law Schools for lack of resources but that a student fee increase of $20 per credit hour had helped raise $300,000 for faculty salaries, library enhancement and student financial aid.
In addition to the upgrades made for KU's accredited programs, the Regents approved major capital
MUNICH
Templin and Lewis Mall remove study not to exceed $50,000
"But I believe we'll make all the requirements," he said.
David Shulenburger, vice chancellor of academic affairs, said he didn't know exactly when the next report on the law school would arrive.
John Montgomery, chairman of the Board of Regents, left, confers with Regent Frank Sabatiini, right. The Regents met yesterday in Toopeka.
improvements for the campus.
Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor, said that improving Allen Field House was a particularly important task.
"This project has to move first," Meyen said. "It's the most critical of the safety features."
The State Fire Marshall's office reviewed the field house in December 1991 in response to a request made by the Lawrence Fire Department.
In that evaluation, the State Fire Marshall's office said, "Allen Field House presents one of the most significant life-loss potentials in Kansas when fully occupied."
Meyen said the project would cover the building's entire ceiling and therefore require special timing.
The target date for the completion of the project is prior to the first game of the 1994-95 basketball season, he said.
Malaysians hope to share cultural spice
By Denise Nell Kansan staff writer
Weng Kim Yee, Kelantan, Malaysia junior, said that knowledge about his culture was limited among people at the University of Kansas.
"I have friends who ask me where Malaysia is." he said.
Yee, a vice president of the Malaysian Student Association, said the group would attempt to increase awareness of the Malaysian culture when it sponsored Malaysian Cultural Night '94 at 6 p.m. Saturday at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread.
The theme for the night is "A Journey To Our Land." Members of the group will perform different traditional dances and songs, present a costume parade and simulate a Malay wedding ceremony.
At the end of the event, an ethnic dinner will be served by the students. Yun Eee Lim, Sabah, Malaysia, junior, and the group's other vice president, said Malaysian food was similar to food served in Chinese restaurants in the United States but spicier. A typical dish is curry chicken, she said.
"It's a bit spicy for Americans, I think," she said. "But we'll try to make it a little less spicy."
Yee said that almost all of the 200 tickets originally available for the event had been sold.
Last year was the first year the group held the event. Yee said at least 80 percent of last year's tickets were purchased by non-Malaysians.
"The main purpose is to introduce our culture to more people." he said. "This year, we are targeting more cultures, especially Americans."
Lim said she hoped the event would
Winston Heng, Sarawak, Malaysia senior and the group's president, said Malaysia was smaller than Kansas. About 200 Malaysian students attend KU.
help to clear up another common misunderstanding about Malaysia. Many people believe everyone from Malaysia is Malay, but Malaysia is actually comprised of three races of people: Malay, Chinese and Indian.
Heng said the group had been preparing for the event since this time last year.
"It's to let people know what Malaysia looks like, what it is like," he said. "A lot of people don't know where Malaysia is. It's kind of a small country."
Tickets are still available today and can be purchased at the SUA box office in the Kansas Union.
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THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN
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4
Friday, February 18, 1994
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Federal holidays can be inconvenient and costly
What a wonderful time of the year. Monday is Presidents Day! A time for friends and families to get together for a traditional holiday dinner and exchange stories about past presidents.
Sarcasm aside, Presidents Day is one of several legal holidays scattered throughout the calendar that are remembered around noon when the mail doesn't show up. Aside from complaints by college students who didn't receive their J. Crew catalogs, these governmental holidays are inconvenient and extremely costly.
Makenomistake about it, George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, Martin Luther King Jr., and Christopher Columbus deserve to be recognized. Their accomplishments helped form this great nation.
However, they do not merit giving government employees (and as a result, bank and financial service employees) a paid holiday. Honoring these men on a Sunday, for example, would serve the same purpose. Having Mother's and Father's Days on Sunday does not cheapen their meaning. What about Easter? Do we lessen Jesus Christ's greatest achievement by not making Easter a legal holiday? Of course not.
A more pragmatic issue is the cost. Giving every governmental employee a paid holiday literally costs the taxavers billions of dollars.
The private sector is also affected. With the government closed, businesses cannot send or receive mail, vital to their livelihoods. With banks closed, businesses are prevented from taking out loans or doing financial transactions. Almost every service, directly or indirectly related to the government, is affected.
In these days of cost cutting and deficit spending, the government should cut the holidays to make the government more responsive to the needs of the public.
RICHARD BOYD FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Taxing welfare benefits creates more red tape
The Clinton administration is formulating a plan that would finance the President's welfare proposal by taxing recipients of welfare benefits. The ability politicians have to try to make the world sound like a better place while creating more and more bureaucracy is bewildering.
The only reason the administration is proposing a tax on welfare benefits is because cutting them outright would sound too harsh and draw too much fire.
What the U.S. welfare system really needs is a plan that would encourage more people to get back into the job market and work toward supporting themselves. What the system doesn't need is a government that continues to create more bureaucracy that will stand in the way of giving welfare recipients the help they really need.
Although most welfare recipients need money to sustain themselves, they also need a system that helps them get back on their feet. And if the money to establish a job training program can't be found anywhere else, it should be taken from the welfare budget itself, but not through a tax on welfare benefits.
A plan stipulating that welfare benefits would be cut and that the money from those cuts would go directly to a job training program would save the government a lot of time and energy that could be used in the creation of a system that works.
Most taxpayers and welfare recipients would rather see welfare money helping recipients than paying more government employees to figure taxes on the tax money.
DONELLA HEARNE FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
BEN GROVE, Editor
LISA COSMILLO, Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
JUSTIN GARBERG Business manager
BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator
JENNIFER BLOWEY Retail sales manager
Editors
Aust Managing Editor...Dan England
Assistant to the editor...J.R. Clarbone
News...Kristi Fogler, Katie Greenwald
Todd Seltert
Editorial...Colleen McCain
Nathan Olean
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 & Coop sales mgr ...Robin King
Special sections mgr ..Shelley McConnell
Production mgr ..Laura Guth
Gretchen Kootterleinchd
Marketing director ..Shannon Reilly
Creative director ..John Carlton
Classified mgr ..Kelly Connelys
Tearheats mgr ..Wing Chan
Letters be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas must have a university license.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
The night time is the right time to be with the studies you loathe
God is dead, and Elvis is questionable.
These and other bitter thoughts careen through my head as 1 plow through "Uncle Tom's Cabin" at 2 a.m.
Doctors and professors frequently decry the benefits of all-nighters. They claim it is far better to study in advance and get a good night's sleep. Easy for them to say. That is unrealistic when I write for the Kansan, work to pay rent, have four other classes and occasionally want to see my girlfriend.
COLUMNIST
JACOB
ARNOLD
Reality is I have a midterm in less than seven hours. My conscience (that whiny voice that I ignore as I punt my roommate's Pekingese over the couch) is telling me that I should have started studying approximately three days, not three hours, ago.
I settle down into the couch and take up my book. The Psychoviolets
I still fanatically believe that I can read three books before the unfeeling whistle calls me to disgorge my pittance of knowledge on an unreceptive test paper. I no longer try to fool myself into believing that I won't do this again. I know I will.
Another swig of Dr. Pepper sets me back on track. A Mountain Dew overdose a year ago has forever soured my stomach on that noble beverage. Instead, I turn to Dr. Pepper, whose life-giving caffeine content is second only to the powerful Dew.
mourn their existence on the compact disc player. I mourn my predicament as the words swim before my watery eyes.
The battle is rejoined. Caffeine troops hurl themselves against the sturdy bulwarks of boring textbooks. Only by dint of numbers can caffeine overcome the mesmerizing words.
With a start, I jerk my head up from my chest. I realize I have just read
three pages without being able to recall a single word contained there.
New weapons are needed to combat knowledge-induced coma. The Psychoviollets receive the death for which they beg. AC/DC roars in. Raw animal energy pours into my ears and infuses me with power. Screw the neighbors. They all hate me anyway.
Hard rock is a strong ally, but it cannot combat the tenacious boredom by itself. Munchies are needed. Sunflower seeds are the best. They require enough thought and motor skills to keep me alert but not enough to interfere with my studying.
Zombie stupor again steals over me calling for drastic measures.
Dwindling time relaxes my studying standards. Only every third sentence gets attention. Before long, the first sentence of every paragraph satisfies my blunted learning hunger.
The hours fly by on swift feet of panic far faster than the belligerent pages demanding my attention.
I step outside into sub-arctic chill wearing only glow-in-the-dark dinosaur boxers and a Brainwaves T-shirt. Cruel light lances over the
horizon, trying to part a dingy, bong- water colored sky
and pushes me to new scholarly heights as I race to cram a few final bits of knowledge.
Shower, shave and breakfast are
fortretened in the rush to get to class.
I will do fine on the test. Not as well as I could have but still fine.
All-nighters are a fact of young adult life. I am sick of hearing how it is bad for my health and dangerous. I don't know of any professor who has ever accepted "I needed the sleep" as an excuse. I will quit staying awake all night when professors quit holding secret meetings to synchronize their project due dates.
I pity those poor, weak fools who think that their two all-nighters a semester are a great trial. For some students, two all-nighters a week are the norm.
Forgive me if I rumble or sound a little grump. I will feel better after I get a few Z's in a lecture class. I'm sure you know the feeling.
Jacob Arnold is a Wichita Junior in Journalism
lam.
WHAT'S WORSE THAN HARASSMENT?
HOMOPHOBIA RESIDENTS HOUSING DEPT.
THE WAY KU DEALS WITH IT!
HOOD UDK 04
Dinner with parents is an adventure
A few weekends ago, my parents and I went out to dinner to celebrate my second consecutive "W" in Math 002, a distinction that I share with approximately 27,648 other KU students.
Actually, my folks aren't that bad, which is evident by the fact that only a small percentage of the restaurants we frequent lock their doors and shut off the lights when they see our car entering the parking lot.
But going out to dinner with my parents is not something that you just "do." You have to rest up, take plenty of vitamins and above all, invest in a latex mask modeled after a former president to avoid being recognized. I recommend the Deluxe Jimmy Carter #237B, which boasts a mouth hole big enough to cram an entire enchilada through if necessary.
However, there are a few places
COLUMNIST
SCOTT
AGIN
where the parental "couth" factor (defined as my mom's resisting the urge to stare at every customer's plate and say "Oooooh, that looks GOOD!" can run at dangerously low levels. These places include Chinese restaurants.
My family has virtually no self-control at Chinese restaurants, myself included. When the waitress comes to our table in full body armor to take
our orders, my dad usually starts off by saying something like, "We'll have the won tons." Invariably, this will start a problem between my dad and our waitress, who incorrectly interprets this to mean, "we would like an ORDER of won tons." So when the waitress asks us if we want eight or 16, my dad gets a very solemn look in his eye, the kind that President Clinton gets when reading a Teleprompter speech calling for a very solemn look. He glares up from his menu and says, very deliberately, "I don't think you understand. We will have THE won tons."
Next, my mom, who is 5 feet 3 inches tall and weighs under a buck, goes on an ordering kick and requests three of each menu item, all of them with authentic Chinese names such as "Moo Goo Shun Tsung Raki," which means "We Cater Weddings."
Several hours later, our food arrives. This is my mom's cue to vocalize her distaste for smokers, who somehow are always situated so that they form the boundary to the smoking sections when our table forms the non-smoking boundary. Usually, she will do this via a sudden, violent volume inflection in her voice, which never fails to get attention.
You know, my parents probably will never change, if I'm lucky. I mean, they certainly not boring, which is more than some people can say about their folks. I even look forward to getting back home for a bite to eat with them every so often. In fact, we're taking my dad out for his birthday this week. I think I go as Nixon.
Scott Agin is a Topeka sophomore in Journ nalism.
A hidden hatred exists on campus
It's amazing to me how many KU students say they are open-minded.
Because based on some snide remarks I've heard from just being an aware listener, many KU students aren't open-minded.
There used to be a time when I wouldn't even say that, let alone write and have it published. My eyes were thoroughly glazed over by my love for the University. I used to think that the University was a great place for all students, no matter how different they might be from each other.
They're bigoted.
But I never really listened for those snide remarks, either. This month I opened my ears. I heard some things that stripped the glaze from my eyes.
COLUMNIST
Among the snide remarks:
A student mumbling "niggers" after he spotted a car full of African Americans.
Students in a closed locker room referring to an Asian desk worker in Robinson Center as a "chink."
After the movie "Philadelphia," a student saying to her friend, "Well, he deserved to die. He's a faggot."
DAN ENGLAND
Another student referring to the movie "Schindler's List" as a "sob-story movie about those damn Jews."
This is what I can internal racism.
Internal racism can be heard only through the cracks of walls or as careless whispers in hallways.
Internal racism isn't a Ku Klux Klan bed sheet or a burning cross. It's something much worse. It's hidden hatred.
Internal racism fools people like me who don't look beyond KU's brilliant crimson and blue spirit. I figured that real, cold-blooded and widespread racism existed only in the pages of my yellowed history books.
And that's why internal racism is so dangerous. Because I didn't see blant, open racism, I thought that it didn't exist on campus. Countless others probably think the same thing. And that fightens me.
Don't dismiss me as an ignorant white kid from the suburbs. I knew that racism existed in other parts of the world. I thought that it existed in some sheltered parts of the United States.
I also was sick of the hypersensitive PC campus soldiers. It seemed as if
But the fact that racism exists on a college campus shocks me. Students are supposed to combat racism, not feed it. College is supposed to be a time of learning about other cultures, not reject them.
And I thought that the University encouraged harmony and understanding. To tell you the truth, I got a little sick of it.
I was looking forward to "Black History Month" about as much as any other "special" month. I figured those months were events to get through as quickly as possible.
It hurts society. It hurts the groups toward which it's directed. And it hurt me. Every snide remark was a sharp dagger to my psyche.
Now I'm glad that events such as "Black History Month" exist. I used to think that months like these were only ways for groups to separate themselves, not unite with others. I'm still not convinced that these months don't do this.
anything I said was criticized by them. Glyme me a PC break. Please.
But at least they increase awareness about other cultures. Other races. Other traditions. And awareness is the only way to combat the racism that I thought no longer existed.
I thought KU students' awareness didn't need to be increased. I thought everyone was aware enough.
I was shocked to find out that I was wrong.
Dan England is a Lenoxa senior in Journal
Jam.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
I don't understand why Senate would not want to fund one of KU's most popular events. Granted, it would be impossible to bring in the 10,000 people it brought in with Pearl Jam two years ago, but still, several students attend the event every year.
Considering how many activities Senate funds that less than a very small fraction of the student body can participate in, you'd think they'd want to fund one of the major events on the campus.
CCC
People come from out of town to this; not to mention KU students. I cannot believe that the Student Senate would not want to back SUA in possibly the biggest event for students on campus during the year.
My name is Brian Anderson. I think that both parties are at fault.
The Student Senate has been notorious for allocating all their money at the beginning of the year, thus leaving little money at the end of the year. Regardless whether they're in debt, they are low on money at this time and should be more careful in the future of spreading their money out over the entire school year — so deserving groups who come to them get their money at this time of year as well as the beginning of the year.
SUA is at fault because the money that they are requesting could have been requested much earlier in the school year. The way I understand it, the money is for the stage, equipment and that sort of thing. And it's something that's going to be needed every year for the Day on the Hill event. So the funding could have been proposed in Senate as early as opening sessions in late spring or early fall of this school year.
Friday, February 18, 1994
O R E A D
F O R U M
864-9040
On Friday, the Kansan asked for students' opinions about Student Senate's original decisions not to finance this year's Day on the Hill. On Wednesday, the Senate gave Student Union Activities $3,200 for the annual event.
Following are the responses we received.
So I believe both parties are at fault and both need to quit whining back and forth in the Kansan and just accept the problems and deal with them as they've unfolded in the past few weeks.
I think that Student Senate should spend all the money they can on Day on the Hill. It's a wonderful event. It encourages unity among all the students here at the University of Kansas.
--approached us about a money request also — in the neighborhood of $4,000 to $5,000. We are a large organization, (but) we don't have that much money to give. But Student Senate has also gone to the Board of Class Officers and the Scholarship Hall governments. They're asking AURH, which is about 10 to 15 percent of the student body, for a third of the money. And, well, that's actually up for debate.
--approached us about a money request also — in the neighborhood of $4,000 to $5,000. We are a large organization, (but) we don't have that much money to give. But Student Senate has also gone to the Board of Class Officers and the Scholarship Hall governments. They're asking AURH, which is about 10 to 15 percent of the student body, for a third of the money. And, well, that's actually up for debate.
My name is Jason Heck, and I am the Oliver Hall Sixth South Vice President and a member of AURH. SUA
I think the Senate should come up with at least $3,200. I think we should come up with at least $4,000. But the SUA also wants us to fund summer activities, which most of our residents will not participate in. I think the Senate should cough up $3,200.
--pus will go crazy if it does not happen.
I find it amazing how little Student Senate represents the students. The students have made it very clear that they wish Day on the Hill to be financed, yet Student Senate consistently vetoes it.
Day on the Hill is only the biggest event that every KU student and non-KU student — anyone who's in the whole entire area — look forward to every year. I want to know, what about this $20,000 in the unallocated fund? I want to know about the articles in the newspaper the other day about all those groups racing to get the money, asking for thousands and thousands of dollars — a lot more than $3,200.
--pus will go crazy if it does not happen.
I don't know why Senate is so blind. They cannot withhold funding from something over which the entire campus will go crazy if it does not happen.
The first thing Student Senate needs to do is figure what their financial state is. One guy says they're over budget, someone else says they have extra money.
The next thing we need to do is finance Day on the Hill because even at $3,200 it's a bargain for how many people get entertained that day. If you have 10,000 people there, that's less than 50 cents a person. That's a good deal for good entertainment.
My name is Ken Martin, and I'm one of the co-sponsors of the Day on the Hill bill. I'm a Student Senator. I would just like to thank you at the Kansan for doing the open forum here, and I appreciate you and your staff trying to get input. I personally believe that the Finance Committee has done a terrible job this year in its motives for voting down bills and whatnot.
--natural fiber clothing
820-822 Mass St. 841-0100
I think it's ridiculous that they're not going to fund Day on the Hill. It's the big event of the year. It's one of the most enjoyable things that the school puts on for the students and for the rest of the community.
I don't think it should be downsized at all because I think it was downsized enough last year. From Pearl Jam to the bands they had last year — we need bigger talent than that. And we need an enjoyable concert for students to go to. And fund it.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
It's easier to criticize than to create policies
As a future administrator, I am always interested in academic culture. Associate Professor Elizabeth Banks offered a notable opportunity to experience some of the subtle intricacies coupling academic culture in her letter to the editor last Friday. Did Professor Banks participate, or try to, in the consensual relations policy negotiation?
Negotiation is always part of organizational change, and probably more so at a university (a collegeum) than a corporation (a bureaucracy). Often, though, as Professor Banks has apparently demonstrated, participating is undervalued by academicians (e.g.,
I don't have time, or Let "them" do it) who prefer to negotiate from a position of criticism after plans of action are drawn up. At that stage, confronted by fixed flats for change, those on the comfortable sideline use instruments of negotiation such as resistance and vetoes, foot dragging and quiet subversion.
Policy development within the complex environment of higher education is always difficult and painstaking. If we could get scholars like Professor Banks to utilize their intelligence and energy a priori, as opposed to ex post facto, we may not have responses such as hers in the UDK. My, the webs of culture we weave as academians.
Lee Alderman Lawrence graduate student
Health care costs will increase federal deficit
Last week I read that the Congressional Budget Office judged that Clinton's health care plan would increase the federal deficit by $78 billion, not cut it by $58 billion as its advocates have asserted. I had figured Washington would wait until after the program had been passed before they started revising cost estimates upward. If the bill already is being bumped up by hundreds of billions of dollars, just how high is the cost going to go after the new bureaucracy gets dug in and secure? (I recommend comparing the initial cost projections for Medicare and Medicaid to what we have actually ended up paying.)
The central theme of the Clinton plan has been "more for less."
Bureaucracy and red tape will be cut, costs will be controlled and everyone will get more and better health care while paying less. Yet Clinton's response to the new cost estimates was casual. I could see why he supported his plan before. But when the most wonderful part of the plan — "more for less" — was rejected, he never missed a beat. The $130 billion difference was no big deal. Now maybe Clinton cares so much about the American people that a few billion dollars isn't enough to make him reconsider his compassion. But could it be possible that "more for less" was something he never cared about or believed in the first place? And is it treason to question the other promises and proclamations that are used to defend The Plan?
Matt Conrad Wichita senior
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The pullout reported by U.N. monitors followed a pledge by Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic to meet NATO's Sunday deadline. Karadzic made the concession under pressure from Russia.
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina — Whole convoys of Bosnian Serb artillery withdrew from the hills around Sarajevo yesterday in compliance with a NATO ultimatum to pull back or be bombed.
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Lt. Col. Bill Aikman, a U.N. spokesman in the shell-shattered Bosnian capital, wouldn't specify what sort of equipment being withdrawn, but said "we're talking heavy weapons."
"Literally they're moving out in convoys, not in individual vehicles," he said. "Clearly there's a major withdrawal going on."
withdrawal of heavy guns since NATO issued its ultimatum Feb. 9. NATO has said all heavy guns within a 13-mile radius of Sarajevo must be removed or placed under U.N. control by Sunday or face NATO bombardment.
Russia has been the most powerful ally of the Serbs, who are fellow Slavs and Orthodox Christians. The promise from Karadzic, coming after the meeting with the Russian envoy, appeared to reflect Serb acceptance that Moscow had reluctantly lined up behind NATO to prevent Western involvement in the war.
It was the first significant Serb
But Bosnian Serb generals have defied Karadzic before, and it was unclear whether they would abide by promises made by their political leadership. Statements by Gen. Manojo Milovanovic, Bosnian Serb army chief of staff, reflected the frustration of having to pull back and lose superior battlefield advantage.
"We are openly telling everyone: In case of air strikes, all foreigners who find themselves on our territory will become hostages," Milovanovic said.
Japan developing new trade strategy
The Associated Press
TOKYO — Under the threat of U.S. sanctions, the government decided yesterday to develop a wide-ranging package of measures to trim Japan's record trade surplus and possibly head off a trade war.
Prime Minister Morihiro Hosakawa and top trade negotiators agreed to focus on four areas — promotion of imports and foreign investment, deregulation, tougher anti-monopoly enforcement and fairer government purchasing.
The decision reflects growing anxiety in Japan over U.S. threats of trade retaliation following a breakdown in talks in Washington last week on reducing the two countries' trade imbalance.
"The ball is in Japan's court," said the chief government spokesman, Masayoshi Takemura.
Yesterday the United States announced the trade deficit with Japan shot up nearly 24 percent last year to a record $53.9 billion, surpassing the $56.3 billion set in 1987.
The four areas in the new trade package reflect key U.S. complaints. But the package is unlikely to solve the key issue that caused last week's deadlock: a U.S. demand for numerical benchmarks to measure the success of trade agreements.
ulu leader criticizes Mandela's peace plan
The Associated Press
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — A leading Zulu nationalist ridiculed the latest peace offering from the ANC as a play yesterday, bolstering fears that political unrest may undermine South Africa's historic election in April.
Mangosuthu Buthelezi, leader of the Inkatha Freedom Party, said the ANC's characterization of new political proposals as a compromise was "utter hypocrisy."
White conservatives who also are threatening to boycott the first multiracial election April 26-28 also reacted coolly.
But Buthelezi held out hope for an eventual agreement with the African National Congress and President
F. W. de Klerk's white minority government, which led talks on ending apartheid and allowing the black majority to vote.
"We are committed to participating in the election — provided that they walk that extra mile," Buthelezi told state television.
Conservative whites and blacks, grouped in the Freedom Alliance, fear the ANC will win the election and impose a socialist dictatorship that will trample minority rights.
Mandela said at a news conference his group had dropped its demand for a single-ballot system in the April vote.
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A single ballot would have virtually assured the ANC a majority of seats in both the national and provincial legislatures. The Alliance has demanded
that voters cast two ballots — one for a national Parliament and another for regional legislatures. Two ballots would give small, regionally based parties — such as Inkatha in the Kwazulu black homeland — a chance to establish power bases in their areas of support.
Mandela also said the ANC approved amending the new constitution to allow consideration of a white fomelland after the election. He did not give details, but said the ANC supported having the current Parliament change the new constitution to incorporate such a clause.
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Both the government and the ANC have firmly opposed setting up territories along racial lines, and it was unclear if Mandela's statement indicated a significant shift in policy.
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Friday. February 18. 1994
Term-limit proposals rejected by legislators
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — Supporters of term limits got the debate they wanted yesterday, but not the results. The House rejected two of their proposals.
The first was a proposed constitutional amendment to limit legislators to serving 12 years in the Kansas House of Representatives and 12 years in the Senate. It failed on a 59-63 vote.
The second proposal was a bill to limit members of the state's delegation to Congress to serving 12 years in the U.S. House and 12 years in the Senate. The vote on it was 42-81.
The votes were on motions to advance the measures to final action. The proposals remained on the House calendar but were likely to drop to the bottom.
The votes tell only part of the story. The debate lasted more than three hours and sometimes degenerated into anarchy. Sometimes the House chamber resembled an elementary school classroom without a teacher.
"I'm going to go home and go to bed," said a weary Rep. Tom Bradley, R-Topeka. Bradley supports the term-limit proposals.
The events probably ended the debate on term limits this year. Even
Bedlam dominated during the debate's first 90 minutes.
But opponents said term limits are not necessary, especially for the Legislature. Seventy-one of the House's 125 members began serving only after the 1990 elections.
Supporters like Bradley pushed the term-limit proposals as ways to ensure fresh blood in government. Also, surveys have indicated most Kansans support the idea.
"The people of this state already have term limits," he said. "They have the opportunity to bounce our butts out of here every two years."
And, in an angry speech, freshman Rep. David Adkins, R-Leawood, accused term-limit supporters of pandering to polls.
Rep. Ed McKechnie, D-Pittsburgh, offered an amendment to change the length of individual terms for senators and House members. Currently, the constitution sets House terms at two years each, and Senate terms at four years each. McKechnie wanted to make them four and six years, respectively.
ardent supporters predicted strong opposition in the Senate.
NEW YORK — An attorney for a World Trade Center bombing suspect accused another defense lawyer yesterday of sabotaging his client's case by implicit linking him with the attack's alleged mastermind.
Members approved his changes, 65- 57.
It was the first time a defense lawyer had conceded that there was a conspiracy and that his client was involved.
Gulf War potential motive in Trade Center bombing
And another defense lawyer suggested that anger about the Persian Gulf War may have motivated some participants in the Feb. 26 bombing that killed six people and injured 1,000.
On Wednesday, defense attorney Robert Precht accused fugitive Ramzi Yousef, 26, of coming to the United States on Sept. 1, 1992, with a plan to bomb a U.S. building and duping Precht's client, Mohamad Salameh, into participating in the scheme.
Defendant Ahmad Ajaj, 27, of Houston, came into the country on the same flight as Yousef. Therefore, if the jury believes Precht's argument, it would link Ajaj to the bombing's mastermind.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Henry DePipio already has reminded the federal court jury that Youset's fingerprints were found on bomb making manuals in Yousef's luggage.
The Associated Press
Prosecutors had portrayed Yousef as a busy participant in the bomb making, but not as the central figure.
"In my view, Mr. Precht did more damage to Mr. Ajaj in the first six minutes or so of his summation than Mr. DePippo did in the six hours of his summation." Ajaj's attorney, Austin Campriello, said yesterday in asking Judge Kevin Duffy for a mistrial. The request was denied.
The two fugitives, Yasin and Yousef, also have been indicted and the United States has offered a $2 million reward for each man's return. Ahmed was the second defense lawyer to raise the possibility that it may have been more than coincidence that both had connections to Iraq.
Four defendants are on trial for conspiracy in the bombing. They face life in prison without parole if convicted.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Colleges ask for freedom to offer necessary classes
The committee is considering a measure that would allow community colleges to offer courses without the permission of the Regents school officials if the courses are sought by a private business or government agency.
TOPEKA — Community college representatives yesterday urged the Senate Education Committee to endorse a bill that would allow them to continue to offer courses in counties served by Board of Regents schools, even if they do not have the regents school's permission.
"We support these changes in order to avoid confusion and misunderstandings," said Rodney Cox, president of Butler County Community College.
The Associated Press
M
Ted Ayres, general counsel and director of governmental relations for the Regents, said obtaining permission from the Regent institution was required to avoid unnecessary duplication, encourage cooperation and foster efficiency in the delivery of services.
"It means at the end of this semester Butler County will receive no more state aid to support this major Kansas industry," Cox said. "In all likelihood, McConnell Air Force Base will go out of state to replace the Butler program."
"We feel that if we would not have to ask permission it would speed the process and reduce costs," Moon said.
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The community college needs permission from Wichita State University officials to offer courses in Sedgwick County. Cox said Butler has been denied permission by Wichita State to continue teaching courses at McConnell.
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Industry needs fast reaction, quality service and results, he said.
Mary Moon, director of Butler County Community College Business and Industry Institute, said this bill would allow community colleges to be more responsive to the needs of business and industry.
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battles, duplication and bureaucratic approval processes," Cox said.
No action was taken on the bill by the committee.
Questions raised in student's hazing death
The Associated Press
CAPE GIRARDEAU, Mo. — As police questioned two more suspects in the alleged haze of death of a Kappa Alpha Psi pledge yesterday, friends and family of Michael Davis wondered how "brotherhood" could have turned into violence.
"Aren't fraternities supposed to be about brotherhood?" said Kara Rayburn, a Southeast Missouri State student who worked with Davis at the campus library. "I can't imagine one human being wanting to treat another human being this way."
Five fraternity brothers were arraigned yesterday on charges of involuntary manslaughter and hazing in the beating death of Davis earlier this week. Two other men were being questioned.
fraternity initiation in which pledges ran down a line of brothers who hit them with their fists. The rite took place late at night on a campus football field.
Davis, a 25-year-old junior studying journalism, was found unconscious in his apartment Tuesday.
A father of one of the suspects said Davis had endured a
Family members said they tried to persuade Davis to give up the fraternity bid after he showed up at home in St. Louis last weekend with a big scratch across his nose.
"When I asked him why he wanted to pledge this fraternity, he said, 'Ma, when you're pledged, you have to take it.'" said his mother, Edith Davis.
Five members of the fraternity were charged with involuntary manslaughter. One also was charged with one count of tampering with physical evidence for allegedly removing papers and books and clothing from Davis' apartment.
Authorities deny unusual request
The Associated Press
WEST PLAINS, Mo. — Authorities said they were opposed to a convicted sex offender's request to be cased.
"This is something I want to do," Stephen Charles Gray, 30, said. "I look at it as a glorious blessing, a release. Freedom."
Gray was convicted of rape, sodomy, assault, burglary, armed criminal action and other charges in an attack on a 15-year-old girl and her mother in their home in September 1992. He is to be sentenced March 8.
Gray said he was sure he would rape again unless he was rendered physically incapable of doing so.
Mary Still, a spokeswoman for the Missouri attorney general, said there was no state law that would authorize the judge to impose such a sentence.
The mother who was attacked said she wanted Gray to go to prison for the rest of his life.
Gray insists he is serious.
"But we're realistic enough to know that we'll be lucky if that happens," she said. "And we know we're lucky to be alive."
"The doctors tell me that I have to deal with these fantasies in my head," he said. "I said that was my point. I want to take away that choice in my head. I don't want that choice."
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STATE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, February 18, 1994
9
THE RACE FOR ATTORNEY GENERAL OF KANSAS Winter opposes capital punishment law Stovall wants to crack down on crime
Amy Solt / KANSAN
M. R. CLEVELAND
Wint Winter Jr., a former state senator from Lawrence, said one of his main objectives if elected attorney general would be working to prevent people, especially young people, from breaking the law.
By Stephen Martino Kansan staff writer
Wint Wint Jr. says he sees Kansas being ravaged by crime, and the traditional ways of fighting just won't work any more.
Winter said that his experience serving in the Legislature would aid the state in trying new and innovative ways to fight crime if he was elected attorney general.
"The attorney general's office is a place to provide positive leadership to change the system," he said. "The crime problem is very serious in Kansas, and the criminal justice system is broken and flawed."
Winter, a University of Kansas law school graduate and former Lawrence senator, is seeking the Republican nomination for attorney general. The primary is Aug. 2, and his opponent is Topeka attorney Carla Stovall.
Winter cited statistics that showed Kansas ranked 15th in violent crimes in the nation, while neighboring states such as Nebraska and Iowa were ranked 44th and 48th, respectively.
Winter said that the state had to move past what it was doing in adult corrections to tackle the problems of crime.
"We need a new kind of attorney general," he said. "One who has worked in the Legislature with legislators. Someone who can head up the command post against crime and violence."
Winter has proposed two basic solutions: getting tougher on people who break laws and working to prevent people, especially young people, from breaking laws.
As a state senator, Winter advocated sentencing guidelines, something his opponent, he said, rejects.
"Sentencing guidelines fought the old notion of how to handle criminals," he said. "We fought to eliminate the parole system and the idea that everyone can be rehabilitated. We moved from having corrections
facilities to having penitentiaries. Because of sentencing guidelines, prisons will be more full of meaner, tougher people."
William Alix / KANSAN
"We have got to recognize the time to prevent people from becoming criminals is early in life," he said.
However, Winter said that he personally opposed capital punishment. "I didn't vote for it when I was in the Legislature, and I wouldn't vote for it if I was now," he said. "But if it becomes the law of the state, the attorney general has a responsibility to enforce the law, and I will."
Winter, 40, said the state had to be just as concerned about preventing possible high-risk violators. He said the juvenile system of today was designed for truants and runaways of the '60s and not the carjackers and gang members of the '90s.
Programs that advocated against teen pregnancy, for drug treatment and that generally strengthen the family would begin to solve many problems, he said.
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Burdett Loomis, professor of political science, said that Winter's name recognition and ability to raise money would probably benefit the candidate in the long run.
"No one's going to get around Carla Stovall on the fight on crime," he said. "But Wint's pretty much a moderate Republican who has done some pretty progressive things in Kansas."
By Stephen Martino
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — Carla Stovall's candidacy for attorney general is based on something that no other candidate can claim, she said — a first-hand account of the effects of crime.
Stovall's best friend, a Methodist minister in Denver, Colo., was murdered a couple of years ago. She was shot five times.
"I learned from that experience that life is very fragile," she said. "I have to do something while I'm here because her death explained to me how unexpected life can be, and we have to do something while we are here."
That, in part, is why Stovall, 36, is seeking the Republican nomination for attorney general.
Carla Stovall, a Topeka lawyer, said she was a supporter of the death penalty. If elected attorney general, Stovall said she would be able to make the decision about who received the sentence.
She is in private practice in the Topeka firm of Entz and Chanay, but she said that her experience as Crawford County attorney from 1985 to 1988 is what set her apart from her opponent, Lawrence attorney Wint Winter Jr. The primary is Aug. 2.
"Prosecuting is wearing the white hat and protecting the victim," Stovall said. "Politics and law enforcement stay in your blood. I love it so. I want to protect the public and do what's right."
Stovall said that since she had spent time as a prosecutor, she was in the best position to address the problem of crime in the state.
"The attorney general has to be a very effective advocate for crime and safety issues in Kansas," she said. "The office has to protect the public and do what is right."
On the top of the list, Stovall said, is support for the death penalty.
Stovall has outlined 13 specific proposals that she says will help address the problem of crime, juvenile offenders and consumer protection.
Stovall said that a majority of Kansans supported the death penalty and that she could make the decision
of who to apply the sentence to, if need be.
"Some crimes are so awful that it is the appropriate consequence," she said.
Stovall said that she would have preferred the original bill as opposed to the one which passed in the Legislature last week. The first draft of the bill called for felony murder to be included in the crimes that could be punishable by death. Felony murder is an unpremeditated murder made in commission of a felony crime, such as armed robbery or rape. That provision was removed in the House Federal and State Affairs Committee.
difference between her and her opponent was with sentencing guidelines. She said the guidelines, which Winter helped push through the Legislature, released hundreds of criminals back into the streets.
Stovall said that another point of
"These guidelines send the message that what you did wasn't that bad," she said. "They are nonsensical, and 15 percent of those released are already back in prison."
Attorney General Robert Stephan, who is actively supporting Stovall's candidacy, said she was the best candidate.
"She is less of a politician and more the lawyer," he said. "She's the one that is cut out for the job."
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1-800/832-1230 ext.120.
"People were walking in the streets, young couples strolled along holding hands, children were playing," he said. "But there was fear."
Though last week was marked by some of the worst shelling and death in the war's history, Carrard said the IOC group came away with the feeling that it was time to at least start thinking about rebuilding sports stadiums and programs.
Olympic officials support Sarajevo
Committee pledges matching donations The Associated Press
Koss, a Norwegian national hero who set world speed skating records with both his golds, urged his 4.3 million countrymen to each donate 10 Kroner — about $1.43 — for every gold medal won by a Norwegian.
LILLEHAMMER, Norway — The International Olympic Committee said yesterday it will match any money donated by Olympic athletes to ease the suffering in war-blasted Sarajevo, where death stalks venues built for the 1984 Winter Games.
"This can only be done when the reconstruction has begun, which is not yet," Carrard said. "But we have word that many organizations and companies around the world are ready to rebuild Sarajevo for the young athletes."
"The eyes of the world are on Sarajevo," said Francois Cararrand, the IOC's director general, on his return with committee president Juan Antonio Samaranch from an unprecedented three-day trip to the Bosnian city.
The IOC delegation went to Zetra stadium, where opening and closing ceremonies for the '84 Winter Games were held. The stadium's soccer field is a cemetery, and U.N. troops use it as
The United Nations and the IOC called for an "Olympic truce" in all the world's trouble spots during the Winter Games.
A cease-fire that has been in effect for several days left the city "totally quiet" during the IOC visit. Carrard
"If an athlete gives 100 Kroner to Sarajevo, we will give 100 Kroner," he said. "If an athlete says, 'I will give 50,000 Kroner,' we will match it."
Carrard praised Koss and made an additional pledge.
astaging area.
The IOC announcement followed speed skater Johann Olav Koss's pledge Wednesday to donate $32,000 in Olympic bonuses to Lillehammer Olympic Aid, a relief agency for projects in Sarajevo and other besieged areas.
THE NEWS in brief
WASHINGTON
Clinton changes stance on involvement of U.S. in peacekeeping missions
In a revamped, still-classified proposal, the Clinton administration said the United States should retain command over its military forces involved in United Nations peacekeeping missions.
The proposal drafted by President Clinton's national security team is a substantial reversal from a policy contemplated last year that would have involved rapid expansion of U.S. involvement in peacekeeping and the acceptance of U.N. command over U.S. troops.
Under the new proposal, titled "Presidential Decision Directive 13," the United States would yield operational control of military forces only on a case-by-case basis and could overrule an order from a U.N. commander. The United States would not establish any separate military force for participation in U.N. operations, contrary to Clinton's statements during his presidential campaign.
With memories of successful international cooperation in the Persian Gulf War still fresh, Clinton last year spoke favorably of U.N. peacekeeping missions. Then in October, 18 Americans were killed and more than 70 wounded in a firefight in Mogadishu, Somalia. Questions arose about whether poor communication between U.S. forces and peacekeepers from other countries worsened the casualty count.
SAN CRISTOBAL DE LAS CASAS. Mexico
The government's peace envoy, Manuel Camacho Solis, announced yesterday that the talks would be in the southern state of Chiapas, but said he would not specify where until Sunday for security reasons.
Talks planned to end uprising
Rebel and government negotiators will meet Monday at an undisclosed location in southern Mexico to try to negotiate an end to a 6-week-old uprising.
The announcement followed Wednesday's release by the rebel Zapatista National Liberation Army of a former Chiapas governor who was kidnapped from his ranch Jan. 2, a
day after the rebellion broke out.
Peasants in southern Mexico have long complained about exploitation, poverty and landlessness and say the government has ignored their plight. Chiapas, which borders on Guatemala, is the poorest state in Mexico.
The formerly unknown Zapatistas took control of several cities Jan. 1 to demand better treatment. At least 107 people, mostly rebels and civilians, died in fighting that ended with a unilateral cease-fire called by the government Jan. 12.
WICHITA. Kan.
Woman takes blame for attack
A woman awaiting trial for the wounding of a Wichita abortion doctor last summer says she is responsible for a 1992 attack that closed an abortion clinic in Chico, Calif.
Shelley Shannon, 37, of Grants Pass, Ore., told The Wichita Eagle that she told Chico police in a Jan. 1 letter that she doused the abortion clinic with foul-smelling butyric acid in 1992. The attack forced the closing of the clinic for a week.
The letter also informed police that government officials in Oregon and in Wichita had proof that Elaine Bell, an abortion protester from Redding, Calif., did not commit the attack.
Shannon is charged with attempted first-degree murder in the Aug. 19 shooting of Dr. George Tiller outside the Wichita clinic where he performs abortions.
Bell was a suspect in the Sept. 17, 1992, attack at the Chico clinic, but police dropped the criminal case because of a lack of evidence. After that, the clinic filed a civil suit against Bell asking for an unspecified amount in damages. The case is scheduled to go to trial Feb. 28.
Shannon told the Eagle that she couldn't understand why clinic officials thought Bell was responsible for the Chico attack.
"Everybody seems to think ... that I'm just trying to take the credit for it," she said. "My attorney and everybody thinks like I want to be a martyr or something."
Carol Downer, founding director of the Federation of Feminist Women's Health Centers — a chain of abortion clinics — said she didn't believe Shannon committed the attack.
"It may be a strategic move on their part to create one big martyr and draw the heat off other people," Downer said.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, February 18, 1994
11
Kansas' Big Eight title hopes faltering
KANSA
34
William Alix / KANSAN
Kansas senior guard Steve Woodberry, who suffered a cut just below his left eye, tried driving Wednesday night against Randy Rutherford. Senior forward Richard Scott, right, played just 10 minutes before fouling out with zero points.
Loss to Oklahoma adds importance to Missouri game
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
Hopes have dimmed for the No. 4 Kansas men's basketball team after losing against Oklahoma State on Wednesday.
Kansas coach Roy Williams was no longer optimistic about the Big Eight Conference race.
"It would be a miracle if Missouri doesn't win it now," Williams said. "It's hard to believe what Missouri is doing."
The 63-59 overtime victory in Stillwater, Olda, oversided Oklahoma State into a tie with Kansas for second in the conference at 6-3. The Cowboys improved to 17-7 overall, while the Jayhawks dropped to 21-4.
The Jayhawks' next game is against No. 12 Missouri at 2:45 p.m. Sunday in Allen Field House. The Tigers enter the game with a 19-7 record overall, and they are first in the conference at 10-0. Missouri escaped an upset by Iowa State on Wednesday and won 79-72 in overtime.
The Tigers are led by a group of seniors. Missouri guard Melvin Booker, forward Lamont Frazier and center Jevon Crudup are all senior starters. Williams said that experience had helped them this season.
"They are an exceptional team." Williams said. "They're a tough team to beat. You look at the best teams in the conference, Oklahoma State and Missouri, and experience is a big factor."
Booker is a Big Eight Player of the Year candidate. This season he is averaging 18 points and 4.6 assists a game. In six conference categories,
Booker is in the ton 10.
"Booker has done a great job this year," Missouri coach Norm Stewart said. "He has got to be one of the most underrated guards in the nation. He wasn't that highly recruited out of high school, but he has improved every year."
Kansas freshman guard Jacque Vaughn, a conference Freshman of the Year candidate, may be assigned to guard Booker. Vaughn also excels in the classroom. He was named to the academic All-Big Eight team yesterday with a 3.77 fall semester grade point average.
"For a freshman, he's picked up things faster than any other player we've ever had." Williams said.
In the last game between the two Jan. 31, Missouri defeated Kansas 79-67 in Columbia, Mo. It was the third game that Kansas senior forward Richard Scott played with a sore left shoulder. He played 24 minutes but was mostly ineffective.
Scott played 10 minutes against Oklahoma State on Wednesday, but he was held scoreless and fouled out. Before his injury, Scott was averaging 15.3 points a game and joined senior guard Steve Woodberry as the only players averaging more than 10 points.
Williams said scoring had been a concern from the beginning of the season.
William Alix / KANSAN
11
"I basically knew that Nov. 1," he said of the scoring problem. "Richard Scott's injury has made it a little different, but it hasn't changed anything. You've got to go with the guys you have. Hopefully the guys other than Richard will step up and take his place."
"Steve has approximately six to eight stitches underneath his eye," Williams said. "It was a pretty good
Woodberry joined Scott Wednesday as one of Kansas' walking wounded when he was elbowed under his left eye after a jump shot.
Kansas junior center Greg Ostertag scored 18 points and pulled down 13 rebounds in the loss to the Cowbys.
blow, considering there was no foul called. We anticipate him playing Sunday, but he couldn't play today. He looks like one of those guys who just came out of a heavyweight fight and lost."
Missouri contrasts with Kansas' injury and scoring problems. The Tigers have many scorers to bring in off the bench, but Williams said Booker was always a constant threat.
"They have tremendous depth, and it's talented depth," he said. "They have interchangeable parts. If one of them falls down, somebody else just closes in and carries on."
The game against Missouri begins the last five remaining games on Kansas' schedule. Williams said he hoped less emphasis would be placed on a team's postseason success.
"I do hate that we start pointing to the tournaments," he said. "I hope it doesn't get to that point. We just want to improve each game. I know that sounds corny, but it's true."
Pitcher's rule in game: It's all a 'no-brainer'
By Andrew Gilman Kansan sportswriter
"I'm a lot better when I don't think," Rude said.
Thinking is something junior Dan Raund would not like to do this weekend when the No. 25 Kansas baseball team travels to Fayetteville, Ark., to play a three-game series against the University of Arkansas Razorbacks.
"When you think too much, it clutters your mind," he said. "When your mind is cluttered, that creates worry, and worry creates doubt."
The mind of the Billings, Mont., infielder and pitcher was blank last weekend at the Olive Garden Classic, where he accumulated six hits in 14 at-bats. He also knocked in four runs and scored five on the way to being named to the All-Tournament Team.
Even after a great weekend, Rude said he was still concerned about the mental aspects of the game.
"One of my weaknesses is confidence," Rude said. "That and my mind. Baseball is such an easy sport to get down about. If you fail 70 percent of the time, you're considered a successful player. It takes a lot to control that."
"If you start to hang your head about something, then it will happen again. You've got to stick your nose right in there and go after it."
Kansas coach Dave Bingham thinks that Rude has done just that.
Rude, who batted ninth most of last year, has moved to the top of the order and now bats first.
"It's a big assignment for him to bat first," Bingham said. "He had a great weekend, he was outstanding."
Rude also contributed with his arm. He pitched 5 2/3 innings and gave up four runs on six hits. He also struck out eight.
"I felt good pitching," he said. "I gave up two homers and struck some people out. There were a
Rude was pleased with his effort on the mound.
couple times when I lost my couple time, but I thought it was a positive five and two-thirds outing."
Although the Jayhawks won only one game out of four during the weekend, Bingham was concerned about his team's performance, not winning or losing.
"We're just going to try and play a full game," he said. "The main thing is to sustain a three-game series."
Bingham also mentioned that the Jayhawks were looking to play their type of game.
"We want to control how we play, whether that's versus Sisters of the Poor or No. 1 Georgia Tech," he said. "But overall, we want to win."
They absorbed a 21-4 beating on Saturday, and then turned around on Sunday and no-hit the Horned Frogs for eight innings, while leading the game 4-0. But a two-run home run in the ninth inning and another two-run shot in the 13th inning proved to be too much, and the Razorbacks lost a heartbreaker.
The Razorbacks are 0-3 on the season, with all three losses coming at the hands of Texas Christian University.
"They're a lot like us," he said. "They have a strong group of veteran guys with some holes in their lineup. They'll run the bases and hit and run. They have a multi-dimensional offense. They're definitely a NCAA-caliber type program."
Even though Arkansas has not won yet this year, Bingham said the Razorbacks would be formidable opponents.
Arkansas finished fourth in the Southeast Conference and ended the season 33-26.
"Arkansas will be a good test," he said. "We just want to see who can handle the pressure for us. We want to control how we play."
But Bingham was more worried with his team.
"I can't let things distract me," he said. "Worrying is a big part of the game, and I can't let it bring me down."
Rude agreed.
Jayhawks to face Cowgirls, Sooners in weekend trip
'Hawks head to Oklahoma
By Matt Siegel
Kansan sportswriter
Oklahoma State will have some added incentive when it faces the No. 10 Kansas women's basketball team tonight in Stillwater, Okla.
"We have had some good wins," Oklahoma State coach Dick Halterman said. "We beat Colorado, which was No. 3 at the time. We defeated Creighton and Texas A&M, both of which are leading their conferences. If we beat Kansas I think it would lock up an NCAA berth for us."
Halterman said that Kansas had a lot of motivation as well. He said Kansas was jockeying for a high seed and possible home court advantage for the first two rounds of the NCAA Tournament.
Despite a 6-4 conference record, Oklahoma State is peaking at the right time. The Cowgirls are 5-1 in their last six games and 15-6 overall. The Jayhawks are 9-2 in the conference and 18-3 overall.
Kansas junior forward Angela Aycock scored 23 points against Oklahoma State in a 79-68 Kansas victory in Allen Field House Jan. 23. Halterman said it was important for his team not to let a similar situation occur.
"Angela is possibly the premier player in the conference," he said. "We made a big run last time and she just took the game over. We can't focus on her entirely because they have Tate, Dixon, Halbleib. You can go right on down the line. They have nine or ten players that will step up for them."
Halterman said that equally important was containing Kansas' athletic prowess because he felt that the Jayhawks were the most athletic team the Cowboys would face this season. He said that the Cowboys needed to handle Kansas' pressure better, especially in the first half. As for the offensive end, he said he was hoping for high production out of his post players.
"We're relatively small in there." Kansas coach Marian Washington said. "In terms of bulk and power, I think we are one of the smallest inside teams in the conference. We're challenged in the paint."
The Jayhawks may face an increased challenge because Oklahoma State freshman center Dawn Burnett, has returned from an injury. Halterman said that she was the team's best post player. She missed the first game against the Jayhawks.
"Oklahoma State is very difficult to beat at home," she said. "Colorado found that out. It's going to be a big challenge. They will have a lot of incentive. They are going to get up for Kansas."
File photo / KANSAN
But Washington said her biggest concern was playing well on the road.
Kansas also plays the Oklahoma Sooners at 2 p.m. Sunday in Norman, Okla. After beginning 10-3, the Sooners have gone 4-4 after losing to Kansas 85-78 on January 21. Still, Washington said the Sooners were a team to fear.
4
"Anytime you can beat a nationally ranked team, there are bonus points," Washington said. "We're at a point now where a lot of teams we're playing have nothing to lose. I always felt that Oklahoma had a lot of talent and that for some reason it didn't jell. This year, their coaching staff should be commended because it seems they are playing better basketball."
Kansas senior center Lisa Tate blocks a shot in the Jahawks' previous game against Oklaheim. Kansas plays both Oklahoma schools this weekend.
Men's tennis looks to build on 7-0 streak
A second tournament crown is what the No. 33 Kansas men's tennis team will be looking for when it travels to Bloomington, Ind., to partake in the Indiana Invitational. Last weekend, the Jayhawks won the Minnesota Invitational by upsetting the No. 27 Golden Gophers from Minnesota in the championship match.
SPORTS BRIEFS
Kansas is off to a 7-0 start, its best since 1986 when it went 8-0. Kansas
coach Michael Center was the No. 2 singles player on that 86 squad.
The Jayhawks face Vanderbilt at 9 a.m. today in the first round of the round robin tournament. Other teams participating in the tournament include Indiana and West Virginia.
Next week the Jayhawks will play in the United States Tennis Association/Intercollegiate Tennis Association National Team Indoors in Louisville, Ky. Kansas earned the right to play in the USTA/TA by defeating Wichita State in the Regional Team Playoff finals in Des Moines, Iowa. The victory against the Shock-
Big Eight All-Academic team chooses Vaughn
ers gave Kansas its second Regional Team Championship in three years.
The No. 15 Kansas women's tennis team travels to Fayetteville, Ark. this weekend to play Arkansas Friday and Alabama Saturday. On Sunday the Jayhawks will travel to Little Rock, Ark., and play No. 9 Mississippi.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Kansas Freshman Jacque Vaughn was named to the Big Eight All-Academic team yesterday. Vaughn, asociology major,
has a 3.77 grade point average.
Nebraska forward Bruce Chubick was named to the team for the third straight year. Chubick, a history major, has a 3.50 GPA.
Iowa State had three players round out the team. They were Fred Hoiberg, junior, 3.28; marketing; Julius Michalik, junior, 3.29; physical education; and Marc Carlson, senior, 3.47; management.
To qualify, athletes had to be regular competitors and have at least a 3.00 GPA, either cumulative or in the previous academic year.
Compiled from staff and wire reports.
12
Friday, February 18, 1994
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
3.74
Harding, Kerrigan at opposite ends of the rink
The Associated Press
HAMAR, Norway — Nancy Kerrigan skated in the same lacy white costume she wore the day of her assault, a subtle reminder to Tonya Harding that all is not forgotten or forgiven.
They never spoke on the ice in their first Olympic practice together yesterday, and they tracked each other out of the corners of their eyes to keep from bumping while they skated. When one performed, the other turned away. They acted more like strangers than teammates.
In different ways, they made their points to each other, Kerrigan with her calculated choice of costumes. Harding with her three triple axels and gutsy recovery from a nasty spill.
At the end of two sessions that crackled with tension, Harding
crashed on a triple axel, skidded into the wall and clutched her right ankle in pain. She had come so far, suing to get here, and suddenly she looked as if she might go no further in these Winter Games.
Nothing, though, not even a persistently sore ankle, was going to stop her from trying the one move that no other woman in the Olympics can match. The same toughness Harding had shown amid scandal the past six weeks became evident to everyone watching.
She rose gingerly, skated slowly over to her coach, and a few minutes later attempted the jump three more times in the rink where the medals will be decided next week. She pulled out of the first one before leaping, then she twirled around only twice on her next attempt. Finally, she made it,
a full three and a half revolutions, even if she had to step out of the landing at the last moment because of the pain.
"My ankle hurt like that at the nationals," said Harding, who won the U.S. Figure Skating Championships last month after Kerrigan was clubbed in an attack that Harding's ex-husband and bodyguard claimed she helped plot.
Harding got a warm hug from Lily Lee, an American who competes for South Korea, at the end of the first 45-minute session. Harding then talked and laughed with Bulgarian skater Zvetelina Abrasheva.
Kerrigan, though, left early without saying a word to Harding. Perhaps not coincidentally, that's when Harding skated her best, twice nailing the triple axel jump only one woman,
Midori Ito of Japan, ever landed in the Olympics.
In the second session, Kerrigan stepped on the ice first, precisely on time, just after Elton John's song, "I'm Still Standing," ended on the loudspeakers. Kerrigan looked bewildered as she scanned the crowd, but smiled when she saw her coaches.
There were the usual close passes between the skaters, Harding speeding at times between Kerrigan and Lee. But no one got bumped, and the only bruises in this first session came on the occasional falls by all the skaters.
Most of the time during Harding's music, Kerrigan stood on the side, her back to the rink, talking to her coaches, Evy and Mary Scottold.
Kerrigan then skated through her
entire program to a Neil Diamond medley, opening nicely with a triple flip and a triple toe-loop combination. But Kerrigan also popped a couple of triple tumps, turning them into doubles. Harding chatted with her coach and didn't watch at all.
Kerrigan left the ice with nine minutes left in the 45-minute session, and Claire Ferguson, president of the U.S. Figure Skating Association, put her arm around her and escorted her out.
Harding kept practicing, and two minutes landed the tough triple axel on her first attempt. That jump is the one Harding will need to land in competition next week to separate herself from the others. Nailing it now, on the first try, sent her rushing over to her coach and choreographer to give them hugs.
Asked how she thought her first
1994 Winter Olympic Game
practice went, Harding gave thumbs-up sign and left without word.
Kerrigan skated elegantly despite some mistakes, though she showed none of Harding's leaping ability and daring. But Kerrigan was in a buoyant mood, especially pleased to get a telegram from Dallas Cowboys quarterback Troy Alkman.
"The telegram wished her good luck, and she was very excited." U.S. figure skating spokesman Kristin Matta said. "She said it was cool."
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The Etc.
Shop
SEE THE CLASSIFIEDS
new
THE
HARBOUR
LIGHTS
Now a full service bar
after 57 years
of downtown tradition
031 Massachusetts
Downtown
$
100s
Announcements
Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business
Classified Directory
Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
200s
SAVE with your Kansan Card TODAY! $AVEHUNDREDS!
LBUs Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
Classified Policy
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs
are being issued in this newspaper are
available on our website.
The Kansas will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person group of persons based on nationality, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansas will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law.
SPENDADOLIAR...
100s Announcements
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 and requires an ordinance of discretion. In some instances, limitation or disclosure based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or dis-
I
110 Bus. Personals
HEMP clothes, hemp backpacks, organic cotton clothes, hemp hacky sacks. Simple Goods, 735 Mass M.-Sat., 10:30 p.m. Thurs. to 8:00 p.m.
Holiday Inn, Holcomba Springs. Co. Party with someone you know. Free beer and appetizers every night from Sp. m., 7 p.m. when you stay with us. $109 + tax for 1-4 people per room. Call 1-800-6549 to book your Spring Break today.
Unique Sterling Silver Jewelry
Hoods, Pendant & More!
For Guy's & Gals
928 Mass. Downtown
928 Mass. Downtown
120 Announcements
KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8am-4:30pm
WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500
HAVASU: America's New Spring Break Hot Spot,
Lake Havasu, AZ, is throwing America's largest party!
*top name* Conerts, Comedians, and
**players**
*will* Lake Will Roar in *'11*; CALL *1*
- 800-HAVASU
Pharmacy Hour
Monday: Thursday 8am-9pm
Friday: 8am-10am
Saturday: 8am-12pm
Sunday: 11am-3pm
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11 30am
SPRING BREAK 94
PLEASE NOTE
300s
Merchandise
SPRING BREAK
Cancun $439
With R/T air
South Padre $159
with outage
party/meal package!
Florida $79
Sand, sun and cheap!
Bahamar/Cruise $329
Includes some meal!
Call immediately!
Maupintour:
749-0700 or 843-0050
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
- Kansan Classified: 864-4358
Jayhawk Spirit
20% OFF Greek Merchandise
Thur end of February
933 Massachusetts
Daytona Beach from $129 *7 nights *Beachfront Hotel *All taxes and tips
Spring Break
*Central Location
Daytona's Beach is 23 miles long. Don'tlet a bad location ruin your Spring Break
Dale 842-9129
NOWOY DOES SHING BREAK BETTE!
SPRING
LAST CHANCE!
BREAK
/ COMPLETE FIVE & SEVEN NIGHT TRIPS
69
13TH SELLO T
YEAR
AM LOW AM
SOUTHPADREISLAND
SOUTHPADRE ISLAND
DAYTONA BEACH
PANAMACITY BEACH
STEAMBOAT LASVEGAS
Shanghai
SUNCHI
VAIL/BEAVERCREEK
VAIL/BEAVERCREEK
ORLANDO/DISNEY WORLD
MUSTANGISLAND
HILTON HEAD ISLAND
BREKEN RIDGE/KEYSTONE
PRESENT PROGRAMME: FESTIVAL 2018
PLANETS 10% OF TICKETS
FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION & DESIGNATIONS
1·800·SUNCHASE
Tax preparation: Short Form $15, Long Form $27
Electronic filing $27, refund loans $47
Calling cards $38
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, February 18, 1994
13
Spring Break '94/ SOUTH PADRE ISLAST/ 6135 PER WEEK-1 and 5 am amigos share a week in a bedroom condo on S. Padre for just $135 per person. This offer is limited and only available to you if you have a roommate. 626/ISLAND Reservation Service *P.O. Box 3469* S. Padre Island TX 78597 "Rate is per person based on 6 people sharing a bedroom condo the week of March 26, 20xx. Tax and damage赔偿 extra deposit.
130 Entertainment
BENCHWARMERS Friday Freddy Jones Band &
Poets
$2.00 Teas
18 & over
Saturday
November
Turquoise Sol
2 for 1 Wells
18 & over
$1.00 shot of the day
everyday!
140 Lost & Found
POUND: Lawrence HS ring, class of 91. Call 842
6444.
Lost callc cat as of 277. Reward, please call 769
2177
programmable calculator found Tuesday afternoon at 15th and Ida. Call to identify 842-6126.
Male and Female
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
CONFERENCE SUPPORT SPECIALIST
American Teleconference Services is searching for a few unique individuals to support our expansion. The team will possess outstanding language and interpersonal skills; must have a high level of energy and be able to handle a fast-paced environment. Must have the ability to meet all must. In return for your dedication and teamwork, you will be rewarded with an excellent salary and benefit package which includes some unique features. Interested candidates are invited to submit resumes.
Director of Human Resources American Teleconferencing Services, Ltd. 10559 Lowell, Suite 600 Overland Park, Kansas 66210
300 SUMMER CAMP OPPORTUNITIES
IN NY, PA and NEW ENGLAND. Instructed neede-
r for: Tennis, Basketball, Baseball, Hockey,
Golf, Soccer, Volleyball, Bowling, Windsurfing, Launch, Chess, Orgynathics, Ceramics, Jewelry, Volleyball, Soccer,
Dance, Dramatics, Equestrian, Fitness, Ropes,
Outdoor sports, Plano Accompaniment, Phys. Ed.
400-843-6248 now!
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
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camp. Teach: swim, archery, sailing, golf, gymnastics, archery, army camp, golf, camping, crafts, dramatics, OR riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. Salary $150 or more. LWC/LWC/GWC Miflah, NIL. 8003, 700-449-2496
Gounselors/Support Staff-Children's Camps/Top Tier Salary, MB/RD/Laundry, travel allowance. Must have skill in one of the following activities: archery, arts & crafts, baseball, basketball, soccer, football, golf, guitar, gymnastics, field hockey, football, golf, guitar, gymnastics, ice hockey, horseback ride-hunt seat, karate, lacrosse, mature, photography, piano, pioneering, rocketry, rollerbling, ropes, sailing, soccer, swim team, tennis, theater, technicians, kitchen steward, cooks, bus drivers, maintenance, nurses, secretaries. Men call or write: Camp Winada For Boys, 2255 Gladiolus Rd., Suite 40E, Boca Raton, FL 33431 (944) 954-5500. Women Camp Winada For Boys, 2255 Gladiolus Rd., Suite 171, Duxbury, MA 02328 (944) 617-8556. We camp in the student union from 11am-4pm on 03/03 in the Oread and Regionalist Rooms.
Cruise line, entry level, on board positions avail-
great benefit. Summer or year round. (813) 760-9255.
Gourmet Bistro now hire terrase service, wall-
camera, table, sofa, stool, Cafe, Spa,
Café. 8900 W 10th OP, KS (93) 624-7580.
Graduate Student Assistant (non-Architecture or fine art students due to confidentiality) for Distinguished Professor of Architecture, part-time/time $360/mo. EOA, contact Cynthia Muckey, correspondence, classroom assignments, use of Macintosh. Deadline February 23, 1994.
McDonald's
McDonald's
JOIN OUR TEAM
This Saturday, February 19,
from 11:00am-2:00pm at our
6th Street location, we will be
providing job information and
conducting open interviews for
positions in all our restaurants.
WRITERS WANTED
Major film production company
seeks new talent. Send us your
sample screenplays.
(301)515-2060
'94
9
KU SENIORS
► RESUMÉS
► COVER LETTERS
► INTERVIEW TRAINING
RESUMÉ SERVICES
832-8100
Looking for capable, creative and committed individual, to be a mother's helper. If interested, please send name and number to Staci, P.O. Box 721 Lawrence, KS 60404
Nannies Wanted. Position nationwide, summer or yr-rund, exp, not req. Great pay and benne.
Need instructor to give beginning organ lessons to my daughter in my home. Call 841-3484 after 5pm. Needed part-time, dependable person. Apply Norge Village, 24th and Iowa. No phone calls.
ONEID FACTORY STORE filling several part time positions. Weekday afternoon, evenings, and weekends available 15-20 hours wk. summer session. Suite 103-105 pm weekdays. 749-4612 EOE.
Juicers Shougirls
Juicers Showpieces Explore the horizons of making $1000 + weekly, working at Lawrence's top adult night spot. Now hiring attractive dancers and waitresses 18+. Excellent working atmosphere. Apply in person, 913 N. Second, Lawrence, 7 p.m.-2 a.m., or call 841-4122 after 7 p.m.
Top private girls resident in MAHLE for athletic trainer. 6/20/94/8/24/94. Excellent salary, RM/RD laundry, travel allowance. Women call or write: Camp Vega for Girls, P.O. Box 1771, Duxbury, MA. 02332 (617) 934-8536. We will be on campus from 1am-4pm on 3/19/94. Registration Room 1A.
SUMMER JOBS OUTDOORS
National Parks, Forests, Fire Crews,
Send Storm for Dense Dustils
Sullivan's, a 113 E. Wyoming, Kalispell, MT 95901.
Teacher's Aide Positions available - M/F: 7:30
9:30; M/W, 4:50; and T/R 10:00-11:15. Experience in
wheelchair necessary. Apply at Immunel Lutheran-
child Center 2104 W.15th or call Darla, 842-8131.
Office Assistant position also available.
Tennis Job-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 visit us at (804) 2333-617 (617) 9345-6346. Men call or write: CampWanad, 2255 Glades Rd. Suite 4002, Boca Raton, FL 32413 (907) 954-5500. We will be on campus in the Great and Regional hostels.
225 Professional Services
Experienced teacher (French-native speaker for foreign students) in your elementary/intermediate French/German class. Flexible hours and reasonable rates. Call Lamaru at 749-3680 (Leave message). Au
$$ Premiere Tax Service $$
1040E2 $; 1010 $; 1045 +15 extra fee for other forms to be filed with 1040. State returns $= $51.
Will pick up and deliver. Call Brian at 256-2572.
OUI, TRAFFIC, Criminal Defense,
Divorce and Civil Matters
Attorneys at Law
Former Prosecutors-Near Campus
Elizabeth Brigid Craig Stancillie
749-0087 414 W.148 842-6432
Driver education offered through Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 yrs. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided 841-7749
For a confidential, caring friend, call us.
We're here to listen and talk with you.
Bbirthright 843-4211. Free pregnancy testing
Customized Library Research - don't get lost in the stack, let us bring stacks of information to you
Research and information gathering for students and faculty. Call 841-3675
FERNANDINA STUDENTS
DV-1 green student
Immigration Dept. Green cards provide permanent resident status. Citizens of almost all countries are allowed to take part. Students, tourists, any may apply. For info or forms: New Era Services. 2021 Stagg Si, Canoga Park, CA 91436.
BRAXTON B.COPLEY
Attorney at Law
Personal Injury
Traffic Tickets, Mideastern,
Landlord/Tenant
Personal Income Tax
719 Massachusetts 749-5333
INTERNATIONAL STUDIENTS! We transfer Videos from US mode to your system or from your country to US mode. $25 includes tape and mailing. Video Transfer. PO Box G, Ottawa, Kitchener, Ontario
Not ready for boring old lifestyle life? Want to travel?
Read: Life as an Odyssey; Guide to Meaningful Careers and Unique Lifestyles. For more info call 1-800-883-724.
Tel; (818) 998-4425; Fax; (818) 882-9681.
TRAFFIC-DUIT'S
Fake D.I. 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
VIDEO EDITING AND
PRODUCTION SERVICES
A/B roll video editing with EIDL
3D computer animation.
163 field production package.
Award winning screenwriter.
PRIMAL SCREENWriting
913-841-0630
1 + word processing, resumes, letters, term
patches, etc. 815/5, bg425/5, pg474 after 5.30 p.m.wkd
235 Typing Services
**Ider Women Word Processing - Former editor**
*Includes files into accurate pages of letter*
*quality type. 943-2000.
Beacon Publication Services-Quality word processing, latex printing; Call. Mary. 843-2874.
Looking for a good type
*Papers, not books and magazines, Charts
*Laser printing to WOW' your profits
*Grammar and spelling free
*18 years experience
call Jack at
the Graduate
Word processing, applications, term papers,
dissertations, resumes. Editing, compilation, rush
work on manuscripts.
Words by Chris Word Processing.
High quality papers and spell; check
words.
X
300s Merchandise
*BRASS BED, firm, orthopedic mattress set and frame, never used, cost $100, $30 cash each,
$50 furnishings.
305 For Sale
*LIVING ROOM SET*, safa, love seat and chair.
Plush high back style, still in plastic, cost $1,800.
black leather biker jacket. Excell. com. hardy been worn. Bought in August '93. Size fits M/U.
Macintosh Classic IH-48 with 40 MB + MS Word,
Pagemaker and Quark, *700* OBO *614* 862-3684
Classical Guild, Gold St w/case, $40 623 1214
For Sale: 600 Classical Guild's excellent set
of instruments.
Cassio Graphing Calculator.
Manual included. Excellent condition, $55
Call 841-5849
Casio Graphing Calculator.
primer: F835-7582, OF, P.S.
MACINTOSH Computer. Complete system includ-
ed.
Mac PLUS 4-meg RAM, 36-meg hard drive, and
minor $40 1-883-1-623, O.P. KS,
Old R.U. Jayhawk Decal, three color, 1929? "x"*x"
for $15. Write PO Box 72856 Machine 60046
340 Auto Sales
Men's 20 inch Gianlus ignana mbi. bike ideal for train & campus use, w/Control束支 $200
84 Dodge Omaha 8432 well, reliable, $600. Leave message at 8432 3422
**Hyundai** Execed GLS in good condition **idr**
168 km/l *kii* 71 mk, AC / AM/FM cassette.
Call 841-7591.
**JEEP WRIAGLER in good condition. New tires**
$7500 **I interested call 648-0000.**
190 Mazda Rx7 GXL, red, 45 Ki m, power sunroof,
$10.00 rack 768-1640
1888 Handa Accord. 4 Dr., 5 Spd. cruise, A/C
Honda Accord. Great condition. Call for details
832-1401
1991 Mazda Miata 23k miles, excellent condition Call 749-5812
Grey 79 Limited Edition Mazda X7 Sun roof. New
colour. Excellent acclimation needs. Needs
phone Call: 841-623-8510
360 Miscellaneous
Giving away cellular phone number FREE. First month service and connection fees paid. Call 811-429-0365.
400s Real Estate
3 bldm w/sunroom and plenty of storage space, 2 bathrooms, 1 kitchen, 1 airr. fire place and pool. On KU bus route, $50 + availability. March 1 Mendelssohn 1-897-4655.
Applecroft Apt. avail. April 1 2 berm. 1 bath. fully equipped tkc dishwasher, micro. disposal heat, air, water, trash paid. On bus route. No pets. Call avntime 843-825. Ack for Chris or Susan
3 Bedroom/ 2 full bath now available on bus
route microwave & dishwasher $500.
798.1468.0001.0001.
1 Bedroom Apt. available now! Call 841-1212
Available March 1. Two bedroom townhouse.
1/2 bath, walk to campus, pool 443 per month.
Available immediately at Brady Apts. 1839 Kennebunk road, neat paid,
heated patio, not pets. $475/mo. 841-3126.
4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished,
Interested? Call 814-5255, 794-0455 or
642-4045
Available now, two bedroom at 912 Tennessee
basement, basement 405 plus utilities.
small pet O. K. 789-264-3211
MORNING STAR
Trailridge Apartments
new leasing for summer and Fall
Studies, Agus, and Town Houses
KU Buo Road, Dillens, Buschall,
Count, 2015
Call Today for Information
843.7333 904-6980 W 6th
Roomss, apartments, keps, older
homes available. A STAIR (2021).
www.GRISGROUPS.com
843-7333 2500 W.6th
Nice Nibm. duplex, central air, street parking on bus route, no nota. Available March 1, call 764-280-5311.
Ombed bedroom for sublease. Water and trash patio. Room February 2, 1945/mo. Now $37,000/week.
Park25
We are now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature studio 1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. We also have 3 bedroom, $2 \frac{1}{2}$ bath townhomes.
- 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)
One bedroom apartment available now. On KU bus route. Small pets OK. Call 865-4289.
Spaicous a bedroom apt yet to campus. Furious calls. Contactly. Call 865-1212. Ask about Coldwater flat #4.
Now leasing for FALL
- Weekly Maid Service
We're making life easier
- Front Door Bus Service
- "Dine Anytime" with unlimited seconds
- Laundry and Vending Facilities
- Free Utilities
NAISMITH Hall
1800 Naismith
942-8554
843-8554
Sublease top floor studio off 5th & Color. from March to lst, July 31st, & 31st; & wait p. laundry facilities. Near bus route, 841-5797 or 841-3789.
Sublease. Big 1 Br. W/D Hookups, CA/CH, DV. cable p. book from KU. Available March ****
RENT REFERRAL
H&S MANAGEMENT SERVICES
LOOKING FOR A PLACE TO RENT?
841-5454
FREE SERVICE
MASTERCRAFT
Studio, 1,2,3, & 4 bedroom apartments and roomhomes
HANOVER
REGENTS COURT
749-0445 : 19th & Mass.
Now renting for June and August, 1, 2 and 3 dbrms,
dishwashers, microwave, W/D, french-peeling, ceiling
cabinets.
841-1212 : 14th & Mass.
SUNDANCE
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. Call Kathy or Shana at Meadowbrook 842-4200
Offers Completely Furnished
15th & Crestline
Mon - Fri 8-5:30
Sat 10-4
Sun 1-4
Sorry no pets
TANGLEWOOD
Hanover Place Apt. for rent. Near Campus.
4370 MO Call 641-1212.
749-2415 : 10th & Arkansas
House for rent 2 bedroom no pets, newly remodeled call 843-2033
Lorimar Townhomes
Furnished room for rent with shared kitchen and
bathroom from KU. Off street parking.
No pets. 811-6500
CAMPUS PLACE
841-1429 : 1145 Louisiana
Open Daily 9AM - 5PM
ORCHARD CORNERS 749-4226:15th&Kasold
Equal Housing Opportunity
MASTERCRAFT
---
meadowbrook FALL '94
*1 and 3 Bedroom
Apartments Available
*Quiet Location
*2 blocks from KU bus route
*Call Gina at 843-4754
2010 Northbound
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
How to schedule an ad:
430 Roommate Wanted
By phone: 064-4358
1 roommate for 4 brim townhouse 740-610 p/m no utilities. Call Melissa 749-7600
ROOMMATE NEEDED to share two bedroom
78/70 mo +1/7 needts. Call Dave 864-3300
841-9079
1/4 S for 4 bedroom apt. Near campus. 2 full baths.
$144 per month + 1/4 utilities. 842-445.
1 roommate for 4 brim townhouse $144 p/m nouti-l
2 furnished bedrooms in home, close to campus
1 furnished bedroom in DW, DW, AC; 2 fee $16
Call Seth at 845-390-5200
Roinmate needed for big beautiful 2 bib app.
Call 819-2045 at 819.500-141/no phone.
Call 799-1023.
Classified information and order form
*commute to share townhouse at Sunrise Village* 472.7%/month + /uilities Call Mike or her phone: (866) 550-1234
1 $i麻袋机, non-smoker for 3rd bedroom; $1.25
$麻袋机, non-smoker for 3rd bedroom; $1.25
Female roommate wanted NOW For 3 br house.
Roommate campers, WFD, wipes to move.
Lodge 2485-1040, 2485-1060, 2485-1070.
I HAVE TO MOVE TO K.C.I. * female needed to share 3 dbrm, spacious apt, $200/month, + utilities, on bus route, convenient location, no smokers or pets, call 845-7647 in the night
Ads phone in may be billed to your MasterCard or Vlae account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
119 Sharter Fillet
- Dr Mail: 118 Starfler Filist Insurance KS A04A5
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 W visa.
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ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
Cases per mile per day
1.0x 1-2X 4-7X 8-14X 15-28X 29+X
2.05 1.55 1.95 .85 .75 .69
1.90 1.15 .90 .70 .65 .45
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1.75 .90 .65 .69 .65 .45
378 want to buy
405 for rent
438 roommate wanted
1 05 personal
1 18 business personas
1 28 announcements
1 38 outreachmeet
Classifications
Come on Over For Dinner
MasterCard
305 for sale
340 auto sales
308 miscellaneous
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:
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You don't have tolive here to eat here! Our "Dine Anytime" meal programs let you enjoy a huge selection of appetizing entrees, vegetables, desserts, and salads from 7am-7pm daily (11am-6:30pm weekends) With our "Punch Card" and "5Meal" programs you can get meals as low as $2.50 Either way, you'eat it up.
1800 Naismith 843-8559
Signature:
The University Daily Kansas, 119 Stauffer Finti Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66445
For more information call or stop by
NAISMITH HALL
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
XAMON
© 1994 FarWorks, Inc./Dial by Universal Press
2-10
Thirty years had passed, and although he had no real regrets about marrying Wendy, buying a home and having two kids, Peter found his thoughts often going back to his life in Never-Never-Land.
14
Friday, February 18, 1994
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
U.S. hockey team's medal hopes still alive after tie
The Associated Press
LILLEHAMMER, Norway — What else? Aite.
In its best-played and most exciting game yet, the U.S. hockey team tied Canada 3-3 last night. And in tying the Olympic record with three ties in a tournament, the Americans left the ice with perked-up med hopes and a feeling of accomplishment.
"There has been a lot of references to our lack of intensity from start to finish, and probably they're well-deserved — until today," U.S. coach Tim Taylor said.
"Ithink we did our share of standing around in Games 1 and 2. We certainly took stock in that and realized that we put our backs against the wall by only coming out of the Slovakia and France games with a total of two
points. I think we had a little bit more feistiness."
The United States had rallied from two-goal, third-period deficits to the France and Slovakia before tying Canada on Todd Marchant's power-play goal with 28 seconds to play. Sweden also had three draws in 1988 and went on to win the bronze medal
The Americans play Sweden (2-0-1) on Saturday and finish the preliminary round Monday against Italy (0-3). They are behind Sweden, Canada (2-0-1) and Slovakia (1-0-2) and ahead of France (0-2-1) and Italy in Pool B. To be one of the group's four medal-round qualifiers, they probably only need to win one of their two remaining games — or to tie them both.
"Whatever it takes," U.S. goalie Garth Snow said.
Though the team could probably
make the medal round with five ties, Taylor said, "Yes, but we need a win. We need to prove to ourselves that we can beat somebody. I think this was more of a win than the first two ties to us, mentally. So I think this will be more a springboard to us. We'll see.
"We've had very positive finishes to all of our games. I think we feel the best about this one. I think we feel like this was a real good die."
So did Canada coach Tom Renney, who joked that it was "a good win for both teams."
Though it certainly was as good as a win for Canada, which clinched a med-round berth, Canadian players were not as happy as their coach.
“It’s too bad because I think we’re a better team overall and we deserved to win,” Petr Nelved said. “The big difference between us and them;
they're satisfied with a tie and we're not."
Marchant understands Nedved's feelings.
Since a Jan. 25 pre-Olympic victory over Canada in Toronto, the U.S. team is 1-1-5 in exhibition and Olympic play—including ties to its hot grids.
"When you come back on a team and you tie them, you feel as if you've won," he said. "When a team comes back and ties you, you feel like you've lost."
"I made the statement in Toronto ... It's really hard to win a hockey game at this level. You can't make mistakes, you have to be focused from beginning to end," Taylor said. "And now the kids are kind of joking about it: 'Coach, ever since you said it's really hard to win a hockey game we haven't been able to do it.'"
Marchant scored after a hooking penalty on Canada captain Fabian Joseph with 42 seconds left.
"I didn't see it go in right away," he said. "All of a sudden I saw Corey Hirsch turn around ... and then everybody came over and trampled me."
Taylor pulled goalie Garth Snow for an extra attacker, giving the Americans a 6-on-4 edge. They immediately took advantage, with Marchant wristing a shot from the faceoff circle through a tangle of players and past goalie Corey Hirsch.
Snow made 29 saves, including a penalty shot by Greg Johnson with 7:49 remaining to keep the U.S. team close.
Taylor praised Snow but said Mike Dunham, who was shaky in allowing
A list of the top six countries winning medals in the Olympic games.
UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN
The tally
Source: The Associated Press
Dave Campbell / KANBAN
Country Gold Silver Bronze
Russia 5 5 2
Norway 5 3 1
Italy 2 2 4
United States 2 2 0
Germany 2 1 1
Canada 1 0 2
four goals on 14 shots in the opener against France, would play Saturday against Sweden. Dunham, who has been successful against the Swedes, stopped 64 of 68 shots in his last two pre-Olympic exhibitions against them.
U.S. skier wins silver medal on birthday
The Associated Press
RINGEBU, Norway — Tommy Moe stood at the top of the race course with a chance to make U.S. Olympic history.
The pressure was so great he yawned.
Not just once. These numbers fourteen.
"I know that's a good sign because it means I'm not overexcited at the top," Moe said.
Relaxed and confident, Moe sped down the Kvitfjell course yesterday and won the silver medal in the super-giant slalom.
It was an extra special moment for Moe. It came on his 24th birthday and made him the first American man to win two Alpine ski medals at a single Olympics.
If not for an error near the bottom of the
"It's a dream come true to have a gold and a silver in my back pocket," said Moe, who won the downhill Sunday.
course, Moe might have been the owner of two golds. The No. 3 starter, he had the fastest time of the day at the last checkpoint but lost a few fractions of a second and finished in 1:32.61.
The next racer, Markus Wasmeier of Germany, skied a smoother line in the final section to catch Moe and win the gold in 1:32.53. Norway's Kjetil Andre Aamdott took the bronze in 1:32.93.
As Moe crossed the finish line, throngs of Norwegian fans sang "Happy Birthday." He waved, blew a kiss and went off to share a piece of cake with sixth-place finisher Ale Skaardal of Norway, who was celebrating his 28th birthday.
"I had a good feeling when I woke up this morning and it was my birthday." Moe said. "I was just relaxed. After the downhill, there was no pressure for me. It's almost easy for me to skd fast right now."
Moe was unaware at first that he was the only American ever to win two ski medals at the same Olympics.
Moe had another factor working in his favor. The course was set by U.S.coach Bill Egon.
"I think I memorized the course in about one hour," Moe said. "It's never come to me that easy. I knew exactly where I wanted to go."
A few years ago, Moe wasn't sure where he was going. He was a teenage hell-raiser who hung out with the wrong crowd and smoked dope.
After dedicating himself to skiing, results came slowly. Moe has never won a World
"It's coming to me at a perfect time in my life," he said. "I've worked really hard in my career. It's almost easy for me to go out there and shred the mountain."
Cup race, but he has improved steadily, finishing third in a super-G in December in Val d'Isere, France.
Moe has an opportunity to win a third medal. He placed third Monday in the downhill portion of the combined event, with the slalom half of the race scheduled for Feb. 25.
"There's a lot of tough competition, but those guys can falter or I can have a great race," Moe said. "A bronze metal would be great to add to my collection.
"I'm going to try to catch up on all interviews and enjoy the whole thing because I know there's a lot of people who would like to be in my boots right now," he said.
University Audio
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841-3775
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EVENTS: Nordic combined (ski jumping — 90 meter)
speed skating (men's 1000m, women's 500m preview)
alpine skiing (women's downhill preview); bobsled (two-man preview); figure skating (ice-dancing preview)
7-10 d.m.
EVENTS: Nordic combined (ski jumping — 90 meter) figure skating (ice dancing compulsories); speed skating (men's 100m); luge (men's doubles)
11:37 p.m.-12:37 a.m.
EVENTS: General report.
TNT
Today's Olympic TV Schedule
EVENTS: Hockey (Czech Republic vs. Norway — live and TBA); figure skating (ice dancing compulsories — live); speed skating (men's 1000m); Nordic combined (sk jumping — 90 meter); luge (men's doubles); biathlon (women's 15k)
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Date:Feb.19,1994
POST-SEASON BASKETBALL
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TICKETS TO SEE THE KU WOMEN'S BASKETBALL TEAM IN THE BIG EIGHT TOURNAMENT ARE AVAILABLE. CONTACT THE TICKET OFFICE (864-3141) FOR DETAILS.
WOMENS FINAL FOUR
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Basketball
SPORTS: The Kansas women's basketball team comes from behind and defeats Oklahoma 80-76. Page 10.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSA.
VOL.103.NO.105
KANSAS STATE
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA KS 66612
MONDAY.FEBRUARY 21.1994
ADVERTISING:864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
Serb deadline passes quietly
The Associated Press
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina — Bosnian Serbs pulled back enough heavy guns from snowy hills around Sarajevo to stave off immediate air strikes as a NATO deadline for removal passed early yesterday.
But the Western alliance warned that any movement of weapons back toward Sarajevo or attacks on the battered Bosnian capital would bring retaliation from NATO.
Bosnia's Muslim president, Aljaja Izetbegovic, earlier urged NATO to go into combat for the first time in its history and bomb the Serb guns that remained around Sarajevo.
But Yasushi Akashi, the U.N.'s senior official in former Yugoslavia charged with making the call on air strikes, said he saw no immediate need.
"Ihave decided that it is not necessary at this stage for me to request NATO to use air power," Akashi said in a statement released at his Zagreb, Croatia,
headquarters.
NATO, after nearly two years of painful debate about whether to get involved in Bosnia's war, had demanded all heavy weapons to pull back that distance from Sarajevo or be placed under U.N. control. Otherwise it would launch air strikes.
NATO Secretary General Manfred Woerner said yesterday the alliance would follow U.N. recommendations not to use air power "at this stage" in Bosnia.
Woerner, speaking at alliance headquarters in Brussels, said he had agreed in telephone calls with President Clinton to keep the threat of air strikes intact in case weapons were moved back toward Sarajevo or the city was attacked.
"The deadline will stand." Clinton said yesterday.
"are deadline will stand," Clinton said yesterday. But later yesterday, administration officials signaled that strikes were not likely, saying poor weather over Sarajevo made it difficult to determine Serbian compliance.
In a day that saw 400 Russian troops join the U.N.
peacekeeping force in a gesture that encouraged Serbian compliance, skides cleared for the first time after days of snowy weather.
Before the deadline, the U.N. commander for Bosnia said the situation remained unclear at nine of 41 Serb gun sites around Sarajevo which U.N. soldiers have not yet visited.
Bosnian Serbs spent yesterday by campfires, roasting oxen and lambs, drinking brandy and singing nationalist songs on Mount Trebevic overlooking Sarajevo.
On the roads around Trebecv, last-minute movements of trucks hauling guns could be seen.
There has been almost no shelling of Sarajevo, under siege and bombardment for 22 months, since a U.N. cease-fire took effect Feb. 10, a day after NATO issued its ultimatum.
U. N. officials hope that removing the guns is a first step toward ending Sarajevo's cruel siege, in which about 10,000 people have died. That could pave the way to peace elsewhere in Bosnia.
Jayhawks readjust goals
Big Eight title hopes laid to rest with loss
By Gerry Fey
Kansan staff writer
A new season begins for No. 4 Kansas after its 81-74 defeat to No. 12 Missouri last night in Allen Field House.
Kansas junior guard Calvin Rayford said the Jayhawks had to change their mindset now that capturing a fourth consecutive Big Eight title was out of reach. Missouri now has a four-game lead on Kansas, eliminating the Jayhawks from contention.
"We've got to focus," Rayford said. "It's a new season. We've got to come out hard and do what we've been doing. We'll push to win the Bie Eight tournament."
The Jayhawks tried to avenge the 79-67 defeat Jan. 31 at Missouri. In yesterday's game, Kansas had a 54-47 lead in the second half, and it seemed as though the Jayhawks would put pressure on the Tigers in the standings.
In Kansas' 18-8 run to open the second half, the field house crowd erupted in cheers when junior center Greg Ostertag took a pass from senior guard Steve Woodberry and slam dunked it.
But Missouri senior guard Melvin Booker had a game high 32 points and led his team to a comeback that would dash Kansas' title hopes for. A disappointed Kansas coach Roy Williams said the Jayhawks had had a good chance to win the game.
"I thought we were right in the basketball game," he said. "I thought it would go down to the wire, and we would have a chance to win at the end."
Pearson said that Missouri was the most physical team in the conference.
The Jayhawks have been hit hard with injuries the past few weeks. Woodberry wore goggles at the beginning of the game to protect a cut under his left eye. Kansas sophomore forward Sean Pearson started in place of senior forward Richard Scott, who continues to be bothered by a sore left shoulder.
"This game was just as physical as the last time we played them," he said. "We were prepared for it. Now, we just have to put the pieces back together and get Richard and Steve healthy."
Williams said Kansas had not lost the game because of the team's injuries.
"We're not in the best of health to say the least," Williams said. "But that would take away from Missouri's win. If you talk about that, what you're doing is using excuses."
This season will mark the first time that the team's seniors, Woodberry, Scott and guard Patrick Richey, have not won or shared the conference title.
Scott said it was the seniors' job to encourage the team after the defeat.
"The Big Eight is probably out the window, but we've got higher goals, like the national championship," he said. "We'll have a meeting with the seniors. We'll have to try and pick the team up after losing two straight."
KANSA
31
MISSOURI
Sprint
Kansas freshman center Scot Pollard, battles for a rebound with Missouri senior center Jevon Crudup. The Jayhawks called Missouri "the most physical team in the conference," and the Tigers lived up to that title, using their muscle to beat the "Hawks 81-74.
Physicians think that Anthony Thomas, Kansas City, Kan., junior, died from meningococcal meningitis — a fast-eacting and contagious type of meningitis. Meningococcal meningitis starts when bacteria called meningococcol travel from the nose and throat to the three membranes and the folds surrounding it.
Meningitis' deadlv work
and the fluid surrounding the brain and spinal cord.
Area of detail
Cerebral cortex
The membranes
After the bacteria enters the brain, the membranes — or meninges — become inflamed, eventually cutting off oxygen to the brain and killing its cells.
Cerebral cortex
Dura mater
Arachnoid
Pia mater
Cerebral cortex
Oura mater
Arachnoid
Pia mater
Cerebral cortex
How it's spread
The meningococci are spread by direct contact or through droplets sprayed into the air by coughing and sneezing.
They enter the body through the nose and mouth.
Normally, the bacteria reside harmlessly in the nose and throat.
Symptoms
But for an unknown reason sometimes the bacteria attack their host and invade the brain, traveling to the brain.
If you experience these symptoms,
seek medical attention.
High fever and
a severe headache
Extreme stiffness
in the neck
Nausea and
vomiting
A skin rash of tiny,
bright red spots
Source: Charles Voyce, chief of staff at Walkins Memorial Health Center; Kansas Department of Health and Environment; Stedman's Medical Dictionary
KU student dies from meningitis
Kansan staff writer
By Jamie Munn
Kansas staff writer
A case of meningitis, the second on campus in 10 months, has caused the death of another KU student.
Anthony Thomas, 21, Kansas City, Kan., junior, died from an inflammation of the brain and spinal cord at about 1 p.m. Friday at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan.
Physicians at Watkins Memorial Health Center examined Thomas briefly Thursday afternoon and then transported him by helicopter Thursday night to the Med Center, said Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins.
Based on a presumptive clinical diagnosis, Yockey said, he thought that Thomas had contracted a meningococcal bacteria, which is one of the more common forms of meningitis. Official test results should be available today.
Thomas lived on the seventh floor of McCollum Hall and was participating in KU's spring football drills. About 100 football players were given Rifampin, an anti-
"It's unfortunate that in about 10 percent of the people, there's just nothing that can be done." Yockey said. In about 90 percent of meningitis cases, there is more time to recognize the bacteria's symptoms.
once, as a preventative measure
Friday afternoon, Yockey said.
Yockey said there had been no additional cases of meningitis reported. Thomas' roommate, who was also on the football team, has taken the preventative medication
Only students in close contact, for example, those who may have drank after Thomas, needed the medicine, he said.
"Even if they rode in an elevator, sat in his classes or ate at the same cafeteria, they don't need to worry," he said.
Ken Stoner, director of student housing, said grief counseling and informational meetings about the infection has been offered to students on Thomas' floor.
Stoner said he thought that Thomas had not had a chance to develop a large group of friends at the residence hall because he had just transferred from Hutchinson Community College for the spring semester.
Because the bacteria usually is passed by saliva, casual contact with Thomas would have been safe, Stoner said.
KU student Christopher Henley, who lived on the third floor of McColum Hall, died of meningitis in May 1993.
INSIDE
A
Members of the KU community gathered Saturday to celebrate Malaysian culture.
Page 5.
A celebration of culture
Not just kids' play: Students learn from volunteering time with youth
By Frank McCleary Kansan staff writer
Despite busy schedules at the University, some students find time to get involved with Lawrence children.
Kansan staff writer
Becky Price, case manager for the Big Brothers and Big Sisters of Douglas County, said about 70 KU students, from freshmen to graduate students, served as volunteers for the organization.
Organizations such as The Boys and Girls Club of Lawrence and Big Brothers and Big Sisters of Douglas County include many KU student volunteers.
Price said some of the students had become involved with the group as part of a class assignment and that their roommates then had become interested.
The students are important to the program because they are younger and have diverse interests, Price said.
Price said that two programs were offered.
The First Friends Program is geared toward college students, Price said People who volunteer for this program are required to give three or four hours a week for six to nine months.
The Big Brothers and Big Sisters Program requires a longer commitment.
Volunteers are required to give three or four hours a week for a year and can choose the age and race of the child with whom they work, Price said.
Students who volunteer for either program must meet certain requirements, she said.
"What is most important is stability.
Price said.
The Boys and Girls Club of Lawrence also includes KU students among its volunteers.
Julie Hinkhouse director of cultural
But it is not something to be taken lightly, she said.
and fine arts programs, said many students worked at the club as part of a class project.
"It's a big commitment," she said.
"We're going to get a satisfaction out of helping kids who are less fortunate."
Hinkhouse said the club was always looking for good role models in the community.
Eight girls from the club spent part of Saturday afternoon with 10 female residents from Oliver Hall.
Robin Sorensen, Overland Park freshman, said she had organized the activities so residents could become involved with the Lawrence.
"When you come to KU, you stop realizing that there are people out there that aren't KU students," she said. "But Lawrence is not just a college town."
ΓΦΒ
James Wilcox / KANSAN
Adri Jones, Wichita freshman, helps Danielle True, 10, of the Boys and Girls Club of Lawrence use puff paints.
2
Monday, February 21, 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 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-Fintt Hall, Lawrence, KA 66045.
MCAT By popular demand: We're adding a new MCAT section.
You have a new opportunity to get a higher score.
It's a new chance to experience the knowledgeable instructors, helpful practice tests, solid science review, and diverse study tools of the nation's most popular MCAT prep course.
A new **MCAT** class starts
February 27.
The section will meet Monday and Wednesday evenings
Kaplan Center
1000 Massachusetts Street
Lawrence, KS 66044
Call 842-5442.
KAPLAN The answer to the test question
WATKINS
1907
"We Care For KU"
CPR Training 864-9570
-
Date Day(s) Time
Feb. 22 & 24 TR 6-9 p.m.
Mar. 12 Sa 9 a;-2.30 p.m.
More classes will be set up for March & April.
The Saturday class (includes break) and the 2- session class train you in adultchild/infant CPR. Training is through American Heart Association. There is a $5 charge for training.
STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES 864-9500
Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students
ON CAMPUS
The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an information table from 9:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. today at Wesco Terrace. For more information, call Debra Brodsky at 864-3742.
Narcotics Anonymous will meet at 11:30 a.m. today at Alcove1 in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Andy B. at 843-9461.
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 Anishinslin at 843-3099.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today at Danforth Church
n St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a Catholic law student discussion group at 12:30 p.m. today at 109 Green Hall. For more information, call the center at 843-0357.
KU Kempo Karate Club will meet at 6 p.m. today at 130 Robin Center. For more information, call Mandana Frushi at 842-4713.
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 "Fundamentals of Catholicism" class at 7 tonight at the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call the center at 843-0357.
KU Students for Slattery will meet at 8 tonight at Aldersport Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Rep. Jim Slattery will speak. For more information, call Jeff Bottenborg at 823-8350.
The Douglas County AIDS Project is sponsoring two support groups, one for those living with HIV/AIDS, the other for friends and family supporting a loved one with HIV/AIDS. For more information, call the Douglas County AIDS Project at 843-0040.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor an "Exploring the Faith" program at 8 tonight at the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call the center at 843-0357.
CLARIFICATION
A comment made by Student Senator Paul Wolters was taken out of context in a Page One story of Friday's Kansan. The $3,200 that Student Senate allocated to Student Union Activities for this
year's Day on the Hill is money SUA intends to use for the event. The money that Wolters said SUA would not use is about $3,100 from the Student Lecture Series.
University Audio 2319 Louisiana 841-3775
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WEATHER
Weather around the country:
Atlanta '72/57'
Chicago '33/18'
Houston '67/55'
Miami '82/64'
Minneapolis '28/11'
Phoenix '64/44'
Salt Lake City '43/16'
Seattle '43/33'
St. Louis: 46°/83°
LAWRENCE: 45'/28"
Wichita: 49*/32*
Cloudy
TODAY
Tulsa: 56'/42'
Tomorrow Wednesday
Omaha: 48 X27
Kansas City: 46'/28'
Freezing rain turning to snow
Source: Alan Denton, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
High: 28° Low:18°
ON THE RECORD
Lawrence police reported.
A Lawrence woman was battered by her husband Friday in the 1000 block of East 23rd Street,
A suspect was arrested Friday in the 1300 block of Iowa Street for possession of marijuana, Lawrence police reported.
A suspect was arrested Saturday in the 2200 block of Iowa Street for possession of marijuana and intent to distribute marijuana, Lawrence police reported.
T
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Monday, Feb.21 - Friday, Feb.25
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CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, February 21,1994
3
Club pushes lighter marijuana laws
HONK
FOR
HEMP
Martin Altstaedten / KANSAN
KU NORML says benefits of drug outweigh harm
Thomas Trower, Lawrence resident, participates in a "Hemp Rally" at the Lawrence Court House. Members of KU NORMAL attended the rally yesterday in support of the legalization of marijuana.
By Angelina Lopez
Kansan staff writer
Passersby honked, gave thumb-ups and yelled cat-calls to the people holding signs that declared, "Save Trees, Free Hemp" and "Marijuana Amnesty."
Members of the University of Kansas chapter of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws and other marjuania supporters stand outside Douglas County Courthouse at 11th and Massachusetts streets on Sunday to support the legalization of marijuana.
"Sometimes we get the great All-American gesture," said Thomas Trower, KU NORML member and Lawrence resident. "But it's usually 95 percent positive to 5 percent negative."
Nicole Lighthorn, KU NORML member and Mission Viejo, Calif., sophomore, said that through these demonstrations and other activities, such as benefit concerts and literature distributions, KU NORML hoped to achieve its main goal — educating people about the benefits of marijuana.
"There are over 20,000 potential uses for marijuana," she said. "But marijuana has a negative image. There's a lot of propaganda covering up a great plant."
Since its formation three years ago, Lightburn said, KU NORMEL has promoted the environmental and medical contributions that marijuana could make.
For example, she said, one acre of marijuana would produce the same amount of paper that four acres of trees produce. Marijuana paper could also be made for half the cost of regular paper.
Medically, Lightburn said, marijuana can relieve pain. Marijuana also can alleviate the nausea that can prevent AIDS and cancer patients from eating, which only weakens them further.
KU NORML's end goal is the full legalization of marjuana, Light burn said. To promote legalization, KU NORML is signing and circulating petitions that support the Voter Initiative Bill, which would allow voters to vote directly on legislation without going through politicians. KU NORML also supports the Kansas Cannabis Crime Prevention Act, which would fully legalize marijuana and grant amnesty to those currently imprisoned under marijuana drug laws.
Lightburn stressed that KU NORMAL wanted marijuana legalized for the products it could produce and not the entertainment it could provide.
"KU NORML is not a smoking club," she said. "Our focus is on education. However, it should be a matter of personal
choice. You should be able to smoke if you want to."
Some of the members do smoke, but they want to point out that there have been no reported deaths because of marijana use.
"If we're going to have a war on drugs, let's at least make it consistent and fair," Trower said. "Hundreds of thousands of people die yearly because of alcohol and tobacco."
Lightburn said the only negative side effects of smoking marijuana were the legal penalties.
The next KU NORML meeting will be at 5 p.m. Wednesday at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union.
Not just for smoking
Hemp can be used for
cloth: more durable than any manmade cinth
fuel: converted into biomass, can be used as fuel
used as food
food: high in amino acids and protein, the
■ paints and varnishes; produced from the seeds' oils
- protecting the soil soil; with very deep
roots; it damages soil erosion
paper; can be durable; also it is the most common paper used in bibles
canvas; used as art canvases by Rembrandt and Van Gogh
medicine: relieves menstrual cramps, painse and headaches
KANSAN
Source: Nicole Lightburn
Students to voice concerns about health care
Conference in Omaha will address questions of Midwestern schools
By Heather Moore Kansan staff writer
They no longer are covered by their parents' insurance, and they can't afford their own coverage.
Many students have fallen between the cracks in insurance coverage.
Student Senate passed a resolution Wednesday that voices its support for the Central Collegiate Health Association Conference in Omaha, Neb., which will address these issues.
The resolution said that the Clinton administration and its health care task force had failed to address students' health care concerns.
One goal of the conference is to recognize
students as separate from working adults. A second goal is to place students on committees concerning health care. The last goal is to let students have more representation in reforms and laws.
Tonya Cole, liberal arts and sciences senator and sponsor of the resolution, said the conference was part of a nationwide movement that the University of California-Berkeley had begun to
"We're not going to sit back and let people decide without hearing
"I'm going because KU has peer advisers and a student health advisory board," she said. "KU is at the forefront, and other schools want to know how we run these."
ensure that concerns were addressed.
our concerns.
Cole said.
KUliberal arts and sciences senator
tonya cace
Tonya Cole
Students should be on the committees.
Cole said that Watkins Memorial Health Center might not be directly affected by the health care plan.
"If we go about this in an organized fashion and have our facts straight, they will lie
Cole said she thought that people would listen to student concerns.
ten," she said. "We've been working on a national campaign to give them something to think about."
"It would still be a student health facility, but there could be mandated guidelines," she said. "The plan would more directly affect students' being insured. I've found that we have to drop students from insurance because they don't have six hours and can't afford to buy it."
Sherman Reeves, interfraternity council senator, said support was important.
"One person is representing KU on important student issues regarding health care and needs support for that cause," he said. "Students are being overlooked and need to stand up for themselves."
Amy Patton, CCHA student affiliate for Pittsburgh State University, said that this was the first time students from the Midwest would meet to talk about health care.
"We need a network to discuss issues, compare programs, insurance and services," she said.
Patton said the price of student health care would be affected by the health care plan.
Kansas native dives through Black poetry
Visiting professor uses research in instruction of two English classes
By Denise Nell
Kansan staff writer
John Tidwell never learned to swim.
When he was growing up in Independence in the 1950s, African-American children were not permitted in public swimming pools.
"The only way to learn how to swim was to go out to rivers, which I didn't find attractive," he said. "So I just never learned."
BRIAN E. LEYRICH
Tidwell, who is the Langston Hughes visiting professor at the University of Kansas this semester, now fills his free time taking swimming lessons three days a week through the Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department.
John Tidwell
Carol Prentice, assistant to the vice chancellor for academic affairs, said the Langston Hughes visiting profes-
To accept the position at the University, Tidwell said, he had to take a semester of personal leave from Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, where he is an associate professor of English.
This semester at the University, Tidwell is teaching English 570, Disparate Voices from the Harlem Renaissance, and English 574, Contemporary African-American Literature, 1945 to present day.
In his classes, Tidwell focuses on authors such as Sterling Brown, Jessie Fauset and Frank Marshall Davis, an author whom Tidwell has researched extensively.
Davis was a black poet and a journalist who was born in Kansas. Tidwil interviewed Davis before Davis' death in 1987 and edited his book "Livin" the Blues: Memoirs of a Black Journalist and Poet." He is now editing another book by Davis, "Black Moods: Selected Writings by Frank Marshall Davis."
Tidwell will close the Black History Month activities March 2 when he gives a lecture, "Frank Marshall Davis and the Politics of Black Art."
Zamora Jenkins, Bennett, Colo., senior, is taking Tidwell's contemporary literature class. She said that because Tidwell had spoken to and had known Davis, discussing Davis' book was more interesting.
"He's very interesting and very knowledgeable," she said. "It's easy for us to raise our hands and ask questions. It's like he's on our level, but at the same time he's very professional."
Tidwell was born in Independence in 1945. He lived there until 1964, when he went to Washburn University in Topeka, and he got his bachelor's degree in English in 1969. He received his master's degree at Creighton University in 1971 and his doctorate from the University of Minnesota in 1981. He has worked as a professor at several universities and was a visiting professor at Yale in 1985. He has been working at Miami since 1993.
At the beginning of this semester, Tidwell loaded up a trailer with books and clothes and drove 11 hours to Lawrence, leaving Mandie, his wife of six years, behind.
Tidwell said he talked to his wife, who is the assistant prosecuting attorney for Butler County, Ohio, about three times a week.
The two are adjusting to their first long-term separation, Tidwell said, but he still gets homsick sometimes. He alleviates his homesickness by taking swimming lessons, doing research and visiting his mother, who still lives in Independence.
"There's always mixed feelings," he said. "There's the excitement of having the prospect of coming back to my home state, but also the feeling that I'm leaving."
Tidwell said that he liked the University and that he thought his 60 students here were responding well in his courses.
"This is a wonderful field to be in," he said. "There are so many possibilities."
A trade worth making!
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Step 2: Set up an appointment with the representative between February 22nd and February 25th. On these dates representatives will be at the Union Technology Center to evaluate your old machine.
Step 3: Receive a voucher for the amount of money your system is worth as determined by the representative, good toward any Macintosh system offered by the Union Technology Center.
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Monday, February 21. 1994
OPINION
UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
VIEWPOINT
Delays are inexcusable in Lindley Annex repairs
Lindley Annex is in desperate need of repair. But the renovations request is caught up in a mire of bureaucracy and red tape.
The state fire marshal found six potentially dangerous violations in the annex during his visit in Fall 1992. However, it is unclear when these renovations will occur.
Bob Porter, associate director of facilities operations, said requests could take as long as seven to 10 years to complete.
Such delays are unacceptable.
The annex's fire code violations are not insignificant technicalities. They are potential hazards that could endanger students. Among the needed repairs is a door that cannot close or lock.
One architecture student reported seeing an unknown man enter the annex through this door late one night. Inarguably, this is a frightening hazard for architecture students who work on projects at the annex day and night.
Obviously, at a large university only limited resources are available for renovations. Projects cannot be approved or completed instantaneously, and some delays are inevitable.
But when students are put in danger, renovations should become a priority. The University cannot afford to allow the request for the annex's renovations to sit idle beneath a mound of paperwork for years to come. Students' safety should supersede bureaucracy.
The University should take steps necessary to expedite the renovations to the annex. Allowing the annex to remain in its current state of disrepair is a perilous proposition.
COLLEEN McCAIN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Criminals deserve only hard time, not cold cash
Allowing convicted criminals to profit from their vicious crimes is ludicrous. We should not allow crime to be an appetizing avenue to fame and fortune.
In Florida, Danny Rolling, a budding artist, has pleaded guilty to slaying five teenagers. Rolling has been offered lucrative movie contracts and plans to sell more of his graphic sketches. However, Florida is one of only nine states that prohibits a criminal from profiting from crime. Rollings' lawyer is trying to change the state law in accordance with a Supreme Court ruling.
The issue is not new. Both Charles Manson and John Wayne Gacy have brought this controversy to the public eye. Manson designed a series of T-shirts and books. Gacy paints portraits of clowns. The items sell only because demented killers created them.
Despite strong protests by victims' families and friends, the Supreme Court struck down a 1991 New York law that prohibited Gacy from profiting from his killings. This case set a scary precedent by allowing criminals to make money from breaking the law.
An alternative approach to the problem would be to allocate profits acquired from such activities to the cost of incarceration. If criminals make more than the cost to incarcerate them, they could keep the excess.
It is sad that criminals can profit from the horrible acts they commit. Some may argue that paying off the cost of incarceration with profits from art and movie deals takes away what the criminal has earned. On the contrary, by committing such brutal acts and then trying to use them to make money, the only thing criminals have earned is hard time.
CARSON ELROD FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
BEN GROVE, Editor
LISA COSMILLO, Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
TOM EBLEN
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Editors
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Aast Managing Editor ...Dan England
Assistant to the editor...J.R. Clairborne
News ...Kristi Fogler, Katie Greenwald
...Todd Selftorf
Editortal ...Colleen McCain
...Nathan Olsen
Campus ...Jean DeHaven
Sports ...David Dorsey
Photo ...Doug Hosse
Features ..Sara Bennett
Wire ..Allison Lippert
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JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
Business Staff
Campus sales mgr ...Jason Eberly
Regional Sales mgr ...Troy Tarwater
National & Coop sales mgr ...Robin King
Special Sections mgr ..Shelly McConnell
Production mgrs ..Laura Guth
Marketing director... Shannon Kelly
Creative director... John Carlton
Classified mgr... Kelly Connexy
Torems 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 Texas at Austin may use their own names.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
Watching the Olympic Games changes strangers into friends
There's nothing like the Olympics.
You know, the thrill of victory, the agony of defeat and all that stuff. All the cliches, however trite they may be, really rising true.
COLUMNIST
I love the Olympics. I have ever since I was little. I remember watching Dorothy Hamill win the gold medal in 1976. I like so many other aspiring skaters of the time, immediately got a "bowl" haircut — just to be like Dorothy.
As hard as I tried, I found I just wasn't cut out to be an Olympic skater. I now live out my Olympic fantasies with a normal haircut in front of my television. Every event from luge to alpine skiing to ice dancing to bobsledding — I could watch them all until my eyes fell out of my head and rolled across the floor. And I would be happy.
While I was walking through the Kansas Union, I noticed that a crowd of about 10 people had gathered in front of one of the new Union schedule monitors. I approached the crowd and noticed that they were all whispering to each other in excitement.
Something that happened the other night made me see that I wasn't the only one who felt this way about the Olympics.
DANIELLE RAYMOND
As the skaters spun in a million circles across the rink, the crowd followed them with delight, their own heads dizzy from the fast movements on the screen. When the pair moved together in perfect rhythm from one corner of the ice to another, the crowd moved and swayed in time with the athletes.
I looked at the monitors to see just which part of the computerized calendar was so fascinating. Much to my surprise, I found that the Union was broadcasting the Olympic coverage over one of the two small monitors. The small group was watching the finals of the pairs figure skating event. I began to watch them watch the finals of the pairs figure skating event.
And when the moment came for the couple to do their triple axles and double toe loops in perfect unison, the entire group stiffened with tension. Nobody dared breathe until the skaters were safe on the ground again.
Their conversation appeared to be quite animated.
At the end of the routine, the group stood motionless for a moment as the couple effortlessly glided off the ice together and moved toward the press box.
I didn't bother to watch the television for the slow-motion replays of the routine's highlights because they were being acted out for me by the little crowd. One person imitated the movements of a treacherous jump. Another waved her arms, mimicking the graceful gait of the spins. They all offered their opinions about the routine as a whole as if they were sitting next to Scott Hamilton in the CBS commentator booth.
As the scores flashed across the screen, the crowd became silent once again. One man moved closer to the screen in anticipation of what was to come. Everyone waited to find out what the results would be. I found myself getting caught up in the heat of the moment.
"5.9, 5.9, 5.8, 5.9... , " the numbers
came across the small monitor, and the crowd squealed in delight. The couple had done it — they had won the gold medal. The crowd, including me, began to applaud and jump around in appreciation of the scores. The celebration of the group in front of the monitor nearly equaled that of the winning pair on television.
As the television coverage for the evening ended, it hit me. The entire time I was watching the crowd I had assumed that they had all known each other. As they dispersed, though, I saw this was not the case. They said their goodbyes as if they had all been best buddies for some time, then went their separate ways. None of those people had known each other, yet they had all come together in front of that tiny monitor to cheer on the Olympic athletes in their quest for gold.
What can I say? I was amazed. A bunch of strangers standing in front of a television giggling and shouting like a bunch of little kids for two people they don't even know—how cool.
Danielle Raymond is a Wiltmette, Ill. Junlor in Journalism.
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Olympic athletes not political game pieces
The Winter Olympics in Lillehammer, Norway, are coming under the scourge of politics. Like so many other Olympics, the Lillehammer games have been targeted by those who want to use the games to further their own causes. The issue is whether Norway should have been allowed to sponsor the games because it broke an international whaling ban.
Although the idea of punishing a country with sport sanctions for its misbehavior is not new, it is inconsistent and its results are debatable. The inconsistency lies in the way that only certain countries seem to suffer the punishment. Until the 1992 Barcelona Olympics, South Africa had been prevented from competing in the seven previous Olympics because of its domestic apartheid policy. China was also at the Barcelona games but, unlike South Africa, was also at the '88 and '84 games. In Barcelona, China won 54 medals. Three years earlier, Chinese security forces killed 5,000 pro-democracy students in Tiananmen square, but China's place at the
Olympics was never doubted. One country was banned from Olympic competition because it denied much of its population basic rights; the other country was allowed to compete despite doing essentially the same thing. There lies the inconsistency.
Sixty-two nations boycotted the 1980 Moscow Olympics, but does anyone really believe such an action brought the Cold War to an end or brought the former Soviet Union out of Afghanistan any quicker? Although Olympic success is considered important by many nations, no nation ever caved in because of international
COLUMNIST
JACK
FISHER
So it is time to separate sports and politics, as hard as that may seem. Each country's Olympic committee should have the power only to regulate its athletes' behavior and set sports standards. It should not be allowed to tell its athletes when and where they can compete. This policy would prevent governments and special-interest groups from using athletes as pawns in their international policy games. There always will be a certain amount of politics in sports, especially in the Olympics with its country-by-country medal counts, but with all countries competing, at least the gold would truly mean best in the world.
There also always will be countries that abuse human rights, international treaties or the environment, and those countries should be punished for such things. But the punishment should not be laid down like a blan-
sports boycots. Athletes don't run countries; they compete for them. Those with the power to change a country's domestic policy usually are unaffected by a sports boycott.
ket. Don't think a country is simply a collection of people with one will or mindset or that athletes from such countries share their leaders' beliefs. Remember that the athletic ban on South Africa prevented both Black and white South Africans from competing. Norway may have indeed broken the whaling treaty, but to punish its athletes for that action would be comparable to failing every student in a class if only one was caught cheating. The levels to which sport has risen and the training demands now required mean that the successful athletes are the ones who have sacrificed everything — including a childhood, friendships and family life — to train for their sports, a dedication that few of us will ever attain for anything we do. Is it fair, then, to think that that dedication is somehow a country's asset to be disposed of or sold however we see fit? Who is to say one person's cause is more important than another person's lifelong pursuit?
Jack Fisher is a London senior in Journalism.
Tailhook case leaves feelings of distaste
The Tailhook partying in Las Vegas in 1991 was not an edifying spectacle.
The investigations and judicial proceedings that followed haven't been exactly edifying either. With the Feb. 8 dismissal of the last three cases against naval officers charged with one offense or another, the Navy can put this sad chapter behind it.
NATIONAL PERSPECTIVE
It ought to. What good can come of it already has. What's left is a mixed bag of disgust and doubt.
You can come away from this episode convinced with Capt. William Vest that Adm. Frank B.
Kelso II, chief of naval operations, arranged for subordinates to shoulder the blame for not stopping lewd and improper conduct he himself could and should have stopped.
You can come away convinced that the Navy both botched the initial investigations and overcorrected in its subsequent legal proceedings.
You can come away wondering whether distasteful acts weren't treated as worse than the criminal — never mind the failure to intervene.
You can come away hoping that this occurrence won't adversely affect the working relationships — civilian and military — of men and women who know how to behave, which is most of them.
You can come away saying,
"Enough."
The Virginian-Pilot and The Ledger-Star Norfolk, Va.
You can come away hoping that enough consciousness was raised among the rest of them to prevent a recurrence.
Funding needed to save beauty of Grand Canyon
The Grand Canyon is among the natural wonders of the world. To see it is to be awed almost beyond words at the power and scope of the forces that carved such a creation from the flat Earth.
Administrators of the canyon park
are considering asking for financial support from corporations and private citizens. The number of visitors to the park is growing, jeopardizing its natural integrity.
The National Park Service needs more money to improve mass transit and to build roads, parking areas and commercial sites. Park service officials may need to limit the number of visitors and vehicles. They fear that Congress may not allocate the money needed. It should. The Clinton administration and Congress should not be stingy on something this important.
Omaha World-Herald
Omaha, Neb.
1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, February 21, 1994
5
BALSAMINI
A spiritual celebration
The Malaysian Student Association brought the spirit of its cultural heritage to all who attended Malaysian Cultural Night 94 on Saturday at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
Oriental music, traditional dancing and brightly colored costumes were used to introduce Malaysian culture to about 350 people. The theme for the night was "A Journey To Our Land."
"It was a really successful night," said Ming Chang, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, senior.
Chang, who helped coordinate the event, said it was important for people to know that every country in the Orient was unique. Malaysian culture, she said, has been influenced primarily by three races in Malaysia: the Malay, Chinese and Indian.
The night began with an acknowledgement of the Chinese influence on Malaysian culture with two men in a giant lion costume who darced on stage to a steady drum beat. Chang said the lion represented a monster that the ancient Chinese believed could scare off evil.
Weng Kim Yee, Kelantan, Malaysia, junior and vice president of the Malaysian Student Association, said that all the students involved had worked hard to create a special event. He said that some students had been practicing as much as twice a week.
[Diagram of a traditional Japanese lion dance performance]
Chang said that the students had worked so diligently because they wanted to share who they are with those who would never be able to visit Malaysia.
Photos and story by Brian Vandervliet
Legislators to discuss refunds on illegal taxes
The Associated Press.
TOPEKA — The Legislature will start talking this week about how to refund taxes the state collected illegally from military retirements, an issue that has been a proverbial fly in the ointment for lawmakers.
The Senate Ways and Means Committee will hold hearings Wednesday on a measure that would refund $60 million over two years to military retirees who paid state income tax from 1984 to 1991.
The Legislature enters its seventh week of the 90-day session with most of the significant issues
still unresolved. Legislative committees are expected to discuss the death penalty, public initiative and how to reorganize the Department of Agriculture.
The bill providing $60 million worth of refunds is sponsored by Sen. Lana Oleen, R-Manhattan, and 20 other senators.
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the state had collected taxes from military retirees illegally because it did not tax the pensions of other government retirees. The veterans filed a class action lawsuit against the state in 1989.
The House Taxation Committee also will hold hearings on four bills that are intended to return
some of the illegally collected taxes.
Some lawmakers are a bit skeptical if the state can or should provide refunds to the retirees.
Sen. Gus Bogina, R-Shawnee, chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, said the state simply could not afford Oleen's bill.
"If we settle the lawsuit, we should levy a special tax for one year," he said.
House Speaker Bob Miller, R-Wellington, said legislative leaders were reluctant to settle the lawsuit with the veterans' attorneys because they were worried that not all of the veterans would accept a settlement.
Democratic front-runner dies in crash
Attorney general candidate called party's rising star
The Associated Press
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — A rising star in the Kansas Democratic party, who had strong ties to Gov. Joan Finney, was killed in a traffic accident in Arizona.
Thomas E. Sullivan, 45, of Leawood,
Kan, was killed in the 6:40 am, crash
Friday when the car he was in collied
with another car at an intersection,
said police spokesman Mark Ruffen-nae
Services for Sullivan will be at 10 a.m. Tuesday at St. Agnes Catholic Church in Roeland Park.
Most political observers considered Sullivan a front-runner in the race for the Democratic nomination for Kansas attorney general. He faced Richard Schodorf of Wichita, an assistant Sedgwick County district attorney, and Jerry Shelor, a Topeka attorney.
"There is no way in the world I can express my deep feeling of loss and regret that this young life was taken." Mrs. Finney said.
Also killed was another passenger Philip M. Cartmell, 54, a lawyer from Mission Hills, Kan., he said. His memorial service will be Monday at the Village Presbyterian Church in Prairie Village.
The men were riding in the back seat of a car driven by Richard L. Birkholz, 56, of Overland Park, Kan.
The men were in Arizona on a golfing trip.
Dennis Langley, the chairman of the Kansas Democratic Party, said Sullivan's death is tragic.
"I'm shocked. He was a rising star in the Democratic Party," Langley said. "Our thoughts go to his wife and son."
Birkholz was listed in stable condition at John C. Lincoln Hospital and Health Center Friday night, the officer said.
The driver of the pickup, Richard A. Steele, 39, of Scottsdale, was hospitalized in good condition at Scottsdale Memorial Hospital South, said spookwoman Kav Speerduti.
The accident occurred when Birkholz made a left turn against a red light, Ruffennach said. Birkholz was cited for reckless driving, running a red light, failure to yield and improper lane position, he said.
Everyone involved was wearing seat belts and alcohol wasn't a factor, Ruffenbach said.
Sullivan had already raised more than $146,000 for his campaign.
Mrs. Finney appointed Sullivan to the Kansas Public Employees Retirement System Board of Trustees in May 1991, after months of reports of pension fund losses from bad investments.
In September 1991, Mrs. Finney appointed Sullivan special prosecutor to handle criminal investigations stemming from those investment losses.
Last year, Sullivan served as chairman of Mrs. Finney's Task Force on Ethics Reform.
Sullivan earned a degree in secondary education from the University of Kansas before graduating from the University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Law in 1974. He had practiced in the Kansas City area.
Three killed in plane crash three family members injured
The Associated Press
GRAIN VALLEY, Mo. — A single-engine plane crashed Sunday near the Grain Valley Municipal Airport, killing the pilot and two members of a northeast Missouri family and injuring three other family members.
The plane went down next to a farm pond northwest of the airport and near a residential area about 10:45 a.m., said Skip Hedges, the Grain Valley police chief.
"Witnesses indicated the motor was going and everything was fine and then down it goes," Hedges said.
Hedges identified the dead as Kevin Hilten of Hannibal, age not immediately known, a contract pilot and son of the manager of the Hannibal airport; and passengers Susie Lowe, 41, and Jamie Hopson, 15, both of Palmrua.
Jordan Hopson, 12, was in stable condition Sunday evening at St. Mary's Hospital in Blue Springs, while Jodie Lowe, 9, was in critical condition at Children's Mercy in Kansas City. A third girl, Jessie Hopson, 13, was in critical condition at Independence Regional Medical Center.
LEARN QUARK
Tuesday,
February 22
7-9 pm
105 Stauffer-Flint
KU AD CLUB
$3 Member
$5 Non-Member
Sign up in Room 205A Stauffer-Flint
COMPLETED FORMS MUST BE RETURNED TO OAC BY 5:00 P.M. FRIDAY, MARCH 4, 1994
CHANCELLOR'S STUDENT AWARD NOMINATION FORMS ARE NOW AVAILABLE IN THE ORGANIZATIONS & ACTIVITIES CENTER, 400 KANSAS UNION
Awards include:
The Agnes Wright Strickland Award
The Donald K. Alderson Memorial Award
The Class of 1913 Award
The Rusty Leffel Concerned Student Award
The Caryl K. Smith Student Leader Award
Description of Awards included on nomination form.
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NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WASHINGTON
Backers of amendment for a balanced budget have support for vote
backers of a balanced budget constitutional amendment have enough support to assure a vote in the Senate, but not necessarily the two-thirds majority to pass it, the measure's chief sponsor said yesterday.
"We have 60 votes to block a filibuster; I don't know that we have the 67 votes to pass it," said Sen. Paul Simon, Democrat of Illinois, in an appearance on NBC's "Meet the Press."
An Associated Press survey of the Senate's 100 members last week showed 60 of them saying they supported or would probably support the amendment. Twenty-seven said they would reject or were leaning against it. Twelve senators said they were undecided. The amendment would require balanced federal budgets beginning in the year 2001 unless three-fifths of the House and Senate voted to allow a deficit. It fell one vote short of passage, 66-34, the last time the Senate debated it in 1986.
Even with Senate passage, the amendment would still
require a two-thirds vote in the House and ratification by 38 of the 50 state legislatures before it would become part of the Constitution.
Because ratification could take up to seven years, Sen. Bill Bradley, Democrat of New Jersey, called the amendment a sham, saying it would do nothing to reduce the government's annual deficits.
SAN CRISTOBAL DE LAS CASAS, Mexico Rebels arrive for peace talks
Maya Indian rebels came out of the jungle yesterday to the city where their uprising started on New Year's Day, this time hoping to achieve their goals of land and liberty through peace talks.
Hundreds of Red Cross workers, civilian peace workers and military police armed only with clubs surrounded the cathedral in San Cristobal where the talks will begin today
The government's peace negotiator, Manuel Camacho Solis, and Bishop Samuel Ruiz traveled to the rebels' Lacandon forest stronghold east of the city yesterday morning and escorted their representatives back.
At least 18 rebel negotiators, all wearing ski masks or bandanas to disguise their faces, arrived at the main plaza in three caravans of Red Cross vehicles.
Among the rebels was the group's chief representative, "Subcommandante Marcos," who appeared to have an automatic weapon strapped to him.
In interviews published yesterday in The New York Times, Marcos said the Zapatista National Liberation Army did not expect a quick agreement.
Marcos, who has kept his identity a secret, said rebels would lay down their arms only if profound changes were made in Mexico's political and economic system. He said the rebels wanted political autonomy for Chiapan Indians, the resignation of President Carlos Salinas de Gortari and the establishment of a transitional government until the August presidential election.
MANHATTAN
MANHATTAN Closed bridge creates worries
A bridge that has been closed since July's flooding has some residents worried that emergency vehicles won't be able to get to them in case of a fire or an accident.
The Barnes Road Bridge was closed after the Big Blue River ripped a 10-foot-wide hole in it during flooding last summer.
Residents of Rocky Ford Trailer Park, who live a half-mile from the bridge in Pottawatomie County, are worried about the bridge being closed because trailers are vulnerable to fires and natural disasters.
Last December, about 300 residents of the area signed a
petition asking the commissioners of Pottawatomie and Riley counties to expedite the bridge's repair or provide some temporary alternative.
Riley County Public Works Director Dan Harden said the reconstruction project was proceeding at record pace. Officials expect to start construction in July.
STOCKHOLM, Sweden 64 Kurdish refugees rescued
Crew members on a ferry bound for Stockholm pried open a shipping container yesterday and discovered 64 Kurdish refugees near suffocation.
The refugees, including 26 children, were discovered when a crew member heard them pounding on the walls of the metal container, three hours after the boat left the Estonian capital Tallinn on Saturday evening, Sweden's national news agency TT said.
"They had been locked up in the trailer for nine hours and were running out of oxygen," ferry superintendent Marlene Andersson told the news agency.
The group of mostly Iraqi Kurds told police they had paid $2,500 each to be smuggled to Sweden.
They were taken to refugee centers in Sweden.
Compiled from The Associated Press
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THE END TIMES
The League of Nations was established in 1920 to pursue international peace and security. In 1945 the organization was replaced with the United Nations. Since the founding of these organizations there have been hundreds of wars on this planet... like the war in Yugoslavia. Can the UN Peace-Keeping Forces ever establish a world peace that lasts? According to the Bible it will never happen. However, Bible prophecy points to a coming one world order...a "New World Order" that will be directed primarily by a multi-nation federation in the old Roman Empire. (See Revelation 17 and Daniel 2). Are NAFTA and GATT tools through which the world will be unified for the last great conflict? Is the European Common Market the headquarters for this new order? Remember...48 specific prophecies were completely fulfilled at the first coming of Christ. The odds of that happening were 281,474,976,710,656 to one*. Should you be concerned with the more than 300 specific prophecies about the second coming of Christ? Something to think about. To be continued..
Cooking School
* The law of compound probability doubles with each detail added.
KCBT STUDENT MINISTRIES
NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, February 21, 1994
7
Brady law puzzles gun dealers
Specifics of checks on gun sales unclear
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Brady law's five-day waiting need for heat-dampening buildings.
week, and confusion abounds among gun dealers and law enforcement officials preparing for paperwork and background checks.
"I don't know anything," said Ron English of Olde English Gun Shop in Tipp City, Ohio, near Dayton.
the law kicks in Feb. 28. The gang-girl totp rants in Washington don't disseminate information to the
field. The net result will be a bottleneck until every thing gets ironed out."
Even the federal official in charge of implementing the law expects preparations to go down to the wire.
"In a lot of places, it's going to be a photo finish," said Robert Creighton of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms.
Dan Grogan, owner of The Gun and Tackle Store in Dallas, said he didn't have a copy of the form ATF expects gun dealers to use to report a handgun buyer's name and date of birth.
But he does know he's supposed to send it to the chief law enforcement officer of the city or county where the person lives.
"I don't see that it's going to be a big problem," he said.
ATF representative Jack Killorin said all federally licensed gun dealers should receive a package with a copy of the form in the next few days.
Creighton said the biggest issues would be making sure the chief law enforcement officers, or CLEOs, designated to do background checks know they are the designees and letting gun dealers know where to send the Brady forms.
The officer has five days after receiving notice of a prospective gun sale to conduct the background check. The purchase can be stopped if the buyer is found to be a felon or charged with a felony, a fugitive, an illegal alien, a drug user or addict, an adjudicated mental incompetent, or someone dishonorably discharged from the armed forces. If no move is made to stop the sale in five days, the dealer can sell the gun.
Although police pushed for the opportunity to do the background checks, some were expressing bewilderment about what will happen Feb. 28.
"There's supposed to be a background check, but I haven't seen anything about how specific that needs to be," said police Chief Tom Davidson of Tipp City, a town of about 7,000 people.
The law says the officer doing the check — and state and local officials are supposed to determine who that is — must make a "reasonable effort" to check the gun buyer's background.
"We expect a good-faith effort that would include a check of the National Crime Information Center computer system," Creighton said.
"You run a criminal records check and it comes back with an arrest — say it's a violent crime, an armed robbery," he said. "Now you have to follow through to see if the individual was actually convicted. The majority of those records don't show it to conclusion, so the CLEO has to make phone calls and pursue it."
In Seattle, police Sgt. Verlin Judd said he was unsure if the Brady waiting period even applied to Washington, since it has its own five-day wait and background check.
But Washington is covered, Killorin said. Its law requires a check by police or sheriff where the gun store is located, whereas the Brady law says it must be done by officials where the buver lives.
Ohio is trying to develop a statewide system in which the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation and Identification would do all the checks, said Dayton police Chief James E. Newby.
"I'm thankful we're going to have the state system, because it would stretch the police," said Newby, adding that Ohio may impose a fee on gun buyers to cover the cost.
Afghanistan capital suffers food crisis
The Associated Press
KABUL, Afghanistan — This battered capital is suffering perhaps its worst food shortage in Afghanistan's 15-year war, as heavy fighting and blocked roads have reduced the city's food stocks to a bare minimum
Bread, meat and other essentials are still available in the markets, but prices are beyond the reach of many residents, most of whom are jobless.
The United Nations and the Red Cross have warned that food shortages could soon lead to starvation unless fresh supplies reach the besieged city soon.
"No food or medicine is being allowed to go into Kabul," said Peter Stocker, the head of the Red Cross in Kabul. "We estimate we have one to two weeks of food stocks left."
Afghans have proved amazingly resourceful during the country's long war. Much of the central Asian nation is mountainous and barren, but there have been no major food crises. The
extended family network has ensured that everyone gets enough to eat.
However, President Burhanuddin Rabbani's forces have been embroiled in a battle with rivals since Jan. 1, disrupting supplies in Kabul.
Two large markets have been destroyed in the fighting. About 50,000 people living in schools, mosques and other public buildings are dependent on handouts. About 300,000 more, forced from their homes, have moved in with other families in Kabul, according to the Red Cross.
Pakistan's Foreign Minister Sardar Assef Ali met with Hekmatyar on Friday in the eastern Afghan city of Jalalabad. Assef Ali said that Hekmatyar had agreed to let food supplies enter Kabul but that there had been no evidence of that happening yet.
Conditions worsened in recent days due to a blockade of the main roads leading into Kabul by one of Rabbani's enemies, Prime Minister Gulbuddin Hekmatyar.
Political violence escalates in South Africa
The Associated Press
JOHANNEBURG, South Africa — African National Congress leader Nelson Dlamelo blamed his main black rival, Mangosuthu Buthelezi, yesterday for a massacre of young NC election workers.
Attackers used automatic weapons and knives early Saturday to kill 15 ANC supporters — 12 of them teenagers — who were preparing to conduct a voter education program in the Natal village of Mahehel, 300 miles southeast of Johannesburg. Police have been unable to trace the attackers.
Buthelezi, the head of the Inkatha Freedom Party, condemned the massacre. But Mandela said the Zulu nationalist was fanning violence with his opposition to the country's first all-race election.
Mandela criticized calls from leaders in the violence-torn Natal region to resist the vote April 28-28.
"These are the results of that talk, which we regard as irresponsible talk," Mandela told reporters yesterday.
That was a reference to Buthelezi, who told a rally of his followers last weekend that his call for an election boycott could lead to violence.
"One of them has gone so far as to say he does not want to lie and to promise the people of Natal that there will be no bloodshed in the course of their campaign to disrupt the election," Mandela said.
Natal is considered an Inkatha stronghold, and much of the political violence raging there has been between supporters of the ANC and Inkatha. Inkatha opposes
the election, fearing ANC dominance in a post-apartheid South Africa.
Mandela led a meeting yesterday between the ANC and its political allies, who unanimously endorsed concessions meant to bring conservative Blacks and pro-apartheid whites into the election process. The proposals will be taken up by constitutional negotiators today.
The concessions, which Mandela announced last week, include separate ballots for national and regional elections. A single ballot, as originally planned, would have virtually assured the huge ANC a majority in all the provinces as well as in the national legislature. Two ballots would give small, regionally based parties, such as Inkatha in the KwaZulu Black homeland, a chance to win power bases in their strongholds.
Yesterday, the militant Pan-Africanist Congress released its election platform, promising to return the land to the Black majority. The group is unlikely to get much support in the election, recent polls have shown.
Political violence is expected to intensify as South Africa prepares for its first all-race election in April.
Yesterday, gunmen fired on a bus traveling to an Inkatha rally near Durban, wounding seven people, police said. Three houses in the area were burned to the ground.
Near Johannesburg, dozens of houses were gutted and at least eight people were wounded in a Black township battle linked to the ANC-inkatha feud.
More than 3,000 Black South Africans have been killed by political violence during the past year.
Murder trial for activist set to begin
Secrecy surrounds proceedings in death of abortion physician
The Associated Press
PENSACOLA, Fla. — Barricades are up outside the courthouse, and jury selection is already cloaked in protective secrecy for today's start of a murder trial for Michael F. Griffin, accused of shooting David Gunn outside an abortion clinic a year ago.
The 47-year-old Eufaula, Ala., physician was shot three times in the back March 10 while he was parking behind Pensacola Women's Medical Services. An abortion protest was being held in front of the clinic.
The trial of Griffin, 32, a Christian fundamentalist and former chemical plant worker, is being closely watched by activists for the impact it may have on the national abortion debate.
Gunn's death already has convinced many state and federal lawmakers that special laws are needed to protect abortion clinics, asserted
Eleanor Smeal, president of The Feminist Majority Foundation, which advocates abortion rights.
"It reframed the debate so that this violence was taken more seriously," she said. Smalel also said a first-degree murder conviction would put a chill on anti-abortion violence.
John Burt, a lay minister who was leading the demonstration when Gunn was shot, said he well understood the high interest of abortion rights advocates.
"If Mike got off, gracious, they'd go crazy because that would be a license for everybody else to do something like that. I would guess," Burt said. "I would like to see him get something like second-degree if he has to get anything at all ... so he'd be able to get out and have some kind of life."
Griffin is charged with first-degree murder, and the prosecution is seeking the death penalty.
Griffin's lawyers plan to call local anti-abortion activists to the stand to try to show that they, and Burt in particular, influenced Griffin through speech and action and by giving him anti-abortion videos and literature.
The attorneys contend that such exposure enraged and deluded Grif-
fin, either driving him to temporary insanity or prompting him to kill in the heat of passion. The defense also still could take the line that Griffin did not shoot Gunn at all but falsely confessed to the murder under influence of the anti-abortion material.
The trial is expected to run at least two weeks, with jury selection taking the first five days.
Against the wishes of lawyers on both sides, Circuit Judge John Parnham ordered that jurors be sequestered throughout the trial. Prospective jurors' identities will be kept secret, and each will be questioned in private on matters related to abortion.
The extreme measures are to ensure juror privacy and safety because of the "escalating pattern of violence and intimidation surrounding the abortion issue." Parnham wrote in a pretrial order.
Within days of Gunn's killing, some doctors around the country donned bulletproof vests, and clinics stepped up security.
Five months after Gunn's death, George Tiller was wounded outside his abortion clinic in Wichita. He survived.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Administration counterattacks health care ads
ANALYSIS
By Nita Lelyveld The Associated Press
These are the kind of broad principles administration officials now say they will focus on.
But after several weeks in which the attacks on the plan have sounded louder than any praise, the Clintons are imitating the strategy of the very ads they criticize.
WASHINGTON — Across the country, the Clinton administration has lashed out at the advertisements criticizing its health care plan, pointing out they involve actors, not real people, who are delivering simplistic, frightening slogans.
When the Clintons appeared in Edison, N.J., on Wednesday, they talked about health reform but not about regional purchasing alliances, managed competition, employer mandates and premium caps.
The reason for the counterattack is obvious. The ads are powerful because their messages are simple; The Clinton plan will eliminate choice and create huge government bureaucracies.
There is a danger that the catch phrases of the ads and the fears they generate will resonate more deeply with people than the muddle of facts, figures and jargon they're hearing about the Clinton plan.
"The problem is that in a climate with a lot of misperception and a lot of very subtle factual issues, it's kind of hard for people to sort it all out," said Marc Roberts, professor of political economy and health policy at Harvard University's School of Government.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, February 21, 1994
9
SPORTS EDITOR
DAVID
DORSEY
Aches, pains weigh down senior 'Hawks
Tattered, battered and bruised
Those words apply, in any order, to the Kansas men's basketball team's senior class. Forwards Richard Scott and Patrick Richey and guard Steve Woodberry are veterans of a combined total of 373 games. Lately, the games have taken their toll.
Scott injured his left shoulder in practice Jan. 24. Since then, he has missed one game and has averaged just 4.1 points in his six games since. By doctor's orders, he's been wearing a shoulder brace that serves as protection but hinders his mobility.
Friday before practice, team trainer Mark Cairns handed Scott the brace and helped him secure the velcro straps. Scott acted like a kid who's been told by his mom to fasten his seat belt.
"I'm going to wear it for now," Scott said with a frown. "I guess Doc knows what's best for me."
During yesterday's 81-74 loss to Missouri, however, Caims allowed Scott to play without the brace. Scott finished with six points in 13 minutes of play.
Of course, with Scott's trademark style of intense inside play, each game becomes a physical one.
"It's getting better, but at the same time, it limits me in certain motions on the floor," Scott said. "At least try to play with a little more enthusiasm."
Unlike Scott, Richey has yet to miss a game this season. He is averaging 25 minutes a game and 6.8 rebounds a game in Big Eight Conference play. During his first three seasons, he averaged just 15 minutes a game as a reserve.
Although he clearly won't complain about his increased playing time and role as a starter, he clearly can feel its effects.
“It’s been a lot more physical out there,” Richey said. “It seems like people are a lot stronger. Maybe it’s because I’m getting a lot more playing time. It’s an all-out war out there.”
Richey has been wearing a flak jacket to protect his ribs during practice and games. Wednesday night at Oklahoma State, he should have worn a face mask. His collision with Oklahoma State senior guard Randy Rutherford nearly flattened his face.
"I was going for a loose bake, and I collided with Rutherford," Richey said. "It happened so fast that I can't describe it. I got hit in the nose and mouth. I was bleeding pretty good."
"Tomorrow, my body will probably be aching," Riley said. "Oklahoma State and Missouri are usually the two touchest games."
Yesterday, Richey played 33 minutes and scored six points. He decided to go without the flak jacket. Today, he'll probably wish that he wore it.
Woodberry, who has long been the target of opposing defenses, has plenty of his own alliments. He needed six stitches underneath his left eye courtesy of an unintentional elbow from Oklahoma State's Bryant Reeves on Wednesday night.
After yesterday's game, Woodberry was the last Jayhawk to leave the locker room, and he chose not to talk with the media.
It's hard for fans to notice Woodberry's aiments, however, considering he has led the Jayhawks in scoring and has at times taken the team on his back—his alling back.
Woodberry scored 14 points but made just five of 14 field goal attempts. Most of his shots he created on his own — while he was being double, sometimes triple teamed.
For most of this season he has suffered from back spasms. He also wears a brace to protect his left knee, which he hurt early in the season. He began yesterday's game wearing eye goggles, but removed them because they were uncomfortable.
"Before people play us, the first thing they do is say 'We've got to contain Steve Woodberry,'" Richey said. "I think Steve's done a great job dealing with it. Players like that are hard to come by."
Kansas freshman guard Jacque Vaughn has noticed the pressure and pain that the seniors have endured — and will continue to endure
"It's been real tough for them," Vaughn said. "But they're the type of individuals that will stick it out to the end."
Tigers foil title bid for Jayhawks
Missouri takes four-game lead in conference
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
Missouri's 81-74 victory against No. 4 Kansas yesterday disappointed the Jayhawks in more ways than one.
This game, combined with Kansas' overtime loss to Oklahoma State on Wednesday, marked the first time the Jayhawks have lost two consecutive games since 1989. The defeat also eliminated Kansas from the Big Eight title race because Missouri has a four-game lead on the Jayhawks.
Kansas coach Roy Williams said the Tigers had solidified their chances to be ranked in the top 10.
"What they've accomplished this year is mind-boggling to me," Williams said. "They've won at some big-time places. I think they deserve to be a top 10 team, and I think they will be in there this week."
Kansas dropped its record to 21-5 overall and 6-4 in the conference, and Missouri improved to 20-2 and 11-0. Missouri kept its hopes alive for the first undefeated Big Eight season since Kansas went 14-0 in 1971.
Kansas senior guard Steve Woodberry started the game wearing goggles to protect a cut he has below his left eye. Woodberry, who made just five of 14 field goals, suffered the injury against Oklahoma State.
Kansas freshman guard Jacque Vaughn matched up with Missouri senior guard Melvin Booker for almost the entire game. Vaughn led Kesas with 21 points, a career high, and had four assists. But it was Booker who led Missouri to victory, scoring a game-high 32 points.
Junior Calvin Rayford, who shared duty with Vaughn at point guard, said Booker was a tough player to handle.
"When his team is down, he's the one that's got to step up," Rayford said. "He is their senior leadership, and he did the job tonight."
Kansas' frontcourt got into foul trouble in the first half, when senior forward Richard Scott and freshman center Scot Pollard both had three fouls.
Despite the foul trouble, Scott ended the game with six points and five rebounds. Because Scott's play has been limited because of a shoulder injury, it was the first time in two games that he has scored. But Scott said that putting points on the board was not very important to him.
"It's getting better," he said of his left shoulder. "It's good to score, but at the same time, defense is the most important. I could have gone out and scored 100 points, but we still lost."
The foults took their toll on the Jayhawks. Missouri was 15 for 19 from the free-throw line in the first half. That, and two three-pointers by
Missouri 81, Kansas 74
MISSOURI (20-2, 11-0)
Player fgm/fga ftm/fta tp
Winfield 0-2 2-4 2
Thames 5-7 1-2 11
Crusid 3-10 6-8 12
Booker 8-15 13-14 32
Frazier 4-7 2-2 10
O'Leyn 3-7 0-0 8
Finner 0-0 0-0 0
Atkins 2-5 0-0 6
Smith 0-0 0-0 0
Heller 0-0 0-0 0
Totals 25-53 24-30 81
KANSAS (21-5, 6-4)
Player fgm/fga tfm/fta tp
Vaughn 7-10 3-4 12
Woodberry 5-14 2-4 14
Richey 2-5 1-2 6
Pearson 4-11 1-2 11
Ostertag 5-8 1-5 11
Scott 3-6 0-2 6
Pollard 0-1 0-0 0
Rayford 2-2 0-0 4
Gurley 2-2 0-0 0
Williams 0-1 1-3 1
Totals 28-80 9-22 74
Maltime Missouri 39 Kansas 34 point
goals Missouri 7-17 (Booster 3, O'Liney 2,
Attkins 4) - Kansas 9-19 (Richey 1-2,
Pearson 2, Vaughn 4, Woodberry 2,
Gurley 2) - Robbinsville Missouri 40 (Crup
shoe 12) - Jacksonville Missouri 12 (Frazer 4) - Kansas 14 (Vaughn 4)
Total fouls Missouri 20, Kansas 22 Attendance
15,800
senior guard Mark Atkins helped the Tigers to a 39-94 lead at halftime.
Free throws hurt Kansas throughout the game, whether it was the Tigers making them or the Jayhawks missing. Kansas was nine for 19 from the three-point line and nine for 22 from the free-throw line.
"It's the tempo of the game and the importance of the game," Williams said. "When you're out there at the three-point line, you're shooting, and you don't feel that there are 16,000 people watching. You have more time to think at the free-throw line."
Williams said he was happy with Kansas' performance in the beginning of the second half. Kansas went on an 18-8 run, taking a 54-47 lead. Defense was the key for Kansas, as it caused 15 Missouri turnovers in the game.
Missouri came back on the play of Booker and senior center Jevon Crudup, tying the game 69-69. At one time, Booker scored 10 consecutive points for the Tigers.
"Probably eight of his points may have come in a minute." Williams said. "We must have had them by eight or nine. On two of his three-pointers I thought Jacque played pretty good defense on him."
Booker hit a three-pointer, taking the lead 72-69, and the Tigers did not trail the rest of the way. Missouri coach Norm Stewart said Missouri's comeback had been a team effort.
"We dug ourselves a hole, and we made a rally," Stewart said. "Everyone had a hand in it. We showed a lot of hard work today, but there's a lot of season left."
POLLARD 31 MISSOURI 15 ANSHE
William Alix / KANSAN
With Kansas senior guard Steve Woodberry in pursuit, Missouri senior guard Melvin Booker attempts a shot over Kansas center Scott Pollard. Booker scored 32 points in yesterday at Allen Field House.
Missouri guard dominates Jayhawks
Kansansportswriter
By Andrew Gilman
Missouri senior guard Melvin Booker had never beaten Kansas in Allen Field House.
Now, after his fourth trip to Lawrence he has. Booker scored 32 points and almost single-handedly kept the Tigers in the game when it looked as though they might be out of it.
With Kansas leading 61-53 and 8-53 remaining, Booker found his shooting touch and brought Missouri back.
Booker scored 10 consecutive Missouri points, including two three-point baskets and an 18-foot jumper that gave the Tigers a tie at 63-63. Not
even two minutes had elapsed, and the Tigers had erased an eight-point lead.
Booker, who had 24 points in the second half, said that he had met a great challenge.
"He got us back in the game," Missouri senior center Jevon Crudup said. "We knew he had the hot hand so we got him the ball."
"The shots were falling," he said. "I wanted to step up and do it for the team."
Booker was constantly at battle with Kansas' freshman guard Jacque Vaughn. Vaughn scored a career-high
The rest of the Tigers recognized Booker as the go-to guy.
21 points and impressed the senior.
"He did a good job of accepting the challenge we gave him," Booker said. "I told him after the game that he stepped up."
Vaughn, who scored 13 points in the second half and guarded Booker most of the game, said he had had a tough time stopping him.
"You feel like after he makes the first three-pointer that you've got to stop him," Vaughn said. "I said that two times, and then he came back and made a third. He was in the zone and knocked the shots down."
Booker's play allowed the Tigers to beat Kansas twice this season and gave the Jayhawks their third home loss of the season, something that has
not happened since 1989. But Booker earned the respect of Kansas players and Coach Roy Williams.
"He was sensational," Williams said. "All those recruiting experts and the guys that read everything in the newspapers, it just shows what they know."
Sophomore forward Sean Pearson also was impressed with Booker's performance.
"I think he was determined to score," Pearson said. "He was unconscious. He was making everything."
Kansas junior guard Calvin Rayford, who also spent time on the floor against Booker, realized the potential of Booker's game.
"You've got to respect the shooter and the drive," Rayford said. "He's very quick, and that makes him hard to guard."
But Missouri coach Norm Stewart put it all together.
"He can run the ball club," Stewart said. "He can score, he can get rebounds, he can set plays, he can do everything. He made some outstanding plays."
But Booker wasn't concerned with his own play. He said it had been the team that he thought of.
"The team stayed poised," Booker said. "It's been a team effort all year long, and maybe now we'll get some respect."
Sophomore pitcher leads Jayhawks to series' victories
Sophomore pitcher Jamie Splittorff struck out 10 players and gave up only seven hits on his way to pitching a complete game victory for the Jayhawks Friday in Fayetteville, Ark., against the University of Arkansas.
The Jayhawks won the opening game of the three-game series 5-3.
Coach Dave Bingham was impressed with Splitter's (2-0) performance.
SPORTS BRIEFS
Kansas improved its record to 2-3. Arkansas dropped to 0-4.
"Jamie is one of the premier pitchers in college baseball," Bingham said. "There's some
thing magical about him when he's on the mound."
The Jayhawks managed just four hits in the game but were aided by Arkansas' starting pitcher Scott Cunningham (0-1). Cunningham issued six walks in the game, including three in a four-run second inning for Kansas. He also threw a wild pitch during the inning.
Junior shortstop Dan Rude had two RBF's for the Jayhawks, who dealt Arkansas its first season-opening home loss since 1981.
In the second game, Kansas scored single runs in the fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh innings, winning 4-2 against Arkansas, pushed to 0-5.
Kansas, 3-3 on the year, got eight innings out of senior left-handed pitcher David Meyer. Meyer gave up just two hits and one earned run, evening up his record at 1-1.
Junior third baseman Brent Wilhelm knocked in two runs for the Jayhawks.
Men and women Jayhawks get weekend tennis victories
The No. 15 Kansas women's tennis team defeated unranked Arkansas on Friday in Fayetteville, Ark., by a 5-2 count.
The Jayhawks lost only two games in No.1 and No.2 singles.
Mindy Weiner, playing in the No.1 singles spot, won 6-2, 6-0. Weiner, who is ranked No.35 in the latest Intercollegiate Tennis Association poll, improved her record to 20-6, the most wins of any Kansas player.
The Jayhawks followed up their first victory with another on Sunday against No. 9 Mississippi, 5-1, and improved their overall record to 5-1.
The No. 33 Kansas men's tennis team won two matches Friday at the Indiana Invitational in Bloomington, Ind.
Rebecca Jensen, playing in the No. 2 spot, remained undefeated in dual competition this year and moved to 5-0.
The Jayhawks defeated No. 47 Vanderbilt 6-1 and unranked Indiana 4-3.
Kansas won all of its matches except at the No. 1 singles spot against Vanderblit.
Martin Erickson, playing in the No. 2 spot, won both of his matches and improved his record to 12-4, 8-1 in dual matches.
The Kansas men won all six of their doubles matches during the weekend.
Kansas first in five events
Kansas freshman Marcus Scheid led the Kansas track team to five first-place finishes this weekend in Manhattan at the Kansas State Invitational.
Scheid won the long jump and the triple jump.
Seniorpole vaulter John Bazzoni won for the sixth time this season, vaulting 15-11 for the Jayhaws.
Junior Cassandra Bryant-Wans set a meet record in the triple jump, jumping 38/1/2.1
}
10
Monday, February 21, 1994
Camera America
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"I thought our defense broke down in the first half," Kansas coach Marian Washington said. "If you give the Sooners an open shot, they are going to knock it down. In the second half I thought we did a better job of covering."
Norman, Okla. — The two top scoring teams in the Big Eight Conference traded baskets for 37 minutes yesterday. But clutch free-throw shooting and a key rebound propelled the No. 10 Kansas women's basketball team past Oklahoma 80-76.
With just under three minutes to play, the Jayhawks held a five-point lead. The Sooners managed to narrow that gap to 77-76, but time was running out on Oklahoma. The Sooners were forced to foul Kansas junior forward Angela Aycock with 15.3 seconds remaining.
By Matt Slegel
Aycock stepped to the line, ignored the crowd and knocked down the first free throw. A second successful free throw would almost assure the Jayhawks of no worse than overtime.
The ball rested for a split second on the right side of the rim and then fell off.
The rebound skidded off to the right side while several players crashed to the floor. An Oklahoma player managed to get a hand on the ball, but Aycock never quit on the play. She scooped up the ball and hunched over it. Oklahoma had no choice but to foul Aycock again, this time with 10.9 seconds remaining.
She knocked in both attempts, which sealed the victory for Kansas. The victory on the heels of a 60-58 loss Friday at Oklahoma State.
Richard Devinki / KANSAN
"Friday's loss was disappointing for us because we expected to win that game," Aycock said. "We made mistakes down the stretch that really cost us, so today we just wanted to play hard and steal one on the road."
The Jayhawks came up with 10 team steals, led by sophomore guard Charisse Sampson's seven. For one of the few times all season, Sampson didn't start for the Jayhawks, but she ended the game with a game- and season-high 23 points.
"I felt there were times in our last couple of ball games that too many times, Charisse played passive," Washington said. "There is no way in the world that we can afford to have Charisse not shoot the ball when she is open. I have confidence in my players. She had an outstanding performance today."
The Jayhawks held Oklahoma's leading scorer, sophomore forward Etta Maytubby, to just six points. She entered the game averaging 19.8 points a game, and she scored 28 points against the Jayhawks on Jan. 21 at Kansas.
The Jayhawks opened a 14-5 lead to start the game, but the Sooners battled back to take a 41-40 half-time lead. In the second half, the Jayhawks overtook the Sooners despite the fact that Aycock, senior center Lisa Tate and freshman forward Jennifer Trapp were in foul trouble.
"She cherry-picked on us so bad in Allen Field House," Washington said. "We would send the person assigned to her to crash the boards, and before we knew it they were breaking on us because she didn't go to the boards. We knew that, and we weren't going to let it happen to us again. I thought we did a lot better job covering her."
OKLAHOMA
21
SOONERS
Kansas senior center Lisa Tate and Oklahoma center LaNea Jones reach for rebound yesterday at Lloyd Noble Center in Norman, Okla. The Jayhawks beat the Sooners 80-76, and Tate led the Jayhawks with five blocks.
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Holiday Inn, Steamboat Springs, Co. Party with someone you know. Free beer and appetizers every night from 9 p.m.-7 p.m. when you stay at Holiday Inn. 212-806-3494 or visit www.holidayinn.com. I book a Spring Break today.
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1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, February 21, 1994
11
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CONFERENCE SUPPORT SPECIALIST American Teleconference Services is searching for a few unique individuals to support our expand-individuals will possess outstanding language and interpersonal skills; must have a high level of energy and be able to handle a fast-paced environment and attention to detail are a must. In return for you, you will be rewarded with an excellent salary and benefit package which includes some unique feature interested candidates are invited to submit a resume.
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600 CAMPUS IN THE USA, RUSSIA AND
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Adult and youth umpires needed. Anyone interested in working as umpire for Lawrence Parks and City Beach contact Bob Stanifollot 845-7129 for adult softball umpire and Lee Ice at 841-4411 for youth baseball/softball.
CAMP COUNSELORS WANTED for private Michigan boys/girl summer camps. Teach: swim, hockey, basketball, golf, sports, computer, rifley, archery, tennis, golf, sports, computers, camping,戏剧, dramatics, OR riding. Also maintain a maintenance Sahary $150 or more plus Rhd. Costs: W/CWC/WGCI Makhid, NLFd, 8093. 706-444-244
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Summer Employment Opportunities
Spend the summer in the beautiful Catskill mountains of New York. Achieve a challenging and rewarding summer experience working in a residential camp for adults with physical and developmental disabilities. Positions available: counselors, cabin leaders, and program leaders. All students are encouraged to apply. Season dates June 6-August 24. Good salary, room and board, and some travel allowance. For more information call 914-434-2220 or write to camp Jened, P.O. Box 483, Rock Hill, NY 12775
Like Children? Want to get out of the Dorm? Need relievable babysitter occasional evenings. 2 children. Call Pamela 843-4605
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Macintosh Classic 490 with 5.5 MB + MS Word,
Pagemaker software, 700 OBO, Call
or IP address #42-986.
340 Auto Sales
**90 JEEP WRANGLER in good condition. New tires. $7500 If interested call 749-0989.**
**1903 Mazda RXV GXL, red 4K m.i. power sunroof.**
*100 can call 780-1640.*
Casio Graphing Calculator. Memorabilia.
Manual included. Excellent condition. $55
Manual included. Call 1-800-324-7260.
MACINTOSH Computer. Complete system include
instruction only $99. Call Customer # 504378.
**89 Hyundai Excel GLS in good condition.** hatchback, 5-speed mi, 91k cm, AI/M, FM/amcette, satisfeille, l'écran, écran LCD.
Grey 78 Limited Edition Mdnx RK 5 Y. Sun roof, tinted windows, in body in excellent shape. Needs new paint.
Old K. U. Jayhawk Decal D three color, 1928? x²" for
$15. Write P Box 70386 Laurie 86046
Giving away cellular phone number FREE. First month service and connection fees paid. Call 841-875-2630.
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
NOT USING BODY HOUQUEH Membership?
Sell ILL Cell Attn CBM-8377-8647 p. 61m.
家园
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
2 bdm/w/awuroom and plenty of storage space, x bathrooms, D/W, W/D, central air, fire place and pool. On KU bus route, $50 + utilities, avail. March 1. Mellelda 1-897-6685
3 Bedroom/ 2 full bath apt now available on bus route. Microwave & dishwasher $500.
4 bedroom apartment for rent. fully furnished.
very nice. Interest? Tel 841-2535, 704-945 or
604-3653.
Applecroft Apt. avail. April 1. 2 dbkm. 1 bath fully equipped kitch. dustmop, micro, disposal heat, air, water, trash paid. On bus route. No pets. Call anytime 845-8292. Ask for Chris or Susan
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
Available immediately at Brady Apt. 1528 Karenwood room, bpm water, heat & water pad, quiet, no phone calls, free Wi-Fi
Apartments Available
- 2 blocks from KU bus route
- Call Gina at 843-4754
- Quiet Location
2040 Heatherwood
Hanover Place ApL, for rent. Near Campus.
$370/MO. Call 841-1212.
Available now, two bedroom at 912 Tennessee.
W/Dbochroom on basement, $40 plus utilities.
Free W/D bochroom on basement.
Farmed room for rent with shared kitchen and
Two short bloeds from KU. Off street parking.
Garage on the right.
Naismith Place
Naismith Place
Lorimar Townhomes
Now renting for June and August. 1,2 and 3 bdrms, dishwasher, microwave, W/D, fireplace, ceiling fans, cable pd. Call 841-7849 for appt.
MORNING STAR
Rooms, apartments, and well kept, older homes available now. 841-STAR (7827)
YOUNG EARTH
SUNRISE
VILLAGE
660 Gateway Ct.
(Behind Sonic)
Now Leasing for Fall
Mon.-Fri. 10-12, 1-5
*Luxurious 2,3,&4 Bedroom Town Homes
*Garages; 2½ Baths
*Microwave Ovens
*Some with Fireplaces
*On KU Bus Route
*Swimming Pool and Tennis Courts
Park25
3 new bedrooms home. 2 bath, wash dryer-door kit,
redirigator and oven on bus route. $600 a week.
841-8400 or 841-1287
We are now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature studio 1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. We also have 3 bedroom, $2 \frac{1}{2}$ bath townhomes.
Nice Bairn duplex, central air, street parking space for pets. Available March 1, call 860-954-3751 or visit www.bairn.com
Trailridge Apartments
new leasing for Summer and Fall
Studies, Agus, and Town Houses
KU Bussin, Dloum, Nassau,
Clover, 2 cwph
Call Today to rejuvenate
843-7333 2500 W.6h
One bedroom rent for sublease. Water and trash path. Rent of Pohluserv $956/mo. New
- Volleyball Court
- 2 Pools
- with 4 Stops on Property
- 2 Laundry Rooms
* Some Washers/R
- Some Washer/Dryer Hookups
On campus, newly remodeled studio now avail-
ble. Great day to eat and take a look!
$296 + electricity
MASTERCRAFT
- On KU Bus Route
Call or stop by today.
2401 W. 25th, 9A3
842-1455
(sorry no pets)
Completely Furnished
Studio, 1, 2, 3, & 4 bedroom apartments and townhouses
Offers
REGENTS COURT
REGENTS COURT
19th & Mass. : 749-0445
HANOVER
SUNDANCE
TANGLEWOOD
10th & Arkansas : 749-2415
1145 Louisiana : 841-1429
CAMPUS PLACE
ORCHARD CORNERS
15th&Kasold : 749-4226
Open Dailv 9AM - 5PM
Professional Management and Maintenance Compan
Equal Housing Opportunity
MASTERCRAFT
One bedroom apartment available now. On KU bus route. Small pets OK. Call 805-4289.
Spacious 1 bedroom app very close to campus. Furnished rooms. Call 841-812-1241 about Coldwater flat
Studio apartment availm. May 29 - Aug 10. Aug 10 min. Kit incl water, Water pad, Toilet. £350. £350. £350. £350. £350. £350. £350. £350. £350. £350. £350. £350. £350. £350. £350. £350. £350. £350. £350. £350. £350.
Now leasing for FALL
We're making life easier
- Weekly Maid Service
- Front Door
- Bus Service
- "Dine Anytime" with
unlimited seconds
- Laundry and Vending Facilities
- Free Utilities
NAISMITH
843-8554
1800 Naismith
Sublease top floor studio off 5th & Color, from March 1 to July 31st. $310 or wd. pat. Laundry facilities. Near bus route. 841-5797 or 841-5799.
Sublease Big. 1 Br. W/D Hookups, CA/CH, DW, Cable pd. 1 block from KU. Available March 1 789-9309.
meadowbrook
12 3
Answer 2 Questions
1. How much time did you spend looking for your
How much time do spend looking for your apartment?
Come on Over For Dinner
apartment:
2. Do you want to live in a
2. Do you want to live in a beautiful, centrally located living community?
Answers
1. If you spent over 1 hour,
you wasted a lot of your time.
2. Don't hurry down the stairs.
2. Meadowbrook is leasing for fall now. Call Kathy or Shana and in 1 hour your apartment hunting time will be over!
Youdon't have to live here to eat there! Our "Dine Anytime" meal programs let you enjoy a huge selection of appetizing entrees, vegetables, desserts, and salads from 7am-7pm daily (11am-6:30pm weekends) With our "Punch Card" and "5 Meal" programs you can get meals as low as $2.50 Either way, you'll eat it up.
Mon Fri 8-5:30
Sat 10 4: Sun 1-4
15th & Crestline
842-4200
Sorry, not pets
For more information call or stop by
NAISMITH
1800 Naismith 843-8559
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
VILLAGE SQUARE apartments
- Close to campus
•Spacious 2 bedroom
•Laundry facility
•Swimming Pool
•Waterbed allowed
9th & Avalon 842-3040
430 Roommate Wanted
- By phone: 864-4358
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Now to schedule an ad:
Male roommate to housewife at Sunrise UV
Lake, Calif. Call Lisa, Utility
Mike or John at 823-1477 for details.
N /1for 4bbedroom A new campus 2 full baths.
4 per month +/uitilities 843-445.
Female non-smoking roommate wants to share a bedroom apartments close to campus for next fall.
Admission may in be held by your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
* b warranty: 191 Stafford Flint
I HAVE TO MOVE K.O.C. I female needed to share 3 bdm. spacious apc. $200/mon. + utilities, on bus route, convenience location, no smokers or call, pq82-7647 in the evening.
I Hommate, non-smoker for 3 bdm cones, also per month. Near campus. Washer/Dryer/Cat
2 furnished bedrooms in home, close to campus.
Covered parking. W/D, DW, AC, 2 1/2 bath. $195
mo. Call Seth at 841-9289.
ROOMMATE NEEDED to share 2 bedrooms
ROOMMATE 179/mm. + /utilities Call dave 664-3390
+ /utilities Call dave 664-3390
- By Mail: 119 Stauffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 60845
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148 last & final
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370 want to buy
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The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Half, Lawrence, KS. 6604
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1994 FarWorks, Inc. Distributor Universal Press Syndicate
2-21
"Well, yes, that is the downside, Fluffy. ... When we kill her, the pampering will end."
12
Monday. February 21. 1994
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Olympic athletes compare to all-time greats
Bv DAVID CRARY
By DAVID CRART
Associated Press Writer
LILLEHAMMER, Norway — Forget the asterisks. Bonnie Blair and other Lillehammer superstars clearly belong among the all-time greats of the Winter Games.
If the interlude leading to these Games had been the traditional four years, rather than the one-time only two, who knows whether Blair, almost 30, would have been around to win her fourth Olympic gold medal.
Some upstart might have emerged to challenge Norway's speed skating king, Johann Olav Koss, or the all-conquering cross-country skiers, Norway's Bjorn Dahlie and Russia's Lvohy Egorova.
But Olympic historians and commentators dismiss the speculation. These athletes have won consistent-
ly, under immense pressure, against probably the highest caliber of competition in the history of their sports.
"Bonnie Blair would win any time, any place," Bud Greenspan, veteran producer of Olympic documentary films said.
Koss's awesome 10,000-meter victory yesterday earned him his four career gold medal and his third world-record gold at Lillehammer.
To surpass Heiden's gold mark — shared by Finnish speed skater Clas Thunberg — Koss would have to return for the 1998 Games in Japan.
Only 25 now, he wouldn't be too old.
But, like Heiden, he wants to become a doctor and may find four more years of skating too stressful.
Karl-Adolf Scherer of the Germany sportsnews agency SID, covering his ninth Winter Olympics, said he
ranked Eric Heiden above Koss because the American won at all five distances.
"Heiden was not a world-record breaker, but he was a great competitor," Scherer said.
He has two more chances during the next week to break the Heiden-Thunberg record for most Winter Games golds won by a man.
He rated Dahlie as the greatest cross-country skier ever. The Norwegian, only 26, has won five gold and two silver medals in eight Olympic events.
The two-year-gap phenomenon occurs as the Winter Games are shifted for a staggered schedule, with winter or summer competition every two years.
The short gap is most noticeable in speed skating and cross-country,
where repeat championships are commonplace. But it also will come into play when Alberto Tomba competes on the Alpine slopes later this week.
Andy Mill, a member of the U.S. Alpine team in 1976 and 1980 and now a commentator for CBS, said it was unfair to compare today's skiers with legends like Franz Klammer, the Austrian remembered for his daredevil gold-metal downhill run in 1976.
Tomba is already in the record books as the only Alpine skier to win golds in two Games. Now, thanks to the short interlude, he could stretch the streak to three with a slalom or giant slalom victory.
ANALYSIS
And he praised Toma as much for his charisma as his medals.
Greenspan said today's higher performance level was linked to bigger Olympic payoffs.
"Tommy Moe is an automatic millionaire now," Greenspan said. "The Mahre brothers (Alpine medalists in 1984) wouldn't have made 20 percent of that."
Even cross-country can be lucrative. Dahle's victories will double his current annual earnings of $200,000, the Norwegian daily Verdens Gang said yesterday.
Lillehammer stars on the verge of passing their prime should be thankful for the decision to alternate Winter and Summer Games, Mill said.
"The athletes in the twilight of their careers have one more shot," he said.
The tally
Torch
Country Gold Silver Bronze
Norway 8 5 2
Russia 7 5 3
Italy 3 3 7
Germany 4 2 5
United States 4 3 0
Canada 2 2 2
Source: The Associated Press
David Cause / KANGAN
Speed skater Dan Jansen, veteran of four Games and a world-record holder, had never won any Olympic medal until his gold in the 1,000-meter Saturday.
"Dan Jansen can really count his blessings with this two-year gap," MIH said.
Morning Star
842-9979
1 Mile East of Johnny's
Pet Care 15% OFF BOARDING FOR DOGS & CATS
VISA
MasterCard
Now Available!
KU Bookstore REBATE
Over $2,400,000 returned to date.
Now accepting receipts from the Fall'93 semester for rebate payments.
Receipts (period 94) from cash or check purchases are eligible for a 6% rebate at the Customer Service counter of the KU Bookstores until the end of June 1994.
KU student I.D. required.
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
Ks. Union 864-4640
Burge Un. 864-569
Computer hardware purchases are not eligible. Other restrictions may apply.
KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store that offers rebates to KU students
Pepperoni Sausage Mushrooms Black Olive Beef Zucchini Onion Canadian Bacon Tomato Italian Sausage Eggplant Bacon Jalapeno Extra Cheese Spinach Pineapple Brocoli Pepperoni Sausage Mushrooms Black Olive Beef Zucchini Onion Canadian Bacon Toasted Italian Sausage Eggplant Bacon Jalapeno Cheese Spinach Pineapple Brocoli Pepperoni Sausage Mushrooms Black Olive Beef Zucchini Onion Canadian Bacon Tomato Italy Italian Sausage Mushrooms Black Olive Beef Zucchini Onion Canadian Bacon Tomato Italiano Sausage Mushrooms Black Olive Beef Zucchini Onion Canadian Bacon Tomato Italian
WE HONOR
KANNYN
Italian Sausage Eggplant Bacon Jalapeno Extra
Chocolate Spinach Pineapple Broccoli Peppers
PYRAMID Mushrooms Black Olive Bee
On Canadian Bacon Tomato Italian Sausage
No Pile It On!
Valid Through July 31, 1994
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
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!
LOTHERS
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)
Eir Show • 829 Massachusetts • 842-0611: 20% off Eir Show brand sunclasps
RESTAURANTS & BARS
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
Counter Gift Shop. Co.
University Bookshop • 1116 W 23rd St • 749-5206: 20% off all clothing (except sale items)
University Bookshop • 1118 W 23rd St • 745-6200. 20% off clothing (except sate items)
Weavers Department Store • 901 Massachusetts • 843-6360. 20% off all lingerie, hosiery, or intimate apparel
Bonanza 3329 Iowa 642-1200 All-you-can-eat Presnasticks Food & Desert Bar for $2.99
Dos Hommes BVI 815 Naminghamshire 841-7268 Bu 1 menu item, the get 2nd for 1/2 price
American Bistro • 701 Maassachusetts • 841-8349: 10% off any entree (limit one)
Bananas • 2290 Epson • 849-1209: All items free of charge! Food & Dessert Bar for $2
Imperial Garden · 2907 W 6th St · 841-1688: 10% off any dinner entree (limit one)
Dunkin Donuts • 521 W 251d • 749-5015. 15% off any purchase
Fifi's Restaurant • 925 Iomega • 841-7226. 10% off any entrance (limit one)
MERCHANDISE & PRODUCTS
Pizza Shuttle • 1601 W 23rd • 842-1212: 1 carryout, 1 topping pizza w a g. coke for $4.00
Plum Tree • 2665 Iowa • 841-6929: FREE appetizer (2 crab raccoons) or 1 egg roll w/purch
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-Pasta • 1410 Kispa, 865-5400/520 W 23rd, 842-8000: FREE Crazy Bread w/pizza pizzal 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
Pyramid Pizza • 507 W 14th St (under The Wheel) • 842-3232: $4 **sm**-$6 **mgr**-$8 **lg** eaad 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
Cycle Works • 1601 W23rd • 842-6363: FREE lock set w/ new bike purchase
The Athlete's Foot *914 Massachusetts* **841-6966:** $10 off a shoe purchase of $65
Communities **842-6966:** $15 off a shoe purchase.
Francis Sporting Goods • 731 Massachusetts • 843-4191: 15% off all Champion Sportswear
Englewood Florist • 939 Massachusetts • 841-2999: 3 FREE latex balloons with any purchase of $20 or more
Frankie Sporting Goods • 731 Massachusetts • 842-1919: 15% off all Champion Sportswear
It's Your Party! *1601 W 23rd* - 749-3455: Buy any 3 greeting cards and get 1 FREE
Jayhawl level 1 *Kansas Union* - 664-3545: 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 EVERYDAYI
Black Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826 • Blue Books for 10¢
Inkwell Bookstore • 1420 Crescent Road • 843-3826 • 20% off Black Computer Diskettes
Jayhawk Bookstore • 935 Massachusetts • 749-5194: $1.00 off all adjustable hats, $2.00 off all fitted hats
Jayhawk Spirit • 935 Massachusetts • 749-5194
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 Sport Skub *807 Massachusetts* *20% of UK Lawsuitals*
Laser Logic • 865-0505: 20% OffRecycled 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)
Penton 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)
Shipped @ 911.625.7777
Union Technology Center - Level 3-Burge Union - 864-5690-10% off any accessory (disks, diskholders, cables, paper, surge protectors, etc.)
Video Blz - 832 Iowa - 749-3507 - For Tuesday! Rent 2 Videos for the Price of 1 (Tuesday only)
SERVICE
VIDEO BLD 832 IOWA 749-3501 • Tuesday • Price of framed prints of KU and sororites
Vormehr Studio & Gallery • Riverfront Plaza. Ste 321 • 749-0744 15% off of framed prints of KU and sororites
The Auto Medic • 3631 W 10th St • 842-0384: 20% off any service call
The Auto Medic • 3631 W 10th St • 842-0354: 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 • 2494 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
Terms and conditions. The following terms and condition relate to candidate for use by the *University Dairy Runan Rana* DRC or in participatingBMPS (PM). 1) The DRC must be signed to be valid, is non-transferable, and PM may request identification, confiscation of the Card if used by anyone other than the candidate. Candidate's signature on a PM or the DRC shall constitute a candidate's agreement to be bound by these terms and the direction of the Director of IPM. 2) DPCS special Offer Discounts are not valid with other offers or special promotions of PM. 3) PM is not apply to a portion of purchase; 4) apply only to a candidate's reasonably personal requisition to total purchase (an determined by PM). 5) non-DRC purchases are part of the total purchase and are only available to candidates for use by the University Dairy Runan Rana, in Kansas, and PM may deny entry to persons under 21 year of age. 6) PM may substitute a comparable value offer in laws where legal advertising requires PM to change the original offer. 6) Candidate agrees not to hold the *University Dairy Runan Rana*, independent agencies, independent agents, or DRC selling businesses, any organization or employees of the University Dairy Runan Rana, or any individual, group, or entity involved in themarketing of an invalid DRC or lack of relevance causes an action by a member of the PM or any other group or individuals associated with the IPC. 7) The DRC must be approved by the American Arbitration Association.
S
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SPORTS: U.S. hockey team advances to the medal round after defeating Italy. Page 9.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.103,NO.106
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
KANSAS STATE
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA KS 66612
ADVERTISING:864-4358
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22,1994
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
African, African-American students not the same Chances slim
FAN BILLY
jennie Zeiner / KANSAN
Gregory Frost, assistant to the dean of the graduate school, said he learned a lot about African culture and his own African-American culture from wife Eileen Mai Frost, Monrovia, Liberia, graduate student.
Interaction leads to insight on themselves, each other
By Denise Neil
Kansan staff writer
when Deo Taquiba came to KU from Uganda five years ago he expected African Americans to look just like those in the pages of Ebony magazine.
"I kept looking for the glamorous and very rich," he said.
But Tajuba, Jinga, Uganda, graduate student and one of 71 African students at KU, discovered that his preconceived perceptions of African Americans were about as accurate as theirs were of him.
Gregory Frost, assistant to the associate vice chancellor and assistant to the dean of the graduate school, said he had experienced these misconceptions first-hand. In July, he married Enid-Mai Frost, Monrovia, Liberia, graduate student and president of the African Affairs Student Association.
"There's still misconceptions of Africa as a place with uncivilized people," he said. Enid-Mai Frost had been a foreign exchange student in the United States when she was in high school. She decided to return for her college education in 1985, and she met Gregory Frost in 1988.
Gregory Frost said that adapting to each other's culture had not been easy.
"She's not an American," he said. "She can be very critical of our culture and I have to be more sensitive to that."
One of the biggest differences between the two cultures is the makeup of the family, Gregory Frost said.
"The African culture is more traditional, more family-oriented in many cases, than the African-American community," he said. "When I was introduced to her family, I got to see first-hand that they're more traditional, more formal."
Enid-Mai Frost said divorce was rare in her culture and that close relationships developed beyond the boundaries of the immediate family.
"One of the hardest things has been understanding his relationship with his family," she said. "He knew from the beginning that I came from a very close family. I can't understand the lack of closeness in the African-American family."
Sandrine Lisk, second-year law student from Sierra Leone and treasurer of the African Affairs Student Association, said she thought that the African-American students and African students did not interact enough. She said her group would try to coordinate activities with the Black Student Union during African Awareness Week March 28 through April 2. The goal is to
BLACK HISTORY MONTH
Upcoming events
Wednesday: "Impediments to Black Empowering; Past and Present," a panel discussion featuring officials from KU and Washburn University, will be held from 7 to 9 p.m. in the Kansas Room at the Kansas Union.
KANSAN
draw the two groups together and encourage understanding of cultural differences
"The only thing we have in common is our skin color," she said. "African-Americans do not have the same cultural backgrounds."
Gregory Frost said that African Americans could learn about their backgrounds by getting to know African students.
The lessons the two cultures can teach each other are valuable. Taiuba said.
"I believe that African Americans and Africans can teach each other about ourselves," he said. "And we need to teach each other as a way to understand each other."
February Sisters helped create change
Concerns still exist despite new services
A member of the February Sisters tries to avoid a Kansan photographer after a SenEx meeting on Feb. 6, 1972. An article in the Feb. 7 Kansan reported that the women did not want their photos taken because it was a group decision to keep individuals from receiving attention. One unidentified member of the group offered a different explanation — she didn't want her father to see her picture in the paper. "I don't want him to think I'm a radical woman and cut off my funds," she said.
By Roberta Johnson Kansan staff writer
Twenty-two years after the February Sisters barricaded the East Asian Studies building at 1332 Louisiana, some of the group's goals have yet to be realized.
The group's 13-hour barricade on Feb. 4, 1972, eventually led to the creation of the Office of Affirmative Action and Department of Women's Studies at the University of Kansas. It also paved the way for increased health care programs for women and the formation of the Hiltop Child Development Center.
Max Lucas, dean of architecture and urban design, was head of the University Senate Executive Committee at that time.
SenEx supported the move for campus day care and more women's health services.
"Up until that time, SenEx didn't have the responsibility to deal with those types of issues," he said. "That night, the February Sisters came along and asked SenEx to get involved. It was just a case of 'This is reasonable' 'versus 'This is not reasonable.'"
The Hilltop Child Development Center has been open since 1972, but the day care center is neither free nor immediately available. Director Andi Fishman Pollack said that there was a 200-child waiting list to receive child care.
There is also a sliding fee scale based on income, she said.
The Executive Vice Chancellor's Child Care Task Force is surveying faculty and students on the child-care needs of the community, said Gerry Burns, member of the task force and president of OAKS — Non-Traditional Students Organization.
"There's no short-term way to solve the problem," he said. "There's no way we're ever going to fulfill the child-care needs of the University and City of Lawrence, but we'll come as close as possible."
The February Sisters also worked for an increase in health care services for women at Watkins Memorial Health Center.
"You couldn't get help with birth control,
even if you were married," said Mary Coral, a member of the group and a student at that time. "It was poor service for women."
Although many needed services, such as pelvic exams and birth control, are now available, they are not free to patients as the group had requested.
Today's students are more concerned with the fact that there are no female gynecologists at Watkins, said Christy Morris, Englewood, Colo., senior. Morris, a member of the Women's Student Union, said that the group was pushing for the hiring of female gynecologists.
"Bring me one and we'll hire one," said James Strobl, director of administration at Watkins. "There aren't five female gynecologists in all of College Hill."
Another unaddressed concern was the low number of women serving on the University faculty. Today, only 27 percent of faculty and librarians and 12.9 percent of faculty administrators are women. There are only two female deans in the University, one of which will begin her work this summer.
Strobl said that there was a nurse practitioner, who performs routine exams, in the office of gynecology.
"Things change from year to year," said Carol Prentice, assistant to the vice chancellor of academic affairs. "A few years ago, two of the three vice chancellors were women."
"There's a tendency to feel most comfortable with people that look like us," she said. "Women may seem less qualified, even if they look the same on paper."
that she thought there was some implicit discrimination in the hiring process.
Coral said she was unhappy with the slow progression toward the realization of the goals of the February Sisters.
Ann Weick, dean of social welfare, said
"We've been hacking at a large rock of granite," she said. "After all, look how long it took us to get the vote. In England, they threw themselves in front of horses and died. In America, women hung the President in effigy.
"You have to risk something to make some changes."
Chances slim for getting meningitis
Physicians say disease is rare, students have no cause for alarm
By Susan White Kansan staff writer
Anthony Thomas, a Kansas City, Kan., junior and resident of McCollum Hall, died of the disease Friday. Since then, several students have been fouc of THOMAS. Student
Students should not be afraid of getting meningitis their chances of catching the potentially fatal disease are slim.
THOMAS: Student left his mark in short time at University. Page 3.
But Charles Rockey chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said the number of cases nationwide and in Lawrence was low.
"1.3 out of every 100,000 people nationwide get meningitis," he said. "We expect about one case in Lawrence a year. At least, that is what incidents have indicated. But we could have two a year or none for two years."
Susan Elkins, an employee at KU Information, said worried students had called with various questions about meningitis and their chances of contracting it.
"They want to know the symptoms to look for, if they should go to Watkins for antibiotics and what floor the student who died lived on," she said. "They also are asking about the connections between the student who died last year in McCollum with the student who just died."
Yockey said that meningitis was a rare disease and that students should not worry about catching it.
"It is a very uncommon disease," he said. "Residents of McCollum have been nervous about using the dining hall, but they have nothing to be afraid of. There have only been two cases here. It is just a coincidence that they were both in McCollum."
Yockey said the biggest problem with meningitis was fear of the unknown...
Thomas had an isolated case of meningitis, and no other cases have been reported since he was diagnosed, Yockey said. Every student who was at risk of catching meningitis received preventive antibiotics last week.
"Nobody expects to get meningitis," he said. "Anthony Thomas was a healthy student, probably healthier than a lot who came in with cold symptoms that quickly turned into a severe disease. Students are asking 'what if it happens to me?' But it is more common to die in a car accident."
Ken Stoner, director of student housing, said a stream of questions had been coming to the housing department about the disease. He said he hoped those questions were answered at a question and answer session led by Yockey last night at McCollum.
"We try to get the information out as best as we can," he said. "We will give one more session if there's any lingering concern among the students."
Staff writer Frank McCleary contributed information to this story.
Kansan staff report
Student return home
A KU student injured in a Tennessee car crash that killed another student returned last week to her home in Derby.
Theresa Noonan, sophomore, returned Thursday to Kansas after spending a week in a Memphis, Tenn., hospital, said her mother, Cecilia.
"She hopes to return to KU next week," Cecilia Noonan said. "We're still not sure yet. She has to see a plastic surgeon and some other doctors. But we hope for the best. We think she's doing pretty well."
Theresa was taken to Memphis's Methodist Central Hospital after the car she was driving crashed into a tractor trailer Feb. 10. The accident killed her passenger, Jenna Robinson. Manhattan sophomore.
The two students were traveling on Interstate Highway 55 on their way to Graceland when their car skidded on ice and hit the trailer from behind.
INSIDE
Who is this guy?
Without his make-up, many people may not recognize Jeremy Boldra. But when he shows up at Kansas men's basketball games, everyone knows him as "Kramer."
TOM PERRY
Page 3.
Race-based scholarships get government approval
By Angelina Lopez Kansas staff writer
Without a minority scholarship from the School of Social Welfare, Jay Jackson, Lawrence sophomore and a Native-American student, said that he would not be able attend the University of Kansas.
Jackson, like many other minority students, is only able to afford the cost of a college education because of a race-based scholarship.
In 1990, the validity of race-based scholarships was called into question. Opponents felt policies that earmarked money specifically for minority students discriminated against white students. The Bush administration proposed that these types of scholarships be eliminated.
On Thursday, however, the Department of Education announced its approval of race-based scholarships. It said that these scholarships could be used to remedy past discriminations and to help diversify the university student population.
"Lack of financial aid is the number one reason why minorities don't attend college," said Sherwood Thompson, director of the Office of Minority Affairs.
He said that a legitimate reason for giving away race-based scholarships was to increase the minority population at KU.
A large minority population not only is positive for minority students, said Maurice Bryan, director of the Office of Affirmative Action, but for all students.
"By not having a more diverse campus, we're cheating every student that graduates from here," Bryan said. "An understanding of different ethnic groups is an important part of what's necessary to be educated in the current global economy."
Thompson said there were many misconceptions about race-based scholarships.
"People think there's a big pile of money that whites don't get," he said. "They think that every college gets money for race-based scholarships and that every minority student gets a scholarship."
According to the Department of Educa-
Bryan said that race-based scholarships were not the only restrictive scholarships.
tion, the federal government spends $11 billion dollars on student financial aid, and the largest receivers of this aid are white.
The U.S. General Accounting Office found that only four percent of undergraduate scholarship dollars and five percent of undergraduate scholarships were awarded on the basis of race.
"Minority scholarships are no different than athletic scholarships, scholarships awarded to veterans and scholarships limited to certain fields of study," he said.
Amanda Hostetler, Prairie Village sophomore and president of the Lambda Sigma Society, received a minority scholarship for being a woman in science, not because of her race.
"As a product of minority scholarships, I think they are helpful in allowing minorities to get their foot in the door and prove that they are qualified," she said. "At the same time, other more qualified people may be ignored."
Where to find aid
The following is a list of places to find information about race-based scholarships:
University Scholarship Center
33 Strong Hall
864-5439
Office of Student Financial Aid
50 Strong Hall
864-4700
Endowment Association
Youngberg Hall
864-4201
The University of Kansas Regents Center
12600 Quivira Rd.
Overland Park, Kan.
864-8409
Office of Minority Affairs
145 Strong
864-4351
KANBAN
2
Tuesday, February 22, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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13th and Indiana
Zeta Phi Beta Sorority will sponsor a Bone Marrow Registration Drive from 8 a.m. until 3 p.m. today at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Krista Morgan at 843-2699.
The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an informational meeting about Spanish study abroad at 4 p.m. today at 4021 Wescoe Hall. For more information, call Ellen Hart Strubert at 864-3742.
OAKS — Non-Traditional Students Organization will sponsor a Brown Bag lunch at 11:30 a.m. today at the Rock Chalk Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Gerry Vernon at 864-7317.
Center for East Asian Studies will sponsor a Brown Bag Luncheon at noon today at Alcove F in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Bertha Jackson at 864-3849.
KU Judo Club will meet at 4:30 today at 207 Robinson Center.
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.
*Inspirational Gospel Voices will meet for choir rehearsal at 6 p.m. today at 328 Murphy Hall. For more information, call Kim at 749-3819.
VIDEO BIZ
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Japanese Student Association will meet at 7 tonight at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call KeishaUlma at 864-5738.
Native American Student Association will meet at 7 tonight at 3012 Haworth Hall. For more information, call Johnnie Young at 864-4351.
KU Pro-Choice Coalition will meet at 6 p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread St. For more information, call Stephanie Gabriel at 842-6894.
"Windblown," the student organization of the Mustard Seed Christian Fellowship, will meet at 7:30 tonight at Alcove F in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Hugh Wentz at 841-2647.
KU Dr. Seuss Club will meet at 7:30 tonight at Alcove G in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Jessica Perinchief at 841-2558.
Public Relations Student Society of America will tour University Printing Services at 7 tonight. For more information, call the Public Relations office at 864-7318.
Asian American Student Union will meet at 7:30 tonight at 100 Smith Hall. For more information, call Art Chiu at 832-8332.
LesBiGayOS OK encourages anyone who is lesbian, gay, bisexual or unseason to call Headquarters at 841-2345 or KU Info at 844-3506.
KANSAN
Atlanta: 72'/57'
Chicago: 57'/30'
Houston: 69'/63'
Miami: 82'/68'
Minneapolis: 27'/12'
Phoenix: 69'/51'
Salt Lake City: 38'/24'
Seattle: 47'/39'
Weather around the country:
VIDEO MIX
WEATHER
Omaha: 35'/17'
LAWRENCE: 35'/20'
Kansas City: 41'/26'
St. Louis: 61'/34'
Wichita: 41'/26'
Tulsa: 60'/38'
High: 32° Low: 9°
Chance for snow
TODAY
High: 35'
Low: 20'
Rain, changing over to snow during the afternoon
Tomorrow Thursday
Rainy day
Snow
High: 28*
Low: 18*
Source: Eric Renner, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
Someone superglued a door lock on the sixth floor of Hashinger Hall on Thursday. Damage was estimated at $25.
ON THE RECORD
CLEOPATRA'S CLOSET -a unique boutique
A 1858 Honda Spree moped was stolen at 11:30 p.m. Friday in the 1600 block of West 15th Street, Lawrence police reported.
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
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"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.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, February 22, 1994
3
Student leaves behind friends, memories
By Susan White Kansan staff writer
Anthony Thomas may have only been at the University of Kansas for two semesters — but in that short time he made some close friends who will remember him.
Thomas died Friday from meningitis.
Dave Moradazadeh, Skokie, ill., freshman, said he met Thomas, who was a Kansas City, Kan., junior, through Thomas' roommate and had a meteorology class with him.
"We played Joe Montana Football a lot on his Sega, and we joked around a lot together," he said. "He was a real funny guy. I remember sitting in class or working on labs together and joking around with him."
Charles Wedge, Hays freshman, said he met Thomas a few days after classes started, and they always go along.
"He was liked by most people who knew
Anthony Thomas
10
him," he said. "One time we were joking around, and he told me if I threw another piece of paper at him, he would throw me in the trash can. I threw the paper and ended up in the trash can. He always joined with me after that about stuffing me in the trash can."
Thomas' sense of humor won him a second place award on Nov. 5 in the Omega Psi Phi Talent Exposé. He performed a comedy routine in the contest between University of Kansas and Lawrence High School students, said Brian Jones, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore and president of the fraternity.
"I interviewed him for the contest, and he was always telling jokes," he said. "He was pretty funny."
Moradzadeh said that Thomas had hoped to play for the KU football team in the fall.
"Ihe really loved to play football," he said.
"His dream was to play Big Eight football and eventually to play pro-football for the Chiefs. It's ironic that the stress from his true love may have led to his death."
Wedge said that besides playing football, Thomas spent a lot of his time watching the sport on television.
Moradzadeh said that Thomas also devoted a large portion of his time to his studies.
"He loved to watch football in the lobby," he said. "He had a specific seat he always sat in. Everybody knew which seat was his, and he was always there. He also would hook his Sega up to the big TV in the lobby and played his football game. He had a television in his room, but he liked to play it on the big screen."
Wedge said he would miss Thomas a lot.
"When we first heard about his death, everybody worried about getting sick," he said. "I was just in shock because I had lost a friend."
"He studied a lot," he said. "He really wanted to make something of himself. He always got things done and rarely put things off."
A fund has been set up to help Thomas' family pay for hospital and funeral expenses. Donations may be sent to the Brotherhood Bank and Trust, 756 Minnesota, Kansas City, Kan.
The funeral will be at 11 a.m. on Friday at the Pleasant Green Baptist Church, 3340 Oakland, Kansas City, Kan. There will be a wake before the funeral.
FACES
Student's alter ego pumps crowds
'Seinfeld' character popular with KU fans
stores
KAM
By Cheryl Cadue
Kansan staff writer
Jeremy Boldra, Hayfield, sophomore, dresses up as 'Kramer,' the character from the television show "Seinfalls," at men's basketball games. Boldra said that one of his Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity brothers suggested the Kramer look one night when his hair was messed up.
For Jeremy Boldra, Hays sophomore, portraying a sitcom character during men's home basketball games requires more than crazy hair and crazy clothes.
"I'm more or less a shy person. I've tried to overcome that," Boldra said. "It's strange when I'm in costume and I'm walking around games and people who I don't know come up and say 'Hi.'"
Boldra, who portrays Kramer, a character on the popular television sitcom "Seinfeld," said he dressed up as Kramer for the contest of the best impersonation of a television character at Late Night with Roy Williams last fall, which he won. KU cheerleaders told him he should dress up as Kramer for home basketball games.
"I have never gotten this crazy," Boldra said. "I'll probably do this through the rest of the season, and I might do it next year. It's been fun. It's really neat when people recognize you on campus when I'm not dressed up."
Boldra said he did not mind the publicity his Kramer impressionation had brought, but he did notlike watching himself on television.
Boldra said that even though he had enjoyed playing Kramer, he thought he could quit portraying the character because the KU basketball crowd had lost some of its enthusiasm for him.
"I thought I looked like a goofball or an idiot," Boldra said. "My friends have been real supportive. They've gone to games with me and cheered me on so I don't feel as weird or strange."
"The crowd really isn't into it that much," Boldra said. "I'd say that it's partly my fault."
"I'm not totally acting it out like I should. After seeing myself on TV, I became a little scared and a little embarrassed."
Boldra said his own enthusiasm for the Kramer portrayal had waned because KU had lost several home games.
"Until the K-State game, we had only lost to Temple and it was the only game that I hadn't dressed up for," he said. "There's no longer any superstitious factor for me."
Boldra said he still had not gotten use to the popularity his Kramer portrayal had gained.
"I wasn't that 'popular' in high school." Boldra said. "I was shy. I wasn't a big parter or crazy so it's weird when I'm up on campus and people who don't know even know me say 'lay, what's up. I feel somewhat popular, and I don't know how to respond. It's definitely not gone to my head."
Boldra said that portraying Kramer required more time than he had originally expected.
"I wanted to get involved in Rock Chalk this year, but I didn't have time for it because I've been going to games and stuff," Boldra, an education major, said. "This Kramer thing has kind of taken up this year."
John Blair, Albuquerque, N.M., sophomore, said Boldra added a new spin to basketball games.
"I think we need someone adding morale other than the yell leaders and cheerleaders at the games," he said. "Kraner is humorous and a little bumbling. He's a good character to get people pumped up at the games and to root on our Jayhawks."
Blair said Boldra should continue his Kramer portrayal during next year's basketball season
"Jeremy likes to do it, and he's good at it," he said. "He reminds me of Captain Jayhawk. Jeremy would be like a campus icon."
For Boldra, meeting a lot of friendly
people has been the best aspect of portraying Kramer.
"I really appreciate all the campus support and everyone for this because it's been nice," he said. "I've met a lot of friendly people. I couldn't have done this if they had not been friendly and supportive."
KU readies for NCAA self-study
Review of athletic program to determine accreditation
By Stephen Martino Kansan staff writer
The University of Kansas athletic department will be undergoing a new accreditation policy that, many said, will increase understanding about how intercollegiate athletics work.
The National Collegiate Athletic Association now requires all Division I schools to conduct an internal self-study that will be verified by an outside review team. Previous to the new policy, schools had conducted self studies, but there had been no outside review or verification, and the NCAA was simply notified that the school had conducted its examination.
The change in policy was a recommendation from the presidents' council to the NCAA, said John Leavens, assistant executive director for the NCAA. The presidents' council comprises all the Division I school presidents.
"This will be a peer-review process," Leavens said. "It is intended to swing the doors of intercollegiate athletics open to communities and universities."
Leavens said that the new review process would focus on four areas within a university; academic integrity, fiscal integrity, governance and commitment to rules compliance and commitment to equity. Commitment to equity will include gender and ethnic concerns and student-athlete welfare.
Richard Konzem, assistant athletics director, said that the University athletic department welcomed the accreditation process. He said that the process would expose the role of the athletic department and eliminate misinformation about it.
"This expands quite a bit from the institutional self-study," he said.
Leavens said that the University was in the first group of Division I schools to go through the new accreditation policy. He said that accreditation would occur every five years and that all Division I schools were separated into groups of about 60. There are 301 Division I schools, and Oklahoma State University is the only other Big Eight school in Kansas' accreditation group.
Universities have one year to complete the self-study aspect of the accreditation process. Kansas started in the fall of 1993, and it has until the fall of 1994 to complete the self-study.
Once a university has completed its self-study, Leavens said, a three- to five-person peer-review team would visit the school from two to four days and analyze the information the internal self-study group accumulated. He said that the peer-review group would probably contain a college president, a faculty representative and an athletics administrator.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs and head of the University's self-study committee, said the committee hoped that the report would be ready by August to present to Chancellor Gene Budig. Ambler said that he expected the outside peer-review group to come to the University by November.
Leavens said that after the complete review process, universities could receive one of three notifications from the NCAA: certified with no conditions, certified with conditions and not certified.
"I have complete confidence that we will receive full certification," said Del Shankel, professor of microbiology and the University's liaison to both the Big Eight and the NCAA. "However, I'm sure we will discover some areas where we can make some improvement."
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Tuesday, February 22, 1994
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
新
VIEWPOINT
Homosexual community should reject pedophilia
Recent attempts by homosexual organizations to distance themselves from the North American Man-Boy Love Association are positive steps. NAMBLA advocates loving relationships between men and boys, relationships the group says have existed since ancient Greece.
In January, the Stonewall 25, a New York group, said no to NAMBLA's desire to march with the group in its international march on the United Nations on June 26. The Stonewall 25's march commemorates the 1969 uprising at the Stonewall Inn, a New York gay bar.
In addition, the International Lesbian and Gay Association is considering breaking off its relationship with NAMBLA. The ILGA will vote on NAMBLA's status in July.
The attempts are by no means universal, but they are a start. Though the annual gay pride march in Los Angeles excludes NAMBLA, marches in San Francisco and New York have allowed NAMBLA to participate.
What NAMBLA really represents is pedophilia, and a world of difference exists between homosexuality and pedophilia. The former involves two adult men who understand their sexuality. The latter involves adult men who attempt to impose their sexuality on individuals who are too young to know what sexuality means.
Psychological research has found, in fact, that for the most part pedophiles have no adult sexual orientation and that those who do are largely heterosexual.
Too many people view homosexuality with disgust and therefore equate homosexuality with everything they find disgusting. By distancing themselves from pedophiles, gay groups are emphasizing that those equations are false.
NATHAN OLSON FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Nuclear threat still alive in North Korean gesture
Though a noble gesture on the part of the North Koreans, limiting international inspectors to only seven of nine nuclear program sites is inadequate. North Korea should allow international inspectors to inspect all of the sites.
Some people are praising North Korea for finally submitting to the wishes of the international community. After months of talks with North Korea, some including members of the Clinton administration say this is a positive outcome. "This appears to be a step in the right direction," said Dee Dee Myers, White House press secretary.
But it's hardly a step in any direction. North Korea is acting like a student who invites the resident assistant into the student's room to check for alcohol, saying to the RA, "You can check anywhere — except the refrigerator."
After the inspectors look over the sites and presumably find nothing, can the international community be assured that North Korea is not building nuclear weapons? The answer is a disappointing no.
Though it sounds good that North Korea is allowing inspections, not allowing all sites to be inspected mitigates the show of good faith. Who is to say that the North Koreans aren't hiding something in the sites at which they aren't allowing inspections?
By allowing international inspectors access to all of the sites, the North Koreans can put the international community at ease. It will be a genuine step in the right direction and will give the international community real hope for better relations with North Korea.
DAVID ZIMMERMAN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
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Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number, as well as affiliated with the University of California at Berkeley.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kawaiens reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kawaiens newsroom, 111 Stuaffer-Flint Hall.
'Schindler's List':history lesson taught effectively by Spielberg
COLUMNIST
BRIAN
DIRCK
Steven Spielberg's epic about the Holocaust, "Schindler's List," has finally made it to Lawrence. Everything you have heard about this movie is true. Go see it. See it not only because it has received a record twelve Oscar nominations, nor only because of its deep moral content. See "Schindler's List" because it is good history.
To understand the heights to which Spielberg has risen, keep in mind the depths to which Hollywood has sometimes fallen. Compare "Schindler's List" with the premier symbol of bad movie history, Oliver Stone's "JFK."
"JFK" was a well-crafted thing, with all the verve and flash of a rock video. But Stone's undeniable talent as a filmmaker was put to the service of legitimizing a crackpot conspiracy theory, which held that President Kennedy had been killed by the CIA and the defense industry because he had wanted to pull out of Vietnam. For Stone, history was made completely clear and understandable by a simple, tragic fair tale: Kennedy was
history as therapy, a part of the twelve-step recovery program for Stone and the rest of his damaged generation.
the virtuous white knight of Camelot who was killed by the bad guys, and America has been falling apart ever since.
Unfortunately for Stone, there was no conspiracy to kill Kennedy. But truth wasn't really the issue in "JFK." Rather, Stone turned the Kennedy assassination into a titanic myth of good-and-evil because this invested history with psychological meaning for him and many others who came of age during the 1960s. It felt better to think that Kennedy had been a heroic casualty in the fight for justice rather than the unlucky victim of one tortured lunatic with a gun. "JFK" was
"Schindler's List" is a wonderful contrast to "JFK." An entirely different spirit animated Spielberg. Unlike Stone, he was not interested in simplifying the past with dubious theories, and he wasn't trying to heal inner wounds.
Much has been made of the fact that "Schindler's List" was not filmed in color. In Spielberg's hands, black-and-white film becomes a subtle way of communicating the unknowability of the Holocaust and history in general. The film often seems blanketed in a blurred haze, with backdrops fading away into grainy monochromes. Unlike "JFK", with its silksly crafted and false clarity, "Schindler's List" speaks to the mystery of the past, its mute unknowability that defies easy explanation. History offers hard lessons, Spielberg is saying, but not the false security of certitude.
Spielberg is no trying to make anyone feel better about themselves in
"Schindler's List." The film makes no simplistic moral judgments. Oscar Schindler is a hero in that he saves some people from the gas chambers of Auschwitz, but his story is shot through with ambivalence and confusion. One thinks of a particularly poignant scene in which Schindler is shown relaxing in a plush apartment recently confiscated from a Jewish couple. While he admires his new home, the former owners are spat upon and reviled in the streets below. "Schindler's List" is not a cartoonish morality play like "JKF". Rather, it is the story of one flawed man's difficult journey in a landscape of obscenity, atrocity and evil.
"Schindler's List" is a an expression of respect for the complexities of history, offering a welcome contrast to Oliver Stone and others who would make the past a vehicle for their own dibious purposes. It is above all a sign of hope that Hollywood can, on occasion, get it right.
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Appearance spurs thoughtless questions
Sometimes ifI'm bored (or ifI'm just feeling malicious), I try to embellish
Hi. I'm a *Homo sapien* from Earth, the Blue Planet third from the Sun. I hope this sufficiently answers the two questions with which I have been bombarded all too often: What are you, and where are you from?
Now I know that Kansas is not especially known for its cultural diversity. I also realize that I don't look as native as the swaying prairie grass. People are usually curious about the "hearty chunks" in the melting pot. I appreciate genuine interest about my background, but I usually choose to answer tactless, crass questions with something to the effect of, "I am a mutant android relation to Data of 'Star Trek: The Next Generation.' Caution, human, I breathe fire."
Upon meeting me, most people see the color of my skin and make the brilliantly tacful statement, "You don't look like you're from around here." This is followed by the ambiguous, "Where are you from?" or the infamous, "What are you?" Both questions are accompanied by the Zoo Look. People look at me and wait expectantly for me to break into a tribal dance or to throw myself on a blazing funeral pyre. Sorry, folks, but I only do that for private audiences.
What I really get a kick out of is people who think that they're being culturally sensitive and are quite proud of themselves for being so. These are the people who eye me, paste on the Pat Sajak smile and enunciate, "WHERE... ARE... YOU... FROM?" (long pause, bigger smile) "DO... YOU... SPEAK... ENGLISH" A self-satisfied emulsifier as we wait for me to spew forth foreign dialects while I perform a ritualistic dance on a bed of hot coals. I simply smile back with a confused look on my face until they scream the questions at me (enthusiastically). Then I tell them the dirty, unglamorous truth. "I'm from Sweden. I just tan easily."
COLUMNIST
ALISHA
ARORA
my fairly innocuous past. Once I convinced someone that I was a Moroccan princess in the Witness Protection Program, and could he please keep it quiet or my father would be assassinated.
I am proud of my heritage. My parents are natives of India, but I was born and raised in the United States. I
Some people get violent when they find out that I was not born overseas. Once a guy asked me if I spoke Turkey because I looked like I was from there. Given his mental capacity, I decided to be straightforward and said that no, I didn't speak "Turkey" and that I was from Los Angeles. He thought that I was making fun of him because I obviously didn't look like I was from "around here." He apparently sprang forth from the very soil itself, judging from his filthy vocabulary.
I have been mistaken for many ethnicities and nationalities: Native American, Hispanic, Puerto Rican, Italian, Iranian, Pakistani, French and Persian, to name a few. The man who thought that I was Persian was crest-fallen to find out that the country no longer exists.
enjoy sharing what I know about my Indian culture with people who are genuinely interested. I do not like, however, being dehumanized and scrutinized by people who just want to know who the "foreigner" is.
The best question I have ever been asked came from a lady who was shopping in the clothing store where I worked. She said, "You have such striking coloring. May I ask what your ethnic origin is?" I didn't have to puzzle out if she wanted to know where I was born, where my ancestors were born, where I moved from most recently or who I was in a former life. I found out that she was half French and half Lebanese and that she had lived in Florida for many years with her husband, a native Texan. We had a lovely conversation about multiculturalism, and we both left feeling that we'd learned something.
Now lest you get me wrong, I'm not on some sort of PC trip. I'm just advocating common courtesy and civilized manners. And for the record, I only breathe fire for special occasions.
Allisha Aorra is an Overland Park freshman in biology and English.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Gun-control proponents ignore idea of 'rights'
In your most recent article concerning "Victim Disarmament" legislation and in Ann Blackhurst's letter to the editor, some of the most basic issues have again been ignored.
1. The right to keep and bear arms is one of the civil rights guaranteed under the Constitution. The Second Amendment is no different from the right to free speech or any of the other amendments to the Constitution that form the Bill of Rights. In the American Heritage Dictionary
of the English Language, "bill of rights" is defined as "a formal summary of those rights and liberties considered essential to a people or group of people." Considering the definition, it is no surprise that the "Victim Disarmament" advocates try to separate the Second Amendment from the rest of the bill of rights. In separating it they try to remove the protections afforded other rights to the end of denying people one of their most basic civil rights: the right of self-protection.
2. Another principle that the "Victim Disarmament" proponents violate is that rights are neither granted nor taken away at anyone's whim.
Jeffrey W. Deane Lawrence graduate student
3. Gun control is no different from free speech control (i.e. censorship) and has no place in our free society. Make no mistake that freedom is easy. In the words of French philosopher Blaise Pascal (1623-1662), "Evil is easy and has infinite forms."
Rights are guaranteed, regardless of how much easier it would be on the government without them and regardless of which right it is. On the other hand, privileges (i.e. driving) can be taken away by the government for any reason.
Who has right to decide
what is speech or trash?
Brian Dirck's column on Thursday stated that universities were not "a landfill for unsubstantiated verbal garbage." He proposes banning speech when it "ceases to be an expression of an idea and becomes mere refuse."
Who gets to decide when these conditions have occurred? Mr. Direc? Or majority vote?
Scott Hattrup
Overland Park law student
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, February 22, 1994
5
Multicultural Center to be jointly funded
Student activity fee University split cost
By Heather Moore Kansan staff writer
The Student Senate and the University of Kansas have become partners to provide students with a Multicultural Center.
Senate approved funding for the center on Wednesday night. The University and the Senate will give a combined total of $40,000 for the programming and operating costs of the center. Operating costs include the salary for a graduate student who would run the center. These funds would also include computer costs, a resource library and the renovation of the Supportive Educational Services building, where the center would be located.
The $20,000 that Senate provides
would be taken from the $28 student activity fee, which is what Senate uses to fund other organizations. This would be a new use for the activity fee and would be called the restricted revenue code apportionment fee. The center will start receiving funding this fall.
Tim Dawson, Senate vice president,
said that the new apportionment fee
would be different from existing fees,
but students would not pay more.
"It's permanent, annual and indefinite like Watkins or Hilltop, but we're not raising student fees," he said. "I didn't want a restricted fee or an activity fee increase because student fees will increase anyway. We can utilize what we have."
When Senate draws from the student activity fee, possible sources for the money could be the unused funds of organizations or money that KU's lobbying group no longer uses, Dawson said.
Senate wrote a resolution calling for
the creation of the center during Fall 1991. David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, then asked Senate to match the funds that KU was raising.
Senate set certain restrictions on what groups could use the new fee. For a group to receive money from the restricted revenue code apportionment, the group must receive equal or greater funding by KU. A group also must have occupied space in a University building for one year and plan to occupy it indefinitely. Finally, a Senate board must monitor the group's activities, programs, financial status and facilities.
Dawson said that these restrictions would protect the Senate's interests and keep other groups from receiving protected funding.
"There isn't any other group that meets the criteria," Dawson said. "If a group meets the criteria, they might deserve that funding. I don't want to set a precedent. It should be reserved
for things like the center, which is a University institution."
Dawson said the center would help all students.
Sherwood Thompson, director of minority affairs, said the center would help students now and in the future.
"The center will augment a student's education so they will be more marketable," he said. "We are taking a bold step. We are one of the first centers in the country."
Thompson said that the center would have a variety of programs that a committee would decide upon.
Michelle Rolfe, Black PanHellenic senator, said the center would offer a good foundation for all students' learning.
"It will enhance the education of someone who is not of an ethnic background," she said. "Students can get life experience in working with people of diverse groups."
Slattery discusses future plans if elected governor
By Stephen Martino Kansan staff writer
Jim Slattery said he knew last summer that his current term in Congress would be his last.
"I didn't want to go to Washington with the notion of spending the rest of my life there, like some people," he said.
Slattery found another possible job, however, when Gov. Joan Finney announced in September that she would not seek reelection.
"I want our state to be an inspiration tqthe rest of the nation," he said. "That is why I'm running for governor."
$lattery, the U.S. representative
from Kansas' second district and candidate for the Democratic nomination for governor, spoke before a sparsely filled Alderson Auditorium last night.
N.
After a brief
Jim Slattery
statement, Slattery took questions from the audience, addressing issues from abortion to higher education.
economic development and crime.
Slattery said that as telecommunications improved, companies would want to move to areas that provide high quality public education, health care and public safety.
The audience asked about topical social issues at the candidate, who said he was not to evade questions.
Slattery said that he had supported Kansas law with regard to abortion and had not voted for constitutional amendments overturning Roe vs. Wade. He also said that he did not support federal funding for abortion unless a mother's life was at risk, or if it was a case of rape or incest.
"That is probably not a position you can put on a bumper sticker, but it's precise." he said.
As governor, Slattery said he would support a narrow death penalty but only if it was part of a larger crime package.
"I'm going to spend the next four or eight years as governor, if the people of Kansas give me that honor, debating death," he said. "I want to discuss how to make life better."
Lisa Golzar, Tulsa, Okla., senior,
said Slaytter had won her vote.
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NATO questions Sarajevo ultimatum
By Terence Hunt The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — It took 22 months and, finally, the slaughter of 68 people before NATO mustered the will to act decisively to end the siege of Sarajevo. The question now is whether President Clinton and Western allies will extend their bombing ultimatum to other cities in war-torn Bosnia.
ANALYSIS
The apparent answer is, not immediately— if ever.
Even while halling the success of threatened air strikes in stopping the shelling of Sarajevo, Defense Secretary William Perry spoke cautiously about extending NATO's commitment beyond Sarajevo.
certain that this one is really secure." Perry told a Pentagon news conference yesterday.
"Our first and most important objective is to secure the gain we've already made and we will not seriously consider taking more options until we are
Clinton would go no further than to say that U.S. officials would talk with European leaders this week about extending NATO's ultimatum to other parts of Bosnia.
He said the United States must be sure its allies are prepared to back up any further ultimatums, guaranteeing that "NATO not undertake a mission it is not fully capable of performing."
For all the hesitation, there's a simple allure to extending the Sarajevo model: It worked when nothing else had.
Muhamed Sacirbey, Bosnia's ambassador to the United Nations, pleaded with the West to protect other cities, such as Bihac, reported
to be under Serb attack. He said weapons removed under threat from Sarajevo were being rushed to other battlefronts.
"It seems to us that the focus on Sarajevo has somehow encouraged the Serbian forces to attack in Bihac," Sacirbey said on NBC's "Today" show.
"But there is also, for instance, Zepa, Srebenica, Gorazde, Tuzla, not to mention Mostar and several other Bosnian cities that are suffering quite badly right now." he said.
Bosnian Vice President Ejup Ganic said life would have been normal in Sarajevo if NATO had issued its ultimatum two years ago.
In a question that will haunt history, Ganic sadly wondered "why they needed 10,000 graves in Sarajevo in order to write one page of NATO resolutions."
Conference addresses African-American issues
About 50 members of the Black Student Union traveled to Columbia, Mo., this weekend for the Big Eight Conference for African-American students.
Students who attended the conference, which lasted all day Friday and Saturday, participated in workshops where they discussed issues such as African-American women in higher education, African-American religion and African-American economic development.
Participants also listened to speakers and participated in a step show and gospel extravaganza.
Torrez Dawson, Wichita junior, was elected vice-chair for next year's conference. He said that this was the 17th year the conference had taken place, making it the oldest conference of its kind.
Each year schools in the Big Eight conference rotate sponsorship of the event. KU sponsored it last year, and the University of Oklahoma will sponsor it next year.
Enrique Torres, assistant director of the office of minority affairs, also attended the event.
"Not only did they have strong keynote speakers, but they had strong workshops," he said. "I really enjoyed seeing that many African-American students in one setting."
Student treated for injury
A KU student was treated for cuts on his hand after he struck a glass window in the central stairwell on the landing between the third and fourth floors of Oliver Hall, KU police reported.
The student told police he had broken the window because he had lost his temper over something, but did not elaborate.
His injuries included cutting an artery which resulted in profuse bleeding and hemorrhaging. He was treated by an employee of Douglas County Ambulance Service, but he was not taken to a hospital.
CAMPUS in brief
Flowersketchleadsto arrest
A female student from Creighton University in Omaha, Neb., was arrested Saturday for drawing flowers on a fourth floor hallway wall in Ellsworth Hall, KU police reported.
Police said the hall director saw the drawing and the subject with a pen and called the KU police. The suspect was visiting a friend who lives in Ellsworth.
The suspect was charged with criminal damage to property. She was released from the Douglas County jail on a $100 bond.
Students caught with food
Two KU students who live in McCollum Hall were accused of stealing food from the kitchen of Amini Scholarship Hall on Saturday, KU police reported.
The students were visiting a friend who lives in Amini and eating leftovers in the kitchen when they attempted to take some frozen burritos from the freezer. They were discovered by the proctor, who escorted them outside.
The students walked across the street and called for a ride from Saferide. They were picked up and the car had begun to leave when an Amini resident stopped the car. He told the driver that the two passengers were in possession of a box of cake mix and several packets of dry cocoa from the hall.
The proctor and the scholarship hall director called Kami Thomas, assistant director of the department of student housing. She said that because of the small dollar amount involved a criminal report was not necessary and housing would handle the matter.
Compiled by Kansan staff writers
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1
Get Organized! Some students afflicted with planning paranoia
Get Organized!
Some students afflicted with planning paranola
Wash Underwear
Buy Biscuits for Fluffy
Wash Underwear
By Cathleen Siechta Kansan staff writer
Buy Biscuits for Fluffy
They're small. They're sticky. They cover Shannon Ferber's desk. And just when she thinks that she's seen the last one, they come back.
They're "Post-it" notes.
"Every Sunday night, after I've taken the last one down, I put up a whole new week's worth of 'Post-it' notes," said Ferber, Overland Park junior. "That way I know what to do every day. I remember to do Tuesday's homework on Monday, Wednesday's homework on Tuesday, and so on. Over the week, I put up even more notes with lists of things to do and errands. That way I don't forget anything."
Ferber is not alone in her quest for organization and efficiency. Keeping appointments, getting homework done and remembering test dates are just a few of the things that can drive some students to planning paranoia.
"I'm obsessed," said Angela Kokoruda, Leawood junior. "I look at my day planer every morning when I get up, in every class, before I go to bed, and I'll even get out of bed to write something in it if I think of something I need to do."
Kokoruda said that she wrote in her planner daily and that she usually completely filled the two pages allotted for each day.
"I write homework assignments and appointments in it," she said. "But sometimes I'll even write stupid things in it like 'exercise,' or 'drink eight glasses of water.' Really, those are things I should know to do anyway."
Dan Hubbard said he could empathize.
"If anyone opened up my planner and read it, they'd probably think I was an idiot." Hubbard, Chesterfield.
Mo., senior said. "Sometimes, if I'm going home for the weekend or something, I'll write stuff like 'Get packed,' which hopefully, I would know to do without writing it down. Hopefully."
Time management may seem an admirable virtue, but could date books and infinite lists of "things to do" encourage an unhealthy compulsion in some students?
"Compulsion is usually defined as when something becomes so important to you that if you don't engage in it, it tends to make you feel uncomfortable and panicky," said Raymond Higgins, professor of psychology. "These students are more of a case where they make things like lists as a way of trying to maintain control in their lives. It may seem silly to write down things that you should just naturally know to do, but it gives you a sense of security."
Hubbard said that his three-ring DayRunner brand daily planner with personal directory, ruler, metric conversion table and an instruction booklet on how to use the planner, not only gave him a sense of security, but also an identity.
Water Chla Pet
I think you can tell a lot about a man by his planner," Hubbard said. "When I was a
1.
"I think you can tell a lot about a man by his planner." Hubbard said. "When I was a
freshman I wrote everything on my hand. When I was a sophomore I had
when I was a sophomore, I had a little throwaway spiral planner. I realized that it just didn't fit my planning needs. So, my junior year I got the DayRunner. Since then, I've bought the most extensive refills you can buy for it.
But with planners ranging in price from $4.95 for the Jayhawk date books sold in the Mt. Oread Bookshop to Kokoruda's $130 tapestry-covered Franklin day planer with $30 yearly refills, writing reminders on hands may be the most economical organization option for some students.
it really does keep me from screwing up. Before I got it, I was late for appointments and classes and forgetting things like homework and tests. That was when my method for remembering things was writing them on my hand."
"When you write things on your hands, it's just right there," said John Edwards, Wichita senior. "You can't miss it, unless you take a shower and lose it all, or your hands get sweaty and blur the message."
Edwards said that another disadvantage of keeping messages on his hand was lack of privacy. On the Friday before Valentine's Day, Edwards's girlfriend noticed the message 'Get flowers' scribbled on his hand and ruined his surprise.
"I guess that's one drawback I didn't think of," he said.
Photo illustration by Heather Lofflin/KANSAN
Study Math
Study Math
art
Museums and galleries offer campus culture
Kansan staff writer
By Kevin Hoffmann
The KU campus is filled with opportunities to satisfy the appetites of those with a taste for art and museums.
The University is home to many museums and art galleries that house treasures from ancient Greek coins, to a 17th century European painting, to a 20th century sculpture. Stephen Smith, Prairie Village Kan., graduate student of art history, said that he hoped every student would take the time to see the University's artistic and historical collections.
"Art is a part of the campus too, just like the basketball games," he said. "It would be a shame if people overlooked what was available."
Here is a brief description of the various museums and galleries on the KU campus.
THE NATURAL HISTORY MUSEUM, A BEGINNING
Before classes began in the fall of 1866, Francis Snow, one of the University's first professors, started a collection of specimens from nature with the hope of forming
From its founding, the University has emphasized the display of artifacts.
Dyche traveled the world acquiring various mammals, bringing his collection back to Kansas. During the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago, worldwide attention centered on Dyche's 112 mounted North American large mammals. The display is now part of the large panorama display that visitors first see when they enter the museum.
a Natural History museum. By 1877, Snow's collection had grown to over 12.000 specimens.
In the late 1800s, the efforts of L.L. Dyche continued the growth of the University's collections. Dyche, who was hired as an assistant in the Natural History Department, was a taxidermist with a flare for adventure.
The museum, now spans four floors of Dyche Hall with more than 150 exhibits. The museum schedules four traveling exhibitions each year and constantly upgrades its permanent exhibits.
The museum is internationally recognized as a center of research and teaching for natural history, and more than 35,000 adults and children participate in museum education programs.
Kathryn Morton, Coordinator of Marketing and Public Relations said she hoped everyone who entered the Natural History
Museum would feel welcome.
Hours for the Natural History Museum are Monday through Saturday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.; and Sunday 1to 5 p.m. Admission is free.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
"You don't have to feel like your a naturalist to step inside our doors," she said.
THE HELEN FORESMAN SPENCER MUSEUM OF ART
The Spencer Museum of Art is one of the bigger university museums in the U.S. The museum houses twelve different galleries on its third and fourth floors that display more than 20,000 different works of art. Eight of the galleries are used for permanent displays, and four are used for traveling exhibitions and works on loan from other institutions.
The museum's walls are lined with original paintings dating as far back as medieval times. Visitors also will find numerous sculptures, textiles, ceramics and other decorative arts by such famous artists as Monet and Rosetti.
Asian, European and American artworks are most common throughout the museum, which is arranged in chronological order.
relations for the Spencer museum said it allowed students to get a real-life look at the artists they study.
Sally Hayden, managing editor of public
"It's a place students can come to relate to many of the things they're studying," she said. "You can find works from any of the different time periods in history."
Hayden said visiting the museum could also be a relaxing pass-time for students.
"It's a retreat from all the work and pressures of a student's classes," she said.
Gallery hours at the Spencer Museum of Art are; Tuesday through Saturday; 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., with the gallery staying open until 9 p.m. on Thursday; and Sundays, noon to 6 p.m. The museum is closed on Mondays. Admission is Free.
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS ART AND DESIGN GALLERY.
The art and design gallery is located on the third floor of the Art and Design building. This large, single-room gallery is dedicated to showing the work of KU students and faculty. Throughout the year, paintings, drawings, prints and sculptures are displayed. Exhibits change every three to four weeks.
See MUSEUMS, Page 8.
KULife
People and places at the University of Kansas.
WEIRD
In January, a 33-pound, 2-foot-long Border collier named Apple swallowed an entire 12-inch carving knife in the course of snacking on devil's food cake at the home of her owner, Eric Fuchs of New York City. Two days after doctors removed the knife surgically, Apple was back at home, "ready to play" according to Fuchs.
LEAD STORY
UH-OH
According to trial testimony in January in Santa Ana, Calif., George Edgar Lizarralde, 31, was legally blind in 185 when the Department of Motor Vehicles issued him a driver's license. He had failed the test three times, and DMV granted the license on the fourth try even though he again failed the vision test. In the January trial, DMV's negligence was found to be the cause of injuries to Deborah Ann Mohr, whom Lizarralde plowed into in a crosswalk in 1990.
-Police in Santa Rosa, Calif., went door-to-door in January to warn residents that a 6-foot-long python had escaped from a bath tub down a drain and that they should keep their bathroom doors closed and their toilet lids down.
-A pro-nuclear power video, sponsored by a private company seeking to develop nuclear reactors in Japan, features the cartoon character "Mr. Pluto," who downplays the risks of plutonium to the primarily school-age audiences. Says Mr. Pluto, "If everyone treats me with a peaceful and warm heart, I'll never be scary or dangerous." A narrator says that if a person drank plutonium, most of it would pass through his body without harm.
- Firefighters in Canton, Ohio, rushed to the home of Lisa M. Ash, 24, in November to extinguish a fire. They pulled out of her oven a smoldering voodoo doll, made from cloth and twigs, that she said she was using to cast a spell against someone, based on advice she said she received from a telephone psychic line.
-In January, an administrative law judge ruled against the claim of the California Department of Motor Vehicles that the vanity license plates of Bruce Deam, a federal geology researcher, were offensive. Deam, who is female, is a serious cat lover and has had the plates "A PUSSY" since 1973.
-In October, Blue Shield of Idaho and Blue Cross
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Tuesday, February 22, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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The Art and Design Gallery is open Monday through Thursday, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.; Friday from 8:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.; and Sunday from 1 to 4:30 p.m. The gallery is closed Saturdays. Admission is free.
Because most of the work comes from KU alumni, faculty, and students, the art and design gallery displays mostly contemporary art.
THE WILCOX CLASSICAL MUSEUM
Betty Banks, curator of the museum and associate professor of the classics, said students should relish the chance to see a truly ancient object.
This museum opened in 1888 and is located on the first floor of Lippincott Hall. Visitors will find plaster casts of Greek and Roman sculpture and other antiquities including vases and coins. These works provide a three-dimensional, realistic scale of some of the most famous works in classical art.
Continued from Page 7.
Count on Commerce
Commerce Bank
"It's one thing to see an old coin in a book," she said. "It another to see it
MUSEUMS: Enjoy art on campus
(Formerly The Bank of Kansas)
World Trade Center
Hours for the Wilcox Classical Museum are Monday through Friday, 8:15 a.m. to noon, and Sunday 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. The museum is closed on weekends. Admission is free.
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS ANTHROPOLOGY MUSEUM
with your own eyes."
Located in Spooner Hall across from the Kansas Union, this museum houses a collection of hundreds of thousands of archeological and ethnographic objects from around the world. Exhibits focus on understanding different cultures. Every fall, the museum displays a major exhibition of American Indian art.
the artwork of KU students and faculty as well as other regional and national artists.
Hours for the Museum of Anthropology are Monday through Saturday, 9 a.m., to 5 p.m.; and Sunday 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Admission is free.
Shows at the gallery usually run from one to three weeks in length.
THE KANSAS UNION GALLERY
Susan Hoffman, advisor and member of the fine arts Committee for the SUA said that the Union Gallery was unique because it was student-run.
"The students plan everything that goes in there," Hoffman said.
Hoffman said the student union gallery also was educational for the people who worked there.
This gallery, located on the fourth floor of the Kansas Union, showcases
"It's excellent experience for anyone who is interested in doing work for an art gallery," she said.
Hoffman said she thought all students should spend time viewing the arts.
EDUAL HOUSING LENDER
"Just opening your mind and seeing what the artist was trying to express is important," she said.
The Kansas Union Gallery hours are Monday through Friday; 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Saturday 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.; and Sunday noon to 4 p.m. Admission is Free.
9145D
WEIRD: Stolen teddy is soldiers' last straw
Continued from Page 7.
of Idaho demanded the return of payments they mistakenly made to now-suspended psychologist Terry Clapp for treatments of several people with multiple personality disorders. Based on testimony at Clapp's disciplinary hearing, his preferred treatment of that disorder was exorcism, which the insurers said they do not cover.
--Beijing's official Heilongjiang Legal News publication reported in January that the wife of Zhang, lingui, following the advice of a fortune-teller on how to improve marital relations, cut off his penis with a pair of scissors. The fortune-teller had concluded that the problem in the relationship was Zhang's faulty organ and
that the wife's only hope was to remove it so that a new one would grow.
COMPELLING EXPLANATIONS
-In January, several parents who had been arrested at a cockfighting raid in Dayton, Tenn., filed a $55 million lawsuit against the sheriff's department, claiming that the raid traumatized their children, who were in attendance. Before the deputies arrived, the children were watching 400 people cheering two fights in adjacent rings in which 15 roosters had already been killed.
ULTRA-WEIRDOS
In January, a trial began near Riverside, Calif., for former Air Force commander James Pou, 34, accused of escaping from military prison. At the time of escape, Pou, a highly trained and decorated rescue fighter, was serving time for desertion. At trial, he testified that he had been having suicidal thoughts and uncontrollable rages about an ongoing feud with a sergeant at a previous Air Force duty station. He said that the last straw in his decision to try to escape came when prison officials removed a white teddy bear from his cell.
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SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, February 22, 1994
9
Men's tennis hopes to cause a racket
Jayhawks to test winning streak at tournament
By Matt Siegel
Kansan sportswriter
As a player in 1985, Michael Center, then a junior, helped the Kansas men's tennis team to a 9-0 start. Now, as the Kansas coach, Center has the No. 33 Kansas men's tennis team off to a perfect 10-0 start.
"I know the guys have mentioned the streak," Center said. "But I kind of downplay it. If we want to keep the streak alive, we still have our work cut out for us. We want to get the national respect we think we deserve."
Kansas will have a chance to gain some national respect tomorrow in Louisville, Ky., at the United States Tennis Association/Intercollegiate Tennis Association Intercollegiate Indoor Team Championship. The 20-team field includes perennial powers such as Stanford and Texas. Center said the field was comparable to the top 20 teams in the nation playing each other.
Kansas faces the host team, No. 15 Kentucky, in the first round of the tournament. If the Jayhawks defeat the Wildcats, Kansas would face defending national champion
Southern California, who received an automatic bye into the second round.
"We have to beat Kentucky first," sophomore J. P., Vissepoa said. "If we play USC, I don't think there is any reason why we can't compete with them. They might have a little bit more experience, but I don't think there is any legitimate reason why we can't beat them."
The Jayhawks said they felt confident after defeating West Virginia 4-3 Saturday. Although Kansas' No.1 singles player, sophomore Reid Slattery lost, the team won at the three, five and six singles spots. Along with the singles victories, Kansas won two of its three double matches.
Visssep and freshmen Tim Radogna, playing in the No. 2 doubles spot, are 7-0 in doubles during the spring season. Visssep said the reason for their success was due to an unlikely source.
"I tmr wears a navy blue bandanna," "Vissepo said. "I thought it would be good to wear a bandanna so we would match. But every time I would wear the bandanna we would fall behind. So I switched to wearing a red Kansas hat and we have won. I told Tim we have to stick with the bandanna and the hat combination. It's working."
Superstitions aside, Center said the reason for the Jayhawks' success had been their resiliency and ultimately finding ways to win. Center also said that another key was that everybody had contributed to the Jayhawks' winning streak. But even Center didn't expect the early success his team has had.
"My goal for this team is to peak at the end of
the year," he said. "It's still early, so I'm somewhat surprised but definitely not shocked. I felt like we were strong up and down our line-up. I didn't feel like we had any weak spots on our team but to be undefended at this point , yeah, I'm a little surprised."
Center said the only concerns he had were making sure the team stayed healthy and becoming mentally tougher. As for which team was better, the team Center played on nine years ago, or the team he's coaching now, Center picked this year's Jayhawks.
Big Eight basketball sees change of tide
"This team is deeper," he said. "When I played we had the best player that we've ever had here in Mike Wolf. He was a dominant No. 1 player and we just kind of filled in after him. But this team is more talented and has more capabilities."
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
What a difference a year makes.
Last season at this time, Kansas was 8-2 in the Big Eight Conference and on its way to a third consecutive conference title. Missouri was 4-6 and would end the season in seventh place.
The tide has turned in the conference somewhat this season with No. 10 Kansas at 6-4 and third, while No. 6 Missouri sits with the best conference record at 11-0.
With its 79-68 victory against Kansas on Sunday, Missouri swept the Jayhawks 2-0 this season for the first time since 1990 and clinched at least a tie for the conference title.
Although nothing has changed much on the Tigers' squad, Kansas coach Roy Williams said they were a lot better team than last year. Missouri lost only one starter from last season in forward Warren Jeffen.
"I've been one of Missouri's biggest fans since the beginning of the season," Williams said. "It's true that they are not much different from last year. Seventh place last year is very misleading. The ball is bouncing their way this year."
Missouri coach Norm Stewart said last season showed the Tigers what needed to be done to win a conference title. Missouri won the big Eight Tournament, but lost in the first
round of the NCAA Tournament last year.
Nebraska coach Danny Nee, who will face Kansas tomorrow, said the difference has been Missouri's ability to win the close games this season.
Missouri continues its chances of being the first team to go undefeated in the conference since Kansas was 14-0 in 1971.
"In my eight years in the league, I've never seen a team dominate like Missouri has done," Nee said. "They've won at places that they're not supposed to win at in the Big Eight."
Throughout the season, senior guard Melvin Booker has been a consistency for Missouri. Booker was named the Big Eight Player of the Week for the second consecutive time after scoring 32 points against the Jawhaws on Wednesday.
Despite Booker's success this season, Oklahoma coach Billy Tubbs still would not concede the award to him. Oklahoma senior forward Jeff Webster leads the conference with a 24.7 points a game average, and Tubbs said he still was partial to Webster.
"Booker is an outstanding player, but it's not my call," Tubbs said. "I think Jeff Webster is the best player in the Big Eight. Booker deserves all the credit he gets, but I could have told you at the beginning of the season that it wasn't going to be an Oklahoma player."
AP Men's Top 25
The Jawahires, after Sunday's home loss to Missouri, are on the rope of getting knocked out of the Top 10.
| | Record | Pts. | Pts. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 1. Arkansas (60) | 20-2 | 1,630 | 1 |
| 2. Michigan (58) | 19-4 | 1,500 | 7 |
| 3. North Carolina (1) | 19-4 | 1,465 | 2 |
| 4. Connecticut (1) | 21-5 | 1,365 | 7 |
| 5. Missouri | 22-3 | 1,341 | 3 |
| 6. Kentucky | 20-3 | 1,321 | 1 |
| 7. Kentucky | 20-5 | 1,104 | 11 |
| 8. Temple | 19-4 | 1,082 | 13 |
| 9. Louisiana | 21-4 | 1,043 | 16 |
| 10. Kansas | 21-8 | 982 | 4 |
| 11. Massachusetts | 21-5 | 938 | 10 |
| 12. Indiana | 16-5 | 935 | 16 |
| 13. Louisville | 20-4 | 930 | 5 |
| 14. Purdue | 21-4 | 916 | 9 |
| 15. UCLA | 18-3 | 817 | 6 |
| 16. California | 21-4 | 816 | 19 |
| 17. California | 18-5 | 598 | 19 |
| 18. Syracuse | 17-5 | 582 | 14 |
| 19. Saint Louis | 20-3 | 438 | 18 |
| 20. Minnesota | 18-8 | 326 | 20 |
| 21. Boston College | 18-7 | 194 | — |
| 22. Marquette | 18-7 | 189 | 22 |
| 23. Oklahoma St. | 18-7 | 122 | — |
| 24. New Mexico St. | 18-7 | 98 | — |
Other receiving votes: Cincinnati 96, Aia-Blair ham 84, Maryland 79, Penn 42, Texas 35, Georgia 70, Wake Forest 12, Wisconsin 20, New Orleans 13, Xavier 10, Illinois 10, Murray 10, Ohio 10, Ohio
Source: The Associated Press
AP Women's Top 25 Kansas, after winning one and losing one this weekend, doubled two spots to No. 12.
| Team | Record | Pts. | Pts. | Pts. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 1. Penn St (5) | 25.1 | 1,820 | 1 | 2 |
| 3. Colorado | 20.1 | 1,561 | 1 | 2 |
| 4. Connecticut | 21.3 | 1,482 | 3 | 2 |
| 5. North Carolina | 22.2 | 1,405 | 4 | 5 |
| 6. Southern Cal | 19.2 | 1,341 | 7 | 5 |
| 7. Texas Tech | 19.4 | 1,324 | 8 | 5 |
| 8. Louisiana Tech | 20.3 | 1,094 | 12 | 1 |
| 9. Virginia | 21.3 | 1,062 | 6 | 9 |
| 10. Purdue | 20.4 | 1,092 | 6 | 9 |
| 11. Stanford | 16.5 | 945 | 13 | 10 |
| 12. Kansas | 19.4 | 880 | 10 | 13 |
| 13. Vanderbilt | 19.6 | 845 | 14 | 14 |
| 14. Iowa | 16.5 | 836 | 11 | 15 |
| 15. Seton Hall | 21.3 | 716 | 16 | 17 |
| 16. Alabama | 18.5 | 615 | 17 | 18 |
| 17. Boise St | 20.3 | 500 | 19 | 19 |
| 18. Mississippi | 19.2 | 328 | 24 | 20 |
| 19. Washington | 16.6 | 322 | 15 | 16 |
| 20. Florida Intl. | 19.3 | 322 | 16 | 17 |
| 21. Florida | 20.4 | 182 | — | 23 |
| 22. W. Kentucky | 18.6 | 175 | — | 24 |
| 23. Mississippi | 21.6 | 161 | — | 20 |
| 24. Rutgers | 15.5 | 148 | — | 20 |
Others receiving votes: Georgia 106; San Diego
187; Clifton 79; Oregon 84; Autumn 57;
Okahoma St. 51; Bowling Green 45; SW Miami
st. 38; Indiana St. 37; Northwestern St. 28;
Santa Ana St. 26; University of California
LA91 N. Mexico St. 16; Aa Birmingham St.
84; Arkansas St. 6; George Washington St. 5; Kent St.
7; Stephen F. Austin St. 9; Hampstead Tech St. 1W
Louisiana St. 4; TAMA AM. 3; Creighton 2
Source: The Associated Press
JT
Knight Ridder PHOTO
U. S. hockey player Peter Clavaglia shows his joy after scoring a goal in the opening minutes of yesterday's USA vs. Italy hockey game at the XVII Winter Olympics in Lillehammer, Norway.
U.S. hockey beats Italy, advances
The Associated Press
LILLEHAMMER, Norway — Dan Jansen stumbled and the U.S. hockey team sent him a message: Hang in there. So when the U.S. hockey team was in trouble, it turned to Jansen for inspiration.
About 24 hours after watching a tape of the speedskater's incredible story of triumph amid tragedy, the American hockey players raced into the medal round.
The United States scored five times in the first 14:31 last night and went on to beat Italy 7-1, earning a quarterfinal shot against unbeaten Finland.
"Here we are, sitting here, we had tied a bunch of games and had lost to a great team in Sweden and we were a little dejected," said Peter Ciavaglia, whose goal 1.50 into the game pointed the Americans (1-1-3) toward tomorrow's quarterfinal match with the Finns (5-0).
"All of a sudden, we look at this guy, who had gone through so many hardships in previous Olympics. He had to overcome so much more than we've had to. It was just emotional. It touched all the guys. It was never so silent around this team."
Jansen had won everything but Olympic gold until winning the 1,000-meter race last week. In 1988, he fell during both the 500- and 1,000-meter races; the 500 flop came the day his sister died. In 1992, he struggled again. And this year, almost fell
during the 500, finishing eighth.
"We had sent丹斯丹 a letter from the team after he lost the 500, saying we were behind him and wanted him to know that people were really positive," U.S. coach Tim Taylor said.
Taylor, who tried to motivate his players during Sunday's practice by uncharacteristically shouting obscenities at them, decided to show a film of Jansen's 1,000-meter victory after Sunday's dinner.
"I didn't know the circumstances completely of the Dan Jansen story," Ciavaglia said. "And it just shows you, when things aren't going well and you have a bad shift or a bad game or you don't get the breaks, you can look back and say, 'Here's a guy who overcame a lot more than I did.'"
Of course, the U.S. hockey team had plenty to overcome, too, especially its aggravating habit of falling behind in every game.
"When you've played the first four games and you've had the lead for maybe five minutes total, the guys in the locker room said, 'Hey, let's try something different, let's get out in front.' And it worked," Clavaglia said.
"Coming back all the time is as emotionally draining as it is physically. It's just nice to get a big lead. We wanted to come out and make a statement in this game, that we're not going to lie down
and play dead. The tournament's just starting."
Looking for its first medal since 1980, the United States finished fourth in Pool B preliminary play. Finland wonPool A.
"Going into the tournament, we knew the only thing that mattered was making the metal round," U.S. captain Peter Laviolette said. "It doesn't matter whether we're 5-0 like Finland or not. Right now, we've got as many points as Finland, which is zero."
The U.S. team snapped a six-game Olympic winless streak dating back to the 1992 semifinals.
Italy (1-4), made up mostly of Canadians and Americans of Italian descent, was never in the game. The United States, which led by more than one goal for the first time all tournament and also had its first third-period lead of the Olympics, outshot the Italians 47-16.
"We played with a sense of urgency, 'Laviolette said. "We had to do it and we came out flying."
Brian Rolstorf scored one goal in each of the second and third periods, tying him for the Olympic lead with seven goals.
"We know we can play with Finland," Rolston said. "Our coach says they're playing as well as any of the great Russian teams, but that just gives us a little boost. We know we have to play our best and I think we will."
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Tuesday, February 22, 1994
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Russia takes gold, silver in ice dancing
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Despite thunderous cheers for an elegant routine that far exceeded anything they danced at last month's European championships, England's Jayrie Torvill and Christopher Dean, the 1984 Olympic gold medalists, were passed over emphatically by the judges. Their marks drew whistles and boos from a flag-waving crowd.
HAMAR, Norway — Rock n' rollers from Russia won the ice dancing gold medal last night, while the rules may have rolled over crowd favorites Torvill and Dean, who finished third.
Drive thru window for your convenience
KAROAKE
Russians Oksana Gritschuk and Evgeny Platov won the gold, and their countrymen and world champions
❤️
"It was a good routine, I guess," Dean said. "We're all being conservative, I think, this Olympic year, as opposed to groundbreaking."
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"I think the judges had decided beforehand. The audience tells the whole story," said Jill Trenary, the 1990 women's world champion who is engaged to Dean.
Usova and Zhulin's program, to "Notta de Caribia," featured a one-arm carry, several love taps and even some tugging on Usova's ponytail by her husband.
Mala Usova and Alexander Zhulin took the silver.
1994 Winter Olympic Games
"That's for you to speculate on," Dean said when asked about prejudging. "We'd like to think tonight the audience were our judges."
The silver came when Tovill and Dean struck out with the ludges
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"We feel OK right now because we had a good performance," Torvill said. "We'll probably be very down in the morning, waking up, looking at bronze medals."
Several dance coaches speculated that Torvill and Dean had too many lifts and that they were penalized for an illegal split. The judges were unavailable for comment.
including a few in which she looked like a spinning top.
"We skated according to the way we read the rules," Torvill said.
schuk and Platov were on top.
U. S. champions Elizabeth Punsalan and Jerod Swallow had a nasty spill in the middle of their free dance. At the end of a lift, Swallow tripped. He tumbled on top of his wife in what looked like a wrestling taken down
Except for a 5.9 for technical merit and a 6.0 for style from the British judge, Torvill and Dean received no breaks. Instead, they got a 5.6 and five 5.7s for technique.
They boogied to "Rock Around the Clock", winning Russia's third gold in as many figure skating events.
"We're younger; it's a new style; it's more fast," Platov said.
✿
His partner paid tribute to Torvill and Dean, who edged them for the European title, despite finishing second to Gritschuk and Platov in the free dance. In the last month, the English couple almost totally revamped its program, to "Let's Face the music."
2620 Iowa
"It was difficult skating after Torvill and Dean because it was great," Gritschuk said. "We were a little nervous because the public very much liked this couple."
The winners used intricate whirls,
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ON CAMPUS PROMOTIONS STUDENT MARKETING MANAGER
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Come find out why populations of snakes are destroyed for commercial purposes every year.
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ARTCARVED College Jewelry
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Today through Thursday Feb.24
10:00 a.m.- 4:00 p.m.
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100s
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105 Personal
110 Business
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120 Entertainment
120 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
200s Employment
203 Help Wanted
208 Professional Services
215 Typing Services
Classified Policy
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against 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 requires that any preference, limitation or discrimination race, color, religion, sex, handicap, status or national origin, or an intention, to such preference, limitation or discrimination.
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs being advertised in this newspaper are available.
110 Bus. Personals
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935 Massachusetts
HEMP clips, hemp backpacks, organic cotton clothes, hemp haacky sacks. Simple goods, 735 Holiday Inn. Smaller items. Holiday Inn. Steamboat Co. Party with someone you know. Free Spring beer and appetizers from sp m-.pm. when you stay with us, $109. From sp m-.pm. when you stay with us, $169-349 to book your Spring break today.
Unique Sterling Silver Jewelry
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292 Makkah Shop
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
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11:30am
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10p
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8am-4:30pm
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Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Saturday 9am-12pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services
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We'll find the lowest fares and best schedules.
On Campus Location
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
Maupintour
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in the Kansas Union and 831 Massachusetts
-Kansan Classified: 864-4358
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120 Announcements
ADVERTISING WORKS!
OAKS COFFEE CLUTTER AT MUNCHER'S BAKERY:
7:00 THOUGHT.
FOREIGN LANGUAGE Study Skills Program.
Help for student of any language. FREE! Improve reading, writing, listening comprehension and conversation skills. Thursday, Feb 24, 3:30-5:30 pm,
4064 Wescoe. Sponsored by the Student Assistance Center.
Wanted: Women for my Glamour Portfolio: To
schedule: Phone 1-800-567-9232 or email us:
1-800-567-9232
Tax preparation: Short Form 415, Long Form 427
Electronic filing £7, refund filing £7, call 685
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Sponsored by the Student Assistance Center
140 Lost & Found
Programmable calculator found Tuesday after noon at 11h58 and low. Call to identify 842-6162.
男女卫生间
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Needed part-time, dependable person. Apply Norge Village, 29th and fina. No phone calls.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, February 22, 1994
11
USE KANSAN CLASSIFIED
600 CAMPS IN THE USA, RUSSIA AND
EUROPE NEED YOU THIS SUMMER.
For the best summer of your life-see your
career center or contact:
Camy Commissary CA
420 Florence VA, 93430
800-990-2577
**CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camp. Teach: swim, basketball, tennis, golf, sports, computers, camping, archery, tennis, golf, sports, computers, camping, dramas, OR riding. Also kitchen, maintenance. Salary $1501 or more W/C/WC/G CW 175 Mild, NlD, I6038, 708-444-244
Caregiver experience preferred assisting disabled male, personal care, transfers, some
exchange possible 842-359 (after 4:15 wk日)
children's counselors, activities instructors, bus
drivers, cooks, nannies, kitchen mgt., kitchen
bakers, food prep, BOX 711
BOO, COURT 803. 305-425-557
Cruise line, entry level, onboard positions avail-
able for benefit. Summer or year round. (813)
292-7470
www.cruise.com
Drummer w/ practice space desperately needed for Lawrence band w/ gigs upcoming very soon.
Blues, Rock and Funk oriented. Sam 864-6736 or 842-9958.
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
Freeleague graphic artists needed to create designs
for a leading company. Call M-81
1166 for more information.
Gourmet Bibra now hiring nestrider server; wait-
for more details.
Gourmet Bibra 908, 10th OP. KS (95) 617-640-110.
Société Wcw 809, 10th OP. KS (95) 617-640-110.
Graduate Student Assistant (non-Architecture or fine arts student due to confidentiality) for Distinguished Professor of Architecture, part-time/week $280/mo. EOJA; contact Cynthia Mueckey at 312-647-5230; instructor-spondence, classroom assignments, use of Macroft. Deadline February 23, 1994.
94 KU SENIORS
r94
RESUMÉS
- COVER LETTERS
- INTERVIEW TRAINING
832-8100
RESUMÉ SERVICES
looking for capable, creative and committed individual, to be a mother's helper. If interested, please send name and number to Staci, P.O. Box 721 Lawrence,KS 60044
Nannies Wanted. Positions nationwide, summer or award, exp and req. Great pay and benns.
Need instructor to give beginning organ lessons to my daughter in my home. Call 841-3484 after 5p
Summer Employment Opportunities
Spend the summer in the beautiful Catskill mountains of New York. Achieve a challenging and rewarding summer experience working in a residential camp for adults with physical and developmental disabilities. Positions available: counselors, cabin leaders, and program leaders. All students are encouraged to apply. Season dates June 6-August 24. Good salary, room and board, and some travel allowance. For more information call 914-434-2220 or write to camp Jened, P.O. Box 483, Rock Hill, NY 12775
Rainforest Montessori School located on seven acres of pasture land with horses is looking for a late afternoon assistant M-F 3:15-8:30. Experienced teachers in Montessori school children required. Will train. Call 843-6800
Spend your summer in Maine! Top private girls student camp looking for athletics/BM/RD/humidity, travel allowance. Womens call or write: Camp Vega for Girls, P.O. Box 1771, Duxbury, MA. M. a2323 (617) 834-6536. We will be on site from 11am to 4pm on 3/9/44, Registrar Room.
SUMMER JOBS OUTDOORS
Over 10,000 openings!
National Forest Crew,
Send Samp for Free Details.
ilvan's n. 113 E. Wymong, Kallispell, MT 59091
Juicers Showgirls Explore the horizons of making $1000 + weekly, working at Lawrence's top adult night spot. Nowhiring attractive dancers and waitresses 18+. Excellentworking atmosphere. Apply in person, 913 N. Second, Lawrence, 7 p.m.-2 a.m., or call 841-4122 after 7 p.m.
**Teacher's Aide Positions available** - M.F. 7-30; M.W. 3/10; M.W. 4/3 and T/R 10/10-11:5. Experience in an Childhood Center 10/48, 10/49 or Darla 8/131. Office Assistant position also available.
Tennis Job-Summer Children's Camp-Northeast-Men and women with good tennis background can teach children to play tennis. Good salary, board, & training waived (912) 645-7350, wine list (817) 645-775, Duxbury, MA 02323 (617) 934-6536. Men call or write: Camp Winnipesaw, 225 Ridges Shade, ID 4046, Boca Raton, FL 97943 (799) 454-3000. We will be on campus in the student union at 68th Ave in Oradar and Regionalist rooms.
225 Professional Services
$ Premium Tax Service $5
1040EZ - $12; 1040 - $10 plus extra fee for other forms to be filed with 1040. State returns $5-$10.
Will pick up and deliver. Call Brian at 256-2572.
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
DOWNTON D. G. SOLDIER
Gnale St. GROLE
Sally G. Kelsey
6 East 13th
842-1133
Customized Library Research - don't get lost in the stacks, let us bring stacks of information to you. Research and Information gathering for students and faculty. Call 841-3765.
Driver education offered through Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 yrs. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749.
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
For free consultation call
Kick Frydman, Attorney
823 Missouri
843-4023
For a confidential, caring friend, call us.
We're here to listen and talk with you.
Birthright 83-4821. Free pregnancy testing
INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS
DV.I. grant program Sponsored by the U.S.
Immigration Dept. Gift cards provide perman-
ent resident status, Citizens of almost all coun-
tries are allowed to take part. Students, tourists,
anyone may apply. For info & forms: New Era
Services, 2021 Stagg S, Canoga Park, CA
91308
Tel; (818) 998-4425; Fax; (818) 882-9681.
OUI, TRAFFIC, Criminal Defense, Divorce and Civil Matters
OUI, TRAFFIC, Criminal Defense Divorce and Civil Matters Attorneys at Law Former Prosecutors Near Campus Elizabeth Leach Craig Stancillie 749-0087 414 W.14th 842-6432
INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS! We transfer Videos from US mode to your system or from your country to US mode. $25 includes tape and mailing. World Wide Video Transfer, PO Box G, Ottawa, Canada. Call us 1-800-660-8983. Tutoring val for college secondary, English/Scolular Math Module (COL 410-660)
719 Massachusetts
BRAXTON B. COPLEY
Attorney at Law
General Practice
Traffic Tickets, Misdemeanors,
Landlord/Tenant
Personal Income Tax
704 5233
VIDEO EDITING AND PRODUCTION SERVICES A/B roll release with EDL 3D computer animation. HiB field production package. Award winning screen writer. PRIMAL SCREEN COMMUNICATIONS
235 Typing Services
Looking for a good type?
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X
*BURSED BED, firm, orthopedic matted set and
bursal cover, cost $100, sell $39 cash,
deal $499.
*LIVING ROOM SET, sfa, love seat and chair,
with TV & DVD player, plastic mat, cost $1500,
safety 847 seats dealer #143-16229
305 For Sale
Old K. U. JAYHawk Decal, three color, 1929? $^2$*5*5" for
15. Write PO Box 7387 Chapel 69046
Wedding Dress - Size 8, Voy, Chapel length train,
150 Call IJ at 843-3300.
black leather biker jacket. Exccell. cond. hardy
black leather biker jacket. *68* Size fit M/F/
150/20. b/o. Kirsten, 834-769-2830.
300s Merchandise
1983 GT PANTERA 19 | BRIGHT RED TED50 ALUM.
W/MCRO FKMOT SUXTOUR XC-LD3DERAILS DIACOMPE BRAKEKS-LEVERS TIGGA PSY-
LIVE 675 D:B0.8 $70.8 O.B CHIRE 654 LOVE MESSAGE
340 Auto Sales
Hudson super 386 CDC desktop with a 4m. Senga
HD. 3.5 (new), and 5.28 drive, drive 14, egar color
monitor, keyboard, mouse, DOS, windows $650.
841-1414.
Casio Graphing Calculator.
Manual included. Excellent condition. $55
Classical Guitar, Guild SLP / case $400-833-814
Eight month membership to Body Boutique for
$695.
Genuine Peruvian Alpaca wool sweaters. Call 855-6823, ask for Luis, prices from $90-$40.
Macintosh Classic II 40 with 40.5 MB + MS Word,
Pupanker and Quack 9, 10790 OBJ. Call
Cisco 9, 10790 OBJ. Call
Grey 78 Limited Edition Maraz RX Y Sun roof, tinted windows, in excellent shape. Needs refurbishment.
'89 Ryundai Excel GLS in good condition. 5dr
hatchback. '79 kia MI, 61k ac, FM/FAM cassette.
Call 649-7250.
MACINTOSH Computer. Complete system including printer only 500. Call Charlie at 829-268-5985.
Giving Aware cellular phone number FREE. First month service and connection fees paid. Call 841-275-2000.
360 Miscellaneous
A
NOT USING BODY BOUTQUE Membership?
SELL IT Call Ann# 842-5377 after p.6.m.
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
2 bdrm w/sunroom and plenty of storage space, 2 bathrooms. D/W, W/D, central air, fire place and pool. On KU bus route, $50 + utilities, avail. March 1. Melinda 1-897-4857
1 Bedroom Apt. available now! Call 841-1212.
A&S MANAGEMENT SERVICES
RENT REFERRAL
4 bedroom apartment for rent, £1250 furnished,
8 bedrooms? Interest? Call 613-8255, 794-0455 or
848-6255.
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
LOOKING FOR A PLACE TO RENT?
841-5454
2040 Heatherwood
*1 and 3 Bedroom Apartments Available
Quiet Location
*2 blocks from KU bus route
Call Gina at 843-4754
Applicropt Appl. avail. 1 April, 2 bdrm. 1 bath. fully equipped ktp. dishwasher, micro, disposal, heat, air, water, trash paid. On bus route. No pets. Call anytime 843-8220. Ask for Christ or Susan.
Available at West Hills Apt. Spacios. Bed unfurnished apt. 275 per month. Water pad. Great location near campus. 1012 Emery Rd. No pets. 841-3800. 542-3884.
Available immediately at Brady Apts. 1828 Kentucky remodeled suites. Call 704-779-6200 or email rek@bradyapcs.com for pricing. $79/mo/1 BR
Available now, two bedroom at 812 Tennessee.
Sold out. $45 plus utilities
small pets O.K. 749-7508
Hanover Place Apl. for rent. Near Campus.
$320/MO Cell 641-1312
Furnished room for rent with shared kitchen and
stairway. Not in KU. Off street parking.
No pets. 814-5000
Lorimar Townhomes
Now renting for June and August 1, 2 and 3 dbrms,
14 bedrooms, 7 baths, ceiling fans, ceiling fans, cable pad, Call 841-7940 for app.
Mac Kenzie Place now leasing for Aug. 4, 19; old luxury lamps, close to campus. All 3B. microwave, washer & dryer all kitchen appl., 2 decks or more. Refrigerator, energy efficient. Fax: 529-798-1066.
Mac Kenzie Place now leasing for Aug 1, 4yr old
MOVING TO PHONEX1 Person needed NOW for spacious loft. 3b dkm warehouse. Glenhaven Apts. Close to campus/downstory. W/D $20 obo /¹/ utl. Smoking fine-Fno pets. Call 895-4258.
3 new bedroom home, 2 bath, washer-dryer hook-
ing room, bedside suite, bus room, 6000
a month + deposit. Call 849-145-8.
Rooms, apartments, and well kept, older
homes available now. 841-STAR (7923)
*2BR Room $407*
*Jacuzzi in each apt*
*Private balcony route*
*Private balconies/Patios*
*Pd cable TV/TVs*
*Basketball court/Park*
*On-site management*
*Ouidad Room 15/15*
*Call for Appointments*
5:15pm - M-F Mon-10 2:57
On campus, newly remodeled studio now available
"Come to 1013 Oedipus today and take a look
Naismith Place
Trailridge Apartments
new leasing for Summer and Fall
Station, Arlington, Dulce,
Kingston, Delray Beach, Boca
Raton, Apollo, Palm Beach,
Tennis Court, Citi Field,
Temple Ridge
One bedroom apartment for sublease. Water and
one bathroom. Free rental fee $35/mo. Now
until Aug. Call 849-1049
Park25
Nice B&M duplex, duplex air, off street parking
806-745-9731 pets. Available March 1. call 787-645-9731
806-745-9731
MASTERCRAFT
We are now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature studio 1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. We also have 3 bedroom, $2\frac{1}{2}$ bath townhomes.
Studio,1,2,3,& 4bedroom apartments and townhomes
Offers Completely Furnished
Sundance 7th & Florida 841-5255
Regents Court 19th & Mass. 749-0445
843-7333 2500 W.6th
- Volleyball Court
- 2 Pools
Hanover Place 14th & Mass. 841-1212
with 4 Stops on Property
COMPLETELY FURNISHED RENTALS DESIGNED WITH YOU IN MIND SECURE AN APARTMENT FOR FALL 94
- On KU Bus Route
- 2 Laundry Rooms
- Some Washer/Dryer Hookups
Mon.-Fri. 9am-5pm Sat. 10am-4pm
Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas 749-2415
Call or stop by today.
2401 W. 25th, 9A3
842-1455
(sorry no pets)
Orchard Corner
15th & Kasold
749-4226
842-4455
Management and Maintenance Company
OAO AAEE
Equal Housing Opportunity
MASTERCRAFT
One bedroom apartment available now. On KU bus路.
Small pets OK. Call 865-4298.
Spacious 1 bedroom apt very close campus. Fur-
ried home with view. Call 841-212k. Ask about Coldwater flat flt #.
Studio apartment avail. May 20 - Aug. 10. May
19-31. Studio apartment avail. May 20 - Aug. 10.
May 19-31. $10 Chelsea, $13 Chelsea at 832-192
847-6532.
Now leasing for FALL
We're making life easier
- Weekly Maid Service
- Front Door Bus Service
- "Dine Anytime" with unlimited seconds
- unlimited seconds
- Laundry and Vending Facilities
- Free Utilities
1800 Naismith
843-8599
NAISMITH Hall
---
Sulease top floor studio off 5th & Color. from March to first 17 July, $310, #10 pld. at laundry facilities. Near bus route. 841-5797 or 841-5798
Sulease Big. I R. W/J Docking, CA/CH, DW, Cable pd. 1 block from KU. Available March 1. 748-805
meadowbrook
10 10
Answer 2 Questions
1. How much time did you spend looking for your apartment?
2. Do you want to live in a beautiful, centrally located living community?
Answers
you wasted a lot of your time.
1. If you spent over 1 hour,
2. Meadowbrook is leasing for fall now. Call Kathy or Shana and in 1 hour your apartment hunting time will be over!
Summer Sublease 1-3 roommates needed. 33dth.
83stroom Townhouse w/ pool. Pool Ten-
nants, heated pool. Bathrooms: 942-969-6200.
Mon-Fri 8-5:30
Sat 10-4 Sun 1-4
15th & Crestline
842-4200
Sorry, no pets
West Hill APARTMENTS
NOWLEASING
FORJUNE AND AUGUST
- Spacious one and two
Bedroom apartments
• Furnished and unfurnished
• Great location near campus
• No Pets
OPEN HOUSE
OPEN HOUSE
Mon. Wed. Fri.
12:30-4:30No Appt. Needed
1012Emery Rd.
841-3800
- By phone: 864-4358
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
430 Roommate Wanted
ROOMMATE NEEDTED to share two bedroom house $189/mo. + Call Dave 643-3590
Call Dave 643-3590
How to schedule an ad:
Male roommate to downtown on Sunrise Ville
Bus route 412.75/m +/- via utilities.
Call: (316) 830-7920
1 Rrommate to share 3 brpm house, w/d new床
2 $15/mo. + 1/2 utilities. For more info use
78-940-6100.
Female non-smoking roommate wanted to share lease for 1 bedroom apartment close to campus for $250/month.
I HAVE TO MOVE TO K.C.I. female needed to share 3 bdm, spacious apc $200/m + utilities, on bus route, convenient location, no smokers or phone, call 862-7647 in the evening.
I am phone in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
In an enquiries 119 Stuart Fillet Filet
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1800 Naismith 843-8559
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You don't have to live here to eat here! Our "Dine Anytime" meal programs let you enjoy a huge selection of appetizing entrees, vegetables, desserts, and salads from 7am-7pm daily (11am-6:30pm weekends) With our "Punch Card" and "5 Meal" programs you can get meals as low as $2.50 Either way, you'll eat it up.
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THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1994 FavWorks, Inc./Dial by Universal Press Syndicate
2-22.
"What? MacDougal is being promoted over me?.. Well, that does it! I won't take no orders from no stinkin sodbuster!"
1.2
Tuesday, February 22, 1994
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Paradise
Paradise
Cafe & Bakery
Open Early
Breakfast Specialties
728 Massachusetts • 8425199
Tapering continues for swimmers
DON'S AUTO CENTER
"For All Your Repair Needs"
*Complete Auto Repair
*Machine Shop Service
*Parts Department
841-4833
920 E. 11th Street
Team readies for Big Eight meet with rest, razors
As the No. 16 Kansas women's swimming team prepares for this weekend's Big Eight Championships, two words will be on their minds.
By Andrew Gilman Kansan sportswriter
Resting and shaving.
all."
"It's been low-key around here this last week," said junior sprinter Ronda Lusty. "It's been a fun time for us. We haven't been working very hard at
Kansas will be in Oklahoma City for the conference championships which start Monday.
The team is going through what it calls" tapering" this week. Tapering is the process of cutting back on practices so that the maximum amount of energy can be saved for a meet.
Along with tapering, the swimmers also will shave their legs, arms and backs to create as much speed as possible.
"We're coming on yardage," senior captain Krista Cordsen said. "We're just trying to repair our bodies so everything will be 100 percent."
"We've let our hair grow on our legs since September," Lusty said. "We'll feel a whole lot faster when it's gone."
Cordsen agreed.
---
"It gives you more of an awareness of the water," she said. "It's psychological, but you really can feel the difference."
relaxing and saving their energy.
Although the shaving won't happen until right before the meet, the Jayhawks will prepare by
But even though the atmosphere was relaxed, Cordsen said the team still had a job to do.
"Everyone's so happy around here," Lusty said. "It's because we all have so much energy."
"We're physically relaxed, but mentally, we're intense and focused," Cordsen said.
third consecutive conference championship and at the same time seek revenge against the Nebraska team which beat them two weeks ago in Lawrence.
The Jayhawks will try to win their
"The motivation is there," Cordsen said. "They'll be tough. Last year year we expected to win it. This year there's more of a hunger. This year we will try to push it to another level."
Lusty also acknowledged Nebraska's strength.
"There's always the revenge factor," Lusty said. "But we want to swim our meet. We're going to have to use each other to build ourselves up."
Even in the midst of the conference meet coming up, the swimmers said that this was a great time of the year.
"We're just trying to have fun," Cord-
sen said. "That's what competition is all about, having fun. These are the best weeks of the year."
Part of the fun may be attributed to Coach Gary Kempf. Kempf, who is looking to win his 14th conference championship as coach for the women's team. Kempf walked along the deck of the pool yesterday with a smile on his face.
"He's trying to keep us relaxed. Lusty said. "He wants to keep us loose so we can be more positive."
Even with all the resting, Lusty said she had her mind on the conference meet.
"I couldn't sleep last night," she said. "I was so excited. I think about it all of the time."
Morning Star
Pet Care 15% OFF BOARDING FOR DOGS & CATS
842-9979
1 Mile East of Johnny's
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FREE PICK-UP & DELIVERY
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$6.99
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2630 Iowa
843-1474
EXPAND YOUR KNOWLEDGE OF ENGINEERING
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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 • 864-4640: $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
RESTAURANTS & BARS
American Bistro • 701 Massachusetts • 841-8349: 10% off any entree (limit one)
Bolivian LB22104VU-82-1260. All you can buy is restaurants! You can买 Bar for $2.99
Dos Hombres v: 815 New Hampshire · 841-7286. Buy 1 menu item, get the 2nd for 1/2 price
Imperial Garden • 2907 W 6th St • 841-1688: 10% off any dinner entree (limit one)
Bunker Donts 521 W 216d - 749-3019. 15% on any purchase
FiFi's Restaurant 925 wards - 841-7226. 10% off any entree (limit one)
Dunkin Donuts · 521 W23rd · 749-5015: 15% off any purchase
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
Parkins Family Restaurant • 1711 W 23rd, 842-9040; $10 off any entree, anytime, 24 hours a day
Perkins Family Restaurant • 1711 W 23rd • 842-9040: $1.00 off any entree, anytime, 24 hours a day
Pizza Shuttle • 1601 W23rd • 842-1212: 1 carryout, 1 topping pizza w/ a/g. coke for $4.00
MERCHANDISE & PRODUCTS
Community Mercantile *901 Mississippi* *843-8544* 15% off any coffee purchases
Cycle Works *601 W23rd* *842-6363* Lock set w new bike purchase
Plum Tree • 2620 Iowa • 841-6222: FREE appetizer (2 crab rangoons or 1 egg roll) w/ purchase of any entree
Pyramid Palm • 507 W 14th St (under The Wheel) • 842-3232: $4 $sm *$med *$kg* ea add topping 75e (Void with 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 reef. French Frw w/ purchase of a Vistaburger & drink
The Athlete's Foot · 914 Massachusetts · 841-6966: $10 off a shoe purchase of $65 or more
Englewood Florist • 939 Massachusetts • 841-2999: 3 FREE latex balloons with any purchase of $20 or more
It's Your Party • 1601 W 23rd • 749-3455: Buy any 3 greeting cards and get 1 FREE
Is your party *1601 W 23rd* 749-3453? Buy any 3 greeting cards and get FREE Jaybay Level-1 Kansas Union 864-3543: 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!
Javhawk 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
Jackie Witch • 935 Massachusetts • 149-6284: 15% off all shoes.
Junior's Farm • 9241/2 Massachusetts • 842-3344: Buy 2 CD's at *reg*, price, get the 3rd (or lesser value) at 50% off Kansas Sports Club • 837 Massachusetts • 842-2992: 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)
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% of any accessory (disks, diskholders, cables, paper, surge protectors, etc.
Video Unib • 832 Iowa • 749-3507: 2 For Tuesdays! Rent 2 Videos for the Price of 1 (Tuesday onl)
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
ERVICE
The Auto Medic • 3651 W 10th St • 842-0364: 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 • 843-7300: 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 Kansas • 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall • 864-4358: 10% off any private party classified advertisement
*image Tan* • 2449 Iowa, Ste 0 • 842-4949: 1 FREESession 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
criteria and conditions. The full wring and condition to a carrierholder is not the *Use The University of Kansas Card* (DRC at Participating Merchant) (PM). If the DRC must be issued to be valid, it is non-transferable, and PM may request identification, conficlation with the Carrier if used by anyone other than the Carrierholder. Carrierholder's signature on a DRC shall constitute an agreement to be bound by these terms and theDirectory of the Director(s). A2 is not valid with any other or special promotions or sales. PM may not apply to tax payment or purchase; it applies only to caribholders responsible for personal purchase to the total purchase amount to be determined by PM. If non-DRC purchases are part of the total purchase, or only available at locations other than the Carrierholder, PM must deny payment to persons under the Directory of the Director(s). A3 is not valid with other or special promotions or sales. PM must beaded to purchase alcoholic beverages in Kentucky, and some PM may deny entry to persons under 21 years of age. PM may be叠加ed to a comparable value offer in some location where legal or advertising codes require PM to change the original offering.俗6) Carrierholder agrees not to bid The University of Kansas Card independently, independent agencies, any student organization or DRC selling locations, Regents or employees of the University of Kansas. Competitor marketing7) If sold on behalf of another person, an employee of the University of Kansas Card is not authorized to sell the products of the DRC. all parties agree to binding authority by a member of the DRC.
Jayhawk Bookstore
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843-3826
1116 W. 23rd St · 749-5206
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119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
864-4358
---
Sports: The No. 10 Kansas men's basketball team tries to win at Nebraska for the first time in three years. Page 11.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.103.NO.107
KANSAS STATE
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA KS 66612
ADVERTISING:864-4358
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1994
(USPS 650-640)
Intervention necessary in healing process
By Susan White Kansan staff writer
After the initial shock wears off, tears give way to feelings of guilt, confusion, pain and self-blame.
NEWS: 864-4810
According to "The Second Rape — Society's Continued Betrayal of the Victim," 16 rapes are attempted and 10 women are raped each hour. And every rape or attempt leaves scars that cannot be erased easily.
Sarah Russell, director of the Rape Victim/Survivor Service - As Soon As Possible, said more than 50 percent of the service's clientele are college students from the University of Kansas, Haskell Indian Nations University and Baker University.
Russell said her role, after a student had been raped, began with a telephone call on the center's 24-hour crisis line.
"I generally get a phone call from
Headquarters, the KU police department or KU info about someone being raped," she said. "Then I determine whether the victim is in a safe place or has any major injuries.
Russell said she then helped the victim decide whether to go to the hospital or the police department for further assistance.
"The victim has to decide what she wants to do," she said. "It is important that we give the person all her choices,' so she knows that she still has choices available to make. We usually act as a go-between for the medical and legal processes of the rape and help the victim decide what to do next."
"We make sure that the victim knows that going to see a counselor is
She then advised the victim to seek further professional counseling to continue the road to recovery, Russell said.
In addition to talking to rape victims, the organization also receives calls from people who have been
"If somebody is raped or assaulted, they call here and we will assess their situation," he said. "Then we ask them if they want to talk to a RVSS counselor."
not a statement of her spiritual or mental strength," she said. "Most victims go through post-traumatic stress syndrome, which is common for an action such as rape. Professional intervention is a necessary part of the healing process."
beaten up, robbed or mugged, Harnesh said.
"We give programs on campus to different organizations,including the residence halls and fraternities and
Sgt. Rose Rozniarek of the KU police department said the department contacted the rape center immediately when a rape victim came in.
However, the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center uses a different approach for its sexual assault services. Susan Hickman, graduate assistant for the center, said the center's goal was to prevent sexual assault by educating people.
"We get someone from victim assistance to come in during our interview with the victim," she said. "If the victim does not feel comfortable talking to a male officer she can talk to a female officer. A lot of what we do after that depends on the victim."
sororites, about prevention information," she said. "We focus on acquaintance rape, since it is the most common type of rape in a college setting."
The discussions focused on maintaining strong lines of communication between men and women during intimate situations. Hickman said.
"They should discuss their expectations and talk about their feelings," she said. "They should pay attention to their instincts and stay in control at all times."
The center also provided community presentations for people who did not live on campus, she said.
"Men come in all the time," she said. "Assault not only affects the victim but friends, partners and family members. It goes way beyond the person who was victimized."
Hickman stressed that the center was not just for women.
Fighting Back A Look at Violence in Lawrence
Where to call
Rape or assault victims in need of support can call:
— A support group meets 7 p.m. every Monday, if interested, leave a message at 843-8985 or call Headquarters Inc.
— All services are free and confidential.
— Emily Taylor Women's Resource Cen
Rape Victim/Survivor Service
— To report a rape, call the University Information Center at 864-3056 or call Headquarters in at 841-7235
Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center
All services are free and confidential.
Watkins Memorial Health Center
Counseling and Psychological Services
Cell Phone 2377
Call 864-3600.
KU Police
—Call 911.
Counselling and Psychological Services
—Call 864-2277.
Clare O'Malley, Overland Park sophomore, puts on makeup to get ready for the Rock Chalk Revue rehearsal. The revue participants had a dress rehearsal last night.
KANSAN
Martin Alstaedten/KANSAN
Rock Chalk finds new home
Revue moves to Lied Center
By Frank McCleary Kansan staff writer
When Hoch Auditorium burned down in June 1991, Rock Chalk Revue lost its traditional home of 41 years.
But tomorrow night the revue will start a new tradition — the Lied Center will become home for the annual student variety show.
The revue, which benefits the United Way of Douglas County, has been performed for the last two years in the auditorium at Lawrence High School.
Tad Gomez, Wichita senior and the revue's producer, said he was looking forward to starting a new tradition in the
ROCK
CHALK
REVUE
1994
center.
"I'm excited about the Lied Center, but there is a feeling of nostalgia about Hoch," she said. "You almost feel like you're betraying Hoch by saying you're excited about the Lied Center."
"It has been a tradition for 45 years," he said. "I hope it's around for another 45 years."
The new facilities will make the show better for both the audience and the performers, Gomez said.
Barb Smith, executive director of the United Way of Douglas County, said she would miss Hoch.
"It's a better environment to watch the show," he said. "You can see everything."
"The facilities have allowed us to have bigger sets," he said. "You can do more on the stage here than at Lawrence High School or Hoch."
Gomez also said the center's acoustics would help the revue sound better. Performers also will benefit from the new surroundings.
Students waiting to perform at the high school had to be quiet, Gomez said. Sound carried into the auditorium. But the backstage doors at the center are soundproof.
"In previous years, the performers have had dressing rooms in classrooms at Wesco Hall or at Lawrence High," he said.
Gomez said the Lied Center also provided better backstage facilities than either Hoch or the high school.
Gomez said the dressing rooms provided a more comfortable environment for those preparing for a performance.
"If you are more comfortable when you're setting up, maybe you'll perform better," he said.
Bryn Smith, Blue Springs, Mo., sophomore, said she was excited to perform on the same stage that national or world-famous performers have.
Clare O'Malley, Overland Park sophomore, said performing in the first revue at the center was an honor.
"I'm sure I'll probably never get to do it again," she said.
"For us to be the first group is going to be great," she said.
Performances will be at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Friday and Saturday night in the Lied Center. The Saturday performance is sold out, but tickets remain for the Thursday and Friday shows.
Fortticket information, call the Rock Chalk Revue office at 864-4033.
Committees would focus on diversity
By Stephen Martino Kansan staff writer
A majority of Kansas residents are women, state Rep. Nancy Brown said, so they deserve a commission to discuss the problems that women from all walks of life face.
Brown, R-Stanley, and state Rep. Gwen Welshimer, D-Wichita, are the primary sponsors of legislation that would create the Commission on the Status of Women. Economic issues, availability of child care, job training and health care studies are some of the issues that a commission on women would study. Brown said.
"The fact that women are now a majority and are playing a new role in society creates a need for the commission," she said.
Brown and Welshimer's bill has a total of 64 co-sponsors. Sixty-three votes are needed for passage in the House.
The bill was discussed yesterday before the House Governmental Organization and Elections Committee. A second bill, one that would create a commission for African Americans, also was discussed by the committee.
State Rep. Joan Wagnon, D-Topeka and a candidate for governor, said at the committee meeting yesterday that other states use such commissions as a clearing house for information. She said the commission could track trends in women's pay and gather information on successful teen-age pregnancy programs.
The commission would fall under the state Department of Commerce and Housing, Brown said. She said she thought that a budget of about $100,000 would be necessary for the commission to be properly staffed and operational.
Brandon Myers, chief counsel for the state Human Rights Commission, said that the commission had no conflicts with the creation of a commission on women. The Human Rights Commission enforces discrimination laws, which include discrimination based on age, race, gender, religion and disability.
African-American leaders told the committee that they felt government agencies did not seek enough input from the African-American population on issues such as education and health care.
"How can you affect a certain race of people with public policy if you do not know their needs and desires?" said the Rev. Ronald Smith, pastor at St. Mark's African Methodist Episcopal Church in Topeka.
But Brown said she would prefer the state create a diversity commission instead of a African-American commission. She said that the state already had a committee on Hispanics.
"We need committees that are inclusive," she said. "People may say that women are a minority, but we aren't anymore."
INSIDE
The Associated Press contributed information to this story.
Abbey Road
Beatlemania hits campus Thirty years ago, the Beatles descended on the U.S. and changed rock n' roll forever. This month, fans of the "Fab Four" remember John, Paul, Ringo and George.
Race relations, discrimination top agenda for tonight's forum
Self-improvement, race relations and discrimination will be debated and discussed at a forum tonight called "Impediments to Black Empowerment: Past and Present."
By Denise Nell
Maurice Bryan, assistant executive vice chancellor and a panelist at tonight's discussion, said he preferred to think of the issue of African-American empowerment in a positive way.
Kansan staff writer
"Instead of focusing on the negative, I'm choosing to focus on the positive" he said. "Not things that hold us back, but what can we do to make it better?"
Bryan, also the director of affirmative action, said African Americans could begin to solve the empowerment problem by displaying courage, intelligence and commitment.
"I think American Americans are still not valued in many ways," he said. "There's the issue of selfesteem and self-worth, and there are negative issues that we still need to fight against."
Sherwood Thompson, director of the Office of Minority Affairs and a panelist, said he planned to discuss his experiences as an African-American administrator at predominantly-wild KU.
"I think one of the impediments has to do with the age-old issue of race relations," he said. "That's a major impediment because we still have a tradition of race exclusion practiced covertly and overtly.
Barbara Ballard, director of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center; Arthur Drayton, professor of African and African-American studies; and Flecia Thomas, director of the Multicultural Affairs Office at Washburn University, also will address the issue.
"Until race has been settled as an issue and other principles are celebrated instead of race as a criteria for advancement in society, there's not going to be a lot of movement in society."
Schedule of events
BLACK
HISTORY
MONTH
On this day in 1868, author William Edward Burghardt (W.E.B.) DuBois was born in Great Barrington, Mass. DuBois died in 1963.
Today's events
Discussion: "Impediments to Black Empowerment: Past and Present"
7 to 9 tonight at the Kansas Room in the Kansas Union
Admission is free
Tomorrow's events
Performance: "A Day of Absence"
8 tonight at Downs Auditorium in Dyche Hall
Admission is free
Water damage to cost $40,000
KANSAN
Kansan staff report
Although the final amount of damage has yet to be determined, Kansas Union officials estimate the damage will cost more than $40,000.
James Long, director of the Union, said final estimates could not be made until ceilings, walls and carpets had dried completely. However, he said all repairs would be made before the end of the semester.
On Feb. 9, a pipe busted because an unsealed air duct allowed frigid air, which froze water pipes, into the building. The pipes burst, spraying water over the northwest corner of the fourth floor.
2
Wednesday, February 23, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
COLOURS • EAGLE'S EYE · II FARMER • HENRY GRETHEL · C.J. COTTON • CALVIN KLEIN·
The University Daily Kanaan (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, KA 68045.
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ON CAMPUS
Ecumenical Christian Ministries will sponsor a University Forum, "Becoming a community of 'Others': Challenging Diversity," at 11:30 a.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 2104 Oread Ave. For more information, call Thad Holcombe at 843-4933.
Global Club will sponsor a forum on opportunities to study abroad at noon today at 502 Summerfield Hall. For more information, call Emma Schmitt at 841-7452.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will hold a Catholic student discussion group at 1:10 p.m. today at Alcove B in the Kansas Union. For more information, call St. Lawrence at 843-0357.
Spencer Museum of Art will sponsor a lecture by Phoebe Adams at 2 p.m. today at the auditorium in the Spencer Museum. For more information, call Sally Hayden at 864-4710.
Center for East Asian Studies will sponsor a lecture by George McColm at 2:30 p.m. today at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Bertha Jackson at 864-3849.
The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an informational meeting about study abroad in Great Britain at 4 p.m. today at 3 Lippincott Hall. For more information, call Nancy Mitchell at 864-3742.
Western Civilization Program and The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an informational meeting about study abroad for Western Civilization credit at 4 p.m. today at 2085 Wescoe Hall. For more information, call Nancy Mitchell at 864-3742.
KU Gamers and Roleplayers will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at the third floor in the Burge Union. For more information, call Alex Baker at 864-7316.
Anthropology group will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at 633 Fraser Hall. For more information, call Destiny Crider at 832-1469.
KU Environs will meet at 6 p.m. today at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Amy Trainer at 841-4484.
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 Water Polo Club will meet at 7 tonight at Robinson Natatorium in Robinson Center. For more information, call David Reynolds at 841-6475 or Nick Pivonka at 841-6197
University of Denver Publishing Institute will sponsor an informational meeting at 7 tonight at Alcove B in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Rick Hill at 865-4189.
KU Sailing Club will meet at 7:30 tonight at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Tom Conrad at 841-4597.
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 tonight at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Ena Wheeler at 865-2459.
WEATHER
WEATHER
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 69°/57°
Chicago: 26°/25°
Houston: 68°/63°
Miami: 83°/69°
Minneapolis: 19°/14°
Phoenix: 68°/46°
Salt Lake City: 44°/23°
Seattle: 47°/37°
Omaha: 25°/18°
Kansas City: 31°/24°
St. Louis: 33°/22°
Wichita: 30°/23°
Tulsa: 37°/27°
TODAY
Tomorrow Friday
Snow
High: 28°
Low: 22°
Possible snow flurries
High: 35°
Low: 15°
Partly cloudy
High: 28°
Low: 13°
Source: Jeff Brandberg, KU Weather Service; 864-3300
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CLARIFICATION
In a story on Page Three in yesterday's Kansan, a byline was left off a photo package. The picture
of Jeremy Boldra, a.k.a. "Kramer," was taken by Melissa Lacey.
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 for
News
Call 864-4358 for advertising:
▪ Classified Department
Comments/Complaints — Kelly
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▪ Display Advertising
Comments/Complaints — Justin
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Kansan fax #— 913-864-5261
Spring Break '94 South Padre Island $135 per week!*
You and 5 amigos can share a week in a 1 bedroom condo on S. Padre for just $135 per person. This offer is limited and only available if you mention seeing this ad.
CALL TODAY:1-800-926-6926
Island Reservation Service, P.O. Box 3469
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*Rate is per person based on 6 people sharing a 1 bedroom condo the week of March 19 - March 26.
Tax and refundable damage deposit extra.
A Good Jayhawk Is Always Prepared. How Prepared Were You?
Attend the 45th Annual Principal Counselor Student Conference to talk to your former counselor and principals about your preparation for and adjustment to KU!
COMMUNITY COLLEGES
Allen County — B
Barton County — B
Butler County — B
Cloud County — B
Coffeyville — B
Colby — B
Ft. Scott — B
Garden City — B
Haskell — B
Highland — B
Hutchinson — B
Independence — B
Johnson County — Regionalist Room
Kansas City Kansas — B
Neosho County — B
KANSAS HIGH SCHOOLS
Andale — B
Andover — B
Arkansas City — B
Achilson — B
Atchison County Community — B
Augusta — B
Basehor Linwood — B
Belolt — B
Bennington — Kansas Room
Bern — B
Bishop Carroll — B
Bishop Ward — B
Blue Valley Silwell — Oread Room
Blue Valley North — International Room
Butler — B
Central Christian — B
Chamus — B
Chaparral — Big Eight Room
Chepman — B
Cheney — B
Circle — B
Colby — B
Concordia — Big Eight Room
Conway Springs — B
The University of Kansas
PRINCIPAL-COUNSELOR-STUDENT CONFERENCE and COMMUNITY COLLEGE CONFERENCE
Kansas Union
Thursday, February 24, 1994
Room Schedule for Student Conferences
10:30 a.m. to Noon
Field Kindley Memorial — B
F.L. Schlagle — B
Fort Scott — B
Douglass — B
El Dorado — B
Ellinwood — B
Emporia — Malott Room
Goddard — B
Great Bend — Malot Room
Greensburg — B
Haven — B
Hayden — B
Hays — B
Hlawatha — B
Highland — B
Highland Park —
Hill City — B
Holton — B
Hutchinson — B
Independence —
Iola — B
- B
ott Room
\cove D
Independence — B
Iola — B
Jackson Heights — Parlor C
J.C. Harmon — B
Jupiter City — Malott Room
Kapaun-Mt. Carmel — B
Kickapoo Nation — Parlor C
Leakeville County — Alcove D
Learning — B
Lawrence — Parlor A
Lawsonworth — Big Eight Room
Lyons — Big Eight Room
Madison — Big Eight Room
McLouth — Big Eight Room
McPherson — Big Eight Room
Meade — Big Eight Room
Medicine Lodge — Big Eight Room
Minneapolis — Big Eight Room
Mission Valley — Big Eight Room
Moundridge — Big Eight Room
Neodesha — Big Eight Room
Newton — Oread Room
Northern Valley — Big Eight Room
Norton Community — Big Eight Room
Olathe East — Curry Room
Olathe North — Curry Room
Olathe South — Curry Room
Onage — Big Eight Room
Osage City — Big Eight Room
Osborne — Big Eight Room
Ottawa — B
Palco -- Big Eight Room
Rosalie -- Big Eight Room
Parsons -- Big Eight Room
Harry-Lecoonton -- Big Eight Room
Philipsburg -- Big Eight Room
Prairie View — Malott Room
Prairie View — Malott Room
Pretty Prairie — Malott Room
Room Guide:
Rooms in the Kansas Union:
Alcove G
stest — English Room
orth — English Room
northwest — English Room
uth — English Room
B = Ballroom — Level 5
Alcoves — Level 3
Big Eight Room — Level 5
Centennial Room — Level 6
Curry Room — Level 6
English Room — Level 6
Governor's Room — Level 6
International Room — Level 5
Kansas Room — Level 6
Malott Room — Level 6
Oread Room — Level 5
Parlors — Level 5
Regionalist Room — Level 5
St. Marys Academy — Kansas Room
St. Thomas Aquinas — Alcove I
Stockton — Kansas Room
Summer Academy — Kansas Room
Syracuse — Kansas Room
Southeast of Saline — Kansas Room
St. John's Military School — Kansas Room
Wichita Northwest
Wichita Northwest — Los
Wichita South — Centerr
Wichita West — Centerr
Winfield — B
Wyandotte — Centennial
MISSUOI Gateway Lee's Su Pembrokie Rockbun Ruxin — SL Terra Whitfield
CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesdav. February 23.1994
3
Storm leaves part of city without electric power
Naismith and Oliver halls included in power outage
By Jennifer Freund
Kansan staff writer
Kathy Garcia, a receptionist at Naismith Hall, fielded calls from students when their power went out yesterday morning.
"One girl called me up and asked if the power was out," she said, "I said, 'Do you have lights?' and she said, 'no,' so I said, 'We don't have any power.'"
Ice from yesterday morning's storm caused an insulator near the intersection of 19th Street and Ousdahl Road to freeze, which resulted in a power outage between Iowa and Massachusetts streets and between 17th and 22nd streets.
Steven Johnson, Kansas Power and Light division manager, said that power went out at 9:10 a.m. and returned at 9:45 a.m.
Johnson said that the company had received calls from customers yesterday morning asking when their power would be returned.
"It's hard to tell people when their power will be turned on, because a lot of times we don't know," Johnson said. Johnson said that the company didn't have much control over frozen power lines and insulators.
The company only could fix them once they were frozen. "It only took 35 minutes to switch the power over," he said. "That's a reasonable time, it's not long at all."
ice on an electric-pole insulator at 19th Street and Ousdahl Road caused a power outage in part of Lawrence, including Oliver and Naismith halls, for about 35 minutes yesterday.
Primary area affected by power outage
Source: Kansas Power and Light
Joe Harder/KANSAN
Lights out
The power outage left Naismith and Oliver halls' residents without electricity for their appliances — including alarm clocks.
University of Kansas
Oliver Hall
59
Nalismith Hall
Street
Vermont Street
Ousdahl Road
Nalismith
19th Street
22nd Street
Louisiana Street
Massachusetts Street
Greg Greenberg, Omaha, Neb., sophomore, said that he
couldn't afford to miss classes every time the electricity went out at Naismith.
"It's happened so many times that I bought a battery powered alarm clock" he said.
Greenberg said his roommate also took precautions against frequent blackouts.
"My roommate has a $100 to $200 device to keep his computer from being fried every time the electricity goes out," he said.
Students may be in for more power outages as inclement weather continues.
Relationships tricky, professor says
By Angelina Lopez Kansan staff writer
To be in a successful relationship, a person has to be able to dive off a three-meter diving board without knowing whether the pool is full.
Heather Lofflin / KANSAN
That is the analogy that Dennis Dailey, professor of social welfare, used to illustrate intimacy, which he said was the most important—and most terrifying—aspect of long-term relationships.
The discussion, which focused on the difficulties of rite-female relationships, attracted enough single people and couples to fill the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union last night. The discussion was sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center.
Fifty percent of long-term relationships go directly into the toilet. "Dailie said."
He said that intimacy was the prime ingredient for a successful long-term relationship.
A. M. C.
Intimacy, Dailey said, was the need and ability to experience emotional closeness with someone and the guarantee that the closeness would be returned.
"People ask for intimacy, but doing it is one of the scariest things on the planet," he said. "It means standing naked in front of someone."
He said the tricky part of intimacy was experiencing it while maintaining individuality.
"That means being whole and self-sufficient without the other person," he said.
Dalley said that the way women and men were raised made an intimate relationship difficult.
Women were taught to be nurturing and open, he said, and men were taught to be strong and not to show their
Dennis Dailey, professor of social welfare, discusses the roles of men and women at the Kansas Room in the Kansas Union. The main topic of last night's lecture was communication between men and women.
feelings.
Dalley originally was scheduled to discuss the topic with Barbara Ballard, director of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center. But because of her commitment as a state representative, she was unable to attend.
Sonya Bouldin, Overland Park junior, said that Dailey represented both the female and male sides of relationships fairly.
"Now I can see how men and women are socialized differently," she said. "I can see how difficult it is for men and women to come to a central plane."
STOP
William Alix / KANSAN
Under cover
Crista Hanley, St. Louis senior, covered up the best she could to avoid the falling snow. More snow is expected today, with temperatures in the 20s.
Pakistani culture is the focus of reorganized, thriving club
By Denise Nell Kansan staff writer
Syed Ali Rizvi spent his Christmas break searching out future KU students in his hometown — Karachi, Pakistan.
Rizvi, sophomore and president of the Pakistan Club, said that before the break he had obtained a list of the names of the students from Karachi who were coming to KU. He went to each of their homes, introduced himself and asked whether they had any questions about KU.
"When I was coming from Pakistan, I didn't know where I was going or who would pick me up at the airport," Rizvi said. "From my personal experience, I felt like going to people and saying 'Hey, don't worry. It's going to be all right.'"
One goal of the group is to help Pakistani students adjust to their new environment, Rizvi said. About 40 students from Pakistan attend KU.
Rizvi said he became president of the group to keep it from falling apart. The president and founder of the group had taken off the fall semester, and the group had become disorganized.
In November, Rizvi decided to hold elections to get new officers who could run the club and find uses for the more than $3,000 Student Senate had allocated them for cultural events.
Syed Iqbal, Karachi, Pakistan, senior and social chair of the club, said the group's disorganization had turned off members.
"We didn't have elections on a regular basis, and that took people's interest away because nothing was hap-
Iqbal said the group also wanted to clear up common misconceptions about Pakistan. Most people, he said, still think of Pakistan as being a part of India. Pakistan once was part of India, but when India received independence from Britain in 1947, Muslim leaders wanted a separate Muslim state — and Pakistan was established as a nation.
peting, he said. Today, the club is organized, Iqbal said. A new board of officers is in place, and more people are attending the regular meetings.
"The goal of our group is to give students at KU firsthand knowledge about our culture." Rizki said.
pening." he said.
S
"The Indian culture is very similar to ours in lots of things," Iqbal said. "People consider things Pakistan to be Indian, but there is an identity that exists behind the country of Pakistan."
The club also has organized a cultural night on April 8 at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St, and has declared a week in Pakistan Week. The group will set up a table in the Kansas Union and distribute information about the Pakistani culture.
UNITED TO BE HEARD
ayhawk Bookstore "Your Book Professionals" "At the top of Naismith Hill"
Graduation Hrs: 8-7 M-Th..
8-5 Fri.
Announcements 9-5 Sat.
& Caps and 12-4 Sun.
Gowns 843-3826
Iqbal said the group would try to work with both the India and Bangladesh clubs to bring in guest speakers who would clear up these kinds of misconceptions. Rizvi said that as president he hoped to improve Pakistan's image.
It's a real good feeling for me right now," he said. "If I can bring the name of the country up, it would be good for me."
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1994 C.L.A.S.S. Award
Nomination Forms can be picked up at Organizations & Activities Office 410 Kansas Union.
DUEBY5:00FRIDAY,FEBRUARY25TH.
STUDENT
SENATE
4
Wednesday, February 23, 1994
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Rock Chalk participants deserve thanks for efforts
Rock Chalk Revue will showcase the efforts of more than 300 KU students who have worked to present five 15-minute, original shows and four in-between acts. This year, 14 organized living groups vied for the chance to present one of the five shows. Each group spent hours preparing a script and audio tape. The groups then submitted folders with their ideas to a panel of 11 judges. The five talented winners will present their creations this weekend. In addition, 20 dedicated individuals have labored about 20 hours a week since May to create a production that will rival previous shows which raised over $100,000 and donated 25,000 hours of community service since 1990. The United Way of Douglas County will be the beneficiary of all this effort.
The 45th-annual Rock Chalk Revue will have its first performance Thursday evening at 7:30 p.m., but the production is more than a show. Rock Chalk is proof that a number of students want to do more than just go to school at the University of Kansas. Rock Chalk is proof that students want to participate in the community. Those students deserve credit.
Rock Chalk Revue represents students' interest not only in their own achievements, but also in the Lawrence community. Organized living groups compete to raise the most money and donate the most service hours, as well as produce the best show. The word is out. These individuals deserve a pat on the back for their commitment and their dedication.
CHRISTOPHER LIVINGSTON FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Russian presence may shatter Bosnian peace
Last week, as Serbian guns were forced into silence, a new booming sound was heard throughout the ravaged land of Bosnia. The sound was of Russian tanks and troops as they moved into the embattled country. Although the silencing of Serbian artillery is a step in the right direction, Russia's presence in Bosnia may cause more problems than it solves.
Russia claims its troops are on a "peacekeeping" mission. If Russia is so concerned about peace, why didn't it act sooner? As the situation stands, Russia's forces in Bosnia may be a hindrance to the peace process.
NATO has worked tirelessly to achieve peace. One of its strategies has been the threat of air strikes. Russia's ground presence has dampened that threat substantially. NATO can't risk injuring Russian troops in an attack aimed at Serbian gun positions. Russia's presence effectively nullifies NATO's best bargaining tool.
Such an interference with NATO's actions might be in reaction to NATO's recent decision to deny Russia membership. With its bid for membership in NATO lost, Russia apparently lost any inclination to cooperate with the organization. Russia may have more in mind than just "keeping peace."
Beyond presenting a logistical problem, Russia's ground troops present an ethical problem. Russia has long been an ally of the Serbian people. The Serbians have been headstrong and stubborn throughout this conflict. The sudden appearance of a longtime ally might give Serbians the impression that they have the upper hand.
Russia's attempts to "keep peace" may result in extended war. The rumble of Russian troops may prolong the roar of the Bosnian war.
MATT HOOD FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
BEN GROVE, Editor
LISA COSMILLO, Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator
Editora
JUSTIN GARBERG Business manager
JENNIFER BLOWEY Retail sales manager
Asst Managing Editor...Dan England
Assistant to the editor...J.R. Clariborne
News...Kristi Fogler, Katie Greenwald
...Todd Selfert
Editorial...Colleen McCahn
...Nathan Oloon
Campus...Jess DeHaven
Sports...David Dorssey
Photo...Doug Hesse
Features...Sara Bennett
Wire...Allison Lippert
Freelance...Christine Laue
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
Business Staff
Campus sales mgr ...Jason Eberly
Regional Sales mgr ...Troy Tarweiter
National & Coop mgr ...Robin King
Special Sections mgr ..Shelly McConnell
Production mgr ..Lara Guath
Gretchen Kootterheilrich
Marketing director ..Shannon Reilly
Creative director ..John Carton
Classified mgr ..Kelly Connelys
Teahead mgr ..Wing Chan
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the University name, telephone number, written affiliation with the University of Kansas must include class and student number.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be malled or brought to the Kansan newroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
A GOLD MEDAL TO RUSSIA FOR THIN-ICE SKATING
RUSSIA
BOSNIA
HOOD UDK '94
POINT/COUNTERPOINT
Offensive material Housing was hasty equals harassment rights were ignored
The setting: Templin Hall, security hours. A security monitor on a routine check of the building notices pictures of damage or the building
notices pictures of nude women taped on several doors. She finds the pictures offensive and potentially threatening. The issue is harassment.
The setting: Templin Hall, early evening. A Resident Assistant is shown a flyer containing the following words: "F.A.G.G.O.T. For Abolishing Gay Guys Of Templin." Also on the flyer is a graphic depiction of two stick men having sex superimposed with a circle and a slash. The R.A. finds the flyer offensive and potentially threatening. The issue is harassment.
I could continue with other events of a similar nature. Events directed at me or at others. But I trust that by this time you understand my point. The events that have been reported in the University Daily Kansan to date are a scant, one-sided, inaccurate glimpse of the entire dynamic of the situation that has developed during the past several months.
At question in the hall, and everywhere else for that matter, is an individual's right to be secure. The issue is not so-called "political correctness." The issue is not what people think. Individuals are endowed with the right to think and believe what they choose. Although I do not agree with some of the opinions of others involved in this situation, I do not challenge their legitimate choice on the question of what they think. It is not my place, nor is it the place of anyone else, to dispute how or what another thinks, values or believes.
However, when an individual's beliefs cause him or her to take actions that create an environment of hostility and intentionally harass other people, those actions are inappropriate. No person has the right or privilege to infringe upon another's fundamental entitlement to live and work in an environment that is free from threatening and hostile actions. This is the issue, regardless of the people at whom the harassment is directed. The issue is harassment.
If individuals continue to participate in actions that are deemed inappropriate and morally reprehensi-
ERIC MOORE
ble, then decency requires that these people should be sanctioned. I am not advocating censorship. This is not a free speech issue. I am advocating elimination of actions that threaten entire groups of people.
The issue at hand is not the residence hall to which someone is assigned. At issue is whether or not the people in question may produce a hostile atmosphere regardless of where they live. The unadorned fact remains that they may not. At issue is the unmistakable obligation people have to treat others with basic respect and dignity. The central issue is harassment.
I certainly hope that in the future, before going off half-cocked, individuals will attempt to discover the underlying issues surrounding an event before writing stories or drawing cartoons which give a lopsided representation of the entire dynamic of the situation. Remember that the issue is harassment.
The gay men currently residing and working in Templin Hall are constantly barraged with openly hostile anti-gay material, which emerges with the specific intent to threaten and intimidate them. The issue is harassment.
The women who work in Templin Hall continue to be harassed by individuals who feel that, because they reside in a men's hall, they are allowed to do as they please. The issue is harassment.
Eric Moore is a Lawrence senior in social welfare.
all started back in November when the first article ran in the University Daily Kragen. "Offensive video
What was my crime? Living in a residence hall was the first. The second was being held responsible for what was on the outside of my door. So when someone writes perverted words on the bathroom stall, can the University be held responsible for sexual harassment? I haven't seen that happen yet. As a matter of fact, the Department of Student Housing would probably accuse me of it.
All that changed when I received a letter from Jonathan Long, assistant director of the Department of Student Housing, who told me that I had to relocate to Oliver Hall and that if I was found in Templin Hall after February 18, I would be arrested and removed by KU police. His letter said that no exceptions would be made to this decision. Also, his decision had the support of the Office of Affirmative Action and the Department of Student Life. This decision, made by one man, without my knowledge, would affect my status as a student at the University, therefore violating Article 2E of the KU Student's Bill of Rights.
Eric Moore, Templin Hall resident assistant and a homosexual, received a phone call while working at the Templin front desk. The caller belched and hung up. Mr. Moore then called KU police and told them that he thought I was the caller. Did he recognize my belch? I don't think so, because I can't even belt at will. Eric Moore claims that by seeing words on my door, he can no longer perform his job efficiently. That is why I was told to relocate.
Two days before my move, however, Jim Schmaedeke, complex director of Templin, hand delivered a letter to me from Fred McEhlenie, associate director of Student Houstures may trigger sexual harassment claims." Following were Opinion editorials like "Templin residents fighting inane battle," and "Resident's complaint shows his immaturity."
Responses included "Tasteless free speech," and "Templin residents fighting worthy battle." All these happened during the 1993 fall semester. I came back to KU thinking that this whole struggle was a thing of the past. I was planning to concentrate more on going to class and making better grades.
BRIAN
GURROW
ing. Fred's letter told me that an exception had been made to Mr. Long's decision and that my move had been postponed until a future date. Did the Department of Student Housing finally realize that they had violated my rights? Or did they just realize that there is no evidence that I sexually harassed anyone? I am still waiting for their response.
So much for spending more time on my schoolwork. I am working a full-time job and this struggle with the University is becoming another.
But if you are really wanting to be sexually harassed in a public place, go to the Spencer Museum of Art, where at my last count, there were at least 18 different paintings and sculptures of nude men, women and children.
I do not approve of homosexuals living in Templin Hall for the same reason that I am not allowed to walk into a women's rest room and use their showers. Is it because I have different genitalia than women? No, it is because they would be uncomfortable because of a heterosexual man's thoughts. That is the same way I feel about sharing the restrooms with homosexual men. I wouldn't complain if all residents were treated equally. If there were only co-ed dormins in which males could be paired with female roommates and have unisex restrooms.
My attention has now been diverted to the University's violation of my student rights. I would still appreciate privacy in my dorm, but I would much rather protect the rights that I have already been promised.
Dan Murrow le is a Kansas City, Kan., freshman in biology.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
A surprising paradox within the University system is that the Student Housing Department should choose to enact the policy concerning harassment and discrimination against a single student, (the Templin resident), while the University does nothing to the ROTC department, which adamantly discriminates against homosexuals.
to permit the ROTC department to remain on campus, when the department openly discriminates against homosexuals. I would like some explanation please into the differences between these two cases. The University policy states, "The University is committed to providing equal opportunities to all students, and prohibits discrimination based on race, religion, sex, color, disability, national origin, ancestry, and sexual orientation," page A26, The University of Kansas Timetable of Classes, Spring 1994
I do not condone what this resident did. it is my firm belief that not only should he be expelled from Templin, but that the University should expel him from its system. But it is here that the paradox applies: for two years groups have been asking the University's governmental system why it continues
Where does the University make the distinction between whom they choose to apply the policy to and whom they don't? Could it possibly be determined by who gives them federal funding and who does not?
ROTC should be subject to same rules as student
Kristy Rohr Topeka senior
Chesley Dohl's column on the XVII Winter Olympics was not only worthless, but very cruel. The German coach who had his leg severed did not slip on the track. He did not hear the warning which is sounded to clear the track each time a luger comes down the course. [Get your facts straight before you write your columns.] He admitted it was his mistake. It was a very unfortunate accident, but it isn't "amazing" or something that I would care to watch, asyouputit. Yourreaction to the accident was cruel and inhuman. You viewed it simply as an oddity inherent in the sport of luge, but these accidents are not frequent occurrences in this sport. Do you
Olympics are interesting,
columnist's words not
also get a thrill from watching a football game in which a player breaks his neck A person who watches sports for that reason should seek professional counseling.
Now, to get back to the dissection of the rest of your column. I agree that not everyone is interested in the Winter Olympics and the sports that are featured in them. But just because you and your roommate are not interested in the Olympics doesn't mean that everyone else in this country isn't. You claim to be a sports columnist, so write about sports and not how little you know about them or how little you assume others know about them.
Once again, the Kansan editorial staff lives "down" to my expectations.
Ana Khan Green Hall Staff
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, February 23, 1994
5
Disabled people to get help from state
Daily life made easier by available devices
By Roberta Johnson Kansan staff writer
People with disabilities soon will have greater access to help within the state of Kansas.
The Assistive Technology for Kansas Project recently received $1.6 million to fund an equipment loan bank and to raise public awareness, said Sara Sack, research associate at the KU Institute for Life Span Studies in Farsons.
Sack said that five centers would be set up in the state to help people with disabilities find available devices that help with daily living. Such devices
include Braille printers, telephone devices for the hearing impaired, environment-controlled light switches and talking calculators.
"Kansas hasn't had a strong network before," Sack said. "People were familiar with few, but not all, of the devices available."
The five sites will be chosen in April. Sack said that members of the Lawrence community had applied to bring a center to Lawrence.
The centers would include equipment loan banks where people could test the devices. Sack said.
People also could receive help in locating funding to purchase resources, Sack said. She said that the state could develop low-interest loans similar to those in Maine, where the interest rates were between 1 and 2 percent.
Jean Hall, program coordinator for Independence Inc., 1910 Haskell Ave., said that the biggest problem for people with disabilities was receiving financial assistance.
"The funding's not there," she said.
"And if it's not seen as medical equipment, even if it helps daily living, it's even harder."
Hall said that insurance companies, if they paid anything at all, only provided a small percentage of the total cost of assistive devices.
Although some devices — some of which can take cans off shelves or pull on socks — are inexpensive, many items may cost tens of thousands of dollars.
Hall said that an electric wheelchair could cost as much as $18,000.
A girl in Wichita uses an eye-scanning computer that costs about
The project's developers also hope to tackle the difficulty in repairing assistive devices.
$20,000,Sacksaid.
"She's without any kind of mobility for weeks," she said.
Sack said that a girl in Parsons whose wheelchair broke almost monthly had to get parts regularly from Great Britain.
Sack said the project's developers wanted to work with businesses throughout Kansas to adapt the workplace to the needs of people with disabilities.
"We're getting in touch with businesses through the chamber of commerce to show how the environments adapt easily," Sack said. "Many times it's just a simple adaptation."
Doctoral program to move to Regents Center
By Gennifer Trail
Kansan staff writer
OVERLAND PARK — Starting this summer, the KU Regents Center will offer a doctoral program for the first time.
The doctor of education degree in educational policy and leadership with an educational administration concentration will be moving from the Lawrence campus to the center. However, three other doctoral programs in educational policy and leadership still will be offered in Lawrence, said Ray Hiner, professor
of educational policy and leadership and professor of history.
Hiner said that the program still would not be able to fulfill the demand that exists in the Lawrence and Kansas City areas for the degree.
"It is clear that the largest population of educational administrators comes from the greater Kansas City area," he said. "When you couple that with the fact that there aren't many doctoral programs in education in the area, we won't be able to provide all the training needed."
the center will begin accepting applications March 1. The School of
Education will accept only 15 to 20 people for the three-year program. The first two years consist of late afternoon and evening classes during the fall and spring semesters and half-day summer sessions for eight weeks. During the third year, students work independently on a dissertation.
The degree in educational policy and leadership is designed for educational administrators who want to prepare for leadership positions at the district level.
Max Heim, professor of educational policy and leadership, said that he supported the move.
"It's a good idea to move the program to where the students are," he said. "Almost all the students I've had in my educational administration classes were from the Kansas City area."
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Wednesday, February 23, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Prominent poet inspires audience
By Cheryl Cadue Kansan staff writer
For Michael Harper, poet laureate of Rhode Island, the job of the poet is to disarm the reader.
"The poet's job is to embroider, to enrich a story, so its essential elements will be presented in a strong enough way to disarm," he said. "This allows you, the reader, to be taken out of your mode and into the poet's mode."
Harper spoke yesterday at a colloquium and poetry-reading of Every Shut Eye Ain't Asleep: An Anthology of Poetry by African Americans since 1945, which he edited.
Jack Oruch, associate professor of English, said the anthology of more than 200 poems was an important literary contribution because past anthologies of African-American poetry used older material.
Oruch said the University of Kansas was fortunate to bring Harper to speak because his work as a teacher and poet was widely known.
"He's a prominent poet and a good
poet," Oruch said. "He writes poetry about people he knows. As he puts it, he writes about people who have to go to work everyday."
Harper, who teaches at Brown University in Providence, R.I., said the anthology contained some of his own poetry, which he used to try to bridge the gap between white Americans and African Americans.
"Understanding poetry, like everything else, takes some effort," he said. "We are all Americans. People need to take the time to make the effort to understand."
Harper said everyone related to a poem in a different way, but the message of that poem could be powerful regardless of meaning.
"I'm trying the best I can to communicate," Harper said. "The best poetry is symbolic and concise."
Jennifer Williams, Topeka senior, said Harper's poetry reading was inspirational.
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"For me, he is one of the most spontaneously inspirational people I have ever met," she said. "His storytelling ability is just phenomenal."
Michael Harper, poet laureate of Rhode Island, pauses to glance at a poem in the book Every Shut Eye Ain't A Sleep: An Anthology of Poetry by African Americans since 1945, which he edited. Harper spoke yesterday at a colloquium and poetry reading.
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THE END TIMES ARE NEAR
The re-establishment of the Nation of Israel in 1948 was one of the most significant events in history. Never has a nation of people been scattered throughout the world for thousands of years and then been re-united retaining their cultural and religious identity. One of the Bible prophecies regarding the end of this age is the re-gathering of Jewish people to their homeland. The Bible also is very clear that the generation that sees the re-gathering of Israel will also see the second coming of Christ. The international exodus of Jewish people has greatly increased. The odds are stacked in favor of Bible prophecy. Maybe you should know more.
Open Discussion: Bible Prophecy in 1994-Is this it? Tuesday, March 1 at 7:00 p.m. Alderson Auditorium - 4th Floor
All 48 prophecies concerning the first coming of Christ came true. There are over 300 prophecies concerning the second coming. Are you a gambler?
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NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
de Klerk wants end of boycott in the election
The Associated Press
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — Yesterday Zulu leader Mangosuthu Buthelezi rejected the latest proposals to end his boycott of the nation's first all-race election.
But Buthelezi and his nephew — the Zulu king — later met with President F. W. de Klerk to discuss demands for Zulu autonomy after the April 26-28 vote. A statement issued by de Klerk said talks would continue, but offered no details.
Government and African National Congress leaders said the Zulu leaders and their allies, including pro-apartheid whites, have no reason to boycott the election because all their demands were addressed in proposals approved Monday at multiparty talks.
A boycott by the opposition Freedom Alliance likely would increase political violence that killed more than 3,000 blacks last year. Much of the violence, which is considered the greatest threat to free and fair voting, stems from a power struggle between the ANC and Buthelezi's Inkatha Freedom Party.
The Freedom Alliance complained the constitutional changes made at Monday's talks failed to protect the powers of regional governments from being stripped by a future government.
Cease-fire to be extended to besieged Bosnian towns
The Associated Press
BONN, Germany — Diplomats agreed yesterday to extend the Sarajevo cease-fire model to other besieged Bosnian towns, with a crucial difference insisted on by Moscow — no new NATO threats, at least for now.
Russia opposed extending the NATO ultimatum against Serb gunners around Sarajevo to other parts of Bosnia, two European officials said after a meeting among Russian, U.S. and European diplomats.
Diplomats agreed to push the three warring factions toward an overall agreement on dividing up Bosnia in three ethnic parts, according to the officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
"Fornow, I would say, we give peace a chance," said Juergen Chrobog, a deputy German foreign minister and host of the meeting.
In a statement, diplomats at the meeting said they would seek to improve the humanitarian situation in Serb-besieged Muslim enclaves and pressure Muslims and Croats for a cease-fire in central Bosnia and the southern city of Mostar.
They insisted the Serbs not move to other war fronts any of the artillery that they removed from around Sarajevo in compliance with the NATO ultimatum.
It was clear after yesterday's talks that Russia, a traditional ally of the Serbs, had added a new element to the Bosnia peace effort. The faded superpower also won some respect.
After 22 months in which the Bosnian Serbs thumbed their noses at Western demands that they cease their
attacks, it took the NATO air strike threat to motivate the Serbs to remove their big guns from around Sarajevo.
But the final step of the Serb withdrawal was negotiated by Russia, which sent 400 troops to help monitor the cease-fire. These soldiers angered Sarajevans by flashing the three-fingered Serb victory salute to Serb fighters outside the city as the world media looked on.
The U.S. and European diplomats who spoke yesterday said they had agreed with Russia's proposal to use momentum from the Sarajevo ceasefire to push for similar cease-fires elsewhere in Bosnia and an overall political solution.
Stephen Oxman, a State Department assistant secretary who took part in the meeting, said the United States didn't rule out force but would proceed on a "case-by-case" basis while trying to bring peace to new areas.
The measures discussed yesterday all can be achieved without the use of force, said Vitaly Churkin, Russia's special envoy for former Yugoslavia.
7
The Muslim-led government is unhappy with the involvement of Russia, feeling it will encourage the West to railroad the Muslims to accept a tripartite division of their land.
The Sarajevo government, which favors preserving a multi-ethnic state, has resisted a division of Bosnia along ethnic lines. Many Bosnian Serbs and Croats remain loyal to the government.
Wednesday, February 23, 1994
About 50 Bosnian refugees protested outside yesterday's meeting against the carving up of their country.
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Ex-CIA officer, wife charged with spying
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — In a case with Cold War echoes and implications for future U.S.-Russia relations, a former top CIA counterintelligence officer and his wife were arrested and charged with selling national security secrets to the Kremlin.
The case, as described in the federal affidavit for the arrest of Aldrich Hazen Ames and his wife, Maria Del Rosario Casas Ames, has many of the elements of a spy thriller novel: hand-offs of secret CIA documents at "dead drops," $1.5 million in alleged Russian payoffs and FBI agents sifting trash cans for clues.
The White House was reviewing how the case might affect relations with Russia at a time when the United States is strongly supporting President Boris Yeltsin and providing millions of dollars in aid.
Ames, 52, and his wife, Maria, 41, of Arlington, Va., appeared before a federal magistrate in Alexandria, Va., yesterday on charges of conspiracy to commit espionage.
Ames and his wife are accused of accepting more than $1.5 million in payoffs for information. The money is alleged to have been laundered through numerous bank accounts in
The afffdavit says that in 1984 Ames began meeting with Soviet Embassy officials in Washington as part of a CIA effort to seek out potential double agents in the embassy.
Switzerland and in the United States,
"which he and his wife subsequently
used for personal gain and enjoyment,
"the affidavit stated.
At an unspecified point during this operation, the affidavit says, U.S. officials became aware that he did not report — as required — all of his meetings with Soviet Embassy officials, or reported them months afterward.
Some of the information cited by the U.S. investigators — including a typewriter or printer ribbon that provided information about the foreign trips — was obtained through FBI searches of trash at the couple's home.
Ames is accused of having met surreptitiously with KGB or SVRR (Russian foreign intelligence) officials on several occasions, including in October 1992 in Caracas, Venezuela, and in November 1993 in Bogota, Colombia. Large bank deposits by Ames, which U.S. investigators said were too large to be from his CIA salary, were made in his Virginia bank accounts shortly after the alleged trips to Caracas and Bogota, the affidavit says.
Federal sting of NASA nets charges against nine men
The Associated Press
HOUSTON — Nine men, including two NASA employees, were accused yesterday of involvement in a kickback and bribery scheme at the Johnson Space Center.
The charges are in the form of six criminal complaints as a result of agreements by each defendant to waive indictment by grand jury.
General Electric Corp. and Martin Marietta Corp. agreed jointly to reimburse the government $1 million to pay for the investigation, the U.S. attorney said.
Vincent Stefan Maleche, 54, a division director for General Electric Government Service, is charged with soliciting and with accepting $2,500 from an FBI agent posing as a contractor willing to take kickbacks in return for subcontracts. He also is charged with soliciting and accepting inside information related to a $1.3 billion NASA contract.
Also named was Augustine Anthony Verrengia, 60, who worked for Martin Marietta. He was charged with accepting a $5,000 kickback from an agent and in return promising subcontracts.
Others named were David Proctor, 34, and James Milton Verlander Jr., 53, charged with two counts of bribery. Verlander allegedly was paid $5,000 to recruit an inside source, Proctor, to toit a fake kidney machine that had depicted as worthy of including on a space shuttle flight, according to federal authorities.
A corporation, Astro International Corp., of League City, was charged with unlawfully receiving NASA documents related to a $3 million contract.
In addition, Douglas Shaffer, the company president, 52, of Bayview; Kenneth Smith, 52, of Granbury, director of NASA programs for the firm; and Lawrence Stevenson, 56, of Houston, its former business development manager, were charged with violating federal acquisition regulations.
Stephen Cieland, 46, of Houston, was charged with using his official position as a NASA contracting officer to solicit a job for his son.
James Robertson, 56, of McLean, Va., a partner with J.M. Beggs Associates, a consulting firm in Arlington, Va., was charged with accepting inside bid information.
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In home of Women's History Month, we are featuring a workshop designed for women to become uniquely successful. Join us to learn methods for enhancing your leadership skills, fostering credibility and strategies for finding strength in your own communication style.
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Student Senate Elections 1994 Candidate Information Workshop Are you Interested in running for a position on Student Senate?
Do you know all of the following:
- What the rules are?
- How to fill out campaign activity/expense reports?
* What procurement questions about the cycle?
- Who answers questions about the rules?
- Where to file a complaint? What happens when a complaint is filed against you/your coalition?
All of these questions and others you may have will be answered at this general session.
Thursday, February 24, 1994
5:00 pm - 6:00 pm
Lawrence Room, Kansas State
Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union
If you have questions, contact Jennifer Paul,
Elections Commissioner, in the Student Life Office,
300 Strong Hall at 864-4060 after the meeting.
Every candidate is required to attend one of the candidate workshops in March, so mark your calendars now: March 28 at 4:30 pm; March 30 at 7:00 pm. In the Pine Room of the Kansas Union
Sponsored by the Student Senate Elections Commission
0
BEATLEmania!
THE BEATLES
Photo manipulation by John Gambie and Brian Vandervliet / KANSAN
JAYHAWK ROAD: KU students may never see the Beatles crossing Jayhawk Boulevard, but 30 years after the 'Fab Four' took America by storm, fans of the group still remember how George, John, Ringo and Paul changed the world of rock 'n' roll.
FEBRUARY 1964: FAB FOUR DESCENDS ON U.S.; 30 YEARS LATER, FANS STILL SCREAMING
By Kevin Hoffmann
Kansan staff writer
Thirty years ago this month, the British rock band "The Beatles" landed in New York and began traveling the long and winding road across America. Along that road, the Beatles became one of the most popular rock bands ever, rewriting rock 'n' roll record books.
'History has proven the Beatles to be unlike any rock 'n' roll band that ever touched foot on American soil.
'Jeff Butterfield, disc jockey at KCFX 101 FL, a Kansas City area radio station, said he was amazed by the impact of the Beatles and how their legacy had lasted.
"It's not so much the adults," Butterfield said. "It's the fact that their kids listen to them. I mean little kids."
"I remember a couple years ago going to a Christmas party at a friend's house." Butterfield continued. "There must have been about four kids running around, all very young. The thing that they did to keep themselves occupied while us grown-ups were playing poker and all that, was that they listened to Beatles records. We thought it was kind of funny that they danced to the records that their parents had when they were teen-agers."
Just two days after they landed in America, the Beatles captured the hearts of nearly every young American with an appearance on "The Ed Sullivan Show." More
than 73 million people watched that enisode.
Formed in Liverpool, England, in the late 1950s, the Beatles originally consisted of six members.
Bassist Stu Sutcliffe left the band, and drummer Pete Best was replaced with Ringo Starr.
Starr joined John Lennon, Paul McCartney and George Harrison to reach everlasting fame as a member of the "Fab Four."
The accomplishments of the Beatles, who shocked adults with their "mop" haircuts and rebellious attitudes, are countless.
During the seven years the band performed in the United States, it recorded 15 chart-topping albums and 21 No. 1 singles.
The song-writing team of Lennon and McCartney resulted in such famous albums as "The Beatles" — also known as the White Album — "Magical Mystery Tour," "Abbey Road" and "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band."
The Sgt. Pepper's album spent 63 weeks at the top of U.S. charts.
The Beatles performed for sold-out crowds everywhere they went. Stories of fans hyperventilating at concerts and going to extremes to purchase concert tickets were common.
dards for the rock 'n' roll industry, the group also changed the way rock bands would be treated in the future. Butterfield said the Beatles were one of the first bands to break free from promoters who controlled when and where they played.
Ray Velasquez, Lawrence DJ, said that his work in area clubs and at private parties was influenced by the Beatles.
"What many people don't realize is that the Beatles stood up for each other individually." Butterfield said.
Not only did the Beatles set new stan-
"Almost everything I do has been touched or influenced by the Beatles," Velasquez said. "Most kids today probably don't realize what they hear on the radio today in the way of progressive music was influenced by the Beatles."
Velasquez, who began a Beatles fan club at his high school, said the rock group had had a tremendous impact on him and his childhood friends.
"Four of us boys would act like we were the Beatles, and we would have the neighborhood girls chasing us around," he said. "I don't know of anyone else in rock 'n' roll before the Beatles that had kids acting like them."
But the Beatles could not stay together forever. Citing personal differences, the group disbanded in 1970, with all members going on to pursue successful solo careers.
'We're not the Beatles'
By Casey Barnes Special to the Kansan
On Feb. 12, 1946, John, Paul, George and Ringo slammed out "Twist and Shout" at Carnegie Hall while thousands of teen-agers screamed.
Thirty years after the Carnegie Hall appearance, look-alike groups and rumors of a possible reunion have helped keep the Beale's alive.
Today, a band in Kansas City sings "Twist and Shout" and performs a completely costumed Beatles show.
Liverpool pays special attention to the details of each performance. From '60s hairstyles to an array of original equipment from the Beatles' era, the band members do what they can to recreate the sounds of their heroes
"The Beatles changed the face of music, and they changed the whole world," said Steve Davis, the George Harrison look-alike in Liverpool and an editor at Great Plains Television.
Members of Liverpool had mixed feelings when former Beatle Paul McCartney recently announced that the group might be getting back together for a "Beatlemania" reunion.
In January, McCartney told "Rolling Stone" magazine, "We're looking for a completely unpressured situation to get together because nobody wants to revive the Beatles."
Since that announcement, McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr have said that talk of reviving the band was more of a publicity stunt than a real goal. But even the thought of a "Beatlemania" reunion elicits emotional reactions from devoted fans such as the members of Liverpool.
"At first there will be a large media hype, but it will be hard to recreate what they did in the '60s," Davis said. "They can't live up to the reputation they had in the past."
Max Utsler, professor of journalism, is a fan of both the Beatles and Liverpool. Utsler, who has played in a few bands himself, said he would like to see a Beatles reunion.
"I've always been a big advocate of the Beatles getting back together," Utsler said. "They have the ability to keep their old audience and attract a new one. No one can touch that, and there is no way to dominate them."
Many Beatles fans agreed that, if the group ever did reunite, it would not be the same without John Lennon, who was assassinated in 1980. When the band was considering a reunion, it considered replacing him with such performers as Bob Dylan, Tom Petty and Eric Clapton. But true fans of the Beatles think that Lennon's absence would have a big impact on any planned or rumored reunion.
"It will be interesting but difficult to capture the magic they had in the '60s," said Larry Kips, an employee at Quigley Music in Kansas City, Mo., who impersonates Lennon in Liverpool. "They can record music and be good, but it wouldn't be the Beatles as I remember."
Beatle collections worth more these days than a box of bugs
By Katherine Barber
Special to the Kansan
THE BEATLES THE BEATLES
Live!
the Star-Club
Hamburg
The Eagles
Britain's
soulful rock
Sings
THE BEATLES
When the Beatles invaded the United States 30 years ago this month, they didn't bring their music, they brought their images. The faces of the "Fab Four" began to pop up on everything from bobbin'head dolls to blankets and bombers.
Clyde Chapman, proprietor of The Chapman, an antique and collectibles shop at 731 New Hampshire St., said interest in Beatles collectibles for the most part was generational. Beatles memorabilia is popular mainly among those who grew up listening to the group.
Today, these items may not have the collectible draw of Elvis memorabilia, but they are valuable among a small group of collectors, local dealers say.
Price guides show that a 1965 Aladdin brand thermos with a full color lithograph of the Beaules can cost $70. A cotton blanket with a screen print of the group fetches $235.
worth $150.
The complete set of Beatles dolls with bobbing heads is valued at $640. Sold separately, George Harrison is worth $135, Paul McCartney is worth $125, Ringo Starr is worth $130 and John Lennon is
"Younger people don't get into the Beatles as much, whereas Elvis is rather cultish," Chapman said.
Alley Cat Records, 717 Massachusetts St., has a substantial collection of used Beatles records, as well as stickers and t-shirts.
Heather Lofflin / KANSAN
Chapman said that interest in Beatles trinkets probably would rise with reports that the surviving members were planning to cut another album.
Although Beatles toys and trinkets may have some value, Chapman said, the band's biggest collectible is its music.
The most valuable album, "Yesterday and Today," from 1966, features what is called the "butcher-block cover." According to price guides, it can cost as much as $10,000.
The "butcher-block" cover shows John, Paul, George and Ringo sporting butchers' coats and dolls on a butcher block with their arms and legs torn off. Only a few of these albums were released before the record company decided that the cover was too extreme and pulled it.
But even the value of Beatles albums can vary a great deal.
Some albums are worth only a few dollars, but others have been appraised in the hundreds, even thousands of dollars.
An album will fetch a higher price if both the album and its cover are in good condition, without gouges from over-playing or ring wear on the cover. Fitzgerald said.
Mike Fitzgerald, a dealer at Alley Cat Records, 717 Massachusetts St., said several factors contributed to the value of Beatles and other used albums.
If the album still has all of its paperwork, such as posters, the value also increases.
But original Beatles albums in good condition are in short supply.
Fitzgerald said the Beatles were so popular that most people played their records a lot, thus wearing them out.
But the main factor in determining an
album's worth has to do with when it was pressed, or printed. Originals and early pressings fetch higher prices, Fitzgerald said.
Andy Fletcher, also a dealer for Alley Cat Records, said of Beatles albums, "Some albums are very high-priced, but there are so many reissues that it really drives down the price."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
FEBRUARY 23,1994 PAGE 9
KULife
calendar
People and places at the University of Kansas.
EXHIBITIONS AND LECTURES
Concert—The University Band and Concert Band, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, March 2 at the Lied Center. $3 public, $2 students and senior citizens.
Lecture—artist Pheobe Adams about her work, 2 p.m. today at Spencer Museum Auditorium.
Program—"Women as Winners: Finding Your Own Voice," 7 p.m. Wednesday, March 2 at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union.
Exhibition—Sacred and Profane: Two Books In Black and White, Jan. 23-March 20 at the Spencer Museum of Art.
Lecture - Langston Hughes Lecture Series presents "Frank Marshall Davis and the Politics of Black Art" by John Edgar Tidwell, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, March 2 at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
Exhibition—"Imagery and Form," Feb. 15 March 10 at The Lawrence Arts Center, 200 W. Ninth St.
Closing Exhibition—"Art Wake"—group show of paintings, prints and sculpture by gallery artists, Feb. 12-March 1 at Artists En Masse,803 1/2 Massachusetts St.
PERFORMANCES
New Directions Series-
The Kronos Quartet,
8 p.m. Tuesday, March 1
at the Lied Center. $16,
$14 public; $8, $7
students; $15, $13 senior
citizens.
B1
Faculty Recital—Norman Pailge, tenor and Incl Bashar Pailge, mezzo-soprano, 7:30 p.m.
Monday. Feb. 28 at Swarthout Recital Hall.
Doctoral Recital—WaudHalt, plano, 7:30 tonight at Swartch Recital Hall.
Student Recital—Hong Woon Tan, composition,
7:30 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 24 at Swarthout Recital Hall.
The Renegade Theatre Company presents "East Side Comedy Shop," 10 p.m. Friday, Feb. 25, 7 and 10 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 26 at the Renegade Theatre, 518 E. Eighth St. $5 public.
10
Wednesday, February 23,1994
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Taking time to donate
JINAN
Tanya Brumaugh, an employee of Roche Biomedical Lab, takes a blood sample from Jared Smith, Pittsburgh sophomore. Members of Zeta Phi Beta sorority sponsor the drive every February to increase the number of African-American bone-marrow donors. Krista Morgan, St. Louis senior and former coordinator of the drive, said that only 4.6 percent of all bone-marrow donors are African-American.
Anglicans to allow women to become priests
The Associated Press
the last legal hurdle."
LONDON—The Church of England made it official yesterday: it will ordain women as priests.
The amendment to ecclesiastical law to permit the historic change was the last formality in a sometimes bitter and hard-fought debate within the state church.
"It feels like it is all over now," said Jan Fortune-Wood, who will be among the first women ordained at Bristol Cathedral on March 12. "It is
The vote by the church's governing General Synod came a day after a High Court judge dismissed a suit by a traditionalist priest, the Rev. Paul Williamson, who had sought to charge the archbishops of York and Canterbury with treason.
What are you going to do with your life?
I'm going to be somebody! I'm going
to join
"We will have the doctrine tested in every court in the land and Europe," Williamson shouted from the gallery as the General Synod voted.
At least 1,200 women are expected to become priests in the next few
months.
Since the General Synod voted in November 1992 to ordain women, 35 Anglican clergymen and several hundred lay people have quit in protest, according to church representative Steve Jenkins.
Many have joined the Roman Catholic Church, which does not permit women priests. More priests are expected to leave when they become eligible for compensation provided for those who cannot accept sharing their ministry with women.
INTERESTED IN A CAREER IN BOOK PUBLISHING?
A representative from the University of Denver's Publishing Institute will be giving talks and answering questions tonight from 7 to 9 pm in Alcove B of the Kansas Union to seniors and graduate students interested in admission to the summer 1994 class.
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Coordinators/Committees: Feature Films, Fine Arts, Forums, Live Music,
Public Relations, Special Events, Spectrum Films, and Recreation & Trav Coordinator applications are available now in the SUA office and are due by
Coordinator applications are available now in the SUA office and are due by
5 p.m., Monday, February 28.
Committee Member informational meetings will be held
Committee Member informational meetings will be held Tuesday, April 5, in the Southwest Lobby of the Burge Union at 7:30 p.m., and Wednesday, April 6, in the Frontier Room of the Burge Union at 7:30 p.m. Applications for committee members will be available only at these informational meetings For more information call 864-3477.
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, February 23, 1994
11
'Huskers hope to upset' Hawks
NCAA berth could be set with victory
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
Three years of defeat at Nebraska stare in the Kansas seniors' faces. Kansas coach Roy Williams sees two years of close games in Lincoln, Neb.
The No.10 Jayhawks will attempt to end both streaks at 7:05 tonight at the Devaney Center.
"Some teams just feel more comfortable playing at their own place," Williams said. "For our seniors, I think this is the only place where they haven't won."
The seniors have won a road game against every conference opponent except Nebraska. The Cornhuskers have pulled out narrow victories at home in the past two seasons against Kansas. And each time Nebraska senior guard Jamar Johnson has hit three-pointers to finish the Jayhawks.
Last season, Johnson's 25-foot jump shot with 1.01 left in the game handed Kansas its first conference defeat 68.
MINNESOTA BASKETBALL
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64. Johnson's other last-second three-point shot in 1992 defeated Kansas 81-79 in overtime.
The Jayhawks enter the game at 21-5 overall and 6-4 in the conference. The Cornhuskers are 14-8 and 4-4, but Nebraska coach Danny Nee said the team still had a chance to make the NCAA Tournament.
"If we can get the quality wins and win all our games at home, we have a shot," Nee said. "If we get 17 or 18 wins, we'll get in the tournament."
Williams said that he thought Nebraska could get in the tournament. Nebraska has four games left on its schedule with only one road game at Missouri.
"If they go 7-7 in the league, they could go," Williams said. "I will fight."
you're 7-7 in this league and have some good nonconference wins, you should be in the tournament."
Williams said Kansas' goals had changed somewhat. The Jayhawks wanted to win their fourth consecutive regular season title, but Missouri dashed their chances with an 81-74 victory Sunday. Although an NCAA bid may seem locked up for Kansas, Williams said he would not be satisfied if the team did not do well in the conference tournament.
"The goal to win our fourth regular season title is out the window now, but every other goal we had can still be reached," Williams said. "We can win the tournament and try to make the NCAA Tournament with a high seed."
Kansas' goals could be difficult with senior guard Steve Woodberry and senior forward Richard Scott affected by injuries. Woodberry still is bothered by a cut below his left eye, and Scott has a nagging left shoulder injury.
"Hopefully, Steve's eye will get better," Williams said. "But really, we know that Richard's shoulder will not get better."
Woodberry will be depended on against Nebraska to cover senior forward Eric Piakowski, who is averaging 19.6 points and 6.3 rebounds a
game and is seventh in the conference in scoring. He had 26 points against Kansas in the Jayhawks' 94-87 victory Feb. 6.
"We played him a lot with Steve last game," Williams said. "Steve's just a tremendous defensive player. Eric's tough because he moves all the time. Some players stay in the same area, but you never know where Eric is going to be."
Williams said Nebraska was the best three-point shooting team in the conference.
The Cornhuskers are second in the conference in scoring with an 86.9 points a game average, but Nee said defense was a problem, especially against taller teams.
"We're shooting the ball at a higher percentage, but we're not going to beat people by outscoring them," he said. "We feel we have to play better defense. We haven't been able to stop big players on the inside."
Some Kansas players said the Nebraska game would be the start of a new season. Kansas sophomore forward Sean Pearson said all was not lost after Missouri's victory.
"We just have to forget about it and move on," he said. "There's not much we can do about it now. We need to try and win the Big Eight Tournament."
KANSAS 29 CHUBICK 44 KU NEBRAFIELD 12
Kansas senior guard Steve Woodberry shoots a jumper between Nebraska senior forward Bruce Chubbick and senior guard Jamar Johnson. Kansas defeated Nebraska 94-87 Feb. 6 at Allen Field House.
KANGAN FILE PHOTO
Freshmen styles differ, but success is the result
By Matt Siegel
By Matt Siegel
Kansan sportswriter
One came from New Jersey, and two others are from Wisconsin and Oklahoma. Yet another is from Lawrence. Although from different parts of the country, the freshmen of the Kansas women's basketball team have made their presence known.
"Out of all the 298 Division I schools, I can't think of anyone who is prouder than I am of their freshman class," Kansas coach Marian Washington said. "They have had to step up in a hurry and have done a tremendous job."
4
The four freshmen all have contributed in different ways.
KANSAN FILE PHOTO
The four freshmen all have contributed in different ways. Tamecka Dixon, a former high school All-American from New Jersey, is a point guard. Colorado coach Ceal Barry said that Dixon's speed added a new dimension to Kansas. Dixon has used that speed and a variety of shifty dribbling moves to average 7.5 points and 4.3 rebounds a game.
Angela Halbleib, Wisconsin's all-time women's high school scoring leader, plays at the off-guard position for the Jayhawks. Washington said Halbleib was one of the finest shooters the Big Eight Conference would see this season. Halbleib's prolific jump shot has made her the third leading scorer on the team, averaging 11.5 points a game.
Forward Jennifer Trapp, who is from Lawrence, is the only freshman to start for Kansas. Trapp is averaging 8.5 points and 4.3 rebounds a game and is the only Kansas freshman to record more than 10 points and 10 rebounds in a single game this season.
Shelly Canada, who was a four-year letter winner as a high school basketball player in Oklahoma, plays the forward or center spot for the Jayhawks. Canada, after playing six-on-six basketball in high school, has had to adapt to the conventional five-on-five format. Canada averages 2 points per game and more than 11 minutes of playing time.
"I'm not really surprised by our success," Trapp said. "I think we all knew that we could contribute. I think in our situation it was a must that we contribute, but we don't look at it that way. As freshmen we're excited to get playing time and contribute. It's a great opportunity for all of us."
The freshmen have helped the Jayhawks earn a No. 12 national ranking along with a 19-4 overall record and a 10-3 conference record. Some players such as sophomore guard Charisse Sampson and junior forward Angela Aycock admitted that they had trouble sustaining their production for an entire year as freshmen. Trapp said the freshman class had, for the most part, been able to avoid
Kansas freshman forward Jennifer Trapp looks on as fellow freshman forward Shelly Canada posts up against Oklahoma junior forward Angie Guffy.
that pitfall because each freshman did their own thing.
"Tamecka has tremendous ball handling skills and can run the floor like nobody," Trapp said. "Angela, with her three-pointers, always lights it up. Shelly and I are always working hard inside. We're going to have our freshman mistakes of course, but we are pretty optimistic. We're not looking to hit a wall."
"I think with Michigan it was unbelievable that they got the 'Fab Five,' Trapp said. "I think that we have a really great class here. We will continue to improve and possibly be the 'Fab Four' our senior year."
Even though Kansas' freshmen are confident, none of them would go so far as to say that they were a women's version of Michigan's "Fab Five."
Hableib credited the freshmen's success to confidence that the other Javahawks had instilled in them.
Kansas track teams hoping for 'crazy things' at meet
By Andrew Gilman
Kansan sportswriter
Anything can happen.
Kansas track coach Gary Schwartz is saying that about this weekend's Indoor Big Eight Conference championships Feb. 25-26 in Oklahoma City.
"We'll be at a facility where crazy things can happen," Schwartz said.
Schwartz is referring to the indoor track at the Myriad Gardens in Oklahoma City. The track has banked boards that allow for more things to happen, he said.
The track in Oklahoma City is a raised track on the turns. Each lane is higher than the next but evens out on the straight aways.
"With the boards, people get bumped around," he said. "The races are more strategic."
Kansas will need a lot of those "crazy" things to happen if they are to upset the favorites in this weekend's championships.
In a prechampionship coaches poll, defending champion Iowa State was the favorite for the men's title, and Nebraska received the edge on the women's side. Nebraska will be looking to win its 14th consecutive indoor title.
Schwartz agreed with the predictions.
"Nebraska and Iowa State are the ones to beat," he
"This year's team has better depth and quality than before," he said. "Potentially, this could be the best finish since I've been here."
Schwartz said that the men's team was as good as it had been in a while.
The Jayhawks were picked to finish fifth on the men's side and second on the women's.
HIS SPORTS
One of those top finishes could go to junior triple jumper Harum Hazim. Hazim has placed third the last two years at the indoor conference meet.
"I see the title as rightfully mine," he said. "I'm looking for the big jump this weekend. I'm thinking more and using my speed more."
Junior Cassandra Bryant-Wans, who won the triple jump conference indoor title in 1992, will be jumping in the same event. She said that this year's women's team was capable of beating the Cornhuskers.
"I'll have some big jumps this weekend," she said. "We're after Nebraska and, hopefully, we'll be able to take them."
John Gamble / KANSAN
Junior high jumper Erik Lundgren clears the bar in practice at Anschutz Sports Pavilion. The team was practicing yesterday in preparation for the Big Eight Championships Friday and Saturday in Oklahoma City.
Kansas will have two conference indoor track champions from the 1993 season hoping to repeat when the Javahaws travel to Oklahoma City.
Senior Julia Saul will defend her title in the 5,000-meter run, and senior Michael Cox will try to duplicate last year's performance in the mile run.
But Schwartz said that there were many others who could compete well.
Schwartz mentioned senior John Bazzoni as a threat to place well in the pole vault. Bazzoni vaulted to the conference's outdoor title last year and has the conference's best indoor vault this season at 17-7.
Schwartz said the women jumpers were strong, along with the distance runners, junior Kristi Kloster and senior Daniela Daggy. He also mentioned Saul.
"She hasn't raced very much this year, bust she doesn't need to," he said. "She is a major scoring threat in the 5,000- and 3,000-meter runs."
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Wednesday, February 23, 1994
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY. KANSAN
Big Eight alignment with SWC discussed
By Doug Tucker The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Big Eight, the nation's most stable conference for 37 years, has decided it either can grow stronger or die.
Texans seem much more willing than Missourians, Oklahomaans, Coloradoans, Iowaans or Nebraskans to call it a done deal.
But throughout the Big Eight, officials were gearing up yesterday for expansion with four members of an apparently disintegrating Southwest Conference — a move that keeps the Big Eight apace of the dizzying changes sweeping through college football.
The move many had speculated upon for more than a year broke into
public discourse when sources in the SWC said the Big Eight had offered to bring in Texas, Texas A&M, Texas Tech and Baylor.
But the Big Eight is saying — publicly at least — not so fast.
"We haven't done anything formal," said Colorado chancellor James Corbridge, one of the Big Eight's most active CEOs, in talks with the SWC that began when Arkansas left for the Southeastern Conference several years ago.
"We've been talking to the Southwest Conference for quite some time about a variety of scenarios, all the way from creative scheduling to friendly lunches to the possibility of some realignment." Corbidge said.
ly the favored four have been told they are welcome.
The move would send shock waves through the other four SWC schools: Southern Methodist, Texas Christian, Rice and Houston. They've been told in no uncertain terms they aren't wanted.
A television consultant reported the sprawling Dallas-Fort Worth and Houston television markets could be locked up by having Texas and Texas A&M, without getting "saddled" with SMU and Houston.
League coaches familiar with the situation agree.
"You're naming four very fine institutions there," Corbridge said. "All kind of options were discussed, all kind of options are open. We've tried to pursue every possible opportunity."
"Certainly, our conversations have accelerated in the past couple of weeks with the activities by other conferences who formed their own network television deals and left the College Football Association."
Sources say the plan is to split the league into north-south divisions of six schools each. Division members would play each other every year and two teams from the other division yearly on a rotating basis.
Still unclear are a number of details:
What to call the new league? What about such things as conference records and traditional rivalries? Who will be in charge? Where will he hang his hat?
And what about basketball? Big Eight basketball coaches recently voted against a merger with the SWC.
Valid Through July 31, 1994
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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 taxed rental
University Bookshop • 1116 W 23rd St • 749-5206: 20% off all clothing (except sale items)
Weaver's Department Store • 901 Massachusetts • 843-6360: 20% off all lingerie, hosiery or intimate apparel
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)
RESTAURANTS & BARS
American Bistro • 701 Massachusetts • 841-8349: 10% off any entree (limit one)
Bonanza • 2329 Iowa • 842-1200: All-you-can-eat Frestastress 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 regular price, get the 2nd for $1 (Good Mon - Frl, 4 pm to 9 pm)
Little Caesars Pizza-Pizza • 1410 Kasold, 865-5400/520 W 23rd, 842-8000: FREE Crazy Bread w/y any pizza/pizza 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 14th St (under The Wheel) • 842-3232: $4 _sm_ $6 _med_ $8 _lg_ ea add topping 75c ($Void w/o other offers)
Shoney's Restaurant • 2412 Iowa • 843-3519: FREE salad bar w/y any purchase of a sandwich and fries
Vista Drive In • 1527 W 6th St • 842-4311: FREE reg. French Frw 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
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 at its reg, price, get the 3rd (equal or lesser value) at 50% off Kansas Sports Club • 837 Massachusetts • 842-2992: 20% off KU sweatshirts
Kansas Sports Club • 837 Massachusetts • 842-2992: 20% off KS sweatshirts
Laser Logic • 665-0505: 20% Off Reused Laser Printer Cartridges (FREE 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 N2nd 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)
Store Lane • 2004 W. 23rd, 965-2777: $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)
Virginia Tech • 8 College • 749-8744: 15% off any accessory for K1 and norrisite
The Auto Medic • 3631 W 10th St • 842-0384: 20% off any service call
Vormehr Studio & Gallery • 1 Riverfront Plaza, Ste 321 • 749-0744: 15% off of framed prints of KU and sororities
SERVICES
The Auto Medic • 3831 W 10th St • 842-0364; 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 class advertisement
Terms and conditions. The following terms and conditions relate to candidate for use in the University Daily Kanman Card (UDC) at Participating MEMBERS (PM). The UDC must be signed to be valid, is non-transferable, and PM may require identification, consolidation of terms used by any other than the candidate for use in the University Daily Kanman Card. Candidate's signature on the UDC shall constitute an agreement to be bound by these terms and the directors of the Director 2. DSC Special Offers Discounts are not valid with other offers or special promotions on PM $10. do not apply to position of purchase or apply only to candidate for reasonable personal purchase to total purchase (as determined by PM). If non-DNC purchasers are part of the total purchase d are only available
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
864-4358
Classified Directory
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional
100s
Announcements
108 Personal
110 Business
Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
235 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
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise any 'profitable' 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 underwritten by Monsanto.
100s Announcements
110 Bus. Personals
unique Stirring Silver Jew
Hoppe, Ponders & Morda
The Etc. Shop
292 Mass. Downtown
Holiday Inn, Steamboat Springs, Co. Party with someone you know. Free beer and appetizers every night from 5 p.m.-7 p.m. when you stay with someone special. Call 1-800-634-3944 to book your VISIT Break today.
I
WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11:30am
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Friday 8am-9pm
Saturday 10am-9pm
Sunday 11am-9pm
Urgent Care (Additional Charges)
Monday, Friday 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8am-4:30pm
KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services
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AIRLINE HOTLINE 841-7117
TRAVEL CENTER
- Spring Break Packages
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Southern Hills Center
1601 W.23rd.M.F.-9.F:5-30 Sat. 9:30-2
LOCATED BY Perkins
Located by Perkins
120 Announcements
FOREIGN LANGUAGE Study Skills Program.
Help for student of any language. PREI1 Improve
conversation skills. Prepare for conversation
skills. Thurs, Feb 24, 3:00-5:30,
404 Wacec. Sponsor by the Student Assistance
Recovered Source 12th & Oread
841-9475
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Pay Cash for CD's
Alhiza
TRADE BUY SELL Cd's Lp's & Tapes
SPRING BREAK 94
Cancun $439
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Improve reading, writing listening comprehension and conversation skills
FOREIGN LANGUAGE
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305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
380 Miscellaneou
370 Want to Buy
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
-Kansan Classified;864-4358
Tax preparation: Short Form $15, Long Form $26
Economic filing $27, refun loans $9, Call $86
Credit report $30, Refunds $19
Wanted: Women for my Glamour Portfolio!
Schedule: Photo Shoot and Glamour Make-Over
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Spring Break
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130 Entertainment
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140 Lost & Found
Daytona's Beach is 23 miles long. Don't let a bad location ruin your Spring Break
Ski Trip. Spring Break - March 21-25, sleeper buser crept helix, (316) 789-1914
Programmable calculator found Tuesday after noon at 15th and 18th. Call to identify 842-6162.
Men and Women
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Camp Counselors USA
420 Florence St. Palo Alto, CA 94301
800-998-2267
600 CAMPS 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
Adult and youth impresses needed. Anyone interested in working up a umpire for Lawrence Parks and Recreation Dept. contact Bob Stancifl 843-712-9212 or go to www.rbc.edu/leeba at 843-1411 for youth baseball/ball.
CAMP COUNSELORS WANT for private Michigan gan boys/girls summer camps. Teacher: swimming, crafts, sailing, golf, sports, rifley, rifley, crafts, dramatics, or riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. Salary $150 or more. Gift certificate: CWC/WC/176 Mapple, 60098, 700-444-244.
Caregiver-experience preferred assisting disabled male, personal care, transfers in a wheelchair, and living in exchange possible. 842-3739 (after 4:15 wk days)
Children's counselors, activities instructors, bus drivers, cooks, nannies, kitchen mgt., kitchen maid, library staff, BOX PO BOSTON, BOO CUNION, 832-452-465
$15 Today $30 This week
By donating your life saving blood plasma WALK-INS WELCOME!
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816 W 24th 749-5750
Counselors/Support Staff-Children's Camp; Northeast-Total salary, MBA/BD/Laundry, travel allowance. Must have skill in one of the following sports: basketball (jazz, tap, ballet), drum, drums; field hockey, football, golf, gymnastics, l拳击; basketball (jazz, tap, ballet); lacrosse, mature, photography, piano, pioneering rockery, rollerblading, ropes, sailing, soccer, swim team, tennis, theater, technicians; kitchen steward, cooks, bus drivers, maintenance, nurses, secretaries. Men call or write; Camp Wink for Boys, Glades Rd. Suite 217; Camp Tuesdays for Girls, Kitchen steward, cooks, bus drivers, maintenance, nurses, secretaries. Men call or write; Camp Vega for girls, P.O. Box 1797; Duxbury, MA 02332 (617) 934-8536. We will be on campus in the student union from 1am-4pm on weekdays.
Cruise line, entry level, on-board positions avail,
that benefit Summer or year round (818) 564-7320.
Drummer w/ practice space desperately needed for Lawrence band w/ gigs upcoming very soon: Blues, Rock and Funk oriented. Sam 864-7583 of B4-9588.
Freelance graphic artists needed to create designs for a leading company. Call 815-1166 for more information.
Gourmet Bibra now hire terrace server, wafd
server. 901-245-8630 www.gourmetbibra.com
Service W. 800 OP KS (903) 811-1010
Looking for capable, creative and helpful individual, to be a mother's helper. If interested, please send name and number to Staci, P. O. Box 719 Lawrence KS 66044
Nannies Wanted. Positions nationwide,满额
Great pay and benefits.
Travel. (612) 635-4900
Travel. (612) 635-4900
Interested In Becoming A Naismith R.A.
Mandatory question & answer session
Tuesday, March 1 at 10pm Meet at the Front Desk Application will be given out
NALSMITH Hall
1800 Naismith 843-8559
1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, February 23, 1994
13
94
KU SENIORS
- RESUMÉS
* COVER LETTERS
* INTERVIEW TRAINING
832-8100
RESUMÉ SERVICES
Juicers
Shopping
Juccers Showgirls
Explore the horizons of making $1000 + weekly,
working at Lawrence's top adult night spot.
Now hiring attractive dancers and waitresses 18+.
Excellent working atmosphere.
Apply in person,
913 N. Second, Lawrence,
7 p.m.-2 a.m., or call 841-4122 after 7 p.m.
Spend your summer in Main!
prior privilege in resident camp looking for athletic trainees of all levels (BED/MRD/laidroom, travel allowance, Women call or write: Camp Vega for Girls, P.O. Box 1711, Duxbury, MA. O2323 (617) 934-6538 We will be on 1am-4pm on 1/24/2024, 1/25/2024, 1/26/2024, 1/27/2024, 1/28/2024, 1/29/2024, 1/30/2024, 1/31/2024, 1/32/2024, 1/33/2024, 1/34/2024, 1/35/2024, 1/36/2024, 1/37/2024, 1/38/2024, 1/39/2024, 1/40/2024, 1/41/2024, 1/42/2024, 1/43/2024, 1/44/2024, 1/45/2024, 1/46/2024, 1/47/2024, 1/48/2024, 1/49/2024, 1/50/2024, 1/51/2024, 1/52/2024, 1/53/2024, 1/54/2024, 1/55/2024, 1/56/2024, 1/57/2024, 1/58/2024, 1/59/2024, 1/60/2024, 1/61/2024, 1/62/2024, 1/63/2024, 1/64/2024, 1/65/2024, 1/66/2024, 1/67/2024, 1/68/2024, 1/69/2024, 1/70/2024, 1/71/2024, 1/72/2024, 1/73/2024, 1/74/2024, 1/75/2024, 1/76/2024, 1/77/2024, 1/78/2024, 1/79/2024, 1/80/2024, 1/81/2024, 1/82/2024, 1/83/2024, 1/84/2024, 1/85/2024, 1/86/2024, 1/87/2024, 1/88/2024, 1/89/2024, 1/90/2024, 1/91/2024, 1/92/2024, 1/93/2024, 1/94/2024, 1/95/2024, 1/96/2024, 1/97/2024, 1/98/2024, 1/99/2024, 1/100/2024, 1/101/2024, 1/102/2024, 1/103/2024, 1/104/2024, 1/105/2024, 1/106/2024, 1/107/2024, 1/108/2024, 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We're looking for the rare person who can recognize an exceptional opportunity. p/t school year and f/t summer sales internships are available from Northwestern Mutual Life in the financial services industry. An opportunity to work with a respected company, gain valuable training, and be your own boss. Some of our leading interns are making five-figure incomes.
For more information contact:
Jason Lank, College Unit
Director at (913) 362-5000 or
Cathy Schwartz, internship
director at the University
Placement Center at 864-
7679.
235 Typing Services
1-der Women Ward Processing. Former editor transforms scripts into accurate pages of letter
Beacon Publication Services-Quality word pro-
cesses, later printing, call us: 483-874-2637.
Word processing, applications, term papers, dissertations, resumes. Editing, composition, rush jobs available. Masters Degree. 841-6254.
Word processing, spread sheets, resumes, mail mergers, etc. No job too small. Laser printing. Call evenings: 842-6708.
Words by Chris Words Processing.
High quality handwriting, spell check
check with 850-309-509
X
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
**BRASS BD**, firm, orthopedic mattress set and
bedding. cost $100, price $30, cash deal,
tel: 764-8242
*LIVING ROOM SET, safa, love seat and chair*
Plush rug
dealer, renter $1500
*dealer, renter $744-822*
1987 KAW. Niija-Super clean-clean extra$2650
oar Carl 745-753
1953 GT PANTERA 19" BRIGHT RED 7050 ALUM.
W/CRMO FORT SUNINT XC-LT DERAILERS W/
CRMO FORT SUNINT XC-LT DERAILERS W/
CHOI TROES ASKING $875 B.O. CHRIS 424-4980
LEAVE MESSAGE
Bass Guitar for sale. Banae soundgra Ash body. Ebony frond. active electronic perfect condi-
tion.
Classical Guild. Guild SP vc case, 400 b32834
Eight mollon membership to Guild B32834
Eight mollon membership to Guild B32834
For sale 29 gallon aquarium, excellent condition,
all accessories, $75; call 841-7415.
Genuine Imperial Alpaca wool sweaters. Call 855-6832, ask for Luis. prices from $0-$40.
Hyundai super-280 desktop with a 40m, Seagate Hd. 3.5 inch, and 5.25 floppy drive, 14 ega color monitor, keyboard, mouse, DOS, windows $650.
84J144J
Trailridge Apartments
new leasing for Summer and Fall
Studies, Apts., and Town Homes
KUB College, Ballard,
Mountain Court, 4021,
Call Today for more information
843-733-2500 2.50th W.
6th
INFINITY Reference one black steering boxing 1200 now $159 need付 841-3950
**89 Hyundai Excel GLS in good condition.** sdr
16kil, iM, acAM, IP, FM cassette;
Call Num 841-2305
Jaynaw spirit
3 free sew on letters (with purchase
through the end of February
925 Massachusetts
340 Auto Sales
Wedding Dress. Size 7, ivory, Torch length train,
1150. Call IJ at 842-5390.
MACINTOSH Computer. Complete system including printer only 500, Call Chris at 829-889-6885.
Grey 79 Limited Edition Mazda RX 7. Sun roof, window in excellent shape. Needs engine work.
Macintosh Classic I 4/60 with 40 MB+ MS Word,
Pageranker and Mageark $70,000 $70,000 C4-665 888
1900 NAISMITH
Queenize waterbed, freeway, w/bookshell
boardhead #12/0.0, B.3, 189-104.
Avail. June or Aug. 4 @ 3R. 84 BR. 2A, Lg rooms in closes,
total kitchen, coin-油贮, storage unit,
calc.pck CALL 1-913-686-7997 (Topeka) or 841-8704
(Cinch) after 6 o.m.
Giving Away cellular phone number FREE. First month service and connection fees payed. Call 841-265-3700.
KD U. Jikauh Decak VIII, three color, 1982' 6"x5"
for $15. WP Box PO 7351 Laurence 60466
360 Miscellaneous
printer only $50, Call Siria at 902-298-3560.
KU OJ. KAYHJ Decal, three color, 1987 '95 $45
KU OJ. KAYHJ Decal, three color, 1987 '95 $45
Aquarium, 30 gallon "long" tank with walnut stand, and ground lights, lots of goodies. Mail back to:
480-275-2711 Call 362-759-2711
400s Real Estate
2. Barn w/suormoon and plenty of storage space, 2 bathrooms, D/W, W/D, central air, fire place and pool. On KU bus route, $50 + utilities, avail. March 1. Mellandia - 1.897-4685
405 For Rent
HOTEL
1 Bedroom Apt. available now! Call 841-1212.
---
*2BR from $407*
*Jacuzzi in each apt*
*15k, to KU bus route*
*Pd cable TV/Pets*
*Pd cable TV/Pets*
*Basketball court/park*
On-site management
Office on-site
15 Call for Appointments
1:59pm - F-Mon - 10 Fri
4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished
very nice? Interested? Call 841-3330, 748-4445 or
email us at sales@businessplace.com
Naismith Place
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
- 1 and 3 Bedroom Apartments Available
• Quiet Location
• 2 blocks from KU bus route
• Call Gina at 843-4754
2040 Heathwood
Approccer Apt. aval, April 1 3 bdmr, bath. fully equipped kdt. dishwasher, micro. disposal heat, kitchen equipment, microwave, pets Cals anytime 84-8229. Akkri Or Siusa Available at West Wills Apts. Spacious i bed unfurnished apt. $275 per month. Water pad. Great location near campus. 1012 Emerge Rd. No pets. 841-8229
2040 Heatherwood
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
VILLAGE
SQUARE
apartments
- Close to campus
•Spacious 2 bedroom
•Laundry facility
•Swimming Pool
•Waterbed allowed
9th & Avalon 842-3040
---
Available now, two bedroom at 912 Tennessee
avenue, $75 plus utilization, small pet G. K. 789-7450
*Luxurious 2,3, & 4 Bedroom Town Homes*
*Garages; 2½ Baths*
*Microwave Ovens*
*Some with Fireplaces*
*On KU Bus Route*
*Swimming Pool and Tennis Courts*
Mae Kunze plant now leasing for Aug 1, 4yr. old luxury apts, close to campus. All MAP3, microwave, washer & dryer all Kitchen appl. decks or patio/patio. Well insulated, energy
SUNRISE
VILLAGE
660 Gateway Ct.
(Behind Sonic)
Now Leasing for Fall
Mon.-Fri. 10-12, 1-5
Park25
meadowbrook
We are now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature studio 1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. We also have 3 bedroom, $2 \frac{1}{2}$ bath townhomes.
Furnished room for rent with shared kitchen and
bathroom from KU. Off street parking.
No pets. 844-500-9500
Hanover Place Apt. for rent. Near Campus.
$370/Mo Call 841-1212
$750/Month
Now renting for June and August. 1 & 3 bdams,
dwabther, movable house, in place, ceiling,
furniture, lighting, carpet.
841-8400 or
841-1287
2 3 4 5 6 7 8
- Volleyball Court
- with 4 Stops on Property
- 2 Pools
- 2 Laundry Rooms
- Some Washer/Dryer
Hookups
efficient. Call 749-1166.
Call or stop by today.
2401 W. 25th, 9A3
842-1455
(sorry no pets)
- On KU Bus Route
1. How much time did you spend looking for your apartment?
Rooms, apartments, and well kept, older homes available now. 841-STAR (7827)
1. If you spent over 1 hour,
MORNING STAR
2. Doyou want to live in a beautiful, centrally located living community?
- Laundry Room
* Some Washer/Dryer
Answer 2 Questions
you wasted a lot of your time.
2. Meadowbrook is leasing for fall now. Call Kathy or Shana and in 1 hour your apartment hunting time will be over!
Answers
Mon-Fri 8:5-30
Sat 10-4 Sun 1-4
15th & Crestline
842-4200
Sorry, no pets
MOVING TO PHEONIX1 Person needed NOW for spacious loft. 3 bdtrm townhouse. Glenhaven Apts. Close to campus/downstreet. W/D $200 obso /sUtil. Smoking fine-No pets. Call 865-4238.
Study公寓 availment 夏30 May - Aug 10. May
study公寓 availment 夏20 May - Aug 10.
Purchased. Purchased $191 Calle B at 835-195.
Purchased $191 Calle C at 835-195.
New 3 bedroom home, 2 bath, washer-dryer hook-up,
room rate $800, bus route $800, deposit $924 145-149
On campus, newly remodeled studio now avail-
ble. Great day to take a look!
$295 + electricity.
Come on Over For Dinner
You don't have to live here to eat here! Our "Dine Anytime" meal programs let you enjoy a huge selection of appetizing entrees, vegetables, desserts, and salads from 7am-7pm daily (11am-6:30pm weekends) With our "Punch Card" and "5 Meal" programs you can get meals as low as $2.50 Either way, you'll eat it up.
Formore information call or stop by
NAISMITH Hall
1800 Naismith 843-8559
One bedroom apartment for sublease. Water and
plumbing free. Free security. #845/mo. Now
until Aug. Call 843-614-08
One bedroom apartment available now. On KU bus route. Small pets OK. Call 853-4289.
Room for rent $180 per month plus one 30 utilities. Call Mike at 841-3452, non smoker.
Spacitions bedroom apt immediately to campus. Pur-
spective call 841-1212. Call 841-1212. Good Coldwater Rental
Offers Completely Furnished
Now leasing for FALL
Studio, 1,2,3, & 4 bedroom apartments and townhouses
MASTERCRAFT
We're making life easier
HANOVER
14th & Mass. : 841-1212
REGENTS COURT
19th & Mass. : 749-0445
SUNDANCE
7th&Florida : 841-5255
- Weekly Maid Service
- Front Door Bus Service
- "Dine Anytime" with unlimited seconds
ORCHARD CORNERS
- Laundry and Vending Facilities
TANGLEWOOD
10th & Arkansas : 749-2415
CAMPUS PLACE
1145 Louisiana : 841-1429
Mon-Fri 9am-5pm Sat 10am-4pm
MASTERCRAFT
- Free Utilities
842-4455
NAISMITH Hall
Equal Housing Opportunity
1800 Naismith 843-8559
Sublease top floor studio on 8th & Color. from March 1st to July 1st, $104 or pwd, Launcher facilities. Near bus route. 841-5797 or 841-5798.
Summer Sublease 1 from needsmates 3 Bed K3 bathroom Townhouse, Wather/Dryer. Pool Tennis Courses. On Bus Route, B24-4927
West Hill APARTMENTS
NOWLEASING FOR IUNE AND AUGUST
Bedroom apartments
* Furnished and unfurnished
* Great location near campus
* No Pets
OPEN HOUSE
Mon. Wed. Fri.
12:30-4:30No Appl. Needed
1012Emery Rd.
841-3800
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
430 Roommate Wanted
How to schedule an ad:
I HAVE TO MOVE TO K.C. I ( female needed to share 3 dbm, spacious apis. $200/m + utilities, on bus route, convenient location, no smokers or pets, call 842-7647 in the evening.
Female non-smoking roommate wanted to share
room with you. You must be a student for
next fall. Must be a student. Call 833-2299
Ads phoned in may be billed by your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
1 Rrommate to share 3 bdrm house, w/d, new床
2 $175/mo. + /u utilities. For more info call 748-
016-5944.
Male roommate to down house at Sunrise VILLA
Call 812-4377 for details. Call Mike or John at 823-1477 for details.
- By Mail: 119 Stairfor Flint, Lawrence, KS. 68045
ROOMMATE NEeded to share two bedroom
house 189/mo + call 86-305-3999
or visit www.roommate.com
Classified Information and order form
Stop by the Kansas office between 8 a. m. and 5 p. m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be propaid, 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 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 your expiration date.
assisted rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of again 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.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansan 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 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.
Notes
Cost per Unit per day
Please print your ad one word per box
Cost per mile per day
1X 2-3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 20+X
2.95 1.55 1.65 .95 .75 .95
1.90 1.15 1.90 .70 .85 .45
1.95 1.85 .75 .65 .85 .40
1.75 .90 .65 .65 .85 .25
185 personal
110 business persons
129 announcements
139 entertainment
Classifications
1401 host & found
265 help wanted
225 professional services
225 service顾问
1401 hire & found
265 help wanted
225 professional services
225 service顾问
Total ad cost:
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
370 want to Buy
465 for rent
438 roommate wanted
1 | | | | | |
2 | | | | |
3 | | | | |
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Date and begins:
Total day in paper.
Total cost: Classification:
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The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1994 FarWorks Inc. Dist. by Universal Press Syndicate
O
2.23
Larson
"Sorry, Bobby, but you know the rule — no swimming for a week after eating."
1
14
Wednesday, February 23, 1994
THE HERALD
Red Lyon Tavern
944 Mass. 832-8228
A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence
Sexy & Sassy for Spring
Hot Tubs $7
3 Rentals $25
4 Rentals $35
For Couples
7 @ $20
10 @ $25
15 @ $35
20 @ $45
TWO
FREE
TANS
w. above packages
Sexy & Sassy for Spring
Hot Tubs $7
3 Rentals $25
4 Rentals $35
For Couples
7 @ $20
10 @ $25
15 @ $35
20 @ $45
TWO FREE TANS w. above packages
2 FLY FREE
to Hawaii or Mexico
w. purchase of
6 Month Unlimited
only $189
Also 3 Month
Burn Fat Build Muscle
Formula One w/ Chromium
Makes you thinner & firmer, increases energy, lessens appetite & cravings.
100% Natural
100% Money Back Guarantee
Mention this ad for a FREE sample
We'll Beat ANY Local Special
Since 1980
EUROPEAN
TAN, HEALTH & HAIR SALON
23rd & Ousdahl
(Behind Arby's)
841-6222
Well Beat
ANY Local
Special
Since 1980
EUROPEAN
TAN, HEALTH & HAIR SALON
It's Got To Go!
DTK Bare Bones
Tech 123oc Qty. 3
286 - 12
Peer 1632 Qty. 1
386 - 12
Peer 2030 Qty. 1
3860 - 20
Peer 2032 Qty. 2
386 - 20
M
OLYMPICS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
F
Grab A Bag!
Bags range from
$1.00 to $5.00!
Assorted Monitors
Cases
Toners
- Assorted Ribbons
- Assorted Software
- 5.25 Diskettes
And Much More!
Quantity Limited!
All Sales Final!
CPU
No Rainchecks!
Come in and take advantage of incredibly discounted clearance items!
MICROTECH COMPUTERS
2550 Iowa St. The Tower Plaza next to Applebees Lawrence, KS
(913) 842-COMP
U.S. women hit the ice still take bronze medal
The Associated Press
HAMAR, Norway — The U.S. women's 3,000-meter relay team, which thought its medal hopes had been ruined by a wipeout, won the bronze yesterday in short-track speedskating after China was disqualified.
The Americans, silver medalists when the fast-paced sport debuted at the 1992 Games, finished fourth in the final heat after Nicole Ziegelmeyer sprawled to the ice in a turn.
The women's victory gave South Korea a sweep of the first two short-track gold medals yesterday, as Kim Ki-Hoon defended his 1,000-meter men's title.
1994 Winter Olympic Games
But the Chinese, who finished second, were disqualified for reasons not immediately specified. That allowed the Americans to slip into the medal ceremony behind gold-medalist South Korea and silver-medalist Canada, which also was foiled by a fall.
South Korea won the race in an Olympic record 4:26.64, breaking the mark of 4:26.94 Canada set in yesterday's semifinals.
The U.S. women almost didn't make it to the Winter Games, after being disqualified when Karen Cashman fell in the world championships. But they got a spot in the Olympic relay two weeks ago when North Korea, Japan
and Australia each decided not to send a team.
In yesterday's race, the United States had moved into medal contention when Canadian Christine-Isabel Boudrias lost control while in the lead with 10 laps remaining.
Kim, who won his country's firstever Winter Olympics gold medal in 1992, took advantage of a fall by Canadian Derrick Campbell to win the 1,000 men's race.
When Campbell slid into the padded wall, Kim slipped past Gooch and led the rest of the way.
Gooch finished second but was disqualified after judges reviewed his bumping with Campbell. Campbell didn't finish, and no bronze medal was awarded. South Korean Chae Ji-Hoon finished third, but was awarded the silver.
Campbell led from the start of the nine-lap race, but he lost his balance fighting for the lead with Britain's Nicholas Gooch in a turn with three laps remaining.
Kim won the race in 1:34.57, well off the world record of 1:28.47.
The tally
I
A list of the top six countries winning medals in the Olympic games.
Country Gold Silver Bronze
Russia 9 7 3
Norway 8 4 2
Italy 8 7 6
Germany 5 2 8
United States 4 3 1
Canada 2 3 3
Source: The Associated Press
Dave Campbell / KAMAN
Today's Olympic TV Schedule
CBS 6-8 a.m.
All Times CST
CBS 6-8 a.m.
EVENTS: Speedskating (women's 1000m preview); alpine skiing (men's giant slalom, live); nordic combined; figure skating (ladies' technical program preview)
EVENTS: Figure skating (ladies' technical program); alpine skiing (men's giant slalom); hockey; speedskating (women's 1000m)
7-10 p.m.
11:37 p.m.-12:37 a.m.
EVENTS: General report.
TNT 12-5 p.m.
PATTERN
EVENTS: Hockey (U. S. vs.
Finland); figure skating (ladies'
technical); ski jumping; nordic
combined; speedskating
(women's 1000m) biathlon
BRAXTON COPLEY
ATTORNEY
- Landlord/tenant
* Personal Income Tax Reasonable Fees
- Traffic - Misdemeanors
- O.U.I.
- Landlord/Tenant
719 Massachusetts, Suite D
Lawrence, KS 66044 (913)749-5333
743 Mass. St. (913) 749-4664
CLEOPATRA'S CLOSET a unique boutique
---
RUDY'S
PIZZERIA
749-0055
32 Toppings to choose from!!!
.357 Special
Wednesday carry out only
$3 small 1 topping
$5 medium 1 topping
$7 large 1 topping
RUDY'S
PIZZERIA
749-0055
Open 7 days a week
Thursday, Feb.24
Friday, Feb.25
Saturday, Feb.26
Lied Center of Kansas
7:30 p.m.
WORD
ROCK CHALK
United Way
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
R·E·V·U·E
LAWRENCE
JOURNAL-WORLD
is
P.
Proceeds benefit the Douglas County United Way Tickets available at SUA or call 864-4033
Out!
A KU Tradition. Don't Miss It!
layhawk
Bookstore
FEATURES: A new women's magazine published by a KU graduate focuses on girl talk. Page 9.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.103.NO.108
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
KANSAS STATE
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA KS 66612
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
Senate board helps to make campus bright
Lights,phones to be installed
Such fears had motivated the Student Senate campus lighting advisory board to improve lighting when it was formed three years ago. Now, the plans for lightning improvements are ahead of schedule, said Eric Mersmann, architecture and urban design senator and member of the board.
Senate created a new restrictive fee, which costs every students $2 a semester, to finance the board's plan. The plan included increased lighting in some areas of campus and improved emergency call boxes.
Maureen Sullivan, Shawnee junior, said that she occasionally felt scared when she walked on campus at night.
NEWS:864-4810
"A large percentage of the projects are completed," he said. "Several projects were moved up this year because of money saved on previous projects. Projects are coming in under the budget."
Despite problems, the original plan has not been altered, Mersmann said.
"Last summer we had problems getting work done because of weather," he said. "The project has gone really well. A list of projects per year was made when the advisory board was created. We've been following that."
By Heather Moore Kansan staff writer
"I try to be cautious," she said. "I get edgy. You always have to look around because you never know."
Mersmann said the area between Carruth-O'Leary Hall and the vacant Joseph R. Pearson Hall would be improved.
"We moved up work on the driveway behind Carruth-O'Leary that leads to JRP," he said. "There is a different use of the lot now. Before, it was used by JRP residents, but now it is used more by
THURSDAY FEBRUARY 24,1994
the sororites on West Campus Road. The board's goal is to help people feel safer."
John Mullens, head of security and safety for KU police, said crime had decreased in the last few years. He said that he was unsure whether this was due to people making safer decisions.
"Better lighting creates more use of walkways, which means there's less chance of something happening," he said. "Lighting is one of the many facets to prevent crime."
Mullens said that the lighting also had helped KU police do their jobs better.
"It's easier to watch people and to see things that might occur between buildings." he said.
The fast pace of the lighting improvement program is a change from previous years. Mullens said.
"We're seeing more day-to-day change." he said.
"With the old phones, we had trouble with people cutting the headset off," he said.
Mullens said that the call boxes were different because when the button was pushed, the operator at the University 911 Center could keep listening. With the old phones, pranksters could call the center and then hang up the receiver. But with the new boxes, the dispatcher can listen for laughter or a struggle.
The emergency phone boxes around campus also are being improved, Mullens said. Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor, approved the money for the installation of 12 interior phone boxes.
The new phones also will decrease vandalism. Mullens said.
Cindy Alliss, community education and media officer, said lightning would help the officers patrol better.
"Use common sense and stay on the main walkways," she said.
Alliss said that students could take certain actions to be safer. These include walking with someone else, calling a security officer for an escort to their cars and calling Saferide.
Lighting the Way
The University of Kansas continues to upgrade
the quality of lighted places on campus.
Jayhawk Blvd.
WESCOE
Saltcrew Rd.
Sammyville Ave.
Minneapolis St.
14th St.
14th St.
Shading denotes the locations for new lighting systems.
S. A. Moore/KANSAN
Senate interviews violated rules
By Heather Moore Kansan staff writer
General confusion has prevailed in this semester's Student Senate replacement senator interviews.
Interviews were held Jan. 31, but a second round of interviews took place Feb. 7 because some applicants pointed out procedural problems in the first round of interviews.
Poeschel, who was not chosen as a replacement senator, said that numerous rules had been violated during the interview process.
And some applicants — such as Brian Poeschel, Senate Finance Committee member — said the second round of interviews also were flawed.
An elections commission member and five senators are required to attend replacement senator interviews, according to Senate rules.
"For the first round of interviews, five people were there for five or six interviews. Then a sixth, Bill Mills, showed, and there were six senators interviewing." he said.
No elections officer was present during either round of interviews, Poeschel said.
Poeschel said that only four senators had interviewed him during the second round. Senate rules require five senators at replacement interviews.
Although no rules dictate when an applicant must be called, Poeschel said, he is upset that he was given less than 24 hours notice for the interview. Ami Hizer, who was selected as a liberal arts and sciences replacement senator, said she was aware that rules had been broken the first time, but she understood the confusion.
"As far as I know, there were too many senators on the board," she said. "We have a million rules, and we can't be responsible for all of them. It's the nature of the beast. We can't please everyone all the time."
Bill Mills, liberal arts and sciences
senator, was the extra person on the first interview board.
He said that the same replacements would have been selected despite the errors.
"There had been miscommunication, but regardless, the outcome wouldn't have been much different," he said. "I'm confident that the extra person wasn't a factor. The decisions were unanimous, and it wasn't the question of a tie-breaker."
Mills said that the situation was blown out of proportion.
"At times, people make mountains out of molehills," he said.
Travis Harrod, chair of the Student Senate Executive Committee, was in charge of the interview process as stipulated in Senate rules and regulations. He said he had tried to get an elections officer to attend both rounds.
"I let an elections officer know and told them they could come," he said.
"Right now, I know that the elections commission is overburdened with planning the elections."
The presence of an extra person was due to miscommunication, Harrod said.
"One individual said that he'd have trouble making it," he said. "We got a replacement for him. We started the interviews and did one guy. Then Bill walks in, and we invite him in. We should have said, 'We already have five people, now there is one too many.'"
Harrod said that he had had trouble getting senators to come to the second interviews.
"We decided to plod ahead with four people and hope that Senate would understand," he said. "We did our best with the intent of the law. All I'm trying to do is fill the seats with qualified people. The first time it was a procedural error. Anyone should have caught it. It probably should have been me."
Amy Solt/ KANSAN
Slip sliding away
Will Worst, Lawrence junior, uses a cafeteria tray to tread down the hill behind vacant Joseph R. Pearson Hall. Lawrence enjoyed a 1.1/2-inch accumulation of snow Tuesday night and continued flurries through yesterday.
SenEx saves international committee
Kansan staffwriter
By Stephen Martino
The Committee on International Students was saved from the chopping block.
The University Senate Executive Committee decided yesterday not to accept the recommendation of the committee's leader to dissolve the committee.
The international committee voted unanimously for Moos to speak to SenEx and explain why the committee should be dissolved, his letter said.
Felix Moos, professor of anthropology, suggested in a Feb. 8 letter to T.P. Srivasan, head of SenEx and professor of mathematics, that the committee could not continue with its present membership.
SenEx rejected this idea, saying the committee performed an important function within the University community.
"I think the committee is way out of line to suggest disbandment," Srinivasan said. "I think it has a very active role to play."
However, Moos, who did not attend the SenEx meeting, said current international students wanted something different than they did 30 years ago, when the committee first was formed.
He said that international students today wanted integration into the Lawrence community and help securing financial aid. But no one from the community or the Office of Student Financial Aid served on the committee. Moos said.
"We really don't do any good because we don't have the people we need," he said. "We have many committees on campus looking at international students now."
In addition to addressing the international committee issue, SenEx approved the charges for the Committee on Grievance Procedures.
This committee will make suggestions on improving the access of grievance information. A grievance can be filed by a student or a staff member in the case of harassment, a rights violation or a grade dispute.
The grievance committee should report by the end of the semester on three areas: increasing awareness of the University Ombudsman's office, suggesting a minimum set of grievance procedures for the University and considering time extensions for the Judicial Board when reviewing a grievance.
Jill Bechtel, SenEx member, said many people did not know that the ombudsman was available to discuss grievance procedures.
The committee's second goal — the establishment of minimum campus grievance standards — was necessary because each academic department has its own grievance standards, said John Altevogt, graduate SenEx member.
INSIDE
Not again
Page 11.
Law professor fights violence as White House Fellow
AIR JORDAN
Kansas staged a furious second-half comeback but fell short against Nebraska last night, 96-87. Kansas lost for the fourth time in a row at Nebraska. Page 11
By Roberta Johnson Kansas staff writer
By Roberta Johnson
Reno and Robinson have been working on initiatives to combat violence across the nation, he said.
Robinson has been working with Attorney General Janet Reno since Sept. 1. He is one of 17 White House Fellows who works directly under cabinet members for a year.
Reginald Robinson, associate professor of law, is taking direct steps to combat violence in the United States.
The Department of Justice has introduced a plan to support local strategies to combat violence on a community level. The project involves the cities of Denver, Washington and Atlanta and the state of Nebraska.
"No one denies that there is a serious, emerging violence problem." he said.
Robinson, who is on the committee that created the plan, said the federal governmendment should not take total responsibility for the reduction of crime.
"Any serious crime-
fighting attempts
should be locally
driven," he said.
The federal government would provide a "clearinghouse" of information about which local experiments worked but would not be responsible for the decisions of the communities, Robinson said.
Reginald Robinson
"This is a long-term project that is intended to create a framework," he said. "The strategy is not to tell the cities what to do."
A second goal of the project is to encourage coordination of anti-violence initiatives among groups in the community,
Robinson said. These include schools police, social service groups and private foundations.
In addition, Robinson serves on several committees. One helps President Clinton nominate federal district court judges.
"For a number of years, we've dealt with issues categorically," he said. "We need to work across disciplinary lines. The federal government has not been a model in that regard."
Part of his research may take place this spring, when the White House Fellows will take a trip to the American Southwest. Robinson said he hoped that the group would visit the Navajo reservation.
Robinson also is part of a new committee that examines issues dealing with Native Americans. He said the relationship between sovereign tribes and the federal government had not been studied for years.
Robinson said he planned to return to the School of Law after his year in Washington. However, he said, he feels that his experience will affect his work in the community more than it will affect his teaching. He said he could give the Lawrence community another viewpoint about violence.
"The local government then gets a sense of how issues appear to the federal government," he said.
The White House Fellowship can help people become more in touch with the community, said Deanell Tacha, a White House Fellow in 1971-1972. She said that her year in the White House had affected her daily work, as well.
"It's a life-changing experience," said Tacha, who lives in Lawrence and is a judge for the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. "The exposure and understanding one derives can't be duplicated. I was a better lawyer, a better administrator and now a better judge for it."
2
Thursday, February 24, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor a session for music students interested in studying in English in Sweden at 10 a.m. today at the Skilton Lounge in Murphy Hall.
Canterbury House (Episcopal/Anglican) will celebrate Holy Eucharist at noon today at Danforth Chapel.
The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an information session for engineering students interested in studying in English in Sweden at noon today at 3016 Learned Hall.
Western Civilization Program and The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an informational meeting about study abroad for Western Civilization credit at 1:30 p.m. today at 2085 Wescoe Hall
The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor a meeting about study abroad in Great Britain at 4 p.m. today at 3 Lippincott Hall.
KU Karate Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at 130 Robinson Center.
Vietnamese Student Association will meet at 6 p.m. today at 2025 Haworth Hall.
International Student Association will meet at 6 p.m. today at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union.
KU Champions Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at Parlors A, B and C in the Kansas Union.
InterVarsity Christian Fellowship will meet at 7 tonight at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union.
University Chess Society will meet at 7 tonight at the Hawk's Nest in the Kansas Union.
■ LesBIGaySOK will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. This is a business meeting.
Jayhawker Campus Fellowship will meet at 8 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union.
Icthus Christian Outreach will meet at 8:30 tonight at the Big 8 Room in the Kansas Union.
KU Fencing Club will meet at 8:30 tonight at 130 Robinson Center.
Information Center's number was incorrect. The number is 846-3506.
CORRECTION
In a Page One graphic in yesterday's Kansan, The University
WEATHER
Omaha: 25'/8'
LAWRENCE: 34'/13
Kansas City: 30'/10'
St. Louis: 35'/17'
Wichita: 38'/18'
Tulsa: 40'/20'
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 65°/50°
Chicago: 18°/77°
Houston: 65°/48°
Miami: 80°/65°
Minneapolis: 12°/0°
Phoenix: 70°/45°
Salt Lake City: 38°/25°
Seattle: 45°/36°
TODAY
Tomorrow Saturday
Partly sunny and windy
High: 34°
Low: 13°
Cold and snowy
High: 24°
Low: 9°
Partly sunny
High: 38°
Low: 16°
Source: Alan Denton, KU Weather Service: 864-8300 KANSAN
ON THE RECORD
A student reported a harassing phone call Monday to her room in Gertrude Sellards Pearson-Corbin Residence Hall, KU police reported.
aroutine traffic violation. When he was stopped for running a red light, the officer found that there was a warrant out for the man's arrest. He was held on a $66 bond, KU police reported.
A Lawrence man was arrested Monday for failure to comply with
1994 C.L.A.S.S. Award
Nomination Forms can be picked up at Organizations & Activities Office 410 Kansas Union.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, February 24,1994
3
CAMPUS BRIEFS
Taking the cake was a crime: Kitchen raiders to go to court
Two students were arrested and charged Monday with petty larceny for stealing food early Sunday morning from the kitchen of Ammi Scholarship Hall, KU police reported.
Michael Lang, St. Louis freshman, and Terence Jesse, Lawrence freshman, were accused of stealing a box of cake mix and some packages of cocoa mix from Amini's kitchen at about 4 a.m. Sunday. Kami Thomas, assistant director of student housing, said that she had decided not to press charges at the time but that she had changed her mind Monday.
"Some new information had become available in regard to the case," Thomas said. "I reserve the right to change my mind."
The case will be handled through municipal court.
Jesse said he had called Thomas and had told her that he had eaten in the Amini kitchen before.
"I guess that's what set her off."
he said. "She didn't like that, that we'd been there before."
Jesse said that Jason Hatfield, Salina junior and Amini proctor, Steve Maceli, Lawrence graduate student and director of neighboring Grace Pearson Scholarship Hall, and the KU police officer involved had told him that there probably would not be criminal charges.
"I called her and tried to find out why she was making such a big deal of this, but she was adamant about pressing the charges," Jesse said.
Jesse said he had received a call from the Lawrence police department on Monday. He thought it was just to clear things up, he said.
"They started to read me my rights, and I just laughed," he said. "I mean I couldn't believe it.
A friend told me they couldn't take me to court unless it was at least $20 worth of goods. What we took amounted to less than $10."
Last night's panel discussion,
"Impediments to Black Empowering:
Past and Present," was postponed because of snow and has been rescheduled for March 9, said Amber Reagan-Kendrick, organizer of Black History Month events.
Union as planned but that she had not yet been able to reserve a specific room.
History Month event is rescheduled
Reagan-Kendrick, program assistant for the Office of Minority Affairs, said that the rescheduled event would be held in the Kansas
One of the panelists, Flecia Thomas, the director of the Office of Multicultural Affairs at Washburn University, would have had to drive from Topeka last night. Cliff Wiley, the scheduled moderator of the event, lives in the Kansas City area and couldn't make it to Lawrence, Reagan-Kendrick said.
Most students probably do not remember the trip to the high school principal's office as the most pleasant experience of their adolescence.
Officials from about 300 school
But 400 to 500 KU students are expected to volunteer to meet with their former principal, high-school counselor or community college president at today's 45th annual Principal-Counselor-Student and Community College Conference in the Kansas Union.
Students,former educators to meet
Officials from about 300 schools — mostly from Kansas — are expected to attend the conference, said Nancy Blackburn, assistant director of admissions and conference coordinator.
She said the conference would give regional high-school counselors and principals and community college presidents a chance to talk with former students about their preparation for and adjustment to the University.
The conference also allows officials to get information about how to prepare their students for the transition to college, Blackburn said.
"If they come in prepared, they will more than likely be more successful once they get here," she said.
Conferences will be held from 10:30 a.m. to noon today in various rooms at the Union.
Most engineering classes to stop for Expo
Most engineering classes will be canceled after 2:30 p.m. today and all day tomorrow for the Engineering Expo.
The annual event showcases students' work, and 55 high schools from across the state are expected to attend. The Expo will be held
A representative of the office of the dean of engineering said that some professors might continue classes and that students were encouraged to check with their professors.
from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. tomorrow at Learned Hall.
Projects to benefit pedestrians
Crosswalk signals, sidewalks included in Lawrence budget
The Lawrence City Commission on Tuesday night approved placing pedestrian-activated signals on Iowa Street where it intersects, 15th and 19th streets. So instead of waiting for a break in traffic on Iowa Street, stu
dents would be able to walk across the street at both intersections shortly after pushing a button.
By Cheryl Cadue
Kansan staff writer
Compiled from Kansan staff reports
Crossing Iowa Street may become a little easier.
The commission also approved repairs to the sidewalk and stairs on 12th and Mississippi streets.
David Woosley, city traffic engineer, said that the city had approved the signals and repairs because many KU students walked across the busy intersections and because many people used the sidewalk on 12th Street to attend KU football games.
Jennifer Brown, coordinator of the Oread Neighborhood Association, said that the association had wanted the city to repair the sidewalk on 12th and Mississippi streets but that past association requests that had been approved had never been completed because of a lack of funds.
"The project estimates haven't been done," Wildgen said. "It's possible the money will cover the cost of the projects. Hopefully, we'll get the projects completed this year."
$35,000, additional costs could send the price tag past $50,000. In such a case, some of the projects may not be completed.
Mike Wildgen, city manager, said the projects and four additional projects had a combined budget of $50,000. He said that though the initial estimated cost of the projects was
"It's a frustration to have such a large part of the city's budget going into street improvement and such a relatively small portion going to pedestrian and bicycle-improvement projects," she said.
Each year the association submitted repair requests to the Lawrence Traffic Safety Commission because the sidewalks in the Oread neighborhood are heavily used, Brown said.
"This is partly due to a drainage problem and partly because of a lot of pedestrian traffic," she said. "Students use it a lot to get to classes, and people also use it to get to games at the stadium."
(2016)
Tom Leininger / KANSAN
Let it snow
Jian Liu, Beijing, China, graduate student, walks through the snow on the sidewalk in front of Strong Hall. Snow blanketed Lawrence yesterday, and more is expected for the rest of the week. Liu said that he preferred winter to summer because of the cooler temperatures.
Conference gives ideas on keeping campuses green
By Ashley Schultz Kansan staff writer
Five representatives from the University of Kansas attended a conference on campus environmental impacts this weekend in New Haven, Conn.
The Campus Earth Summit, a first-time affair, was sponsored by the Yale Student Environmental Coalition from Friday through Sunday at Yale University.
The KU Office of the Environmental Ombudsman organized a pre-conference program for Friday afternoon to help universities interested in developing environmental stewardship programs similar to the University's.
The office already had set a date for its stewardship program when word came of the Yale summit. The office took its program to Yale to take advantage of the congregation of representatives from about 125 colleges worldwide.
About 25 people attended the pre-conference program, most of them representing universities without existing programs, said Sue Ask, associate environmental ambudsman.
"People found it really valuable to be able to get in and talk about the nitty-gritty on ways things get done," Ask said.
"Hopefully, it will help provide a blueprint for other universities establishing environmental stewardship programs," he said.
The program will be an annual event now, said Steve Hamburg, director of the environmental studies program and head of the ombudsman office.
St. Lawrence University in Canton, N. Y., volunteered to sponsor the next stewardship program, which will take place at the annual environmental studies programs directors meeting. Hamburg said.
Overall, the Yale summit was designed with students in mind, Hamburg said.
"Most of the conference was not on a level that dealt with programs like ours that have well-established curricula."
"The University of Kansas, for example, has one of the oldest programs in the country," he said. "We have a very well-integrated program.
In fact, the University's setup was used as an example at the conference because it integrated practice with curriculum, he said.
"In other words, we have an environmental ombudsman office as well as a well-established environmental studies program," Hamburg said. "Students have the opportunity to use the University as a laboratory for understanding the factors of environmental change."
Environmental change as a social issue was a topic in the speech of Carol Browner, head of the Environmental Protection Agency, said Alison George, a member of KU Enviros who attended the summit.
Vice President Al Gore motivated students via videotape, George said.
most of it. "It was great to be around over 400 people who had the same concern for the environment that I do," George said.
State Environmental Unit, George said Sandra Mori, environmental education coordinator of the ombudsman's office and Amy Trainer of KU Environs also attended.
Sunday, February 27, 1994
1:30 - 5:00 p.m.
Robinson 207
$3.00 registration fee
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SPRING CLIMBING WORKSHOP
For more information:
Recreation Services, 208 Robinson,
864-3546
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Thursday, February 24, 1994
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
2
VIEWPOINT
CBS' olympic coverage is far from gold-medal
Every few years the world gathers together for its best to compete. The Winter Olympics are a great display of international goodwill through the spirit of competition. However, the high standards of the games have not been reflected in the CBS coverage of the 1994 Olympics.
CBS has focused intensely on everything except sports. Tonya Harding and Nancy Kerrigan dominated reports from Lillehammer even before they competed. They have been mentioned in almost every facet of CBS' coverage, including Men's Downhill and the Opening Ceremonies. Worst of all are Connie Chung's exclusives, entitled "Tonya Watch."
Another weakness of CBS' coverage is its strange handling of the time difference issue. Norway is seven hours ahead of Lawrence, and CBS doesn't want to show all the events live when they can tape-delay them in prime time. However, they insist on masquerading as if the events are live. The results have been reported all day on radio and TV, but CBS acts as if the viewers are oblivious to the fact that the events happened hours earlier. Instead of acknowledging the time difference, CBS acts as if events are happening in our backyard.
A third weakness is the vast number of commercials that inundate the coverage. According to the Kansas City Star, Olympic coverage consists of 18 minutes of commercials an hour in prime time, whereas a typical hour contains 12 minutes of coverage. This 50-percent increase in the time devoted to commercials seems excessive.
J. J. ANDRE FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Norway's TV networks should ignore terrorism
Last week Edvard Munch's painting "The Scream" was stolen from the National Art Museum of Norway. This was followed by a "suggestion" by a Lutheran minister and anti-abortion advocate that the painting might reappear if Norwegian television networks show the film "The Silent Scream." The film shows the abortion of a 12-week-old fetus.
Norwegian television networks should not show "The Silent Scream" in response to the Rev. Borre Knudsen's suggestion.
One main reason the networks should not comply is that it sets a dangerous precedent. If a parent gives his or her child candy so the child will stop screaming, the parent will have to give the child candy each time, or the child will scream louder. If the networks comply this time, they will be forced to succumb to other fringe groups, or they will scream louder.
There is no way to tell whether anti-abortion advocates stole the painting. They could be claiming the theft to promote their own cause. If this is true, even after following through with the demands by showing the film, the painting would not be returned because the protesters never had it in the first place.
Essentially, the demand comes down to terrorism Although violence is commonly associated with terrorism, it is not a necessary condition for it. The difference between the mid-eastern terrorists of the '80s holding Americans hostage and the alleged actions of these anti-abortion advocates is only in what they hold captive.
DAVID ZIMMERMAN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSANSTAFF
BEN GROVE, Editor
LISA COSMILLO, Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator
JUSTIN GARBERG Business manager
Editors
Aest Managing Editor...Dan England
Assistant to the editor...J.R. Clashome
News...Kristel Fogler, Katie Greenwell
Todd Selfert
Editorial...Colleen McCain
Campus...Nathan Olean
Sports...Jean DeLevenne
Photo...Daryn Dessay
Features...Sara Bennett
Wire...Allison Lipper
Freelance...Christine Laue
JENNIFER BLOWEY Retail sales manager
Ruinnaea Staff
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
Campus sales mgr ... Jason Eberly
Regional sales mgr ... Troy Terwasser
National a & Coop sales mgr ... Robin King
Special Section mgr ... Shelly McConnell
Production mgr ... Laura Guth
Gretchen Kootterlinschmith
Marketing director .. Shannon Reilly
Creative director .. John Carton
Classified mgr .. Kelly Connelys
Tearse sheets 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 Texas at Austin may not use this font.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
Canada's single-payer health plan provides care for all through tax
I was watching CNN Headline News the other day when I saw something curious. They showed one of those commercials the Health Insurance Association of America put together featuring white, upper middle class, right-wing families who supposedly are just like you and me. Serious, balding "Harry" and his pretty wife "Louise," played by actors, were engaged in a whine-a-thon about the President's health-care proposal and how it would create a massive federal bureaucracy that would bring our society crumbling down, or something like that.
COLUMNIST
PAUL
HENRY
Five minutes earlier, the channel had aired a news story about how women don't stay in the hospital for several days after giving birth anymore, as they used to do, although doctors recommend it. Why? Their medical insurance won't cover it. The new procedure entails giving new mothers a videotape on newborn care and sending them packing, a sort of revolving door of obstetrics.
I understand that insurance companies cannot afford to pay for new mothers to lounge around in the hospital for days at a time; they need to use that money to produce and air commercials slamming the President. But what always gets me is that the insurance industry doesn't seem to know how good it's got it.
The President's Health Security Act was put together with the insurance industry in mind. The proposed system would insure that every American would have access to a health insurance policy provided by the very same companies that are fighting the plan. The industry would be allowed to continue its profiteering, albeit at a reduced rate.
The danger to the industry is that their campaign will be successful:
that Americans will see the President's plan as being inadequate and undesirable, and turn instead to a Canadian-style national health program — the only proposed program that would really end the gravity train for the insurance companies. Called the "single payer" plan, this method of health-care financing would provide health care for every U.S. citizen through a federal tax.
The 52,000-member surgeons' group has the courage to say what few others have in our profit-crazed society. The single-payer system is administratively simpler and offers the best plan for insuring that citizens can choose their doctors, according to the group's chair, David Murray, who testified to that effect before the House Education and Labor Committee.
On Feb. 10, the American College of Surgeons, a professional organization not known for radicalism, endorsed the concept of a single-payer system of health care.
This is not at all what we have heard from Republicans, insurance company representatives and others who
never have had their hands inside an abdominal cavity. We're told that the huge, anthropomorphic government will assign us to doctors as if it were pulling them from Pez dispensers. Yeah the notion that we can choose our health-care options now is largely a myth. Only 29 percent of companies with fewer than 500 employees — the companies at which most of us work — offer workers a choice of health-care policies. If the doctor of your choice isn't involved with the policy you get at your job, too bad.
There is an enormous bureaucracy in the insurance industry. People who have nothing to do with curing profit from sickness. It's difficult to begrudge health-care professionals the money they make practicing the healing arts, but it's equally difficult to see how our country benefits when our health-care dollars line the pocket of insurance company paper pushers. Only a single-payer health program would cut these superfluous moneymakers out of the loop.
EMERGENCY
Paul Henry is a Taecoma, Wash., graduate student in Journalism.
HE'S BEEN SHOT!
ACCORDING TO MY CHART. I THINK YOU MEAN HE NEEDS A SHOT...
IT'S NOT ALL THAT SERIOUS. IT'S MY WALLET THAT GOT MUGGED...
DID YOU SAY WALLET? -MEET ME AT THE CASHIER'S WINDOW...
IS YOUR WALLET OKAY?
NO RUNNING IN THE HALL!
Tax Tip: Underwear is deductible
Today I am announcing the firstever Amateur Tax Tips Contest, featuring an exciting prize, as well as an opportunity for some lucky winners to serve lengthy terms in federal prison.
The purpose of the Amateur Tax Tips Contest is to provide normal people with practical, real-life answers to their tax questions, as opposed to the complex and vague "advice" we so often see in columns written by the kind of goody-two-shoes money geeks who actually save their receipts and record their mileage and file their tax returns on Jan. 2 and finished their science-fair projects early. I'll give you an example of what I mean.
QUESTION: "How much can I deduct for a business office in my home?"
COMPLEX, VAGUE MONEY-GEEK ANSWER: "Calculate the size of the office as a percentage of the total living area, then use this figure to compute the pro rata costs of utilities, mortgage interest, taxes and insurance."
PRACTICAL, DOWN TO-EARTH
ANSWER: $*$5.523.87*$
You can deduct anything. People have deducted used underwear. And
COLUMNIST
DAVE
BARRY
Now I applaud Mr. Clinton's generosity. Although I am troubled somewhat by the idea of any guy voluntarily giving up his underwear. Whoever says that guys are unwilling to make lifetime commitments clearly has not examined the intimate bond that can develop between a guy and his briefs. If a guy's wife secretly throws a veteran pair of underwear away, the guy will whistle in a distinctive manner, and his underwear will leap out of the
garbage and bound toward him like a loyal retriever. That's how close the guy-underwear bond is.
The irony is that I happen to own a set of briefs that are probably quite valuable, inasmuch as they are signed, in ink, by a well-known humor writer. (There's a perfectly innocent explanation, but he's embarrassed about it, so as a courtesy to him I'm not going to reveal his name here.) (Instead, I'll reveal it here: Roy Blount Jr.) I estimate that, for tax-deduction purposes, these briefs are worth $2,473.02. My use of an exact-sounding number is one of the most important Amateur Tax Tips:
when isay "people," I of course mean "Bill Clinton." According to news reports, in past years President Clinton deducted as much as $2 per pair for used underwear that he donated to the Salvation Army, which in turn gave the underwear to some needy individual, who in turn threw it into a trash bin.
ALWAYS USE AN EXACT-SOUNDING NUMBER WHEN YOU ARE MAKING SOMETHING UP The Internal Revenue Service goes over tax forms with dogs that are specially trained to bark aggronly when they find round numbers. If you HAVE to use a round number for some bizarre reason, such as that it is true, you should put a little note in the margin that says "This number is actually true."
ALWAYS "DOUBLE-CHECK" ALL FIGURES. I say this in light of a 1993 Washington Post article concerning a Centreville, Md., man who received a bill from the IRS for $68 billion. A lot
of careless taxpayers would have simply paid the bill, but this man had the presence of mind to question it, and as a result he will be eligible for parole in just 224 years.
No, seriously, he got it it straight-ened out. The *Post* article doesn't say exactly how the *Post* article is that he will be allowed to make two easy payments of $34 billion. This just goes to show that ordinary taxpayers CAN "beat the system." And you can help them, by sending in YOUR tip to our Amateur Tax Tips Contest. The only restriction is that whatever you send MUST BE ON A POSTAL CARD. Send your card to: Amateur Tax Tips, c/o Judi Smith, Miami Herald, Miami, Fla 3132. TI report the best tips just before April 15. The people who suggested them will receive a handsome mention of their names in this column, as well as a chance to be audited for life. The person who suggests the best tip will receive, at tremendous personal tax-deductible sacrifice to me, a historic literary object that has been valued, in print, at $2,473.02. I may even wash them first.
Dave Barry is a syndicated columnist for the Miami Herald.
Textbook prices interest faculty and students
At some point, it would seem the level of assessment of the financial burden should become a matter of careful consideration by the faculty
The article in the Feb. 15 issue of the Kansan detailing the high cost of certain textbooks and supplies is worth consideration by both faculty and students. A common practice in text selection is to have the faculty member teaching a course to specify the text. Since faculty members get free copies of potential texts, they may not grasp the overall financial burden they are laying on the students in the course.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Insofar as the individual student is concerned, the cost of a text is the immediate concern. As more and more of the burden of a university education is being shifted from the state onto those in school, these students may insist on a degree of control of the costs they must bear.
in a department and its administrative officers.
The following questions might focus a bit of attention on textbook selection:
1. Should a book be selected if it is issued only in hard cover? A soft-bound book would be at least half as expensive as the hard-bound conv.
2. Should a text be selected that contains much more material than can feasibly be covered in the
3. Should a book be selected that would not be used for the same course in the subsequent semester or year? If it would not be used, then the student cannot sell back the text and recover part of the cost. Of course, texts would need to be changed from time to time, but the cost to the student should be considered.
course? Students should not be forced to pay for materials that will not be used. In my opinion, students would be acting both responsibly and helpfully by complaining to the chair or dean about such texts. If the book is required in a subsequent course, the fraction of the students taking the follow-up course should be taken into account.
4. Since some subjects change only slightly over the years, can texts be specified that are in soft cover and in outline form? For example, Schaum's outlines in mathematics, fluid mechanics and thermodynamics cost about $13 a copy, contain around 300 pages, countless examples and may present most of what a student needs to understand. Or is a $60 hard-cover text with slick pages and colored illustration five times better?
The writer realizes that the foregoing comments and questions do not take into account other aspects of textbook selection.
James Maloney Emeritus Professor, Chemical Engineering
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday. February 24. 1994
5
'Kansas-stan' lends a hand
By Ashley Schultz
Kansan staff writer
"Kansas-stan."
That's what officials in the Republic of Kyrgyzstan in the former Soviet Union call Kansas — a place halfway around the world. But Kansas and the University of Kansas Medical Center have teamed up with an international relief, organization to airlift medical supplies to the financially disadvantaged republic.
The project kicks off tonight at the Med Center in Kansas City, Kan., and the nation's ambassador is expected to visit the Lawrence campus today.
No longer supplied by Moscow, Kyrgyzstan has problems getting medical supplies on the international market because its currency does not trade internationally, said Jane Cooper, assistant director of development for Heart to Heart International, which is coordinating the airlift.
Even aspirin is hard to come by, Coopersaid.
"There are just no supplies," she said. "They are simply nonexistent."
Heart to Heart became involved with the project through Fred Holmes, professor of medicine at the Med Center, who helped set up a physician-exchange program between Kyrgyzstan and the Med Center.
The relief organization came onboard last spring, when Holmes began considering the supply problems Kyrgyz physicians faced. This will be Heart to Heart's fourth project with the former Soviet Union.
Cooper said organizers hoped for about $5 million worth of supplies — roughly 35 tons.
Barbara Moore, senior project manager for the organization, said the State Department was arranging the aircraft transport. A sea carrier will accommodate what does not fit into the aircraft.
KU MED CENTER
Kyrgyzstan
Some quick facts about the airlift's destination:
- declared its independence from the Soviet Union on Aug. 31, 1991
- has an elected president and a liberal democracy
has an elected president and a fledgling democracy
is almost exactly halfway around the world
has an average monthly income of about $10
adopted the "som" for its currency;
seven soms equal $1
wants to ease its entrance into the international market by teaching English to its people
"Heart to Heart feels very strongly that we just do not send our contributions," Moore said. "We take it."
- has a population of about 4.5 million
- has a largely Islamic population
- has 3,000 small glacier-fed
Source: Rose Marino, general course! KANSAN
Up to 100 people will help distribute the supplies, Moore said. Cost estimates for the trip, which lasts from July 16 to July 27, stand at $3,175 for each person, and the roster of volunteers is still open. Participants will unload and distribute the supplies.
The organization typically uses its pharmaceutical connections to buy supplies at 10 cents on the dollar. It hopes to raise $130,000 to cover supplies not donated, operating costs and the renovation of a ward for cancer patients. Cooper said.
Moore said hospitals in the former Soviet Union looked as if they were built in the 1930s.
"I have been there five times, and I have seen that the second most powerful nation in the world is like a developing country," she said.
George Woodyard, dean of international studies at the University and the Med Center, has visited the insti
The KU Medical Center and Heart to Heart International are spartanning an effort to send medical supplies to the Republic of Kyrgyzstan of the U.S. as well as living groups will be putting out boxes for the collection of animals.
KU for Kyrgyzstan
Kazakhstan
Uzbekistan
Kyrgyzstan
Tajikistan
China
Afghanistan
Pakistan
S. A. Moore/KANSAN
tutes of oncology and pediatrics and obstetrics in Kyrgyzstan. He also coordinates the Lawrence-Kyrgyzstan faculty ex-change program, which began in January.
"The medical airlift will go in this summer and would provide enough medicines and supplies and the like to last them for some considerable time," Woodyard said. "We are talking about a small population base, so this should make a substantial contribution."
Kyrgyzstan is about the same size as Kansas with about double the population, Woodyard said.
Motorcyclist wrecks mandatory helmet law
KU organized living groups plan to put out collection boxes for nonprescription medicines and books, said Jeff Weinberg, assistant vice chancellor for student affairs and coordinator of the effort. One group is planning to set up in the Kansas Union for a week to make it easier for students living off campus to contribute. The Collection will end April 1, the week after Spring Break.
The Associated Press
Sen. Phil Martin, D-Pittsburg, himself a motorcyclist, successfully blocked the measure from being advanced to final vote after arguing that helmets do not save lives. Martin is the leading opponent of helmet laws in the Senate.
TOPEKA — The Senate yesterday rejected a bill that would have required all motorcycle riders to wear a helmet.
The action was a victory both for bikers and for those who advocate
state sovereignty. It is rare for the Senate not to advance a bill to final action. Even bills without much support usually are advanced to final action.
The vote on advancing the bill was 19-20. It was not recorded.
Some opponents objected to the measure because it was mandated by the federal government, under threat of loss of highway construction funds.
The issue is hardly new at the State house. Measures to require motorcyclists to wear helmets have been
introduced since the late 1970s. Currently, only people under 18 are required to wear helmets.
Martin said that forcing bikers to wear helmets would not save lives, a contention that Vidricksen and others disputed.
Seni. Todd Tiahart, R-Goddard, said the real issue was the federal government's encroachment on the sovereignty of states. He said 24 other states had not "yielded to the federal government" by passing a mandatory helmet law.
ities include:
• A contemporary Russian band,
• the KU Slavic Folksong Ensemble
• a poetry reading in English and Russian
• Slavic folk dancing
RUSSIA
Activities include:
Learn more about Russia,Ukraine Poland,and the former Yugoslavia.
- and more!
STUDENT
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
SENATE
842-3232
If You Don't Know That Number By Now Crawl Out From Under Your Rock And Get Yourself To
KU Slavic Club
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Thrifty Thursday Deal: Small 1 Topping
Kansan Card Offer Good Carry-Out Only
"We Care For KU"
14th and Ohio(under the Wheel)
We Have Breadsticks Too
WE HONOR
KANNAN
Since WATKINS
invites you to come join us in a celebration of Slavic culture!
Anonymous HIV Antibody Testing
Where? Watkins Health Center
What? The Test for HIV - the AIDS virus
When? Mondays
Cost? $18.50 cash (paid at initial visit)
New?
How? By Appointment Only
"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
STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES 864-9500
Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students
642 Mass 749
Hall 1912
Tower It is acceptable to all persons
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On Deadly Ground **Pg.4* 20**; 7:00, 9:45
Ace Ventura - Pet Detective **Pg.13-4* 4* 00**;
7:20, 9:35
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
**3** Primetime Show (1) • Wearing Baby
**3** Senior Citizen Anytime • Imagined Stereo
BEFORE & PAY ADULTS $1.00
TUNER RATINGS
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
Crown Cinema
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The GetAway $ ^{R} $ 5.00,
7.15, 9.30
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Philadelphia PG-13 4.45
My Girl 2 PG 5.90 6.45
My Father, The Hero PG 8.30
Mrs. Doubtfire PG 7.15 7.50
Blue Chips 13-14 7.10 9.30
CINEMA TWIN
(110) IOWA 841-5791 $1.25
3 Musketeers PG 5.00,
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At one of 28
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- French • Italian
• German • Japanese
• Spanish • Russian
Courses from 3 weeks to 6 months. Teacher refresher courses also available!
For more info. contact:
For more contact
Council Travel
1634 Orrington Ave
Evanston, IL 60201
1-800-475-5070
Call for a FREE Student Travels magazine!
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts
A New Directions Series Event
"The Kronos Quartet is rooted in the classical-quartet tradition, but its members look and sometimes sound more like escapees from the college-music circuit."--Rolling Stone Magazine
kronos
Riverdale
8:00 p.m. Tuesday, March 1, 1994 Lied Center
Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office (864-ARTS);
Tickets on sale at the Licee Box Office (864-3982); and any Ticketmaster outlet (913) 234-4545 and (816) 931-3330; public $16 and $14, KU, Haskell and K-12 students $8 and $7, senior citizens and other students $15 and $13; KU student tickets can be purchased through the SUA office, Kansas Union; phone orders can be made using MasterCard or VISA; all courses are required.
Partially funded by the National Endowment for the Arts, Kansas Arts Commission, KU Student Senate Activity Fee, Friends of the Lied Series, and the Kansas University Endowment Association. Special thanks to this year's Very Important Partners: Hallmark Marks, Inc., Kief's Audio and Video, Payless ShoeSource and W.T. Kemper Foundation, Commerce Bank Trustee.
THE LUX GARDEN
STUDENT SENATE
K
XXX
THE LIFE CENTER OF MARYLAND
6
Thursday, February 24,1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
ROCK CHALK
United Way
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
R V U E
Rock Chalk Review
To the Men of Amini, You can laugh in my face, I don't care
Love, The Women of Alpha Delta Pi
Good luck to all participants!!
The Women of Kappa Delta Thank the Men of Alpha Tau Omega for great work with Rock Chalk Revue!
Good luck to all paticipants!
Alpha Xi Delta Would like to wish all of the 94' Rock Chalk Participants Good Luck!
TriDelt
△△△
wishes good luck to all the members of Rock Chalk Revue.
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MC, Visa, Discover
We support all participants of Rock Chalk Revue
To the men of Alpha Kappa Lambda It's no shocker that we had so much fun doing Rock Chalk with you!
Love the women of Alpha Chi Omega
1.
Best of luck to all participants in Rock Chalk Revue 1994
We Accept:
VISA
MASTERCARD
Congratulates and wishes the best of luck to all 1994 Rock Chalk participants
Chi Omega
Don's Auto Center
"For All Your Repair Needs"
• Complete Auto Repair
• Machine Shop Service
• Parts Department
841-4833
920 E. 11th Street
We Accept:
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Joe
AS
CPR SATURDAY CPR CERTIFICATION ΣAE FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH, LAWRENCE. SATURDAY, APRIL 23. 9AM-1PM
ΣΑ
Good Luck to everyone participating in Rock Chalk Revue! Have a blast! To the men of Sigma Nu, thanks for all the hard work!
Love, The women of Gamma Phi Beta
Congratulations
1994 Rock Chalk Participants
Best of Luck to
ΔΓ-ΛXA Love, The Delta Gammas
The women of
Sigma Kappa
and the men of
Delta Tau Delta
would like to wish good luck to the participants in
RockChalk Revue
1994
AZIZONA TRADING
168. 9TH Columbia, MO (314) 499-0420
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come see first hand what we got second hand
Hey DG's
Thanks for all your
magnifying glass
SINGIN'
and
DANCE
DANCIN'
The Men or Lambda Chi Alpha Good luck to all participating in Rock Chalk Revue in 1994
Q
The women of
The women of Alpha Gamma Delta and the men of Delta Upsilon would like to wish good luck to the cast and crew of Rock Chalk Revue!
NATION/WORLD
Thursday, February 24, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
"20th Anniversary 1984
7
Red Lyon Tavern A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence 944 Massachusetts 832-8228
"Historical year 1903"
Bosnia, Croats sign cease-fire
The Associated Press
ZAGREB, Croatia — Under growing diplomatic pressure from the West, the military chiefs of Bosnia's Muslim-led government and their second-strongest foes, Bosnia's Croats, signed a truce yesterday.
Many truces in Bosnia have collapsed, but the accord between the former allies against Bosnia's Serbs is likely to gain strength from diplomatic efforts to extend Bosnia a NATO-enforced truce in Sarajevo.
A new note of discord, however, emerged between Russia and the West when Boris Yeltsin lashed out at NATO for threatening air strikes against Russia's traditional allies, the
Serbs, without asking Russia first.
The Russian president reiterated his proposal for a summit between Russia, the United States, France, Britain and Germany to "put an end to the Yugoslav conflict." But the United States and Germany were cool to the idea yesterday, indicating it was premature.
Foreign diplomats consider an end to fighting between Croats and government forces crucial to an overall peace settlement.
The cease-fire, which takes effect at noon tomorrow, covers central Bosnia and Mostar and other areas in the south where Muslims and Croats have fought bitterly since their alliance collapsed in April.
"The U.N. hopes and trusts that it will be respected and implemented by both sides, which is essential in this moment," said Yasushi Akashi, head of the U.N. mission in former Yugoslavia. Akashi participated in the four hours of talks that produced the accord.
The agreement is the most precise and serious in a long list of cease-fire accords. Its signing came amid renewed efforts by the United Nations, NATO and especially the United States and Russia to bring peace to Bosnia.
The cease-fire pact was signed yesterday by Rasim Delic, the Bosnian government commander, and Ante Roso, the Bosnian Crown commander.
Two spies allegedly killed after exposure by CIA agent
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — At least two Soviets who spied for the United States were killed after being exposed by the career CIA officer who has been accused of selling national security secrets, American officials said yesterday.
Meanwhile, the accused officer's wife has been cooperating with the government since she was arrested along with her husband on Monday, according to one official who commented only on condition of anonymity.
The official would not say what Maria del Rosario Casas Ames has disclosed. But her cooperation could be crucial to the government's effort to learn how much
damage she and her husband, CIA operations officer Aldrich Ames, may have done.
The Ameses were charged Tuesday with conspiracy to commit espionage, a charge that carries a potential penalty of life in prison. The couple is scheduled to appear tomorrow at a hearing in federal court in Alexandria, Va.
Vincent Cannistraro, a retired CIA officer, said in an interview yesterday that the CIA knew of at least two U.S. agents — officials in the Soviet government who had been working for the CIA — who had been killed after being revealed by Ames.
CIA representative Dave Christian said he could not confirm the deaths.
The Associated Press
Welfare proposal faces spring review
WASHINGTON — The Clinton administration will submit its welfare reform proposal to Congress by the beginning of April, Budget Director Leon Panetta said yesterday.
Panetta announced the April 1 date while testifying before the Senate Finance Committee on the administration's proposed 1995 budget.
Meanwhile, an administration official said the welfare reform task force was leaning toward imposing a two-year time limit on welfare benefits on the youngest and newest mothers on the rolls while exempting older women.
Clinton has promised to provide day care, education and training for parents on welfare and then require those who still are unemployed after two years to join a work program.
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The Word is Out!
ROCK ▼ CHALK
United Wav
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
R ▼ E ▼ V ▼ U ▼ E
---
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Have A Date Dash at THE GRANADA Party Downtown Bring a Band Hire a DJ Showa Movie
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14th and Ohio(under the Wheel)
We Thank All Rock Chalk Participants
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Good Luck!!!
To all in Rock Chalk Revue!! From the women of Pi Beta Phi
Rock Chalk 1994 Participants
GOOD LUCK
The Total Look
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Open late on Thursdays
1007 Massachusetts St.
832-0140
Crocodile
Looking For Something? has many great clothes and accessories for your theme parties and dances.
Looking For Something?
A
Sororities & Fraternities
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Enjoy great food and spicy atmosphere after the Big Show!
841-7286
815 New Hampshire
Sincerely, The Men of Sigma Chi
DOS HOMBRES
RESTAURANTE
We would like to wish the best of luck to everyone participating in Rock Chalk Revue. Also, a special thanks to the women of Kappa Kappa Gamma for a job well done!
KU
KU
Celebrating the Rock Chalk
Review! Congratulations from ne campus institut.on to another
KANSAS & BURGE
UNIONS
8
Thursday, February 24,1994
NATION/WORLD
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Israeli troops wait for agreement
The Associated Press
JERUSALEM — Israeli troops will start leaving the Palestinian autonomy zones the minute a full agreement on self-rule is sealed, Foreign Minister Shimon Peres said yesterday.
Peres also echoed the chief Palestinian negotiator, Nabil Shaath, who said in Egypt that an agreement on security and civilian government issues could probably be reached within three weeks.
In Paris, though, negotiators ran into difficulties in talks on economic relations between Israel and the autonomy zones planned for the occupied Gaza Strip and West Bank region around Jericho.
Israel's finance minister hurriedly left for Paris, claiming the Palestinians were backing out of an agreement
to integrate the economies of Israel and the self-rule areas. Palestinians denied any such accord.
Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin has stressed that Israel will not begin the self-rule experiment until it has reached a detailed accord on all aspects of autonomy.
But Environment Minister Yossi Sarid, often an Israeli negotiator, told The Associated Press that he doubted that the economic problems would hold up overall agreement.
Peres told the AP in an interview at Parliament: "The minute we shall have the agreement, then the withdrawal will begin. We hope that in several weeks we shall conclude the agreement and then things will begin to be implemented."
Peres said that after the Palestine Liberation Organization had agreed
last month to let Israel run security at border crossings, "things began to move ahead quite nicely."
Negotiators are defining the details for carrying out the Sept. 13 Israel-PLO accord granting Palestinians limited self-rule in Gaza and Jericho. The initial Dec. 13 target for the start of Israeli withdrawal was missed because of disagreements about terms for the transfer of power.
Unresolved issues include the links between the Israeli and Palestinian economies, the size of the Jericho area, control over water and zoning, and security measures.
Heading to the economic talks in Paris, Finance Minister Avraham Shochat said, "We thought we had agreed on an overall custom duty agreement, but now they have changed their attitude."
South African president hit by rock-throwing protesters
The Associated Press
POSTDENE, South Africa — President F.W. de Klerk inshed out at the African National Congress yesterday after young rock-throwing protesters disrupted one of his campaign appearances and forced cancellation of another.
De Klerk was hit in the neck, reportedly with a paper wad, and the South African Press Association said a youth had been arrested later for pointing a toy gun at de Klerk's motorcade.
Groups of supporters de klerk's National Party later clashed with ANC rivals at the site of the canceled appearance last
night. De Klerk wasn't present, but when a National Party official announced that the rally in the Rodeoapen township was called off, the opposing groups threw rocks at each other and some shots were fired.
Police fired tear gas to separate the groups, and one man seen shooting an automatic pistol was arrested. Police Maj. Johan Hickman said one woman had been killed in the clash.
De Klerk told reporters, "This is proof to me of one chilling fact: that the ANC leadership has no control whatsoever over its youthful followers."
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- COLOURS • EAGLE'S EYE • JJ FARMER • HENRY GRETHEL • CJ COTTON • CALVIN KLEIN •
I.S.A.
International Students Association
PARTY
- CAMBRIDGE • WOOLRICH • BOULEVARD • RIVER CITY
Friday, Feb. 25·9:00 PM at the Holidome
Only $3
call 864-4848 for more info
Don't forget AASU's Hallucinia Party on Saturday night!
State Radiator
We recycle anti-freeze, freon, and metals.
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-
POLYBURRITAN
Are you Interested in running for a position on Student Senate?
Student Senate Elections 1994 Candidate Information Workshop
Do you know all of the following:
- When to file?
- How to fill out campaign activity/expense reports?
* Who answers questions about the quiz?
- Where to file a complaint? What happens when a complaint is filed against you/your coalition?
- Who answers questions about the rules?
* What are the rules for an event?
- What the rules are?
842-9979
All of these questions and others you may have will be answered at this general session.
Thursday, February 24, 1994
5:00 pm - 6:00 pm
Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union
If you have questions, contact Jennifer Ford, Elections Commissioner, in the Student Life Office, 300 Strong Hall at 864-4060 after the meeting.
Every candidate is required to attend one of the candidate workshops in March, so mark your calendars now:
March 29 at 4:30 pm; March 30 at 7:00 pm.
In the Pine Room of the Kansas Union
Sponsored by the Student Senate Elections Commission
Morning Star
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7
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Just between the girls
Girl talk is the focus of a new magazine published by KII graduate Lisa
Allison Faling is editor of Girlfriend magazine.
by KU graduate Lisa
Brunner.
Lisa Brunner, KU graduate, is publisher of Girlfriend magazine. She got the idea for the magazine from conversations with her female friends.
By Cathleen Siechta
Kansan staff writer
Girl talk, that age-old ritual in which friends openly talk about their femininity and sexuality, has long been one of the only ways women could communicate on a personal level.
Until now. Girlfriend, a new magazine edited and published by KU graduate Lisa Brunner, offers a forum for women to share their experiences, concerns, ideas and fantasies with each other.
Brunner said she wanted to produce a magazine about sex that women could feel belonged to them.
Girlfriend magazine is scheduled to come out March 7.
"The bottom line of this magazine is that the contributions are written by women, from a woman's point of view, and are intended for a female audience," Brunner said. "When I say it's a sex magazine, I mean it's erotic, explicit in a lot of ways, using very frank language and talking very up front about sex. But it's for women."
Brunner said she had noticed a lack of magazine that openly discussed women's sexual issues. She said most women's magazines were either about "how to please your man," or, on the other end of the spectrum, hard-core lesbian sadomasochism.
"I'm not really trying to create something in the middle of those two options," Brunner said. "I just want to do something different that will be accessible to all women, not just lesbians, not just straight women, but all women."
Brunner decided to create *Girlfriend* about a year-and-a-half ago. She said that listening to friends talk about their experiences gave her the idea to put real-life stories into a magazine. The first issue contains written contributions and photographs by Brummer's friends. She said she hoped to find someone with a medical background to help her start a women's health issues column for future issues.
"Everyone involved in the first issue is an amateur," said Brunner. "The model in the photo layout is a first-time model."
Although a six-page photo essay in the first issue does include nudity, Brunner said that the pictures were done tastefully.
"The body images of women shown in commercials are, for the most part, created by men," Brunner said. "These pictures are beautiful. We want to show women of all body types and all ages."
Renee Spiker, a graduate assistant at Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, said a magazine that realistically depicted women was overdue.
"Clearly, women are depicted in the media from the sex-stereotype perspective," Spiker said. "It would be very advantageous to have the alternative, realistic view of women in the media. The unrealistic female persona that exists is formed by society and exploited by the media. We don't even carry Mademoiselle or any magazines like it at the center anymore because magazines like that just exploit that persona."
Spiker, who also is the coordinator for Watkins Center for Sexual Health, said that a magazine like Girlfriend may help women to accept their own sexuality.
"Women need to be comfortable with their own image and their own body type. If this magazine wants to help women do that, then it is very commendable."
"From a sexuality perspective, my job at Watkins deals a lot with demytriching the whole image that all women should have perfect bodies," Spiker said.
Brunner said she hoped to get contributions from a variety of women for Girlfriend. She said that contributions such as true sexual experiences, erotic fiction stories, questions about sexual issues and photographs would be helpful.
"In the first issue, I'm going to put in a big ad to generate contributions," Brunner said "I want to say, 'This is what I came up with for this issue. How can we help this magazine evolve?' I hope to get a lot of responsive mail. I'd like the bulk of the magazine to remain as close to real life as possible. You know how girls talk about sex when they're sitting around together. I want the writing to be just like that. We want people to open up so we can't really censor them."
Courtney Skeeba, Lawrence sophomore and member of Women's Student Union, said that a magazine like Girlfriend could be positive if dealt with correctly.
"I guess it were done in the proper context, it would be a good thing for women and even educational for men," Skeeba said. "But in discussing issues of sexuality, you should be careful that it doesn't get too vulgar."
Brunner said she was curious to see if Girlfriend would cause controversy. With features such as a mustache column, sex toy reviews and nude photo layouts, controversy may be hard to avoid.
But some women said they thought a little controversy could be a good thing.
"Well, I don't think you have anything worthwhile if you don't don'f some-
one." Sarah Zercher, Oklahoma City senior said. "I think there no way it should be censored. It's kind of an easy way out, to make a magazine about sex, because who isn't interested in sex? It's like using words to get a laugh. I think it would be very interesting."
Brunner said she thought that even those who were not sexually active would enjoy Girlfriend. She said she hoped to get material from women who had chosen to remain celibate.
"Women who are still sexually active are still sexual beings," said Allison Faling, Brunner's behind-the-scenes' assistant editor and partner. "There's much more to sexuality than what you do in bed."
Brunner said that was the point of her magazine.
"We are all sexual beings," she said.
"What we can learn from each other can help us grow as women. This is a celebration of women's sexuality. But it's not anti-male. It's just very woman positive and very sex positive. Actually, I think it would be great if women read it with their boyfriend. Men could be enlightened by it."
The first issue of Girlfriend will be free, and Brunner said she would try to make it available at many locations around Lawrence. She said that she would to print about 500 copies and that she hoped people would read it and send comments and contributions to Girlfriend magazine, P.O. Box 1365, Lawrence, KS 66044.
"I'm very excited about this magazine," Brunner said. "I just can't wait to get that first issue in my hand and start promoting it."
review
Familiar faces, lively action keep 'Blue Chips' enjoyable
In a town that loves basketball as much as Lawrence does, at a time of year when college basketball excitement traditionally begins to rise to fever pitch, the opening of "Blue Chips," the new basketball comedy-drama starring Nick Nolte and Shaquille O'Neal, and the highly anticipated KU-MU game combined to create quite a stir this weekend, wouldn't you say Sludge?
"Yup. I'm basketballled out, though. If only the 'Hawks could have pulled it off Sunday, that would've made it the perfect weekend."
The perfect weekend, huh? You're easy to please, bud.
"You don't know the half of it."
"Let's just say it says the difference between riding in a limousine with a fully stocked bar and riding in an Oldsmobile-Bulck with a Big Gulp in a drink holder on the dash. Sure you're comfortable in the Olds, and it gets the job done, but which is more excited?"
Let's keep it that way. Even though KU couldn't overcome MU, the game still was more exciting than "Blue Chips." This is not necessarily a negative. Not much can compare to a pumped-up Allen Field House on a big game day, regardless of the outcome, right Shudge?
Well put, Sludge. Anyway, Note's gravelly voiced Coach Pete Bell, after his first losing season at the fictional Western University, must decide whether to sell out when given the means by a crooked alumnus, Happy (J.T. Walsh), to "buy" three standout recruits, played by O'Neal, "Penny" Hardaway and Matt Nover.
"Yeah, but what do they give Shaq? A Lexus? How boring is that? I'd tell them to shove it."
Matt & SLUDGE AT THE MOVIES
Well, Sludge, what would you want if you happened to be 7 feet 2 inches tall and still coordinated?
"I'd want one of those new Ford trucks, you know, the ones on those commercials that you can use to catch fish the size of a mobile home and to golf off of a rocky mountain top."
You've put some thought into this, huh?
Exactly, Sludge. The cameos included former KU standouts Rex Walters and Adonis Jordan and Indiana head coach Bob Knight. Knight actually helped Nolte prepare for the role by giving him coaching tips and advice.
"There were so many big names! I felt as if I was watching ESPN, only I couldn't change the channel, and there weren't any commercials."
That's true. Even though the basketball action is well-staged, the moral dilemma about buying players (the "blue chips") facing Coach Bell is convincing and timely enough to make the intended impact and there are enough actual coach and player cameos to satisfy any fan, overall "Blue Chips" is only a modest success.
"Well, you never know..."
"Why didn't he give him a throat lozenge? Nolte sounds as if he's got perpetual phlegm."
Well, Sludge, he did have to do a lot of yelling for this role. It looked like he got Knight's act down pat.
though.
"What? Pat Knight? You mean Bobby Knight's son and player for the Indiana Hoosiers whom Bob kicked during a game when he screwed up once?"
Allegedly kicked, Sludge. Noite must have decided that was too extreme for his role in "Blue Chips," so instead, while yelling at the refs in one scene, he picks up the ball and puns it high into the stands. Hey, Sludge, since you're the aspiring baseball coach, what was your assessment of Bell's antics?
"No way! But can you imagine trying to put a baseball? I'd kick fences and bat racks instead."
"I'm never going to do that when I'm a coach."
I see. With all the sensationalized insurgency on in both amateur and professional sports today, a coach playing players may seem like small potatoes. But screenwriter Ron Shelton ("Bull Durham" and "White Men Can't Jump") and director William Friedkin ("The French Connection" and "The Exorcist"), defy balance the basketball action with the deeper conflict and manage to give "Blue Chips" an authentic sense of importance that continues throughout the film. Despite the occasional soapbox offering, often coming from Bell's ex-wife (Mary McDonnell, whose performance transcends her scripting), "Blue Chips" doesn't try to fix the problem of player payoffs, and wisely so. The result is a film that's lively and fun to watch and not a whole lot more.
You can control your temper, then?
"Yeah, there were enough monster slam dunks to make me a happy camper."
That's all we ask.
music
A prayer's chants: Gregorian monks now music stars
MADRID, Spain — Still spinning from the unexpected popularity in Spain of their double compact disc of Gregori-an chants, the singing monks of Santo Domingo de Silos are going global.
EMI-Odeon records announced yesterday that "The Best of Gregorian Chants" soon will be available in 18 countries. It has sold 300,000 copies and has rocketed to the top of the pop charts since it hit Spanish stores just before Christmas.
"We thought it would be a modest success, but nothing like it has been," said Rafael Gil, president of EMI Music Spain. "Since it's been such a success here, we can't help but think that it will do as well elsewhere."
The compact disc will be on Japanese shelves on March 1 and the U.S. market on March 15, with staggered release dates in Latin America, South Africa, Australia, New Zealand and elsewhere in Asia. In Europe, it will be sold in Great Britain, Belgium, Sweden, Denmark and Greece.
Fame has surprised the 36 monks who live a cloistered existence in Santo Domingo de Silos, a small town in north-central Spain.
Now the monks appear with the likes of Gloria Estefan and Frank Sinatra at the top of the Spanish charts — a stunning achievement for a recording of monophonic, liturgical music used to accompany the text of the Roman Catholic Mass.
The chants take their name from Pope Gregory I (590-604) under whose reign the music was first collected.
When the Second Vatican Council authorized Roman Catholics in 1965 to celebrate the Mass in languages other than Latin, the monks faced the possibility that the prayers they chant seven times a day would disappear.
Because they thought that the selection of Spanish prayers in song was skimpy, the brothers chose to stick with their Latin chants, a decision that led to their first recording contract in 1973 and now to a wealth of royalties well beyond their simple needs.
"We prefer not to need money," said Abbott Clemente Serna. "But you can be sure that it will be put to very good use, for example, in helping out other cloistered monasteries, particularly where there are nuns in need.
"You can be sure this will go to help the Third World."
Neither the monks nor EMI has revealed the terms of their contract.
In Spain, the disc sells for the equivalent of $21 and features 38 selections, some dating as far back as 1,300 years.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
FEBRUARY 24,1994 PAGE 9 KULIife
People and places at the University of Kansas.
NIGHTLIFE
Benchwarmers Sports Bar and Grill
1.001 W 23rd St
These Day, 9:30 tonight, cover charge
Crap Supper, Sunday Drive and a special guest,
9:30 p.m. Saturday, cover charge
Suave Octopus with Sun Sawed in Half, 9:30 p.m. tomorrow, cover charge
Michelle Malone with Band D Soleil, 9:30 p.m.
Thursday, cover charge
The Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire St.
Walking on Einstein & Soleifh, 10 tonch, $4
L.A. Rambers, 10 p.m. tomorrow, $4
Ditch Witch with Starkweathers, 10 p.m. Wednesday,
$3 (18 and over)
The Crossing
Machines of Love and Grace with Course of Empire 10 p.m. Monday, $7 advance tickets (18 and over) Joe and Al, 10 p.m. Tuesday, $3
Tenderloin with John Brown Underground, 10 p.m.
Saturday, $4
618 W. 12th St.
Webb Wilder with Savoy Truffle, 1.0 p.m. Thursday,
$6 advance tickets (18 and over)
King Trash with Danger Bob, 8:30 tonight, $2
Lou's Revenge, 8:30 p.m. tomorrow, $2
The Lonesome Houndogs, 8:30 p.m. Saturday, $2
The Hideaway
106 North Park West St.
Murphy Rule and Ivan Hoes, 10:30 tonight, cover charge
Queers 5-0, 10:30 p.m. tomorrow, cover charge
Johnboy, King Trash and Shiner, 10:30 p.m. Saturday, cover charge
KJHK Benefit with the Eudoras, Chubby Smith Orchestra and the Spamskinners, 10:30 p.m. Thursday, cover charge
Granada Theater
1020 Massachusetts St.
"WHACKI" 9 tonight, cover charge
'70s, '80s and Alternative, 9 p.m. Friday, cover charge
Colorado vs. KU game, 1 p.m. Saturday
Nick Cosmos with Grumpy, 9 p.m. Saturday, cover charge
'80s Night with DJ Jim, 9 p.m. Wednesday, cover charge
Hockenbury's Tavern
1016 Massachusetts St.
Transylvania 2000 with Subduing Mara, 10 tonight,
$3
Hellcat Trio with Transylvania 2000, 10 p.m. tomor-
row. $3
Kelley Hunt, 10 p.m. Saturday, $3
Hurrican, 10 p.m. Saturday.
Little Slater, 10 p.m. Tuesday. $3
Crown, 10 p.m. Thursday.
The Strangers, 10 p.m. Thursday, $3
Full Meal Cafe
803 Massachusetts St.
Tim Cross Jazz Group, 8 tonight, free
Timber Rattlers, 9 p.m. tomorrow, free
White Trash, 9 p.m. Saturday, free
Seventh Day and Tom Krause with friends (?) plus surprise guest, 7 p.m. Tuesday, free
Uncle Dirty Toes, 8 p.m. Wednesday, free
Tim Cross Jazz Group, 8 p.m. Thursday, free
---
10
Thursday, February 24, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Camera America ONE HOUR PHOTO
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Sturdy boxes for moving and storage. Boxes with handles for easier moving. Large quantities at discount prices.
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Live Music!
BRANDING IRON SALOON
806 W. 24th • 843-2000
Open 4 p.m. - 2 a.m.
February 25th & 26th
Kaw Cajuns
Thur., March 3rd
Elite Male Dancers
March 4th & 5th
Prairie Fire
March 11th & 12th
The Outfit
Free Dance Lessons
Saturday & Tuesday 7-9
• Unlimited Parking
• Big Screen TV
• Daily Drink Specials
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Unlimited Tans
3 Months
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FREE hotel for 2 Mexico/Bahamas Vegas
with purchase
EUROPEAN
TAN, HEALTH & HAIR SALON
23rd & Ousdahl • 841-6232
KU's Spring Break Headquarters
Women's
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SHARK'S
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Swim Wear, Casual Wear and yes, Hats
Lawrence
701 W. 9th (9th and Indiana)
Mission, KS
6518 Martway
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The Only Radio Station in Town with Live Olympic Coverage from Chelsea, Norway on Sports Talk
• Every Thursday Night
• Call-ins are welcome
• 7:00 – 8:00 pm
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Lawrence
701 W. 9th (9th and Indiana)
STUSSY
Kansas City
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Mission, KS
6518 Martway
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The Only Radio Station in Town with Live Olympic Coverage from Lillehammer, Norway on Sports Talk
• Every Thursday Night
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• Phone: 864-1747
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THE NEWS in brief
New Russian parliament votes to grant amnesty to 1991 coup leaders
MOSCOW
In its first major action, Russia's new parliament took a swipe at President Boris Yeltsin yesterday by granting amnesty to leaders of the 1991 Soviet coup and the hardliners who fought him last fall.
Yeltsin, who disbanded the last parliament just five months ago, issued an angry statement denouncing the vote as a "dangerous path which contradicts the national interests."
"Regrettably, having barely started its work, the State Duma has shown that it hasn't drawn any lessons from the bitter experience of the Supreme Soviet," said Vyacheslav Kostikov, Yeltsin's press secretary.
The vote came one day before Yeitsin was to deliver his first, long-delayed speech to parliament's powerful lower chamber, the State Duma.
Reformers warned that the amnesty could revive the political unrest that turned the streets of the capital into a battleground in October.
"This is the beginning of a civil war in Russia," said Sergei Yushchenkov, the parliament's defense committee chair.
The Communists and nationalists who pushed the measure through parliament argued that it would heal Russia's political wounds, not reopen them.
Later, at an anti-Yeltsin rally near the Kremlin, there was no talk of reconciliation. "Yeltsin is a murderer!" about 2,000 people chanted as a light snow fell at sunset. "All power to the Soviets!
Many waved red Soviet flags and carried small portraits of some of the jailed leaders of the October violence, including former Vice President Alexander Rutskii, as well as pictures of Josef Stalin and Vladim Lenin.
ATLANTA Stadium removes state flag
ATLANTA
The board that governs Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium voted unanimously yesterday to stop flying the Georgia flag there because its design includes the Confederate battle emblem.
The decision by the Atlanta-Fulton County Recreation Authority means that the state flag will not fly during Atlanta Braves home games this season. It also would not fly during the 1996 Summer Olympics, when the stadium will be used for baseball.
Opponents of the flag contend it is racist because it includes the Confederate battle flag emblem — cross blue bars with stars on a red field. Gov. Zell Miller tries to get the flag changed during last year's Legislature, but he dropped the effort because there was not enough support.
The stadium board had considered flying the pre-1956 state flag, which did not include the Confederate battle emblem. But board members decided removing the flag would send a more powerful message.
"This is an issue facing the citizens that has yet to be resolved, and the absence of a flag draws attention to that issue," said board member Mary Rose Taylor.
© 1994 Rafter Insurance and Annuity Association College Retirement Equities Fund
The Rev. Tim McDonald, leader of a group that is pushing for a flag change, said its next target would be the Georgia
Dome, home of the NFL's Atlanta Falcons. The group was unsuccessful, however, in getting the flag removed from the state-operated building for last month's Super Bowl.
"It's not just a black issue," McDonald said. "There are whites and blacks all across the state who find this flag reprehensible."
TULSA, Okla.
Shootings of six haunt man
The man charged with wounding six people during a shooting spree in a fast-food restaurant said yesterday that he's beginning to have nightmares of the victims' families wanting revenge.
"I have horrible dreams of people surrounding me and attacking me, I guess the families," Marcus Muriel Thompson said in a telephone interview from the Tulsa jail.
"They just started a couple of days ago," Thompson said. "My heart beats a little faster when I wake up."
Three employees and three high-school students were wounded. All the students have been released from hospitals; the employees remain hospitalized in fair to good condition.
Thompson, 26, is charged with six counts of shooting with intent to kill and one count of assault with a dangerous weapon in the Feb. 15射击 at a Wendy's Old-Fashioned Hamburger restaurant during the lunch hour.
"I just want to tell them I'm sorry, but they'll probably never forgive me." Thompson said. "I know I've got forgiveness from God. I've been reading my Bible, and it says I really shouldn't worry about anything else. Man can destroy my body, but only God can destroy my body and soul."
Thompson said that he hadn't spoken to the public defender that a Tulsa judge appointed last week and that he did not care if he does.
He said he slept most of the day and rarely thought about his life, the shootings or what he faces.
"I'm automatically going to get a conviction," he said.
Chicago
Victoria Moryn had two toes amputated and will need physical therapy, said Armella Bernacki, a representative for St. Mary of Nazareth Hospital.
Victim of cold snap released
"She's in good condition. She's healthy," Bernacki said yesterday. She said that Morryn had been released Tuesday and that she would be staying with friends.
A 91-year-old woman found frozen to the floor of her unheated home a month ago was released from the hospital.
Moryn, a widow who lived alone, was discovered Jan. 17 in her unheated home, unconscious and kneeling barefoot in an inch-thick layer of ice from leaking pipes.
Police who found her thought that she was dead until one touched her and she moaned "Oh, God" in Polish, her native language.
She suffered frostbite and hypothermia, and doctors initially did not expect her to survive.
It was not determined how long my son had been stuck, but concerned friends notified police after seeing no sign of her for several days. The temperature in Chicago was about 10 degrees on Jan. 17 and had been below zero most of the previous two days.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
1040 Department of the Treasury—Internal Revenue Service
U.S. Individual Income Tax Return
For the year Jan. 1-Dec. 31, 1992, or other tax year
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1040 Department of the Treasury—Internal Revenue U.S. Individual Income Tax Return For the year Jan. 1-Dec. 31, 1992, or other tax year Your first name and initial
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SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, February 24, 1994
11
COLUMNIST
COLUMNIST
ORESLEY
DOHL
Pregame prep gives athletes key to success
During my early years of competitive sports, I never believed much in pregame rituals or superstitions.
To get ready for games and races I did some mental visualization, said a little prayer and left the rest up to hours of practice, some raw talent and a little luck.
In my sophomore year of high school, that changed.
Our volleyball team had this crazy idea that the first volleyball victory of the season was the product of perfectly planned pregame preparation.
So, for the next couple of weeks our game days were carbon cones:
We would eat the same things, listen to the same music, wear the same lucky "undergarments" and same hairstyles, and chew the same gum — for every game.
As foolish as it seemed to me, it was working — our record was an unblemished 10-0.
Then one Tuesday I thought that I would live life on the edge.
My "game" sports bra was in the wash. So, damn my soul and our team, I wore a different sports bra.
To my amazement, that night our perfect record went from 10 to 10-2.
There was a crisis in the Sylvan Uni-fied Lady Mustangs locker room that night, and conversations were serious.
"Hey, aren't your bangs usually pulled back?"
"Jennifer, didn't you have a vanilla milk shake tonight instead of a chocolate one?"
How could anyone in their right mind believe that not eating the same foods or wearing different socks could ruin a game?
But I was curious about the rituals.
The next Tuesday, while the team was back to wearing the same clothes and same hairstyles and listening to the same music — there was me — a rebel without a cause doing all I could that was different before our match to prove that my theory held true.
But we lost again that night and played as if it was our first 7 a.m. practice of the season — myself included.
It's all in the state of mind. If you feel good about doing something and it works for you, keep right on doing it.
This weekend, members of the Kansas track team will compete in the Big Eight Championships in Oklahoma City against some of the best athletes in the Midwest.
After talking with a Kansas runner, my assumption was right; mental preparation is the key to a solid performance.
When it comes down to it, especially in an individual sport such as track, practically everything athletes do until event time will affect the outcome of their performance.
Junior open miler Melissa Swartz said there were big things and trivial things athletes could do to secure a good finish.
It works for Swartz. Last season, she tried it at the NCAA championships, and she turned in one of her best performances ever.
Before track meets, Swartz listens to tapes she makes in a sports psychology lab. She writes her own script and has it set to music.
Swartz follows the same routine and allows the same amount of warm-up time before her races.
Then there are the trivial things.
"I wear my hair in a ponytail for every meet and put in new spikes. Not all athletes put in new spikes, but it's a new race — so I put in new spikes," she said.
And there's one thing Swartz is sure never to forget: "I always big Chew Red gum. I put a piece in right before my first race at every meet."
While she's chewing that gum, she runs, she thinks of her tapes and she visualizes herself crossing the finish line in first place — all strategies to improve her race, tested and proven to work for Swartz.
This weekend, I hope the Kansas athletes follow their rituals in Oklahoma, and I hope their rituals continue to prove themselves true.
Losing streak makes Jayhawks see red
Cornhusker victory marks defeat No.3
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
LINCOLN, Neb. - The Cornhuskers delivered a shocker, and the No. 10 Jayhawks could not recover in time in Nebraska's 96-87 victory last night at a packed Devaney Center.
After losing three consecutive games, the Jayhawks' record dropped to 21-6 overall and 6-5 in the Big Eight Conference. Nebraska improved to 15-8 and 5-6.
"We're in a slump big-time right now," Kansas junior forward Greg Ostertag said. "We're going to be a tough team when we put everything together."
Despite a 13-point comeback by the Jayhawks late in the game, the Cornhushers held on for the upset.
"They played exceptional basketball for the first twenty minutes," Kansas coach Roy Williams said of the Cornhuskers. "They made more shots against us than anybody's made all year long."
The Cornhuskers exploded in the first seven minutes of the game and took a 19-8 lead. Nebraska senior forward Eric Platkowski helped Nebraska build its leads with good defense and moves to the basket. In the opening minute of the game, Platkowski hit a baseline jumper over Kansas senior forward Patrick Richey, stole the ball on the Jayhawks' next possession and drove for a lawn
Platkowski ended the game with 33 points and 11 rebounds, both game highs.
Everything seemed to be bouncing Nebraska's way as it took a 58-34 lead into halftime, shooting 61.1 percent from the field. Piatkowski scored 18 points in the first half, and Nebraska shot seven for 10 from three-point range.
Though Nebraska shot well from the outside, Williams said, the Jayhawks could have played better defensively in the first half.
"I thought we didn't play as well as we should have," he said. "And we didn't do the little things, so it was a 24-point lead. If we would have done our part, it could have been a 12- or 14-point lead."
Williams said that Nebraska had hit some tough three-pointers.
Nebraska 96, Kansas 87
"Normally, you don't feel bad if the
Player fgm/fga ftm/fta tp
Badgett 5-11 2-2 12
Plattkowski 10-19 10-13 33
Chubick 1-3 4-7 6
Johnson 6-11 1-1 14
Boone 3-9 4-6 10
Strickland 3-9 2-2 9
Glock 0-0 0-0 0
Best 0-0 0-0 0
Brooks 5-5 0-0 12
Totals 33-63 23-31 96
Nebraska (15-8, 5-8)
KANSAS (21-6, 6-5)
KANSAS 20 KU
Player fgm/fga ftm/fta tp
Vaughn 5-7 0-3 14
Woodberry 4-17 5-7 16
Richey 3-6 0-0 7
Scott 3-6 3-6 9
Ostertag 6-8 1-4 13
Pollard 4-7 5-7 13
Rayford 0-1 0-0 0
Gurley 1-4 0-0 3
Pearson 3-5 2-2 9
Williams 1-3 1-4 3
Totals 30-64 17-33 87
Halftime Nebraska 58, Kansas 34, Kansas 9
goals Nebraska 7-17 (Pattockins 3-7,
Brooks 2-2, Johnson 1-4, Strickland 1-2,
Boone 0-2) Kansas 10-2 (Vaughn 4-5,
Woodbury 3-9, Richley 1-4, Gurley 1-3,
Pearson 1-1). Rebounds Nebraska 42
goals Nebraska 37 (O'Neill 8),
Austin Nebraska 20 (O'Neill 8),
Strickland 4), Kansas 19 (Woodberry 7).
Total fouls Nebraska 22, Kansas 20.
Attendance 14, 370.
Kansas senior guard Steve Woodberry dribbles past Nebraska senior forward Bruce Chubick. The Cornhuskers built a 24-point halftime lead but had to hold off a Javahawk comeback to win 96-87 last night at Nebraska.
other team takes those shots, but they made them," Williams said. "You talk about their shooters, but you've still got to get a hand up in their faces."
Nebraskaran a zone defense against the Jayhawks for most of the game, but Kansas had opportunities, Williams said. Kansas had 16 of its 30 field goals in the low post.
"I thought they played their zone well," Williams said. "We didn't do a very good job of getting the ball inside. And when we did get it inside, we fumbled it around a couple of times."
Williams kept Kansas in the locker room for the entire time allotted during halftime.
"Coach was pretty mad, to say it mildly," Richey said. "It's tough to be constructive when you're 24 points down."
guard Steve Woodberry scored 15 points in a row for the Jayhawks. Woodberry had a team-high 16 points, but he was four for 17 from the field. With the score 89-77, Richey missed a three-pointer, but Woodberry got the rebound. He passed it back to Richey,
After Williams' talk, the Jahawks scored the first four points of the second half. But after that, Nebraska seemed to have an answer for every Kansas score.
Kansas began its final comeback down 20 with 8:25 left in the second half. The Jayhawks went to a full court press that produced five turnovers. During the comeback, Kansas
who hit the same shot
Williams said that he was pleased with Kansas' comeback but that he wasn't satisfied.
"We didn't play in the first half," Williams said. "That's two or three times this year.
He said now it was time for Kansas to bounce back from defeat.
'Hawks hope for hits at home
"Now they can talk about a losing streak," he said. "We've either got to turn it around or feel sorry for ourselves."
By Andrew Gilman Kansan sportswriter
All of those people waiting for the Kansas baseball team's offense to start producing, don't panic.
The Jayhawks, batting just .239 as a team, will play Arkansas-Little Rock at 3 p.m. tomorrow and 2 p.m. Saturday at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
Kansas has hit just five home runs in seven games and has been held to four hits twice. But the Jayhawks could pick up their offense against the Trojans. Arkansas-Little Rock, 4-3, has a team ERA of more than six runs a game and has given up 62 hits in 53 innings pitched.
"It's just a matter of time for the offense to come around," Kansas coach Dave Bingham said. "These guys want to hit and run the bases. They want to get it going."
Though the offensive has not won a lot of games for the 3-4 Jayhawks, the defense and pitching have.
Sophomore Jamie Splitterff leads the Jayhawks with a 2-0 record, and he has an ERA of 0.60. Kansas has a team ERA of 4.79.
"Our defense was outstanding last weekend," junior third baseman Brent Wilhelm said. "We've gotten a lot better, and a lot of it is because our communication has gotten better."
bat along with four RBIs. Wilhelm admits that his hitting this year has been suspect.
Wilhelm, who has batted in the fifth or sixth spot this season, is batting. 241. He has seven hits in 29 at
"My hitting has been average up until now," he said. "I've lost a little confidence, but the hitting coach and I have tried to shorten my swing. I'm trying to improve by drills and repetition."
Bingham has noticed the results of Wilhelm's work.
"He's had some good games," Bingham said. "But he has had some difficulty working through some things."
Wilhelm has had two errors in a game on two occasions, but he said he was working past that.
"We're not the power team that we were last year," he said. "But we are a different team, we just need some time to come along. This is going to be an outstanding team."
"I've played hard," he said. "I'm not letting my mistakes bother me as much. Sometimes I worry too much, and that keeps me from playing well."
Even though he has had his own difficulties, Wilhelm said, he has confidence in the team.
Bingham has confidence in his team.
"We've started to play a lot better," he said. "Coach is doing a good job of putting pressure on us at practice. We've found out where we are and need to play to concentrate on every game and every team. This season is a marathon and not a sprint." Bingham has confidence in his team.
Bingham looked to the Arkansas series last weekend where Kansas won two of three as an indicator
STREET BASEBALL
Junior third baseman Brent Wilhelm practices bating with sophomore catcher Ted Meadows.
of what is to come.
"It was important that we could play against a good club on the road," he said. "I'm not concerned with our record, but I'd be a lot more concerned if we had lost two of three."
Baylor accepts offer to move into Big Eight
WACO, Texas—Baylor yesterday became the first Southwest Conference school to accept an offer to join the Big Eight in what could be the beginning of the end for the nearly 80-year-old Southwest Conference.
Three other Southwest Conference schools also were considering a jump to the Big Eight.
Baylor's board of regents voted unanimously to make the move.
SPORTS BRIEFSS
Two other original SWC members, Texas and Texas A&M, and longtime member Texas Tech all had regents meetings scheduled this week to consider the offer from the Big Eight's Kansas City, Mo., offices.
Thomas R. Powers, head of the board, emerged from a 21/2-hour closed meeting of the board to announce that the school was severing its ties with the SWC.
"We are delighted and excited that our board unanimously voted to accept the invitation that's been offered," Powers said at a news conference. "We think the financial possibilities of this new alliance are exciting."
A formal announcement appeared to need only the regents rubber-stamping at the schools.
Tennis defeated
The Kansas men's tennis team came within one match of upsetting No. 15 Kentucky yesterday in the first round of the United States Tennis Association/Intercollegiate Indoor Team Championship in Louisville, Ky.
The Wildcats defeated the Jayhawks 4-3 for Kansas' first loss of the season.
Kentucky's Mahyar Goodarz defeated Kansas' Martin Eriksson in three sets to seal the Wildcats' victory.
A bright spot for the Jahayhaws was Kansas' J.P. Vissepo victory against Kentucky's Ludde Sudin in singles play. Sudin is ranked No. 27 in the country.
1994 Winter Olympic Games
The tallv
A list of the top six countries winning medals in the Olympic games.
I
Country | Gold | Silver |
Russia | 10 | 7 | 4 |
Norway | 8 | 7 | 2 |
Germany | 6 | 4 | 6 |
Italy | 4 | 3 | 8 |
United States | 5 | 3 | 1 |
Canada | 3 | 3 | 3
Source: The Associated Press
Dave Campbell / KANSAN
Blair wins gold for a fifth time
The Associated Press
HAMAR, Norway — Gimme five.
That's five — count 'em, five — gold medals around Bonnie Blair's neck. Five golden tributes to greatness. More golds than Dick Button or Brian Boltano, Dorothy Hamill or Peggy Fleming. Mary Louis Retton or Wilma Rudolph ever won.
She's not colorful, not controversial, not conversational. She's not a quote machine who loves to hear herself talk.
"Maybe in time I'll realize what I've done," Blair said yesterday after winning her second straight Olympic speed-skating 1,000-meter gold medal. "All I know is I loved skating and loved competing."
Briefs compiled from Associated Press and Kansan staff reports.
And loved winning — possibly, more than any American female athlete of our time.
So, then, what exactly is Bonie Blair? Only the greatest U.S. female Olympian ever, the greatest U.S. Winter Olympian ever.
Blair won the way she almost always wins — easily, with little flair, little flash, just all dash. She skated her best time in six years — one minute, 18.74 seconds — to defeat silver medalist Anke Baier of Germany by 1.38 seconds, the largest margin in Olympic history.
The only Winter Olympians to win more gold medals than Blair are Lyda Skoblikova of the Soviet Union, who won six speedskating golds in 1960 and '64, and cross country skier Lyubov Egorova of Russia, who has three golds this year and six for her career.
12
Thursday, February 24, 1994
OLYMPICS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Harding distant 10th as Kerrigan dazzles
The Associated Press
HAMAR, Norway — Nancy Kerrigan came out of her final whirl tonight with a dazzling smile of triumph. Sitting in the shadows in a VIP booth high above the ice, a grim Tonia Harding could only applaud along with everyone else.
Harding had just seen any chance of a medal disappear.
Skating to music written by one of her choreographers, Kerrigan turned in an elegant, nearly perfect performance to take first place in the technical portion of the figure skating competition.
The judges scored her from 5.6 to 5.9 out of 6.0 for the required elements and for presentation.
Oksana Baul of Ukraine was sec.
ond, and France's Surya Bonaly was third.
"Ive never been so confident and so ready to do a long program," said Kerrigan, whose smooth skating and crisp black-and-white dress seemed the antithesis of Harding's rough program and loud, red costume.
For all the excitement surrounding Harding, her performance early in the evening matched her music, "Much Ado About Nothing." She skated with little inspiration, stumbling on her crucial first jump and wobbling on another.
"You can't be perfect every time." Harding said. "I was happy with it."
The judges seemed fair to everyone, neither giving Kerrigan sympathy
marks nor marking down Harding because of her alleged role in the attack on Kerrigan. Harding's scores briefly put her in second position behind 1984 and 1988 gold medalist Katarina Witt, with Kerrigan and 18 others yet to skate.
But one by one, the top skaters moved ahead of Harding.
She had no chance for gold even before Kerrigan skated, and when Kerrigan was done, Harding's shot at any medal had vanished.
The long program on Friday night is Harding's strength, a chance for her to launch into her trademark triple axel — the one jump no other woman will try. She did not attempt that jump during tonight's program.
But even if Harding lands that a couple of times — and everyone ahead of
her falls down — she'd have no chance for a medal.
She had no complaints about her scoring, saying, "All I want is to be treated fairly."
"I'm looking forward to Friday." Harding said. Asked when she will feel satisfied, she replied: "When I have a gold medal around my neck, that's when I'll feel like I've achieved what I came here for."
Loud cheers greeted her when Harding was announced, and not a single boo or catcall was heard. Instead, there were signs of support: "USA Loves Tonya & Nancy," "Go for the gold, Tonya," and high in the stands: "Frank Loves You, Tonya."
"The crowd was wonderful, and the ice felt great," Harding said. "There was a lot of support out there."
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Summer Employment Opportunities
Spend the summer in the beautiful Catskill mountains of New York. Achieve a challenging and rewarding summer experience working in a residential camp for adults with physical and developmental disabilities. Positions available: counselors, cabin leaders, and program leaders. All students are encouraged to apply. Season dates June 6-August 24. Good salary, room and board, and some travel allowance. For more information call 914-434-2220 or write to camp Jened, P.O. Box 483, Rock Hill, NY 12775
Tennis Job-Summer Children's Camps-Northeast-Men and women with good tennis background can teach children to play tennis. Good salary, good training. Write a letter to Camp Vega. P.O. Box 1771, Duxbury, MA 02332 (617) 943-6543. Men call or write: Camp Winnadu, 285 Glades Rd., Suite 4902, Boaton Racine, MA 01812. Women call or write: student union from 11am–5pm on 03/23 in the Oral and Regionalist rooms.
225 Professional Services
10402E- 419; 1490 - $419 plus extra fee for other forms to be filled with 106. State returns $5-$14. Will pick up and deliver. Call Brian at 326-2572. Driver education offered through Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 yrs. Driver's license, transportation provided by 641-7749.
BRAXTON B. COPLEY
Attorney at Law
Offered Practice
Traffic Tickets, Milkmanors,
Landlord/Tenant,
Personal Income Tax
A confidential, caring friend, call us.
We're here to listen and talk with you.
Birthright 81-4221. Free pregnancy testing
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake ID & alcohol offenses.
divorce, criminal & civilmatts
the law offices of
DONALD G. STROLE
Donaldo Strole
Donald Doeley
16 East 13th
842-1139
INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS) We transfer
Videos from US mode to your system or from your
county mode. US mode is portable and mailable
with a USB connector. Transfer, FO, Ottawa,
KSC 6909; KSC 1-248-955 or 1-800-6909.
INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS
DV-1 Greencard Program. Sponsored by U.S.
Immigration, Greencards provide U.S. permanent resident status. Citizens of almost all countries are allowed. Applications close March 22,
1994. For info & forms. New Era Legal Services
Tel. (818) 727-7168; (818) 958-4425
Monday - Sunday: 10 a.m. - 11 p.m.
OUI, TRAFFIC, Criminal Defense Divorce and Civil Matters
Attorneys at Law
Former Prosecutors-Near Campus
Elizabeth Leach, Craig Stancillce
749.0087.414 1W14.8182-6432
SCHOLARSHIPS
FOR
EVERYONE
STUDENT SCHOLARSHIP
CONSULTANTS
1229 Almire Lawrence, KS 65440
for more information B32-1555
***
We are a scholarship matching service
With a 300.00 source database
Our fee for a search $7.50
Or yourmohey back Guaranteed
Tutoring avail, for college primary and secondary.
Foulish, Spanish, Math, Science. Call 843-3901
Ash, Spanish, Walter.
**WRITTING AND
PRODUCTIONS**
A/B roll video tape editing with EDL
3D computer animation
Hifi production film creation
Award winning screen writer.
PRIMAL SCREEN COMMUNICATIONS
ST
Criminal Defense Emergency communication call
For free consultation call
Rick Frydman, Attorney
823 Missouri 843-4023
Paid Internship
We're looking for the rare person who can recognize an exceptional opportunity. p/t school year and f/t summer sales internships are available from Northwestern Mutual Life in the financial services industry. An opportunity to work with a respected company, gain valuable training, and be your own boss. Some of our leading interns are making five-figure incomes.
Formore information contact:
Jason Lank, College Unit Director at (913) 362-5000 or Cathy Schwartz, internship director at the University Placement Center at 864-7679.
235 Typing Services
1-der Women Word Processing. Former editor
quality type. 942-5065
www.womenwordprocessing.com
Word processing, applications, term papers, dis-
cussions, research, and training, rush job
applications. Master's Degree. 625-897-4341.
Looking for a good type?
*Papers, Applications, Spreadsheets, Charts
*Laser printing to WOW! your profs
*Grammar and spelling free
*18 years experience
call Jack i at
Makin 'the Grade
Word processing, spread sheets, resumes, mail
envelopes, no less. Small Laser printing, Call
printing. 824-7095.
Words by Chris Words Processing.
High quality text, spell check
spell check, 865-3990
865-3990
X
340 Auto Sales
1936 GT PATERRA 19° BRIGHT RED 7053 ALUM.
w! CRMO FROWT SIXTOU XLQ-DT DERAILERS
w! CROSSWAVE TOSA GONSA TOSA-GYCHO TIRES, ASKING $870.0 O. B. CHIRS $485-490.
LEAVE MESSAGE.
*LIVING ROOM SET*, afa, lofa, plastic seat, and chair
*LIVING ROOM SET*, cost $1500,
bathroom, bedroom, dairy, eat-in kitchen,
*BRASS BED, firm, orthopedic mattress set and frames, never used, cost $1,000 to $3,300 cash,debt*
Wedding Dress - Size 8, ivory, chapel length train.
$150. Call Jill at 839-5390.
Bass Guitar for sale. Baianes sounded Aaib body.
Ebonfloe bassoon, active electronic perfect condition.
Wooden body. Great sound.
305 For Sale
300s Merchandise
For sale 29 gallon aquarium, excellent condition,
all accessories, $75, call 841-7415.
**Bauernschule Guißer**, **Bauernschule Guißer**, **Bauernschule Guißer**
**Bauernschule Guißer**, **Bauernschule Guißer**, **Bauernschule Guißer**
*Bauernschule Guißer*, *Bauernschule Guißer*, *Bauernschule Guißer*
*Bauernschule Guißer*, *Bauernschule Guißer*, *Bauernschule Guißer*
Hyundai super-280 desktop with a sg. Sageg HD.3.5, new, and 52 floppy drive, 14" egg color monitor, keyboard, mouse, DOS, windows $650. 841-141.
For Sale 600 Classical CD's. Excellent selection.
Call 841-9181. Leave Message.
INFINITY Reference one black steering box original $909 now 119 mg许愿 841-1860
Genuine Peruvian Alpaca wool sweaters. Call 855-832, ask for Lips. prices from $30-450.
Queen size waterproof, freeway w/ bookhelf headboard $180 O.B. B 323-194
Want to live life by your own rules? Want to experience world? Read: Life as an Odyssey; guide to Meaningful Careers and Unique Lifestyles. For more info, call 1-800-893-7424.
MACINTOSH Computer. Complete system include:
uclster ub108. Call Cars 802-800-2685.
**89 Hyundai Excel GIS in good condition.** Sdr
hk16. jklg. mk1, acM, AG/MF cassette,
Call 641-7541.
Call 641-7541.
Grey 79 Limited Edition Mazda X1 7X sun roof.
Workshop is excellent shape. Needs
engine work. Call 414-853-3260.
MACIEN ROSH PUSH. Complete system including printer only 500. Call Charles at 820-268-5885.
Aquarium. 30 gallon "long" tank with walnut
and oyster shells of goodies.
Ideal for first timers. Call 243-2600.
Giving Away cellular phone number FREED. First
month service and connection fees payed. Call 641-8500.
360 Miscellaneous
405 For Rent
400s Real Estate
Avail. June or Aug. 34 4B 2R, 2A lgeams & c&ostess,
total kitchen, coin-op laundry, storage unit,
cable pd. CALL: 1-913-866-7697 (Topeka) or 841-8074
(Dinky) on line 6050.
1 Bedroom Apt. available now! Call 841-1212
2 bdrm /w/sunroom and plenty of storage space, 2 bathrooms, D/W, D/F, central air, fire place and on. On KU bus route, $50 + utilities, avail. March i: Mellandia 1-897-4685.
4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished,
Interested? Call 841-3055, 794-0455
or 840-6450.
Trailride Apartments
new leasing for Summer and Fall
Studies, Apia, and Town Homes
KU Boulevard Mallfront,
Mallview Court, 6th
Call Today for more information
843-7333 2500 W. 6th
Available now, two bedroom at 912 Tennessee
575 plus utilities, small pet O. K. 749-758
Available at West Hills apt. Spaciosa 1 bed unfurnished apt. 427 per month. Water pd. Great location near campus. 1012 Emery Rd. no pets. 841-3800. 543-3884.
FORRENT. Sunflower House student living coop,
1466 Tennessee, has rooms available for summer.
Low rent, close to campus/downstreet, cooperative
living. Office # 81-0483.
Furnished room for rent with shared Kitchen and bath. Two short blocks from KU. Off street park area. 10'x8' apartment.
Now rentit for June and August. 1, 2 and 3 dbrs.
Room with ceiling fan, desk, ceilings, ceiling
fans, cable台, CD-849 - 760 used
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
Hanover Place Apt. for rent. Near Campus.
$370/MO. Call 841-1212.
-1 and 3 Bedroom
Apartments Available
• Quiet Location
• 2 blocks from KU bus route
• Call Gina at 843-4754
2040 Heatherwood
Maa Kenie Place now leasing for Aug 1, 4yr old
Since race now leasing for Aug 1, 4yr. old luxury appliances, close to camperms. All BR, microwave and washer & dryer all kitchen appl., decks or patio/porch. Well insulated, energy efficient.
West Hill APARTMENTS
homes available now. 941-STAR (7827)
MOVING TO PHOENIX! NOW needed for spacious lift. 3 lbrm townhouse. Glennah Apts. 620-257-5165, smiles@apts.ou.1/ulb. Smoking fine. No pets. Call 865-4238
Rooms, apartments, and well kept, older homes available now. 814-STAR (2892)
NOW LEASING
Chamberlain Court Apts.
1-2 Bedroom
Call 749-1586
3 new bedroom home, 2 bath, washer-dryer hook-up, refrigerator and soap. On bus route 600 a round trip to Los Angeles.
*28R from $407*
*Jaccuzzi in each aapt*
*18k, or KU bus route*
*6kK, or KU bus route*
*Pd cable TV paelos*
*Basketball court/Park*
*On-site management*
*Ouidad Office*
*15kK to 145 KI5*
*Call for Appointments*
*5:15pm-M-Fri 10-28 sat*
NaismithPlace
YOUNG STATE SCHOOL
NOW LEASING
Stadium View
Carson Place
Bradford Square
Oread
Call 749-1556 for more info.
or by office on new atl.
Tuesday 12:02 Oread
Tuesday 1-5 p.m.
Saturday 11-3
Bradford Square
One bedroom apartment available now. On KU bus route. Small pets OK. Call 865-4289.
Room for rent $180 per month plus one third utilities. Call Mike at 814-3443, non smoker.
One bedroom apartment for sublease. Water and
floor heating. Free $35/mo. Now until Aur. Call 894-94-46
*Luxurious 2,3, & 4 Bedroom Town Homes*
*Garages; 2½ Baths*
*Microwave Ovens*
*Some with Fireplaces*
*On KUB Route*
*Swimming Pool and Tennis Courts*
and two
needroom apartments
* Furnished and unfurnished
* Great location near campus
* No Pets
841-8400 or
841-1287
SUNRISE
VILLAGE
660 Gateway Ct.
(Behind Sonic)
Now Leasing for Fall
Mon.-Fri. 10-12, 1-5
FORJUNE AND AUGUST
NOWLEASING
OPEN HOUSE
- Spacious one and two
OPEN HOUSE
WEST WATER
12.30-30 NoApt. Needed
1012 Emery Rd.
941-8000
Part25
Part25
We are now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature studio 1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. We also have 3 bedroom, $2 \frac{1}{2}$ bath townhomes.
- 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)
Spacious卧室 bedroom ap very close to campus. Fit-for-
ward bedroom bedroom Call 814-123. Ask about Coldwater flat 44
Studio apartment avail. May 29 - Aug 10. May
paid. Formed $10 Call Inlet at 832-1925
paid. Formed $10 Call Inlet at 832-1925
Now leasing for FALL
We're making life easier
- Weekly Maid Service
- Front Door Bus Service
- "Dine Anytime" with
- unlimited seconds
- Laundry and Vending Facilities
---
- Free Utilities
1800 Naismith
843-8559
NAISMITH Hall
walk to KU & downtown. $290/mo. #842-9072
Sublease large one bedroom apt. on bus route.
Paid by the landlord paid, PETS OK! Available ASAP. $330-843-9048
SubLEASE top floor studio off I16.
Studio apt. Private entrance, off-street parking,
walk to KU & downstairs. $290/mo. 842-9072
Sublanee top floor studio off 5th & Color, from
901-823-4467. Located in the heart of Nassau,
facilities have: Naxos library, 847-957-897 or 847-957-898.
MASTERCRAFT
meadowbrook
Completely Furnished
Offers
Studio, 1,2,3, & 4 bedroom apartments and townhomes
HANOVER
HANOVER
14th&Mass. : 841-1212
1. How much time did you spend looking for your apartment?
1. How much time did you
SUNDANCE 7th & Florida : 841-5255
Answer 2 Questions
REGENTS COURT 19th&Mass.:749-0445
2 3
2. Do you want to live in a beautiful, centrally located living community?
you wasted a lot of your time.
TANGLEWOOD 10th & Arkansas : 749-2415
ORCHARD CORNERS
15th & Kasold : 749-4226
CAMPUS PLACE
1145Louisiana : 841-1429
1. If you spent over 1 hour,
2. Meadowbrook is leasing for fall now. Call Kathy or Shana and in 1 hour your apartment hunting time will be over!
Mon-Fri 9am-5pm
Sat 10am-4pm
842-4455
Mon-Fri 8-5-30
Sat 10-4 Sun 1-4
15th & Crestline
842-4200
Sorry, no pets
MASTERCRAFT
Equal Housing Opportunity
summer suites 4-roommates needed. 360#
Bathroom Townhouse. Warey/Abrry Pool Tent.
220x175. $4,995-$5,495.
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
VILLAGE SQUARE apartments
- Close to campus
• Spacious 2 bedroom
• Laundry facility
• Swimming Pool
• Waterbed allowed
9th & Avalon 842-3040
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
430 Roommate Wanted
1 Reomoteate 3 bdrm house, w,d near bus,
r1$75/m + /1% utilities. For more info call 780-649-
2250.
How to schedule an ad:
**ROOMMATE** NEEDS to share two bedroom
814-330 / rmo + / utilities Call Dave 843-330 or
841-330
Male roommate to townhouse at Sunrise Village, Calif. Call Mike or John at 623-1477 for details.
Female non-smoking roommate wants to share
from apartment clock close to campus for
weekend stay.
Step 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.
- By Mail: 11 Staffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 68045
Aids phonein may be billed by your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made. * $18 Shipped Free*
I HAVE TO MOVE TO K.C.I. 1 female needed to share 3 bdmr, spacius apc $200/+ utilities, on bus route, convenient location, no smokers or pets, call 643-7647 in the evening.
Classified Information and order form
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 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 cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check with cash are not available.
Calculating names:
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of again lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of times 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.
Broad-based service may be advertised that the advertiser have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a lee of $4.00.
Rates
Cost per line per day
105 personal
110 business persons
129 announcement
138 entertainment
3 Nees
4 Nees
6-7 Nees
8+ Nees
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.
Item. of insertions:
Classifications
Cost per line per day
1.9X 2-5X 4-7X 8-14X 15-23X 30+X
2.86 1.55 1.95 .85 .75 .50
1.99 1.15 1.90 .70 .65 .45
1.85 1.85 .75 .65 .60 .40
1.75 .90 .75 .60 .55 .45
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
148 test & based
265 baby wasted
225 professional services
285 junction services
380 for sale
340 pet sales
380 microfluentless
379 want to buy
405 for rent
438 roommate wanted
1
2
3
4
5
Date ad begins:___ Total days in paper
Address:
Total 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 followin if you are charming your ad:
Account number:
Expiration Date:
MasterCard
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
Signature
The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1994 FarWorks, Inc.;Dist by Universal Press Syndicate
© 1994 FarWorks Inc. (c) Dist by Universal Press Syndicate
2-24 Harvey
"What a find, Ms. Dinkins! ...It's Mailman, all right — but remarkably, this specimen is fully intact, with his Canus nipponicus still attached!"
)
Thursday, February 24, 1994
OLYMPICS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Graduation Announcements
& Caps and Gowns
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
501-0115
Indigo Blue
$24.88
Offer good thru
the end of the month.
501
LEVI'S
Reality Check
GAS TANK: One-quarter fulll.
TIRES: Four. No spare.
JEANS: Levi's 501's.
VANDERBILT'S
The Associated Press
Hockey team dejected after loss
1548 E.23rd·913-841-2109·Open M-F9-8, Sat 9-6, Sun 12-5
LILLEHAMMER, Norway — The marvelous, memorable twinkle that American hockey players carried into the Olympics was gone. The dream vanished, and the sparkle went with it.
Suddenly, the eyes looked tired. They reflected resignation and fatigue and defeat. And an exit once again without a medal.
"Emptiness. Disappointment," U.S. forward Peter Ciavaglia said after yesterday's 6-1 quarterfinal loss to unbeaten Finland. "What you've stived for, for such a long time, you can't really get your hands on anymore. It's just very frustrating. I'm already thinking back on things I could have done differently."
Captain Peter Laviolette wanted to say something to the team after the game. He is 29, the oldest player on the youngest squad.
"I couldn't think of anything to say," he said. "It's pretty empty, hollow. I didn't have anything to say."
The United States (1-2-3) hasn't won a medal since 1980, its longest stretch ever.
It will have to wait until 1998 for another try.
As for this year, the best the Americans can do is fifth place. They can finish as low as eighth, which would be their worst showing ever. They begin consolation play today against the Czech Republic.
The Finns, who entered the Olympics as seventh seeds — one spot below the Americans — have outscored opponents 31-5 en route to the tournament's only perfect record.
Finland allowed an average of only 12.4 shots in preliminary play; the Americans had 10 in the first period alone and finished with 28.
But Jarmo Myllys, whose brilliant goal tending carried Finland to the 1988 silver medal, was strong.
At 12:51, Finland broke the scoreless tie with its first of four power-play goals. Jere Lehtinen's shot was blocked by defenseman Brett Hauer before Saku Koiu sent the rebound past goalie Garth Snow.
"In the first period, the USA played better than us. It was our hardest period of the tournament," said Koivu, 19, one of the Montreal Canadiens' hottest prospects. "After our first and second goals, we relaxed and could play our own game."
Finland really heated up after Sacco's shorthanded goal brought the U.S. team within a goal early in the second period. Just when the Americans thought they might rally for the fifth time in the tournament, the Finns scored twice during a 2:16 span.
Today's Olympic TV Schedule
All Times CST CBS 6-8 a m
7-10 p.m.
11:37 p.m.-12:37 a.m.
EVENTS: General report.
EVENTS: Alpine skiing (women's giant slalom); short track speedskating (men's 500m, men's 5,000m relay, women's 600m); cross-country skiing (women's 30k classic report); figure skating (ladies' free program preview)
EVENTS: Alpine skiing (women's giant slalom); short track speedskating; figure skating (ladies' free program preview); freestyle skiing (aerials)
TNT noon 5 p.m.
EVENTS: Hockey (TBA); short track speedskating; alpine skiing (women's giant slalom); freestyle skiing (aerials); cross-country skiing (women's 30k classic); nordic combined (3x10 km cross country)
The Associated Press
EXPAND YOUR KNOWLEDGE OF ENGINEERING
AT THE ENGINEERING EXPO
8AM-6 PM FRI.,FEB. 25
LEARNED HALL
ACTIVITIES INCLUDE:
- Hot Air Balloon
STUDENT
S
- Military Demonstration-
- including Night Vision Goggles HUMVEE Missle Launcher & Engineering Demonstration
- FREE FOOD & CONCESSIONS AVAILABLE
GIANT YUKON
STUDENT
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
SENATE
WILSON
The Giant Yukon is incredibly durable. We think it's the best entry mountain bike you can buy!
$374.95
100 % cro-moly frame
100% cro-moly fork (1 1/8" HS)
100 % cro-moly frame
100% cro-moly fork (1 1/8" HS)
oversize tube set for durability
21 speed Shimano shifting
21 speed Shimano shifting alloy OR wheels
alloy, QR wheels
RICK'S BIKE SHOP inc 916 Massachusetts, (913)841-6642
THE CPA EXAMINATION HAS CHANGED AND SO HAVE WE
Bicycle
"The Original" Wiley CPA Examination Review 1994 now in a new 4-volume configuration...
THE ORIGINAL WILEY CPA
CHRISTIAN BROOK
BUSINESS LAW
AND PROFESSIONAL
RESPONSIBILITIES
THE ORIGINAL WILEY CPA GRADUATION REVIEW 1984
BUSINESS LAW AND PROFESSIONAL RESPONSIBILITIES
THE ORIGINAL WILEY CPA GRADUATION REVIEW 1984
AUDITING
THE ORIGINAL WILEY CPA GRADUATION REVIEW 1984
FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING AND REPORTING:
BUSINESS ENTERTAINMENT
Patrick R. Deloitte
THE ORIGINAL
WILEY
CPA
COMPANION BOOK
BUSINESS LAW
AND PROFESIONAL
RESPONSIBILITIES
BENTY
CPA
FINANCE LAW
PROFESSIONAL RESPONSIBILITIES
Publisher N. Millard
BER
CPA
BUSINESS PROGRAMS AND
PROCEDURES
www.bercaa.com
THE ORIGINAL
WILEY
CPA
INFORMATION REFERENCE
AUDITING 1994
0-471-30423-9 650 pp. $28.00 Paper
BUSINESS LAW AND PROFESSIONAL RESPONSIBILIES 1994
0-471-30419-0 650 pp. $28.00 Paper
ACCOUNTING AND REPORTING:
Taxation, Managerial, Governmental and Not-for-profit Accounting 1994
0-471-30425-5 650 pp. $28.00 Paper
FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING AND REPORTING:
Business Enterprises 1994
0-471-30124-7 590 pp. $32.00 Paper
POURVOLUME SET
0-471.30422-0, 2,900 pp. $116.00 Paper
Published by John Wiley and Sons.
Mt 864-4431 OREAD BOOKSHOP 8:30-5:00 M-F 10:00-4:00 SAT 12:00-3:00 SUN KANSAS UNION. LEVEL 2
POSTCARD
OREAD
WXXXYZ
COLUMBIA
Local bands, get ready to plow the fields to the KJHK FARMERS'BALL
What it is about?
Local bands can send a two song demo tape by March 30,
at 4:00 pm
to: 2051 A Dole
*Must be all original work.
Who is chosen?
•Eight bands are chosen from the tapes
*Four will play at The Bottleneck April 26th
*Four will play at The Bottleneck April 27th
*Judges will select the top four bands which will go on to play April 29th
*One winner will be chosen
The Prize:
Winner will get recording time at Mercy Records Studio and will be the opening band at SUA's "Day on the Hill", April 30th.
KJHX
90.7
MASTERCRAFT
ANNOUNCING
---
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana
841-1429
Hanover Place
14th & Mass.
841-1212
Regents Court 19th & Mass. 749-0445
Sundance 7th & Florida 841-5255
Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas 749-2415
Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold 749-4226
---
OPEN HOUSE
FEB. 26TH View from 10am - 4pm
Completely Furnished
· Designed for privacy
· Close to Campus
· Locally Managed and owned
· Affordable Rates
Come view our 1,2,3, and 4 bedroom apartments & townhouses and discover the convenience and affordabilty of Mastercraft Managed Apartments
FOLLOWING OPPORTUNITY
MASTERCRAFT
Wait, the image has "من حاوی" followed by a space and then some numbers.
Let's re-read the whole thing carefully.
"من حاوی"
842-4455
1
SPORTS: Former Kansas forward Danny Manning is traded to the Atlanta Hawks for Dominique Wilkins. Page 9.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.103,NO.109
KANSAS STATE
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA KS 66612
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
FRIDAY. FEBRUARY, 25, 1994
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
Committee passes death penalty bill
Amended version makes it to Senate
By Stephen Martino Kansan staff writer
A narrow death penalty bill passed a narrowly divided Senate Judiciary Committee yesterday.
The committee voted 7-6 to forward the bill to the entire Senate. Debate is expected to be taken up sometime next week, perhaps as early as Tuesday or Wednesday.
State Sen. Dick Rock, D-Arkansas City, proposed an amendment that limited application of the death penalty to seven specific occurrences
They are:
n premeditated killing during a kidnapping, if the kidnapping was intended to hold the person for ransom.
n killing a person for money, covering contract murders.
n murder of an innate or guard if the murderer is an innate.
n intentional murder of a person during a rape, sodomy or aggravated sodomy.
n murder of a law enforcement officer.
n murdering more than one person as part of the same act.
n murder of a child under the age of 12 during kidnapping if the kidnapping was done to commit a sexual offense against the child.
Rock said that he favored this limited application over one that was inclusive of all first-degree murder.
"There are too many circumstances that can result in bias," he said.
However, State Sen. Dick Bond, R-Roverland Park, said the bill passed by the committee had serious flaws and questionable logic.
"It applies the death penalty if you kill two persons in one act but not if you kill one person a week," he said. "You can execute someone if they kill a 12-year-old but not a 13-year-old."
Death by imprisonment, Bond said, would be his preferred way of handling violent criminals. He made that motion in the committee, but it failed by one vote.
Bond said that death by imprisonment would prevent two possible problems that could come out of the capital punishment.
Mistakes from death, he said, are irreversible.
"If you make a mistake, how do you compensate victims," he said. "And if you say that there will be no mistakes, that is to say government runs perfectly, even in delivering the mail."
Bond said that discrimination, and not just racial discrimination, is inherent in the death penalty. He said that the death penalty was applied more to African Americans who committed crimes against whites than vice versa and that wealthy persons could hire better attorneys to get them out of the death penalty than poorer persons who generally had to rely on court-appointed counsel.
The bill that passed the committee is not the one that the House passed two weeks ago by a vote of 70-55. So if the Senate passes the legislation, it will have to go to the House floor to be debated. The House either can pass the bill as it is, kill it or make changes and have the bill discussed by a House/Senate conference committee.
Bond said that he would introduce his death by imprisonment amendment on the floor of the Senate. He said the Senate may look more favorably on it than the judiciary committee did.
That measure was voted on by the House and failed 61-63. However, the composition of the House will have changed before another vote will be taken.
State Rep. Rand Rock, D-Akansas市 and son of Sen. Dick Rock, resigns from the House today. He was appointed by President Clinton to a federal marshal's position.
State Rep. Tom Sawyer, the House Democratic leader from Wichita, said that Rock's replacement, Joe Shriver, was a death penalty opponent and presumably would support a death by imprisonment motion if it came before the House.
"That will leave us only one vote short," Sawyer said. "I'm hopeful it might have a chance."
The Associated Press contributed Information to this story.
Lower cable rates not expected
Sunflower charges historically lower
By Stephen Martino Kansan staff writer
A representative of Sunflower Cablevision said he did not expect lower bills for subscribers as a result of a rate decrease ordered by the Federal Communications Commission.
The FCC announced a 7 percent rate decrease Tuesday, just 10 months after it ordered a 10 percent rate decrease. That decrease backfired on some customers, causing actual increases in their bills.
The proposed action by the FCC is anticipated to effect about 90 percent
of cable television customers.
Dennis Knipper, general manager of Sunflower, said that he was not sure a rate decrease would occur because Sunflower's rates historically had been low.
"We have been below the previous benchmark rates, so it's too early to tell if rates will be cut," he said.
Sunflower has about 20,000 customers, who are charged a basic $18.50 rate plus tax and fees.
The rate cut should go into effect sometime in May, but the impact on bills was not immediately known.
Knipfer said that Sunflower would make a decision on rate cuts sometime in the next three to four weeks. When the FCC made its first cut 10 months ago, Knipfer said, Sunflower customers did not see lower bills.
The rate cut ordered by the FCC affects basic cable programming, such as the Cable News Network, MTV and ESPN. It has no effect on premium stations, such Home Box Office and Showtime.
The FCC suggests about 57 cents per channel in charges to the consumer, Knipfer said. He said that the rate cuts would have no effect on service to the consumers.
However, the manager of Topeka's primary cable provider said that the action taken by the FCC was extremely damaging to the long-term security of the cable television industry.
"I think the FCC overreacted to cable television due to pressure from the White House, i.e. Al Gore and President Clinton," said Todd Cruthild, area manager for Telecommunications Inc. of Kansas.
Cruthird said that damaging the cable television industry would prevent full utilization of the information highway, a proposal strongly endorsed by the Clinton Administration.
The first effect of the rate increase already has been seen, Cruthird said. The proposed merger between Telecommunications Inc., TCI of Kansas' parent company, and Bell Atlantic has fallen apart. Telecommunications Inc. said it no longer could afford the proposed merger because its revenues were lower because of the rate reduction.
"In the cable industry, we buy wholesale and sell retail," he said. "Our wholesale prices aren't going down any."
BATMAN
Martin Altstaedten / KANSAN
Holy video Batman!
Dodge City senior, dressed up as Batman for a music video that he and a classmate taped for a theater and film class yesterday morning.
Accident spurs changes in chemical disposal
Rv Ashlev Schultz
Kansan staff writer
An incident on Feb. 11 that put two city sanitation workers in the hospital has resulted in changes in how hazardous waste is disposed of at Malott Hall.
The workers were overcome by vapors from a substance placed in a Malott dumpster that later was compacted by the workers in a trash truck. The substance — suspected to be a compound called thionyl chloride — should not have been placed in the trash, said John Landgrebe, professor of chemistry and chair of the department's chemical hygiene and safety committee.
After the incident, the city's sanitation department contacted the department of facilities operations about alternative collection methods, said Mike Russell, KU's environmental health and safety officer.
A "roll-off box" at Malott's main loading dock has replaced the dumpsters, Russell said. The box is about the size of five dumpsters and is picked up by a truck capable of carrying it away.
"They decided that it might be in the best interest of the sanitation people not to compact the trash because, when you do that, if there are any chemicals in there and they get compacted the bottles can break and release stuff," he said.
Hydrochloric acid and sulfur dioxide vapors were formed when the compound came in contact with moisture generated by compacting the trash. The fumes dissipated quickly after hitting the workers, who were treated at a hospital and
released the same day.
Russell said that the fumes irritated the respiratory system
"It kind of burns your lungs and respiratory tract, so its very hard to get your breath." he said.
"Then the city would come in with their trucks, and they would pick up the dumpsters, whichdump all of the material out of the dumpster into the trash truck," he said.
Custodians collect garbage out of the offices and laboratories in Malot and deposit it in dumsters, Russell said.
Then the ducks complied. Landgrebe said reports that a student or faculty member was responsible for the incident were untrue.
A custodial supervisor received a letter from a staff member who claimed responsibility for putting the box of chemicals in the dumpster, Landgrebe said.
"It was a human error, one of those things that happens," he said.
Landgrebe said that the box of lab waste was properly labeled and that the Office of Research Health and Safety had been called to dispose of it.
"They followed every procedure to the letter," he said.
Russell said that incidents like this could be expected about once a year, especially with the types of operations that occur at Malott.
"Our problem is we can't stand there watching dumpsters 24 hours a day, seven days a week," he said. "And I'll be honest with you. From time to time things slip through the system."
Dumping hazardous waste
Suspected hazardous waste material should be reported to the Health and Safety at 844-4599. Representatives of the office will review the material.
1
1 A material evaluation is run to see whether the material is harmful to the environment. It is harmful, it is packaged and labeled.
Truck with boxes
2
2 The material is taken to Campus Waste Accumulation Area at Wes Campus, where it is stored for a maximum of 90 days.
3
Chemical Waste company contracted by the state, transports the waste to a facility in Illinois so it can be recycled.
Source: Office of Research Health and Safety Micah Lasker/KANSAN
Micah Laaker/KANSAN
INSIDE
A Rich History
The Engineering Expo has been a KU tradition since 1911 and will continue today at Learned Hall. Page 6.
Roundups rattle activists, harm snakes and humans
100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900 1000
By Jason Wolf
Special to the Kansan
The three rattlesnakes in attendance at the Students for WildCare meeting Wednesday night in Haworth Hall showed their respect for speaker David Reber.
100
Rattlesnake roundups are inhumane events, posing harm to rattlesnakes, humans and the environment, said Reber, Lawrence graduate student and president of the Kansas Herpetological Society, a nonprofit organization that encourages education and preservation of wildlife.
Although the snakes rattled their tails at the beginning and end of the speech, they kept quiet under the cover of a large beach towel as Reber explained the other side of ratlesse roundups.
Doug Hesse / KANSAN
Reber was the guest speaker at the monthly meeting of Students for WildCare, a KU organization which assists WildCare. WildCare is a private, nonprofit organization that focuses on nursing wild animals back to health and returning them to their natural habitats.
David Reber, Lawrence graduate student, handles a prairie king snake, a snake that is common throughout most of the state. Reber talked to a group of 20 people Wednesday night about endangered rattlesnakes in Kansas.
Reber told the 20 people at the meeting that rattlesnakes at roundups were burned alive, had their fangs extracted and were excessively stretched to reach prize-winning lengths.
Participants in these roundups frequently spray gasoline down holes and cracks in the ground to drive the rattlesnakes from their dens. The gasoline can harm and even kill innocent wildlife living in these hunting grounds, Reber said.
The gasoline-contaminated meat from these rattlesnakes sometimes is sold to people, he said. People also
can become ill if the gasoline leaks into ground water used as drinking water in some rural areas.
Allowing the general public to touch the captured rattlesnakes is another danger that roundups present to humans. Reber said.
Supporters of the roundups garner public support by casting rattlesnakes in their natural habitat as a great danger to the public, Reber said. The supporters exaggerate to the public the risks of bites despite the fact that there have been no reported deaths attributed to rattlesnake bites in Kansas in more than 50 years, Reber said.
He said that the numbers in some rattlesnake dens have declined in recent years and that "any species, no matter how prolific, can become extinct."
Reber said that some types of rattlesnakes were not yet on the endangered species list but that they were candidates on the list for threatened species.
Reber advised concerned individuals to stay informed and to voice their complaints to the Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks as well as to their state representatives.
Amy Barnes, vice president of Students for WildCare, said that the members were opposed to rattlesnake roundups because of their inhumane treatment of the animals.
e
"I can't believe something so cruel still goes on," she said.
V
2
Friday, February 25,1994
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-Flint-Hall, Lawrence, KA 66045
Red Lyon Tavern
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A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence 944 Mass. 832-8228
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ON CAMPUS
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today at Danforth Chapel.
The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an informational meeting about study abroad in Sweden at 2 p.m. today at 109 Lippincott Hall. For more information, call Janis Perkins at 864-3742.
KU Nippon Kempo Karate Club will meet at 4:30 p.m. today at 207 Robinson Center.
**Women's Student Union will meet at 5 p.m. today at Alceve D in the Kansas Union. For more information, call 864-7337.**
Bahái Club will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Mehdi Khosh at 841-7585.
Habitat for Humanity will have a student workday at 9:45 a.m. tomorrow in Ecumenical Christian Ministries,1204 Oread. For more information, call the
KU Gamers and Roleplayers will meet at 11 a.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Union. For more information, call John Whitmer at 749-3855.
Zeta Phi Beta Sorority will sponsor a "Man of the Year" contest at 7 p.m. tomorrow at the Ballroom in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Krista Morgan at 843-2699.
office at 832-0777.
KU Slavic Club and Student Senate will sponsor a celebration of Slavic cultures at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Ballroom in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Tom Kirk at 832-2377 or Valerie Workman at 749-0170.
KU Ballroom Dance Club will meet at 4 p.m. Sunday at 405 Lendy Hall. For more information, call Sunita Yaday at 843-8271.
The Astronomy Associates of Lawrence will meet at 8 p.m. 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 864-4810 for the newsroom:
■ News tips — Campus Desk
■ Comments/Complaints/Corrections
Ben Grove, Editor or
Lisa Cosmillo, Managing Editor for News
Ben Grove, Editor or
Call 864-4358 for advertising:
■ Classified Department
Comments/Complaints — Kelly
Connealy, Classified Manager
■ Display Advertising
Comments/Complains — Justin
Garber, Business Manager
Kansan fax #--- 913-864-5261.
WEATHER
WEATHER
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 52'/40'
Chicago: 17'/6'
Houston: 63'/49'
Miami: 81'/64'
Minneapolis: 15'/3'
Phoenix: 62'/47'
Salt Lake City: 50'/31'
Seattle: 49'/37'
LAWRENCE: 25'/18
Kansas City: 26'/15'
St. Louis: 27'/14'
Wichita: 29'/19'
Tulsa: 35'/23'
TODAY
Mostly cloudy and very windy
Wind chill index ranging from 0 to
minus 10
High: 25'
Low: 16'
Tomorrow
Partly cloudy and warmer
High: 38'
Low: 27'
Sunday
Mostly sunny
High: 46'
Low: 29'
Source: Eric Renner, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
Mostly sunny
Cloudy
Partly cloudy and warmer
ON THE RECORD
A cassette player and radar detector, valued together at $500, were stolen between 8 a.m. and noon Wednesday from a car parked south of Robinson Center, KU police reported. No force was used to break into the vehicle.
A picture and frame, valued together at $100, were taken from a classroom on the fourth floor of Snow Hall. The crime occurred between Jan. 2 and Feb. 3. There are no suspects, KU police reported.
A story on Page Nine of yesterday's Kansan contained incorrect information. The address to send
contributions to Girlfriend magazine is P.O. Box 1368, Lawrence, KS 66044.
CORRECTION
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, February 25.1994
3
O R E A D
F O R U M
864-9040
The University Daily Kansan wants to know what you think about the effectiveness of heritage celebrations in raising awareness. Some heritage celebrations include Black History Month (February), Women's History Month (March) and the Asian American Festival (first two weeks of March).
What is the most effective way for a university campus to participate in these celebrations?
What is the best way for a university newspaper to cover heritage celebrations?
What are the positive and negative aspects of such celebrations?
How have minority and women's issues been taught in the school systems and universities?
HOW TO USE OREAD FORUM:
1) Call 864-9040 and wait for the tone at the end of the greeting.
3) Hang up immediately when finished.
2) Record a concise message (try to keep it less than two minutes).
Names are not required.
Cultural celebrations ignored
4) If you prefer, you may respond in a typewritten or printed letter to the *Kansan* newsroom, 111 Staufer-Flint Hall. Clearly mark "Oread Forum" on the letter or envelope.
1) The Kansan will report the content of the Oread Forum discussions Wednesday. The Kansan reserves the right to use all, part or none of each recorded message and letter.
2) The Forum will stop taking responses at 6 p.m. Monday.
WHAT WE'LL DO:
Non-minorities seldom attend
By Denise Nell
Kansan staff writer
Amber Reagan-Kendrick said she had no explanation for why less than 5 percent of the people who attended Black History Month events were non-minorities.
"It may be that there's not enough out there," said Reagan-Kendrick, organizer of Black History Month events and programs coordinator for the Office of Minority Affairs. "Maybe we need to advertise more."
Black History Month is one of many cultural celebrations scheduled for specific weeks and months throughout the school year. But the groups that sponsor the events say they are having trouble getting people outside of their cultures — the people they are trying to educate — to participate in the events.
Sandra Olivas, Kansas City, Kan., junior and president of the Hispanic American Leadership Organization, said her group had trouble getting non-Hispanics to participate in Hispanic Heritage Month events in October.
"It was very, very frustrating because it seems like the goal isn't being met," she said. "That goal is, of course, to educate the campus about our culture."
Octavio Hinojosa, Hutchinson senior and member of the group, is working now on plans for next year's Hispanic Heritage Month. He said he was trying to schedule more inclusive events that would attract more student attention.
Events such as panel discussions tended to get the lowest attendance, he said, and discussion topics tended to be repeated.
"People get burned out hearing about diversity and multiculturalism," Hinojosa said. "Ifyou'veheard it once, you don't want to hear it again."
He said he thought students might become overwhelmed with the number of events.
"Maybe there are just too many events to attend," Hinojosa said. "It seems like every month is a heritage month. If you want to attend all of them, that's a lot of time right there."
Hinojosa said he thought another problem might be that non-minorities felt uncomfortable attending the events.
"Another factor may be that students are hesitant or scared to attend an event where they may be the only one of their race there," he said. "I'm sure they'd feel out."
Charlie Reed, an Oskaloosa junior who said he had never attended a heritage-month event, agreed with Hinojosa. He said that one reason minority attendance was low at events was that some non-minorities felt uncomfortable.
"In my opinion, most people don't feel very welcome at these events," Reed said. "It's very strange for a person from one culture to go to a different one's culture."
Reagan-Kendrick said she thought conflicting events, such as Student Union Activities films and Rock Chalk Revue rehearsals, might have kept attendance at Black History Month events below what she would have like to see.
Reagan-Kendrick said she thought more instructors should do what she did when she taught English 101 classes four years ago. She made attendance at cultural events a requirement for the class.
"They would go, and I would make them write a paper about what they heard," she said. "The kids learned a lot and actually thanked me."
Some heritage celebrations observed at KU:
Celebrated events
Hispanic Heritage Month
Women's History Month
- Women's History Month *
* Asian American Festival Anvil *
Native American Month
Black History Month
KAMBAM
Sarah Preston, Chicago sophomore, said she also had never been to a heritage-month event.
"Personally, I think they're a good idea even though I don't take part," she said. "But I don't think they're that effective only because, unfortunately, people aren't very aware or don't take the initiative to do things like that."
Preston said she considered herself adequately aware of other cultures already but thought the heritage celebrations should be continued.
2015
"They're worth keeping around," she said. "I just don't feel like people think they'll make a difference by attending."
It's more than a show for director
James Wilcox / KANSAN
Rock Chalk Revue provides memories
By Frank McCleary Kansan staff writer
Julie Thies, Overland Park senior and Rock Chalk Revue executive director, makes some last-minute announcements to the Delta Gamma and Lambda Chi Alpha group. The revue's first performance was yesterday.
Julie Thies met her fiance through Rock Chalk Revue in 1991.
"We were co-directors for our show," she said. "I had a big crush on him but he had a girlfriend."
But they broke up and Thies and David Dunlap, now a KU graduate, started dating, she said.
"We thought maybe it was a Rock Chalk Revee thing," said Thies, Overland Park senior. "But we kept dating after the show."
They got engaged about two weeks ago, Thies said.
"That's when I decided I wanted to be a director," she said.
But the revue is more to Thies than how she met Dunlap. She is the executive director of one of the largest student-run shows in the country. Before she was the boss, she was an usher her freshman year.
Since her freshman year, she has served on the Rock Chalk Reve Advisory Board and helped direct the show for the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority her sophomore year.
Since last August, Thies has been responsible for organizing the revue. Her responsibilities included meeting with the advisory board to choose the theme for the show. She also scheduled rehearsal time for the groups and hired Nathan Berg, a local musician, as the revue's music arranger and conductor.
Last semester she gave 10 to 20 hours a week to revue preparations, she said. That has more than tripled to about 50 to 60 hours this semester.
"Trying to balance this with school is nuts," said Thies, a microbiology major.
She said her microbiology laboratory teaching assistant teased her about the revue.
"She said, 'I don't like you,'" Thies said. "You make my students flunk."
But Thies said she was not concerned about her grades.
"It's all mendable," she said.
Thies paid a physical price recently when she became sick and missed a week of school.
"When it physically brings me down, that's really bad," she said.
"My mom is really worried about me."
"I missed a family dinner about a week ago," she said. "The family isn't mad, though. David understood I couldn't be with him every weekend."
She also sacrificed time with her fiance because of the revue, she said.
Thies said she had many special memories about the revue.
"I like seeing people try new things and succeed at them," she said.
Erich Starrett, Salina senior and assistant director for the revue, said
"But he told me that he is having the time of his life now," she said.
One of this year's show directors told her he did not want to be a director at first, Thies said.
ROCK
CHALK
REVUE
1994
It's showtime
The Rock Chalk Revue will be presented at 7:30 tonight and tomorrow night in the Lied Center. Tickets for Saturday's performance are sold out. For information on the call for Rock Chalk Revue office at 864-4033.
The theme for this year's show is "The Word is Out."
These groups will perform original shows:
Kappa Kappa Gamma and Sigma Chi
Kappa Alpha Theta and Phi Gamma Delta
Delta Delta Delta and Phi Delta Theta
Alpha Chi Omega and Alpha Kappa Lambda
Delta Gamma and Lambda Chi Alpha
KANSAN
Thies was the perfect choice for director.
"She can turn on the game face and get the job done," he said. "But she loves to have fun too. She can put the show on the back burner and enjoy herself."
"She is a master at it," he said. "She can cheer people up and get them centered on the show."
Starrett said Thies knew how to motivate the cast members.
Thies said she would never forget her time with the revue.
"I can't say I haven't enjoyed this," she said. "I have had more fun this week than I ever have."
By Angelina Lopez
Kansas staff writer
A survey the College Budget Committee developed for graduate student employees is not getting what it needs most — responses.
The committee, which consists of 12 University of Kansas faculty members, developed the survey to get accurate information about graduate student employment, said Linda True, member of the committee and professor of systematics and ecology.
However, some graduate student employees said that they were wary of the administration's intentions and that they would not take part in the survey.
David Reidy, member of the Committee for Graduate Employee Organization and graduate teaching assistant, said many of his colleagues feared that the information in this survey would be used against them in their continuing legal battle to be allowed to unionize.
Trueb said that this survey was intended to gather information concerning graduate student employee stipends, time spent in research and other aspects of graduate student employment.
The information revealed would be used to compare graduate student employment between different departments, she said. It would also be used to compare the University's graduate student employment programs against other universities' programs.
Trueb said this survey could make life better for the University's graduate student employees, whose stipends typically are lower than those of their counterparts at other universities.
"With accurate data on graduate employment, it gives us an opportunity."
nity to send a message upstairs," Trueb said.
Reidy said that he supported and applauded the committee's efforts and that if collective bargaining became a reality at KU, the information provided by this survey could be very important.
The Graduate Experience Committee also has released a survey concerning graduate student employment.
The members of the committee were appointed by Andrew Debicki dean of the Office of Research, Graduate Studies and Public Service, and David Shulenburger, vice chancellor for academic affairs.
The purpose of the committee, Debicki said, was to look at the academic experience of KU's graduate student employees.
Richard Schowen, head of the committee, said that the survey was established to look at the quality and effectiveness of each graduate student program at the University.
Sally Frost-Mason, member of the committee and associate dean in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said that members were chosen because of their close involvement with graduate students and graduate education. However, she said that neither the Graduate Experience Committee nor the College Budget Committee involved students in the formation of its surveys.
Sam Marinov, graduate teaching assistant in Western Civilization, said that the lack of student involvement was the reason he had decided not to complete his survey.
"These surveys had not been coordinated with any major graduate organization," he said. "To be effective, students should participate in the formulating and analysis of the surveys."
ADVERTISE IN THE DAILY KANSAN FOR ALL YOUR NEEDS
The University of North Carolina
THE UNIVERSITY THEATRE
Presents
The Grapes of Wrath
Directed by Steven Grossman
Adapted by Frank Galati for the Suppenwoll Theatre
Based on a novel by John Steinbeck
8:00 p.m. March 4, 5, 10, 11*, 12, 1994
2:30 p.m. March 6, 1994
Crafton-Preyer Theatre/Murphy Hall
* The Friday, March 11, performance will be signed for the hearing impaired.
For reserved seats call the KU Theater (415) 501-9997. Tickets are valid until March 6, 1994.
Tickets are available through the KU Theatre's website or at KU Student Screen Activities
presidency. Hire and sound Warmware, interior design, lighting equipment, and audiovisual equipment are available. KU Student Screen Activities is an affiliate of the KU Student Screen Activities Inc.
Local bands, get ready to plow the fields to the KJHK FARMERS'BALL.
What it is about?
Local bands can send a two
song demo tape by March 30,
at 4:00 pm
to: 2051 A Dole
*Must be all original work.
Who is chosen?
*Eight bands are chosen
from the town.
Whatitisabout?
*Eight bands are chosen from the tapes
One winner will be chosen
*Four will play at The Bottleneck April 26th
*Four will play at The Bottleneck April 27th
*Judges will select the top four bands which will go on to play April 29th
The Prize:
Winner will get recording time at Mercy Records Studio and will be the opening band at SUA's "Day on the Hill", April 30th!
KJHX
70.7
4
Friday, February 25,1994
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Multicultural events give students valuable insight
Multicultural. Politically correct. You don't have to be either to appreciate ethnic diversity. Cultural events on campus offer something for everyone, and everyone should take advantage of these unique learning opportunities.
There are numerous reasons for exploring new cultures. The first is education. From life in a South African township to the status of minorities in the media, Black history events this month showed the many sides of African-American culture.Many events took place on campus, making them convenient and accessible to everyone.
There is also the future. Minority populations are growing and producing more leaders than past generations. People who familiarize themselves with new cultures now will be better prepared for the diverse corporate board room of tomorrow.
Most of all, there's respect. Experiencing different lifestyles and traditions help us see others as people not as stereotypes. By broadening our cultural awareness, we gain new respect for other people. Many of those people have the same problems, the same needs and the same hopes as us.
The first step is to attend. Black History Month is almost over, but other events are scheduled for months to come. Women's History Month will be celebrated in March. The Brazilian Carnival will be March 5. Russia Week festivities will commence April 4-8.
Before semester's end, make a point of attending one of these worthwhile events. They are designed to treat everybody to a different slice of life — make sure you get your piece.
SAMANTHA ADAMS FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Government has no right to enter home schools
Once again, Big Brother thinks he knows best. The latest controversy deals with an amendment presented by Democratic Rep. George Miller of California, a senior member of the House Education and Labor Committee. Beginning July 1, 1998, local school districts would be required to vouch that all full-time teachers in schools under their jurisdiction are certified to teach the academic subjects to which they are assigned.
The controversy surrounds private and home schools that receive no public funds. Officials from these schools are concerned that the amendment would require them to use certified teachers. This would hurt private schools and would all but kill home schools.
The issue is not whether home and public schools are good or bad. This issue is whether or not the government can dictate policy to groups that receive absolutely no public funds. Clearly, the government cannot.
Many non-government affiliated groups, such as private schools and businesses, are the most successful in our country. When will legislators on Capitol Hill stop trying to meddle in the affairs of successful groups?
Fortunately, because of an overwhelming uprising among private schools and home teachers, Republican Rep. Dick Armey of Texas is expected to propose an amendment specifying that public and home schools would not be affected by Miller's amendment.
It is our duty, as concerned citizens, to help restrain our monolithic government from spreading its shadow over even more of our society.
RICHARD BOYD FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
BEN GROVE, Editor
BEN GROVE, Editor
LISA COSMILLO, Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
focused on his skiing. The drug "experimentation" eventually subsided, and he went on to make U.S. Olympic history.
For those less fortunate, however, the ability to see options in regard to drug use decreases. What is recreation for some may become a means of escape for others. By ignoring this distinction, drug officials have termed all drug use as criminal. In doing so, they have turned their backs on the causes of drug abuse — pain and the inability to cope.
Perhaps the most disturbing information the Michigan study found was an increase in the use of inhalants. Glues, solvents and aerosols are rarely singled out as targets in "the war on drugs." But desperate people will abuse many things — food, sex, alcohol, caffeine, nicotine — that are not necessarily illicit. Our concern should focus less on the substance and more on the abuse.
translates into full prisons and a sense of solving the drug problem. In reality, however, this is treating the symptoms of crime rather than the causes.
So why does the United States refuse to make this distinction? Well, pain and suffering are hard to define, let alone legislate. However, drug arrests lead to convictions. Conviction ratios justify increased crime-fighting budgets. In the end, this
Drug officials are remiss in explaining the sudden increase in juvenile drug use found by the Michigan study. They blame it on relaxed anti-drug messages. It's more likely, however, that teenagers have seen through the propaganda. Drug use becomes destigmatized as they see more of their friends use drugs without turning into drug abusers. They begin to mock anti-drug messages as lies, and drug use increases.
Now is not the time for anti-drug campaigns based on fear and veiled with half-truths. Teenagers are smarter than that. Much like Moe, they know, too. Given an honest account of the effects of drug use and drug abuse, most will choose to refrain. Otherwise, our message just files in the face of logic. Not the winning kind of flying that Moe does down mountain slopes, but the kind toward which teenagers turn out of spite.
BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator
Greg Thonen is a Kansas City senior in journalism and sociology.
JUSTIN GARBERG Business manager
JENNIFER BLOWEY Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
Edition
Government anti-drug rhetoric unfairly condemns casual users
Editors
Aest Managing Editor...Dan England
Assistant to the editor...J.R. Clairborne
News...Kristi Foglar, Katie Greenwald
Todd Saferf
Editorial...Corman Nieman
Nathan Olsen
Campus...Jose DeHaven
Sports...David Dorsey
Photo...Doug Hesse
Features...Sara Bennett
Wire...Allison Lipper
Freelance...Christine Laue
Tommy Moe can fly on a pair of skis. This is evident by his winning the Olympic gold medal in the men's downhill skiing competition last week. But Moe's victory tossed a wrench into the logic of the U.S. drug-fighting machine, a machine that looks for scapegoats more than it does for a cure for drug abuse. Moe knows. It seems that he used to do some flying off the slope, as well.
This news comes on the heels of a teenage drug use study released earlier this month by the University of Michigan. The study found a 3 to 4 percent rise in drug use during the last two years among teenagers.
The most surprising result of this study, however, was the response it generated from drug officials. When asked by reporters why former drug users were not used as lecterns in governmental anti-drug campaigns, officials balked at the notion.
Wristbands are a solution for minors
Business Staff
"We shy away from those programs," said Tia Clark, research analyst with the U.S. Office for Substance Abuse Prevention. "We don't want to give the message that you can use drugs and recover and everything will be fine."
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Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
America's bad-boy Olympiad spent many years sking the wild side of the mountain as a teenager. He has admitted to "experimenting" with drugs during this time but insists that he was not a drug abuser.
Just the other day, a friend of mine posed a question to me. "Why don't you write about something positive instead of being negative all the time?" And the answer is... I don't know. But something has compelled me to convey the negative thoughts and feelings I have bottled up inside. In my short-lived career as an opinion columnist, I already have managed to bash the NCAA, CBS, the KU police and my sociology professor.
Someone should introduce the people managing this agency to Moe. He not only revels in his past "experimentation," but he wins gold medals for his country. Not bad for a former drug "experimenter." Clearly, the substance abuse prevention office has trouble discerning between drug use and drug abuse.
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-Flint Hall.
COLUMNIST
GREG
THONEN
Drug officials try to lump the Moes of the world with drug abusers. But as Moe has shown, an individual can do drugs and later become successful. He was lucky enough to have a father who cared for, guided and kept him
CAN YOU BELIEVE IT'S ACTUALLY BECOMING SAFE TO WALK THE STREETS OF SARAJEVO AGAIN?
Today, in the never-ending quest to right the world through my eyes, I have yet another gripe. This one involves the decision by the owners of drinking establishments in Lawrence to allow only people of 21 years of age or older to enter. In a community supporting a 25,000+ student population, many of whom are younger than 21, this decision is ludicrous.
CAN YOU BELIEVE IT'S ACTUALLY BECOMING SAFE TO WALK THE STREETS OF SARAJEVO AGAIN?
KIND OF PUTS THINGS IN PERSPECTIVE, HUH?
YEAH... UH.
COVER ME, DEAR.
Jon Myerk.
By doing so, they'll create better ties with the underage students of the University — and give me one less thing to complain about.
Jean
my cup
KIND OF PUTS THINGS IN PERSPECTIVE, HUH?
YEAH... UH.
COVER ME, DEAR.
Joan myerk.
KIND OF PUTS THINGS IN PERSPECTIVE, HUH?
YEAH... UH.
COVER ME, DEAR.
Before anyone jumps down my throat, I know that bar owners can't allow just anyone under 21 to pass freely into their establishments and drink alcohol. Otherwise, the owners
Scott Tittrington is a Poway, Calif., sophomore in journalism and exercise science.
COLUMNIST
What I'm suggesting is that the Lawrence bar operators institute the same system I've come across at fraternity parties here at the University; wristbands. In this system, those who are 21 or older have a wristband placed on them when they enter the party. Bartenders are allowed to serve alcohol only to those who are wearing a wristband.
COLUMNIST
SCOTT
TIMRINGTON
Some area bars already have a system such as this in the works. The Bot
would be jumped by Lawrence police, forced to close down and likely would lose their license to sell alcohol.
tleneck often has "18-and-Over" nights, and at times, so does Benchwarmers Sports Bar & Grill. However, most of the other establishments cater only to the 21-and-over clientele.
These bars have two arguments for their decision not to allow younger patrons in. The first is that the wristbands cost money, money that would be taken away from their profits. The second is that they can't keep those with wristbands from buying alcohol and giving it to friends who aren't of legal age.
There are simple solutions to both of these problems. First, the extra revenue created by the cover charge paid by 18-20-year-old patrons should more than cover the cost of wrist-bands. Second, by limiting each person to one drink purchase at a time, wristband wearers would not have the opportunity to buy four drinks and give three to friends who aren't 21.
Now don't get me wrong. I'm not
I can't begin to count the number of times I've been out with a group of friends and hurt their chances of having a good time because I can't get into a local hangout. The people who own the drinking establishments of Lawrence have a great opportunity to change my frustrations by simply implementing the wristband system.
some 20-year-old looking to get into bars and sneak enough drinks to get blasted. I don't even drink. I'd just like to go hang out with my friends who are of legal age, have the opportunity to meet people in a relaxed setting and all in all, just have a good time. And I'm sure there are many other underage students who share my feelings.
Not simply ethnic slurs, racism is rooted in ideas
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
I want to respond to Dan England's Feb. 18 column, "A hidden racism exists on campus." England states, "Because I didn't see blatant, open racism, I thought that it didn't exist on campus. Countless others probably think the same thing. And that frightens me."
What frightens me, as an African American, is that England had to hear people referred to as "niggers" or "chinks" before he realized that racism still exists.
Everything changes and evolves. This is true of racism. The blatant racism of the 1960s has evolved into the internal hidden racism of the 1990s. Many white Americans are unaware of this change. But those of us who live under the burden of
racism are well aware of this change. Yet so often today, when African Americans, Hispanics, or Asians complain about racism, we are dismissed as paranoid whiners by white Americans.
Racism consists of much more than just a few ethnic slurs. It is based on ideas that usually are not expressed publicly in this era of political correctness. This is why the racism of today is more difficult to identify than that of the 1960s. But make no mistake: Racism still exists.
Kenton Clark Atchison senior
Race-based scholarships are unfair, discriminatory
First, let me point out — I'm not prejudiced. I attended an inner-city
The bottom line is, it is simply unfair for an individual to receive a scholarship based on race, religion or sex. Yes, it is true that the majority of recipients of financial aid are white, however, this financial aid is available to all of society — not just whites. Perhaps white students are the majority of recipients because the white population exceeds the minority population by a wide margin.
high school, and I have acquired close friends from various ethnic backgrounds. However, after reading numerous articles relating to the African-American community this month, I finally drew the line when I read Tuesday's article on race-based scholarships. I have been extremely opposed to this issue for years, and I would like to express my concerns.
My point is, no matter what the
scholarship is — African-American, Asian, etc. — it seems to be available only to students of those and only those particular ethnic backgrounds. What if a Caucasian scholarship fund was started that offered aid only to white students? I don't think that would please minorities.
I'm all for increasing the number of minorities on campus. However, they are capable of getting financial aid from the same sources as white students. In addition, they have the opportunity to receive more money simply because of their race or gender.
I realize that an education is extremely expensive, I just feel that if the tables were turned and a Caucasian scholarship fund was initiated, there would be a serious upheaval in this country.
Felicia Jubratic Kansas City, Kan., junior
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, February 25, 1994
5
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Heather Lofflin/ KANSAN
Sing out loud
Inspirational Gospel Voices, a KU campus group, sings in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union in front of about 60 people. The group was part of a religious program yesterday evening put together by the McCollim Hall Black Caucus.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
GENERAL ELECTRIC
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Photo courtesy University Archives
An engineering student displayed an X-ray machine at the 1952 Engineering Expo.
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Today's Engineering Expo now attracts mostly high school students, but the annual event was once celebrated by the entire University community.
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Dale Runner, professor emeritus of electrical and computer engineering, has been involved with the engineering school from 1944 until his retirement last spring. He said the exposition had changed with the times.
A story in the May 2, 1912, Kansan described the second exposition, then known as Engineer's Day.
"The Expo's been up and down in terms of students and their perceptions of what's important," Rummer said.
The room was decorated with white and pea-green trimming. Japanese lanterns shed a subdued light. At one end of the balcony a spot-light was thrown on the dancers as they whirled over the floor.
The exposition will be held from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. today in Learned Hall. This year's exhibits will include a missile launcher, portable computer-aided drafting devices and night-vision glasses.
The second Engineer's Day, with its dances and parades, was a tamer celebration than that of the year before.
Exposition has a diverse history
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KU engineering students and faculty paraded through campus and through downtown that day. March 31, 1911. When they reached the field the party began.
In a 1948 editorial, the Kansan urged students to attend the event.
Many of the exhibits will involve visitor participation, so you might find yourself doing everything from firing regulation air corps machine guns to sending messages via short wave to anyone in the United States, Canada, Mexico, Australia, and England.
Attendance was extremely high during the years after the war, often reaching more than 15,000 people. The exposition included exhibits not only from engineering but from chemistry, architecture, physics, ROTC and the Boy Scouts.
The mining and metallurgical engineering students challenged the mechanical engineering students to a beer-drinking contest, but instead the groups opted to play a baseball game. The evening ended with a dance in Robinson Gymnasium. The orchestra played until midnight, the end of the first Engineer's Day at KU.
World War II cut short the celebration. Enrollment fell at the University, and the exposition was canceled from 1941 to 1948.
The exposition continued that year but was reduced to exhibits and a dance. After the creation of the Kansas Relays, the exposition and the relays were a source of celebration across Kansas. Often the exposition would end in time for the races' finals.
Chancellor Ernest Lindley announced that too many classes had been canceled for celebrations. Faculty members decided that the engineers had not abused this privilege, but the number of events was cut.
students gathered together for parades and dances. In 1923 Engineer's Day was renamed the Engineering Expo, but the change was more than a new name.
On each Engineer’s Day, often a two-day event,
students gathered together for cararades and dances.
The 1994 Engineering Expo take place between 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. today in Learning Hall.
10 a.m. to 3 p.m.; Engineering Student dunk tank on the west end of the first floor.
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3: 30 p.m. m.s.; Society of Women Engineers Mr, Engineer contest in room 2002.
Campus walking tour at 10:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m.
northeast doors
source: Engineering Student Council KANSAN
Mechanical engineering Meet at room 1055 at 10 a.m. 11 a.m. 11 a.m. and 2 p.m.
11 a.m. to 5 p.m.: Mousetrap-powered airplane contest in room 3024
■ Electrical engineering and computer science: Meet at room 1013 to 9:30 a.m. and 2 p.m.
1. 30 p.m.: Insulating Cup competition in room
2022.
Popularity of the exposition fell during the 1960s and 1970s, and both exhibits and attendance dropped.
Architectural engineering; Meet at room 1014 each hour.
Chemical and petroleum engineering; Meet at room 2022 on request.
Aerospace engineering: Meet at room 1022 each hour from 9 a.m. to noon and 1-4 p.m.
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Each year the exposition is impacted by changes in technology. The 1957 exposition featured a robot squirrel — about the size of two typewriters
2:200 p.m.: Rue Goldberg contest in room 1055.
2:30 to 3:30 p.m.: Index card tower competition in room 1014.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday. February 25.1994
7
Students get a taste of real world
University research assists companies
By Susan White Kansan staff writer
Engineering faculty and graduate students are doing more than just University research on West Campus.
Tim Johnson, associate research engineer for the Center of Excellence and Computer Aided Systems Engineering, said the center does research for Kansas City area companies whose names are kept confidential for competitive purposes.
The center conducts system engineering research for these companies, Johnson said. Students doing the research are paid by the University.
"We focus on the design and consideration of whole computer systems used by these companies," Johnson said. "In other words, we look at the design of the systems from end to end. We consider the whole life of the pro-
Most of the research work was done by the graduate students, Johnson said.
cess."
"Some students help design or update software products," he said. "Others help develop research plans and investigate what the companies may want to use in their systems."
Johnson said one of the center's main projects this year was to design a computer program to help a Kansas company create its annual marketing plan with less hassle.
Huseiny Sevay, Cyprus graduate student, said he was working on a different program at the center that would help a Kansas hydraulic press company quickly solve its customers' problems.
"Alarge portion of the problems that the company's service department deals with are done by phone," he said. "During the call, the service technician needs to have easy access to the customer's records plus know how to fix the customer's problem."
They have to assess a lot of information but do not have an easy way to
access it," he said. "They need to have an expert system on one side of the phone to fix the problem."
The program would enable the technician to be more helpful to the customer without having to recall everything about the product and the customer from memory. Sevay said.
Johnson said the research center was a valuable asset to the graduate students.
Scott Woodward, systems engineer for the research center, said that as a graduate student last year, he created computer models of company operations.
"They showed the manufacturing as well as the business operations of the companies," he said. "Looking at a model representation is the best way to figure out how a company works."
"They get a taste of real world jobs while earning an income," he said. "They are forced to treat it like a real job because they are expected to have tangible results and work so many hours each week. The research will also provide professional connections in their fields."
Election preparation begins early STUDENT Spending Limits
Even though Student Senate elections won't be until April, the elections commission is already busy making changes and working with candidates.
The commission sets recommended budgets for the campaign, hears complaints and makes sure the elections run smoothly.
The commission cannot make spending limits mandatory, because of a court ruling that made it unconstitutional to set spending limits.
Jennifer Ford, elections commissioner, said limits would put all the candidates on an even playing field.
Last night was the first candidate workshop about campaign rules. The workshop was held mainly for the benefit of the presidential and vicepresidential candidates. Spending limits, filing requirements, expense and campaign activity reports, campaign procedures and violations procedures were discussed.
STUDENT SENATE
Workshops on March 29 and 30 were mandatory said Ford.
Ford said there was one major change from last year's election.
"Upon a request from OAKS, we decided to leave two polls until 7 p.m. on the first day of elections," she said. "This will help non-traditional students and other students get to the poll."
Another change required each coalition to check for complaints daily, and weekly hearings on the complaints would be held. Ford said.
Scott Moore, chair of the elections commission, said that most complaints were about campaign signs being sabotaged or about a coalition having two signs on one board.
Moore said that last year's election was more negative and personal in nature, but he said he didn't think that would be the case this year.
"This year, candidates are on different platforms but there aren't any personal conflicts," he said. "It makes our life easier if the candidates want to be elected, not just beat each other."
The elections commission hopes to have a high voter turn out this year, said Moore.
"Last year it was high because there was three coalitions and one independent group," he said. "It helps to get
Recommended spending limits for 1994 Student Senate elections:
Total possible for colection — $2,575
Spending of last year in a winning coin
Independent president and vice president
-$1,000
President and vice president of coalfaction — $700
Coalition expenses per senatorial division. 1.25
Independent senator — $200
the voters out."
A smooth election is another goal of the commission. Moore said.
"We hope it will be unbiased on our and the candidates part," he said. "It will help that we have an experienced elections commission. We can learn from our mistakes."
Moore said that the worst thing that could happen in the election would be for someone to get hurt.
"I don't want anyone to get hurt, personally or physically," he said. "I was disgusted with the negative propaganda last year. I hope that the coalitions will run on the merits of their platforms. Student Senate elections should not be a reflection of our government."
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THE NEWS in brief
Bosnians optimistic as U.N.-brokered deal promises cease-fire
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina
Front lines were tense yesterday, a day before Muslim-led government and Croat forces were to begin a cease-fire in the first major test of a U.N. pledge to expand the Sarajevo truce.
Despite reports of fighting in central Bosnia, where government and Bosnian Croat troops have battled over territory for more than a year, officials in neighboring Croatia were optimistic that this cease-fire could hold. Several previous truces have collapsed.
"This one sounds more serious than the previous ceasefire agreements because it's part of a broader process and new initiatives," Croatian Foreign Ministry spokesman Ivana Moric said in Zagreb.
The latest accord was signed Wednesday by Rasim Delic,
commander of the Muslim-led forces, and the chief of Bosnian Croat forces, Ante Roso. The cease-fire is to take effect at noon today.
Both sides are under mounting foreign pressure to broaden a two-week truce that has mostly held between government forces and Bosnian Serbs besieging Sarajevo, the capital.
About 15 mortar shells hit Wednesday in eastern Mostar, where 500 Muslims are under Croat siege, and there were heavy exchanges of small-arm fire, said David Fillingham, U.N. spokesman in Kiselak, west of Sarajevo.
Muslims and Croats initially were allies against the Bosnian Serbs, who grabbed 70 percent of Bosnia after rebelling against its secession from Serb-dominated Yugoslavia two years ago.
Today's cease-fire covers central Bosnia and Mostar in the southwest, where Muslims and Croats have fought intensely since their alliance broke down.
Under terms of the cease-fire agreement, U.N. troops are to be deployed in sensitive areas to ensure compliance. Heavy weapons are to be withdrawn or placed under U.N. control.
North Korea reportedly has offered to let a U.N. team into the country next week for nuclear inspections, and the United States has accepted the proposal.
The offer reported by a Suth Korean news agency would mark a small breakthrough in the Communist North's standoff with the international community over its suspected development of nuclear weapons.
Inspections to be allowed
SEOUL, South Korea
But the offer does not include the inspection of two sites that the U.N. International Atomic Energy Agency suspects the North has been using for nuclear weapons production.
The Youhap news agency said the offer came Wednesday during U.S.-North Korean talks in New York. Inspections would begin Tuesday
North Korea also is demanding that the United States cancel "Team Spirit," its annual military exercises with South Korea, and not insist North Korea conduct talks with its southern rival on making the peninsula a nuclear-free zone.
The North agreed under pressure last week to accept some inspections, but it has dragged its feet on issuing visas to the inspectors.
U. S. and South Korean officials have made those talks a prerequisite to high-level talks between the United States and North Korea.
They also said that the cancellation of "Team Spirit,"
In Washington, two U.S. senators, Sam Nunn, D-Ga., and Richard Lugar, R-Ind., criticized President Clinton Wednesday for not having a clear policy on North Korea.
which North Korea considers preparations for nuclear war, would depend on the nuclear inspections.
COLESBERG, South Africa
Leaders want end to protests
President F.W. de Klerk and African National Congress leader Nelson Mandela called separately yesterday for a halt to organized protests against election opponents.
Their pleas followed the shooting death Wednesday night of a woman in the Roodepan Black township, which occurred during a clash between supporters of the president and the ANC.
Isghak Adams, the son-in-law of Howard Isaacs who is a lawmaker in de Klerk's National Party, was charged in the slaving and released on a $150 bail. police said.
De Klerk has warned that the intensifying violence could taint the results of the April 26-28 election, the first to include the black majority. His attempts to campaign in Black townships repeatedly have been disrupted by ANC sumporters.
De Klerk blamed the ANC for the violence, saying it had organized protests to disrupt his campaign. He called for the Independent Electoral Commission to investigate.
"I hereby solemnly reiterate the ANC's commitment to a free and peaceful political contest," Mandela said. "We condemn, in the strongest terms, any actions aimed at infringing the rights of any political party, no matter who or what the party's name, to campaign in any part of the country."
Mandela issued a statement yesterday condemning the violence and ordering ANC members to refrain from such disruptions. He said the ANC would make sure any members violating its order were disciplined.
CINCINATTI
A federal appeals court refused to reconsider its ruling that the government committed fraud by withholding information John Demanjik could have used to fight his extradition to Israel on war crimes charges.
On Nov. 17, a three-judge panel of the 6th Circuit Court threw out a 1985 order authorizing Demjanjuk's extradition. Yesterday's action by the full court reaffirms that ruling.
Court reaffirms fraud ruling
The 73-year-old retired autoworker from suburban Cleveland was extradited to Israel in 1986, where he was convicted and sentenced to death for being "Ivan the Terrible," a Nazi guard who tortured and murdered Jews at the Treblinka concentration camp in Poland during World War II.
The 6th Circuit Court rejected that conclusion, however, and in arguing for reconsideration the Justice Department said the court may have violated federal rules in doing so.
The 6th Circuit Court appointed U.S. District Judge Thomas Wiseman Jr. of Nashville, Tenn., in 1992 to investigate the government's handling of the case. Wiseman concluded last year that federal prosecutors withheld evidence but did not do so intentionally.
The Israeli Supreme Court overturned that conviction in July and Demjanjuk was allowed to return to the United States in September.
U. S. District Judge Frank Battisti ruled in 1981 that Demjanjuk lied about his Nazi past when he applied for citizenship. He found that Demjanjuk had served the Nazis at the Trawniki and Treblinka Nazi camps in Poland during World War II.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, February 25, 1994
9
Manning traded for Wilkins
The Associated Press
ATLANTA — The Atlanta Hawks and Los Angeles Clippers traded star forwards Thursday night, with Dominique Wilkins and a No. 1 draft pick going to the Clippers for disgruntled Danny Manning.
The deal was announced at the NBA trade deadline of 9 p.m. EST and culminated weeks of discussions about where Manning would end up.
"We have been exhaustive in our efforts," Clippers vice president Elgin Baylor said. "We are excited to bring such a charismatic and electrifying player to the Clippers."
Both Manning and Wilkins are to become unrestricted free agents after the season, meaning they could sign with any NBA team with no compensation going to their former clubs.
Atlanta gave Los Angeles its No. 1 pick in 1994 or 1995. Manning, who gave the Clippers a trade-me-or-losee ultimatum, also was sought by Houston, Portland and Miami.
"I talked to Danny this afternoon and just wished him the best," Baylor said. "Danny said likewise."
Manning, a versatile 6-foot-10 forward, told the Clippers he would not re-sign with them after his original six-year deal expired after this season. Faced with the choice of trading Manning or losing him with no compensation, the Clippers chose to get what they could.
Manning has faced knee trouble sincejoining the Clippers in 1988 after leading Kansas to the NCAA title and becoming the No. 1 draft pick. He played only 26 games his rookie year after injuring his right knee.
Manning, 27, is having perhaps his best season, averaging 23.7 points, 7.0 rebounds and 4.2 assists in 38 minutes a game this year. He has career averages of 18.5 points, 6.4 rebounds and 2.9 assists.
Wilkins, 34, is a 12-year veteran and eight-time All-Star who has spent his whole career with Atlanta. He is ninth on the NBA's career scoring list with 23,292 points.
After averaging at least 25.9 points a game over the last nine seasons and 29.9 in 1992-93, Wilkins' average has dropped to 24.4 points in 49 games this season.
The 6-foot-8 forward was one of the most flamboyant players in the league during the late 1980s, earning him the nickname "The Human Highlight Film." He missed the 1991-92 season with an Achilles' tendon injury.
Although his point production fell this season, he remained Atlanta's prime offensive weapon and led the team to a 36-16 record, tied for first with New York and Chicago for best in the Eastern Conference.
He now goes to the Clippers, who are last in the Pacific Division with a 17-34 record.
"I talked to Dominique within the last hour," said Clippers coach Bob Weiss said. "He was a little down about the way he feels Atlanta has handled him, he's also excited about coming to L.A. I think it will be a good transition for him.
"The thing he said was, 'Hey, you know me, I'm going to come and play hard to win every time. He's going to take it as a personal challenge to help us win more games. When 'Nique puts on his sneakers, he will not sulk."
UNITED STATES TENNIS ASSOCIATION
Kansas not overlooking LSU
Bv Matt Siegel
Kansan sportswriter
Freshman Bianca Kirchof prepares for the Jayhawks' matches at the Alvamar Racquet Club. The No. 15 Jayhawks play LSU tomorrow at 2:30 p.m.
kansas and louisiana state play at 2:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Alvamar Racquet Club. Kansas is 6-1 overall in its loss coming to No. 1 Texas. The players have used that less as a pitcher.
Jennie Zeiner / KANSAN
"The motivation is that with tennis we don't have as many matches," he said. "One or two bad matches can take us out of the NCAA. Everybody is a stumbling block, and we don't want to stub our toe."
"It showed us that we were literally points away from beating the No. 1 team in the country," senior Abby Woods said. "When we played Mississippi, we felt like we were in a position to beat them from the beginning. Everyone started the match at 0-0, and we just outplayed them that day. I think the Texas match was more of an eye-opener than something to be down about."
Fresh off a victory against No. 9 Mississippi, one might believe that the No. 15 Kansas women's tennis team may overlook unranked Louisiana State. But Kansas coach Chuck Merzbacher said that wasn't the case.
The Jayhawks defeated No. 9 Mississippi this past weekend in Fayetteville, Ark. The victory, coupled with a strong showing against Texas, has the Jayhawks eying a top-10 ranking for the first time in Kansas history.
The Jayhawks have been victorious mainly because of consistent play from the team's top five players or, as Merzbacher likes to refer to them, "his five studs."
Merzbacher said that his team was so talented in positions one through four that he has used a rotational system to let each player have a chance to play at the No.1 singles slot.
"We have four girls that could go to the NCAA Tournament," Merzbacher said. "They are all pretty close in talent. We had a Rolex tournament in Salt Lake early this year in November. Kim Rogers beat Rebecca Jensen and Mindy Winebeat Nora Koves in the semifinals. Then Mindy beat Kim in the finals. That's a good tournament."
Kansas is hoping for another good tournament showing when it travels to Madison, Wis., next week for the Intercollegiate/United States Tennis Association National Team Indoors. Kansas will have to be at the top of its game because in the first round it squares off against the host team Wisconsin. Should the Jayhawks advance to the second round, they would play the winner of Pepperdine and Duke, both top 10 teams.
"We want to be in the top ten," senior Kim Rogers said. "If we win, we want to win convincingly against whoever we play. We have to play with the same intensity and stay pre-
pared."
But for now, the Jayhawks are trying to concentrate on LSU. The Tigers from Baton Rouge are 4-1 on the season, with their only loss coming from
Texas A&M.
"The teams that supposedly aren't as good as the other ones are the ones that aren't ranked or have nothing to lose playing against Kansas." Woods
said. "They are going to go for it all. Teams that sometimes are the underdog are the ones that come out and surprise you. We've seen that with Kansas basketball."
'Hawks to end conference season
By Matt Siegel
Kansans sportswriter
The Jayhawks finish the Big Eight Conference regular season tomorrow in Manhattan against Kansas State. This month, the Jayhawks are 1-3 on the road.
It's literally the end of the road for the No. 12 Kansas women's basketball team.
To do that, the Jayhawks will have to contain the Wildcats' Shawnda DeCamp and Shanele Stires. DeCamp is 19th in the nation in scoring, averaging 21.8 points a game. Stires is averaging 17.3 points a game. DeCamp or Stires has led the Wildcats
"it's a big game for us." Kansas senior center Lia Tate said. "It's a big rivalry, and we want to enter the Big Eight Tournament on the unswing."
in scoring in all but one game.
Kansas will be trying to counter K-State's attack with its own high-octane offense that relies heavily on pushing the ball up the floor and is producing 80.2 points a game. Leading the offense is sophomore guard Charisse Sampson and junior forward Angela Aycock.
"The way we prepare for them this week will be no different from the way we have been preparing for the other teams," Kansas coach Marian Washington said. "They went to Oklahoma and knocked down 10 three-point shots. They are just very capable."
And considering that K-State ranks second in the conference in three-point field goals made, the 19-4 Jayhawks said that they had their work cut out for them.
Sampson won the Big Eight Player of the Week honors last week, and Aycock won the award the week before. The early season meeting between these two intrastate rivals in Allen Field House saw Kansas pummel K-State 77-50.
"We lost two games on the road we shouldn't have," Tate said. "We have to try to keep the ball out of DeCamp's and Stires' hands and force the other players to do some things. Last time we did a good job on Stires in the first half, but she scored at will against us in the second half."
Although K-State is 12-12 overall and 5-8 in conference play, the Wildcats have posted a 9-2 home record.
But that was at home.
The Jayhawks trail Colorado in the conference by one game. If Kansas defeats K-State and Colorado loses
one of its two remaining games, the Jayhawks would tie for the Big Eight Championship. Even if the Jayhawks lose to K-State, they are assured of the No. 2 seed in the conference tournament at the Bicentennial Center in Salina next week.
But before the tournament the Jayhawks will have one more regular season home game against UNC-Asheville. Seniors Erica Muncy, Michelle Leathers and Lisa Tate will be playing in their final regular season home game for the Jayhawks. The usually reserved Tate said emotions would run high, but not until after the game.
"You can't be out there crying on the court," Tate said. "We want to try to make the game a good going-away for the seniors. After the game everybody will probably be kind of sad."
KANSAS 10
COLORADO 24
File photo / KANSAN
Kansas junior guard Calvin Rayford and Colorado junior guard Donne Boyce, who are friends off the court, will face each other tomorrow.
Jayhawks hope to end losing streak
Kansas to face Colorado for second time
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
Troubled times have hit the No. 10 Jayhawks, and Kansas coach Roy Williams said their next game could be the toughest test of all.
The test is not necessarily because of the opponent, since Kansas will face Colorado at 1 p.m. tomorrow in Allen Field House. Colorado is seventh in the Big Eight Conference, while Kansas is third.
Rather, it will be a test because Kansas now has lost three consecutive games for the first time since the 1988-1989 season. In the Jayhawks' game Wednesday against Nebraska, Kansas lost 96-87 and dropped its record to 21-6 overall and 6-5 in the conference. At one point, the Cornhuskers led by 24.
Losing three consecutive games is big news for Kansas, but Kansas senior forward Patrick Richey said the streak was exaggerated.
"Other teams have lost three in a row," Richey said. "But because it's Kansas, everything is going to be magnified a little more."
Kansas junior center Greg Ostertag said he was not ashamed of losing to Oklahoma State, Missouri and Nebraska.
"Those are three good teams," he said. "Nebraska is a really good team, especially when they play at their place."
Although Colorado is only 10-13 and 2-9, Ostertag said the Jayhawks were not assured of a victory. The Buffalooes are trying to recover from a 73-56 defeat at the hands of Oklahoma State.
"It'll be a challenge," Ostertag said. "We could be so much better. The Colorado game is going to be a tough game."
Kansas will have to deal with Colorado junior guard Donnie Boyce, who is averaging 21.7 points and 4.7 assists a game. In the Jayhawks' 87-53 victory Jan. 29, Boyce had 16 points.
Usually a premier scorer like Boyce would not be such a problem for Kansas. The Jayhawks have played well defensively this season and limited opponents to a 38.3
overall shooting percentage before the Nebraska game. But Williams said defense was the problem against the Cornhuskers in the first half.
"Our defense has been the thing that has kept us in the basketball game when we couldn't do anything else," he said. "I jumped on everybody after the first half. Our defense wasn't there, but they made every shot they looked at."
One of Kansas' big concerns during the middle of the season has been injuries. Although senior forward Richard Scott did start against the Cornhuskers and scored nine points, a left shoulder injury has limited his shoulder mobility. That injury has caused the starting lineup to shuffle a bit on occasion. Kansas sophomore forward Sean Pearson has started twice in place of Scott.
Kansas' leading scorer this season is senior guard Steve Woodberry, but his left eye remains a bit swollen after receiving an elbow during the Oklahoma State game Feb. 16. Since the injury, Woodberry has shot 14 for 49 from the field and has hit six of 20 three-pointers.
Williams said that Woodberry had been affected by his injury but that he was not making excuses.
"Against Missouri, he had a couple open three-pointers, and you don't see Steve Woodberry miss many of those," Williams said. "But that's just using excuses."
"We've either got to turn it around, or we can feel sorry for ourselves."
Ostertag said the team was down emotionally after the defeat to Nebraska. Kansas came back to within seven points after being down by 24 points at halftime, but Ostertag said he didn't know if the comeback would be something upon which the Jayhawks could build.
"Coach was pretty happy with the way we played in the second half," Ostertag said. "But we've got to start putting our halves together. Coach was mad at halftime."
Williams said that Kansas had faced a lot of adversity during the season but that it was no excuse for the team's performance the rest of the season.
"I've always had the saying that adversity makes the strong stronger," he said. "We'll find out if we fit into the strong category. I think we do. The bottom line is, we've got three games left, and we'd better play."
Baseball
Because of the weather, today's baseball game between Kansas and Arkansas-Little Rock was postponed until Sunday at 1 p.m. Tomorrow's game still is scheduled for 4 p.m.
10
Friday, February 25, 1994
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We've taken the exciting taste of our Tacos and Burritos on the top with wild sauce. Now there always the Wild way to feed your hunger for something different.
Taco Bell. Cross the Border.
©1984 Taco Bell Corp
The Kansas men's and women's track teams begin competition today at the Big Eight Conference Indoor Championships in Oklahoma City.
Track team hopes to improve record in indoor competition
In a prechampionship coaches' poll, the Kansas women were picked to finish second, while the men were picked for a fourth-place finish.
Kansas will be looking to improve on last year's results. The men came in seventh, and the women finished fourth.
The Jayhawks will have two returning indoor champions. Senior Julia Saul, in the 5,000-meter run and senior Michael Cox in the mile run.
Strong performances also can be expected by senior long jumper Harun Hazim, who has come in third at the last two indoor meets, and junior pole vaulter John Bazzoni. Bazzoni has jumped a conference best 17-7, more than a foot better than anyone else this season, and has provisionally qualified for the NCAA Tournament.
For the women, points could come from junior triple jumper Cassandra Bryant-Wans, who won the 1992 indoor title and placed second in 1993.
The Kansas men's golf team will begin its spring season today at the Ron Smith Invitational, held by South Florida in Tampa, Fla.
Golfers tee off season
SPORTS BRIEFS
The 18-team field will play three rounds on the part 71 course.
Kansas will be represented by seniors Matt Gogel, Jay Helper, Casey Brozek and juniors Tyler Shelton and Jeff Moeller.
The women's golf team will begin its season March 6 at the Dixie Classic in St. George, Utah.
Kansas swim teams plan to break records
The women will try to win their third consecutive conference title, while the men hope to dethrone 14-time defending champion Nebraska.
The Kansas swim teams will have some records to deal with when they compete in Oklahoma City at the Big Eight Conference championships.
In a prechampionship coaches' poll, the men tied with Nebraska for first place. On the women's side, Kansas edged Nebraska for first place.
At home earlier this season the men defeated the Cornhuskers, while the women lost to them.
The women will be returning five champions from last year's team, and the men return one.
The men could show strong performances from their sprinters. Junior Marc Bontrager and seniors Curtis Taylor and Scott Townsend finished two, three and four, in last year's 50-year freestyle.
The women expect points from returning champions Kristen Carlson, Donna Christensen and Krista Cordsen. Cordsen won the 200- and 400-yard Individual Medley events last year.
The women will be swimming at the NCAA Championships March 17-19 in Indianapolis, and the men will compete at the NCAA Championships March 24-26 in Minneapolis.
Another team to join Big Eight
COLLEGE STATION, Texas — Regents at tradition-rich Texas A&M voted unanimously yesterday to join Baylor and accept a merger offer from the Big Eight Conference, paving the way for the Aggies to sever a nearly 80-year affiliation with the Southwest Conference.
The governing boards at two other universities, Texas and Texas Tech, are expected to take similar action at meetings scheduled for today, moving the SWC, at least in its present form, another step closer to extinction.
There was little discussion involving the seven regents who participated in a telephone conference call at a special board meeting yesterday.
NATURALWAY
natural fiber
clothing
820-822 Mass St. 841-0100
Compiled from staff and wire reports.
Sunday
50¢
bowling
Not just for
bowling
anymore!
Jaybowl
BOUNDARY UNION
864-3545
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
Heaven for Lounge Lizards
Futon Couches Starting at $119
BLUE HERON
Futons & Home Furnishings
937 Mass., 841-9443
PIZZA SHUTTLE HOT ON THE SPOT! "NO COUPON SPECIALS"
Everyday
Two-Fers
2-Pizzas
2-Toppings
2-Cokes
$9.00
Prime Time
Special
3-Pizzas
1-Topping
4-Cokes
$11.50
Party
"10"
10-Pizzas
1-Topping
$30.00
842-1212
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Department of Music and Dance Presents the
Friday & Saturday
March 4 - 5 1994
Lied Center
KU Jazz 17th Annual Festival
An Evening with Dave Brubeck
and the KU Jazz Singers and KU Jazz Combo I
Friday, March 4
Public $15 & $13
Students and Senior
Citizens $12 & $10
Saturday, March 5
Yellowjackets
and KU Jazz Ensemble I with John
Fedchock, trombone, and Wichita
State University Jazz Arts I
Public $12 & $10
Students and Senior Citizens $9 & $7
Concerts nightly at 7:30 p.m.
THE LION HUNTING CLUB
The KU Jazz Festival is partially funded
by the KU Student Senate Activity Fee
for reserved seat tickets, the KU box office (Murphy): 915/364-9894;
for reserved hotel tickets, the SUA office, Kansas Union; VISA/Mastercard accepted for phone calls.
COU
FREE CD5 with any purchase of "Initiation"; we've got a free CD5 with tracks not included on the album.
Course of Empire "Initiation" 25%Off*
Also...Catch Course of Empire at the Bottleneck-Mon.Feb,28
*Discounted from KieF's Everyday Low Price.
Not Valid w/other offers.
KIEF'S
CDS/TAPES
24th & Iowa St. P.O. Box 2, Lawrence, KS. 88044
CDS & TAPES MUSIC/VIDEO MOSTERIO
913-842-1544 913-842-1811 913-842-1438
KIEF'S CDS/TAPES
NS
Classified Directory
100s
Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business
Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
200s Employees
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1988 and must be approved by a licensed occupation, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to such preference, limitation or discrimination.
Classified Policy
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person, whether a female or male, owned, credited, 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.
Pharmacy Hour
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Saturday 8am-12pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
100s Announcements
MIRACLE VIDEO
Adult Video Sale $14.98 and
19th & Haskell, 841-754
910 N. 2nd, 841.au
110 Bus. Personals
卫
Holiday Inn, Steamboat Springs, Co. Party with someone you know. Free beer and appetizers every night from 5 p.m. -7 p.m. when you stay with them. Call (800) 463-3644 to book your Spring break food!
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11:30am
Jayhawk Spirit
20% OFF Greek Merchandise
Thur end of February
933 Massachusetts
Unique Sterling Silver Jewelry
House of Gold
For Guy & Gals
The Etc. Shop
928 Mass. Downs
KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday Friday 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8am-4:30pm
Tax preparation. Short Form $15, Long Form $27.
tronic filing $27, refund loans $67, Call 665-2760.
WATKINS
HEALTH CENTER
864-9500
120 Announcements
300s
Merchandise
Spring Break
Daytona Beach from $129
*7 nights
*Beachfront Hotel
*All taxes and tips
*Central Location
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
Daytona's Beach is 23 miles long. Don't let a bad location ruin your Spring Break
Dale 842-9129
- Kansan Classified: 864-4358 -
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
130 Entertainment
Recycle the Kansan
Ski Trip - Spring Break - March 21-25, sleeper bus,
crested belt, (316)1621-194
Sawed in Half
Sawed In
$2.00 Teas
18 & over
Saturday
IGNITE presents
Common
Ground
With special guest
2 for 1 Wells
18 & over
$1.00 shot of the day
everyday!
BENCHWARMERS Friday Suave Octopus with Sun
140 Lost & Found
Lost cellular phone in front of Strong Hall. Can't be unlocked. Request no questions. 816-724-
男 女
200s Employment
600 CAMPS IN THE USA, RUSSIA AND EUROPE NEED YOU THIS SUMMER.
For the best summer of your life-see your career center or contact:
Camp Grouse, Palo Alto, CA 94301
420 Florence, Palo Alto, CA 94301
800-998-2267
205 Help Wanted
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/b girls summer camps. Teach: swimming, canoeing, sailing, water skiing, gymnastics, camping, crafts, dramatics, OR riding. Also camping, crafts, dramatics, or Riding. Also plus RBk. Camp LWC/GWC1785 Maple, NILd., ILd. 708-444-2446.
Caringive-experience preferred assisting in lifting, Sun Tues. threes evenings; work live in Toronto.
Hifting, Sun Tues. Thurs events. Work/live in exchange please. 842-3379 (after 4:15 wk days)
Cottonwood Inc. a service provider for adults with developmental disabilities is currently accepting new students. Mr. Responsibilities include service provision, as well as the organization, administration and daily management of a group home. Must have 2 yrs on campus. Mg
1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, February 25, 1994
11
Adult and youth impaired. Anyone interested in working as umpire for Lawrence Parks and Recreation Dept. contact Bob Stancil 845-712-9328 or Stephen Lewis Ice Lake at 841-441-for youth baseball/oftball.
Cruise line, entry level, on-board positions available, great benefits. Summer or ground round. (813) 246-2900.
Drummer w/ practice space desperately needed for Lawrence band w/ gigs upcoming very soon.
Blues, Rock and Funk oriented. Sam 864-6783 or 843-9988.
Freelance graphic artists need to create design for prominent screen printing company Call 641-230-7528.
SAVE withyour Kansan Card TODAY!
ONLY $1.000 Only available through February 25, 2019 at the Kansan Busan Store and Burge Unionis; University Book Shop and Jayhawk Bookstore.
Juicers Showgifts Explore the horizons of making $1000+ weekly, working at Lawrence's top adult night spot. Now hiring attractive dancers and waitresses 18+. Excellent working atmosphere. Apply in person, 913 N. Second, Lawrence, 7 p.m.-2 a.m., or call 841-4122 after 7 p.m.
Summer Employment Opportunities
Spend the summer in the beautiful Catskill mountains of New York. Achieve a challenging and rewarding summer experience working in a residential camp for adults with physical and developmental disabilities. Positions available: counselors, cabin leaders, and program leaders. All students are encouraged to apply. Season dates June 6-August 24. Good salary, room and board, and some travel allowance. For more information call 914-434-2220 or write to campJened, P.O. Box 483, Rock Hill, NY 12775
$15 Today $30 This week
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
By donating your life saving blood plasma WALK-INS WELCOME!
Gourmet Bistro now hire terrance server, wait-
tis bus, staff member. Host .Min. wage = $1. tips. The Cafe
offers 20 minutes of free food.
Pool Room-825 Iowa. Bartenders and waitresses part-time. In apply in person, 11am-6pm, M-F.
staff, bus person, host. Min. wage + tips. The Cafe Society, 6920 W. 105th Pt. KS, (93) 648-1101.
Nanieres Wanted. Position nationwide, summer or yr-round, exp not req. Great pay and benne.,
Part-time maintenance person needed for apart-
ment complex. Experience required. Call 748-6231.
94
KU
SENIORS
- RESUMÉS
• COVER LETTERS
• INTERVIEW TRAINING
832-8100
RESUME SERVICES
Rainiee Montessori School located on seven acres of pasture land with horses is looking for a late afternoon assistant M-F 3:15-4:39pm. Experience working with children required. Will train. Call 643-6800.
Spend your summer in Maine!
Spend your summer in Maine!
Pinterest girls resident camp looking for sthicle trail patrols for school trips; rm/RB/dunday, travel allowance. Women call er: write Camp Vega for Girls, P.O. Box 1717, Duxbury, MA. O. GAS233 (617) 934-8588. We will be on campus in the student unit from 1am-4pm on Saturday.
SUMMER JOBS OUTDOORS
Over 10,000 openings!
National Junior Press Crew,
Send Stamp for Free Details.
Sullivan's 113. E.Wormy, Kalinell, Mt 59801
Tennis Jobs-Summer Children's Campa-Northeast-Men and women with good tennis background can teach children to play tennis. Good salary, room & board, training, free parking. P.O. Box 1771, Duxbury, MA 03232 (617) 843-653. Men call or write a Camp Winnada, 255 Glades Rd, Suite 4002, Boca Raton, FL 33421. Use our brochure or be on campus in the student union from 11 am to 6 pm in Orcad or Regionalist rooms.
225 Professional Services
Experienced teacher (French-native speaker, former GFA in German) can help improve your skills and increase your confidence in the class. Flexible hours and reasonable rates. Call Lambert at 748-4395 (Laveau message). An email to lambert@microsoft.com.
BRAXTON B. COPLEY
Attorney at Law
General Practice
Traffic Tickets, MIdemaneans,
Landlord Tenant
Income Tax费
1917 Massachusetts
749-3333
Paid Internship
We're looking for the rare person who can recognize an exceptional opportunity. p/t school year and f/t summer sales internships are available from Northwestern Mutual Life in the financial services industry. An opportunity to work with a respected company, gain valuable training, and be your own boss. Some of our leading interns are making five-figure incomes.
For more information contact:
Jason Lank, College Unit
Director at (913) 362-5000 or
Cathy Schwartz, internship
director at the University
Placement Center at 864-
7679.
$$ Premium Tax Service $$
1040EZ. $10; 1040 $10 plus extra fee for other forms to be filed with 1900. State returns $5-$10.
Will pick up and call. Call Brian at 256-5272.
TRAFFIC-DUIT'S
Fake ID* and alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal and civil matters
The law offices of
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G Strole Sally G. Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
Driver education offered through Midwest Driving School, servicing KU students for 30 yrs. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided 841-7749.
For a confidential, caring friend, call us.
We're here to listen and talk with you.
Please be patient. We can not assist
INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS! We transfer
Videos from US mode to your system or from
your country to US mode. $25 includes tape and mailing.
World-Wide Video Transfer, PO Box G, Ottawa,
Australia. Call 0416 973 3121.
OUI, TRAFFIC, Criminal Defense. Divorce and Civil Matters
Attorneys at La
Former Prosecutors Near Campus
Elizabeth Leach Chag Stancifle
749-0087 4.1W, 14th 842-6432
INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS
INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS
DV.I. GREENDALE by U.S.
Immigration. Greencards provide U.S.
resident status. Citizens of almost all
countries are allowed. Applications close March 21, 1994. For info & forms: New Era Legal Services
20231 Stagg St., Canoga Park, CA 91306
www.greendale.edu
Tel: (818) 772-7168; (818) 998-4425
Monday - Sunday
Monday - Sunday: 10 a.m. - 11 p.m.
tucsonville for college primary and secondary
English, English II, and Spanish (3200)
SCHOLARSHIPS FOR EVERYONE
Or your money back Guaranteed
We are a scholarship matching service
With a 300,000 source database
Our fee for a search: $7.50.
STUDENT SCHOLARSHIP CONSULTANTS
1229 Almir Lawrence, KS 60442
For more information call 832-1555
1-der Women Word Processing. Former editor
1-der Women Word Processing to accurate pages of letter
type. 85-203
235 Typing Services
30 Pages and under. 24 hour turn around. Any size accepted. $1.25/page. Call Kukra 843-4483 after 5pm. Custody required for reservation. cessing, (includes typing, grammar, proofing, resumes, laser printing), call Mary. 843-3674
VIDEO EDITING AND
PRODUCTION SERVICES
A/B roll video editing suite with EDL
booklet and CD included.
H18 field production package.
Award winning screenwriter.
PRIMAL SCREENCOMMUNICATIONS
912-843-6030
Word processing, applications, term papers, dif-
frence research, database design, job-
rush jobs. Master's Degree or diploma.
Word processing, spreadsheets, resumes, mall
mentions, too small. Laser printing, Call
munications. 842-6703.
Protege for all your typing needs. Word process.
Professional quality. Small check free. Mid-grade.
Small check free. Mid-grade.
Looking for a good type?
Classical Guitar, Guild 5P w/case,$400 832-8114
Eight month membership to Body Boutique for
$175. Call 864-2098
X
305 For Sale
For sale 29 gallon aquarium, excellent condition,
all accessories, 797, call 641-7415
*LIVING ROOM SEE SFA*, safa seat and chair,
cost $1500; deck $74, dealer $179-222
$877 cash, dealer $179-222
*BRASS BED, firm, orchid mattes set and
mattes set cost $100, $33 call cash,
$74-622-800
*Papers, Applications, Spreadsheets, Charts
*Laser printing to WOW! your profs
*Grammar and spelling free
*18 years experience
call Jacki at
Makin' the Grade
Words by Chris Wick Processing.
High quality papers and printing; spell check
Word processing.
300s Merchandise
Bass Guitar for sale. Ibanes soundacar Aehb body. Ebonite pickups as well as electroacts perfect compdion. Guitar and amplifier.
GTG IP TANFRAI 19' BRIGHT RED 7053 ALUM
W/CRMO FORK SUNKOR TC-O L4D DERAILRS
ALUM LEVERS TOGAS PHYCIO THROES, ASKING $87.0 B.O. C HERS 48-486.
LEAVE MESSAGE $87.0 B.O. C HERS 48-486.
Call 841-0918. Leave Message.
Genuine Peruvian Alpaca wool sweaters. Call 866
Queenizeat waterbed, freeway, ww bookhelf
headboard $150.00 I.O. B. 823-1904
INFINITY Reference one black speaker. still in box, original $200 now $195管辖 941-9560
MACINTYRS QSH Computer. Complete system inclusion. engines w/ 500, Calc, CPU, 899, 896, 895.
BLUE HERON
TWO DAYS ONLY...
SALE!
Sat., Feb. 26th, 10-5:30 Sun., the 27th, 1-5
EVERYTHING IN OUR STORE WILL BE
- Blue Heron futons
15% OFF!
- bedframes
- covers, tables, lamps
- CLOCKS-EVERYTHING!*
n stock items only, excludes
Want to live life by your own rules? Want to experience world? Read: Life as an Odyssey, guide to Meaningful Careers and Unique Lifestyles. For more info, call 800-789-7424.
Wedding Dress Size B, ivory, Chapel length train,
$150. Call IJll at 842-5390.
in stock items only, excludes items already on sale or layaway
937 Mass. St.
841-9443
**88 Hyundai GLS in good condition. 5 dr.
hatchback. 5-speed kt. mi. AC, AM/FM cassette.**
**500cc AT**
*
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
Aquarium, 30 gallon "long" tank with walnut stand, underwater lighting, lots of goods.
Duckweed, Cali 242-7856. Duckweed, Cali 242-7856.
A
400s Real Estate
Avail. June or Aug 4 & 34 4B, 2A Lg rooms c closets,
total kitchen, coin-op laundry, storage unit,
capd cell CALL 1-913-265-7697 (Topeka) or 841-8074
(Cindy) after p. 69.
405 For Rent
1 Bedroom Apt. available now | Call 841-1212.
91676509
2 bdm/s/wmroom and plenty of storage space, 2 bathrooms, D/W, W/D, central air, fire place and on. On KU bus route, $50 + utilities, avail. March 1. Mellandi 1-897-4685
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished,
very nice interior. Call 854-1234, 704-0435
or email us at info@homesbychip.com
Available at West Hill Apts. Spacius 1 bed不安 apts. 87床 per month. Water pd. Great location near campus. 1012 Emery Rd. No pets. 841-3800, 543-3884.
*1 and 3 Bedroom
Apartments Available
*Quiet Location
*2 blocks from KU bus route
*Call Gina at 843-4754
Furnished rooms in house close to campus. WDAC. B Short term lease available. Call 841-729-6300.
Furnished room for rent with shared kitchen and balcony, new block from KU. Off street park area. No停车费. No委员会.
Trailrider Apartments
new leasing for Summer and Fall
Studio, Apt., and Town Home
KU Bus Stop, 3400 South Court,
Court, Jcpk2府
Call Today for more information
843-7333 2500.6th W.
Available now, two bedrooms at 912 Tennessee,
two bathrooms, basement, 57 plus utilities,
oak floor, O.K. Zekk, 2000
2040 Heatherwood
Hanover Place Apt. for rent. Near Campus.
$370/MO. MOA 841-1212.
now renting for June and August, 1, 2 and 3 berms,
dishwasher, microwave, W/D, fireplace, ceiling
fans, cable pd. Call 841-7849 for appt.
**NOW AVAILABLE now:** 841-SFAR (7267)
MOVING TO FOREIGN! Person needed NOW for spacious loft. 3 bdrm w/ kitchen, tv, closet to campus/downstreet. W/D $200 per v. & all Smoking-free no-pets. Call 855-423-8551.
FORRENT: Sunflower House student living coop
1406 Tennessee, has rooms available for summer.
Low rent. close to campus/downtown, cooperative
rent. Office # 841-0483.
New 3 bedroom home, 2 bath, washer/dryer hook-up, refrigerator and air conditioner, bus route: $800 a month. Call 489-1454.
Mae Keslie Place now leasing for Aug 1; 4yr; old luxury apcs, plus to amp purchase in the same space.
VVVVVVVVVV
NOWLEASING
patio: Wen insulated, energy efficient. Call 749-1166.
West Hill APARTMENTS
MORNING STAR
Fri. Wed, Wed.
12:30-4:00NoApp. Needed
101Emery R.
841-R300
6 8
---
meadowbrook
FORJUNEANDAUGUST
Rooms, apartments, and well kept, older homes available now. *MAST-STAT/73923*
Bedroom apartments
Furnished and unfurnished
Great location near campus
No Pets
1. How much time did you spend looking for your apartment?
Answer 2 Questions
- Spacious one and two Bedroom apartments
OPEN HOUSE
2. Doyou want to live in a beautiful, centrally located living community?
1. If you spent over 1 hour, you wasted a lot of your time.
you wasted a lot of your time.
2. Meadowbrook is leasing for fall now. Call Kathy or Shana and in 1 hour your apartment hunting time will be over!
Mon-Fri 8:5-30
Sat 10-4 Sun 1-4
15th & Crestline
842-4200
Sorry, notepa
Chamberian Court A.
1-2 Bedroom
Carson Place
NOW LEASING
Sodium View
Carson Place
Bradford Square
Oread
Call 749-1556 for more info,
or by office on new atl.
1202 Oread
Tuesday-Friday
Saturday 11-3
Bradford Square
Park25
We are now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature studio 1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. We also have 3 bedroom, $2 \frac{1}{2}$ bath townhomes.
- 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)
one bedroom apartment for sublease. Water and
furniture included. Free $346.00 new.
until Aug. App # 845-016.
Now leasing for FALL
We're making life easier
Studio, 1, 2, 3, &4 bedroom apartments and townhomes
14th&Mass. : 841-1212
REGENTS COURT 19th & Mass. : 749-0445
One bedroom apartment available now. On KU bus route. Small peel OK. Call 653-4289.
Room for rent $180 per month plus one third utilities. Call Mike at 841-1443, non smoker.
Offers Completely Furnished
MASTERCRAFT
SUNDANCE
TANGLEWOOD
SUNDANCE
7th&Florida : 841-5255
ORCHARD CORNERS
15th& Kasold : 749-4226
TANGLEWOOD
10th & Arkansas : 749-2415
CAMPUS PLACE
1145 Louisiane · 841-1490
1145Louisiana:841-1429
- Weekly Maid Service
- Front Door Bus Service
MASTERCRAFT
Mon-Fri 9am-5pm Sat 10am-4pm
- "Dine Anytime" with unlimited seconds
- unlimited seconds
- Laundry and Vending Facilities
842-4455
NAISMITH
- Free Utilities
Equal Housing Opportunity
1800 Naismith
843-8559
Naismith Place
*2B/R from $47*
*Jacuzzi in each apt*
*Private balconies/Patios*
*Pd cable TV/pVs*
*Basketball court/pK*
*On-site management*
*Quarantine 15 to 15*
*Call for Appointments*
5:15pm - M-F Mon-10 to 2 aft
Studio apartment avail. May 20 - Aug. 10. May
payment. Furnished. $210 call (843) 629-1923.
Free w/ room rental.
Sapadonna 1 bedroom app very close to campus. Fur-
kay about Cohn Hall fit 44.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
e. By phone: 064-4258
WAKU 6K2C at downtown. 8208 lb. 1023 ft. 1023 m².
Sublease large one bedroom apt. on bus route.
Huge close! Low utilities, water paid, PETS OK!
Available ASAP. 933-843-9048
430 Roommate Wanted
Studio apt. Private entrance, off-erect parking,
ku to RU & down aisle. 8290/m. 843-9072
Sublease top floor studio off 5th & Color. from March 1st to July 1st, $310 or waid p. laundry facilities. Near bus route, 841-5797 or 841-5789
Summer Sublease 2-room homes needed. 38fdm 3Bathroom Townhouse. Washer/Dryer. Pool Tennis Courts. On Bus Route. Call 842-0497
1 Roommate to share 3 brm house, d/w, nber
1 bus room, $15/mo. + / utilities. For more info.
www.roommate.com
Ads phone number in may be killed by your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
In an enquiry, 118 Other Phone Filed
- By Mail: 119 Stauffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 68045
ROOMMATE NEEDED to share two bedroom
780/mo. + /unities Call Dave 843-399-914
843-399-915
Want to stay in Lawrence this summer? Looking for 1 or 2 mellow NSP roomstores to share NEW 3 BR condo. W/D Sublease from 6/1-1/8, $200/mo (nego) + splash. Call Tail.Caller @ 864-7127 today
HAVE TO MOVE TO K.C.I. a female needed to share bmrd. spacious apc. $100/m + utilities, on bus route, convenient location, no smokers or calls, bez 769-7947 in the evening.
Stop by the Kasan 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.
You may print your classify order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kanan offices. 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.
Classified Information and order form
Calculating Rates:
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. Thus, multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
When canceling a classified card 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 or check 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.
Notes
t per line per day
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.
Number of players needed:
3 Inees
4 Inees
5-7 Inees
8+ Inees
Cost per mile per day
1X 2-3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-28X 30+X
2.05 1.55 1.05 .95 .75 .50
1.90 1.15 1.00 .79 .65 .45
1.55 1.55 1.75 .65 .65 .65 .45
1.75 .90 .75 .65 .60 .55
148 lion & found 358 for sale
252 holy washed 340 auto sales
225 professional services 360 miscellaneous
292 vines services
Classifications
105 personal
110 business persons
129 announcements
129 entertaining
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
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379 want to buy
465 for rent
439 roommate wanted
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THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
2-25 Janson
...and as I go, I love to sing, my Knapsack on my back! Valderi, valdera, valderi, valdera ha ha ha ha ha...
God, I hate him.
ha ha... God, I hate him.
More tension on the Lewis and Clark expedition.
12
Friday, February 25, 1994
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U N I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
Skating duel popular on TV
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Nancy Kerrigan's showdown with Tonya Harding was the most-watched television program in the United States in 11 years and the sixth highest-rated show ever.
CBS's prime-time coverage on Wednesday night got a 48.5 rating and a 64 share, Nielsen Media Research said yesterday. Only two Super Bowls and three entertainment programs have received higher ratings.
"I don't think if we sat down to try to script an Olympics we would have done much better," CBS Sports President Neal Pilson said. "I think this is as good as any fiction could be."
The three highest-rated programs are the final episode of "M*A*S*H" on Feb. 28, 1983 (60,2), the "Who Shot J.R." episode of "Dallas" on Nov. 21,
Among sporting events, Wednesday night's Olympic coverage trailed only San Francisco's 26-21 victory over Cincinnati in the 1982 Super Bowl (49.1) and Washington's 27-17 victory over Miami in the 1983 Super Bowl (48.6).
1980 (53.3), and an episode of the miniseries "Roots" on Jan. 30, 1977 (51.1).
Each rating point represents 942,000 homes and 1 percent of the total television households in the United States. The share is the percentage of televisions in use at the time.
CBS estimated 110,530,000 people watched its coverage Wednesday night, the eighth-highest audience ever for U.S. television behind the final episode of "M*A*S*H" and six Super Bowls.
The Lillehammer Games are on track to be the highest-rated Olympics ever. Through 12 of the 16 nights, CBS averaged a 27.6 rating and a 41 share.
The record for a Winter Olympics is the 23.9 rating and 37 share for the 1980 Lake Placid Games, when the United States won the hockey gold medal. The record for any Olympics is the 24.4 rating and a 44 share for the 1972 Munich Games, when a group of Palestinians entered the Olympic Village and killed 11 members of the Israeli team.
"I don't think the Kerrigan-Harding saga is solely responsible," Pilson said. "The Winter Olympics are now appointment television, just like the Super Bowl. People are working their calendars to watch the Olympics."
1994 Winter Olympic Games
The tally
I
Country Gold Silver Bronze
Russia 10 7 4
Norway 8 9 3
Germany 6 5 6
Egypt 6 6 3
United States 6 3 2
Canada 3 4 4
Source: The Associated Press
Dave Campbell / NAMSA
Valid through July 31, 1994
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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 • 844-6464: $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)
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Perkins Family Restaurant 1711 W 23rd - 842-9040 $1.00 on any entree.
Pizza Shuttle 1601 W 23rd - 842-9040 1 carryout, 1 topping pizza w/ a lq. coke for $4.00
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
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MERCHANDISE & PRODUCTS
Community Mercantile • 901 Mississippi • 843-8544: 15% off any coffee purchase
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SERVICES
ormehr 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
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B.C. Automotive • 510 N 6th St • 841-6955: 20% off tune ups and brake repair
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Terms and conditions. The following terms and condition apply to a cardholder to a cardholder for use of The 1 International Darwin Kairow Card (IDC) at Pairing Salem Hammars (PM). If the IDC must be issued to be valid, is non-transferable, and PM may require identification verification, cardholders must agree to the cardholder's signature on the IDC shall be可接受 to be bound by these conditions and the directory of IDCs. 15 species
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358
SPORTS: The Kansas women's basketball team defeated Kansas State 65-54 Saturday in Manhattan. Page 10.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.103.NO.110
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
KANSAS STATE
HTSTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA KS 66612
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 28,1994
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
Texas, Texas Tech agree to join Big 8, er ... 12?
The Scattered 12
Texas, Baylor, Texas Tech and Texas A&M have agreed to leave the Southwest Athletic Conference and join the Big Eight conference.
Texas Tech
Baylor
University of Texas
Texas A&M
Dave Campbell / KANSAN
Four SWC schools jump ship in total
By Michael Holmes The Associated Press
AUSTIN, Texas — After saying thanks for the memories, regents of the University of Texas and Texas Tech voted unanimously Friday to bolt from the Southwest Conference and join the Big Eight.
Their moves followed decisions earlier last week by Texas A&M and Baylor to leave the SWC. The decisions at all four schools were unanimous.
The exodus will leave the 80-year-old SWC with just four members when the new "Big L2" begins play in 1996. But SWC officials say they already are talking with potential new members. The four remaining SWC schools are Houston, Rice, Southern Methodist and Texas Christian.
The history and tradition of the Southwest Conference is interwoven with the
COLUMN: Sports editor David Dorsey
discusses the benefits of the new Big Eight Conference. Page 10.
very fabric of our state and our lives," UT system chancellor William Cunningham said. "The change is both sad and painful. Nevertheless, in this case, the change is inevitable."
Cunningham cited the failure of several SWC schools to boost attendance and to strengthen women's athletic programs. But the conference had been weakened by a series of NCAA probations, including a "death penalty" which halted intercollegiate football at SMU for 1987 and 1988.
The decisions were expected but no less welcomed by Bir Eight members.
The Big Eight had been the only major
"Certainly, the addition of these four outstanding institutions of higher education to the Big Eight family will enhance the academic and athletic reputations of our conference," said Colorado chancellor James Corbridge, chairman of the Association of Big Eight Universities.
conference in the NCAA not to undergo a change in membership the past 30 years.
Texas, Texas A&M and Baylor were charter members of the SWC, which was organized in 1914. Texas Tech joined in 1956.
"The reality of the present environment is that intercollegiate athletics is undergoing considerable evaluation and adjustment." Big Eight commissioner Carl James said.
Cunningham told the regents there were several major reasons for accepting the Big Eight's invitation.
The arrangement allows four state schools to go to the same new conference rather than having Texas move on its own. It groups the Austin school with other large state schools committed to big-time men's and women's sports.
The deal also keeps a more homogeneous geographic alignment, because all 12 schools in the expanded conference are in the central part of the country.
"We tried very hard for many years to make the SWC a strong and competitive vehicle through which our student athletes could attain a position of national prominence in intercollegiate athletics," Cunningham said. "Regrettably, it has become clear that the SWC can no longer provide those opportunities."
University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kan.
Kansas State University, Manhattan, Kan.
University of Nebraska, Lincoln, Neb.
Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa.
University of Missouri, Colombia, Mo.
Oklahoma State University, Norman, Okla.
Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, Okla.
University of Colorado, Boulder, Colo.
University of Texas, Austin, Texas.
Texas Tech University, Lubbock, Texas.
Texas A&M University, Galveston, Texas.
Baylor University, Waco, Texas.
KANSAN
The Big Eight's proposal is meant to find the best possible television contract beginning in 1996-97. The Big Eight, with other conferences already signed with networks, decided that having the four SWC schools would make for a more lucrative package.
ROCK CHALK
REVUE
1994
Revue closes a record season
I will not forget the moment of kindness and compassion that befilled our hearts. It was a time when everyone was reminded of the importance of treating others with respect and kindness, and I will always remember this moment as one of great joy and fulfillment.
Rock Chalk '94 raises $43,000
By Frank McCleary Kansan staff writer
Sean Harris, Overland Park freshman, expresses his joy at winning by hugging other performers in his production. "For Whom the Will Told," performed by Delta Gamma and Lamda Chi Alpha, took the most awards at Rock Chalk Revue Saturday night.
Nancy and Drew Hardy investigated their way into Rock Chalk Revue history Saturday night.
They were the main characters in Delta Gamma and Lambda Chi Alpha's production of "For Whom the Will Told." The show won six of
the nine awarers presented Saturday night, including best show, best actress for Kara Meysenburg as Nancy Hardy and
Page14.
AWARDS:
See who won
best show and
other honors.
rhardy and best actor for Jamey Welch as Drew Hardy.
"For Whom the Will Told" was a mystery about a murdered hotel owner, J.R. Frump, a spoof of Donald Trump. Nancy and Drew Hardy were lounge singers-turned-private detectives who investigated the murder.
Welch, Dallas senior, said that he had been involved with the revue for four years but that this year's show was special to him.
"This was the icing on the cake," he said.
Welch, who helped direct the show, said that he and the other directors went through several ideas before they decided on the final one.
"We were pounding out a lot of ideas," he said. "We decided to play off the Trump Towers idea. We thought we could get a lot of peculiar characters for that subject."
The revue, which sold out two out of three nights, also tied or set records for money raised and for community service.
The revue's three-night run con-
included its first year in the Lied Center with a record-tying $43,000 raised for the United Way of Douglas County. The 1992 performance raised the same amount. The revue raised $26,000 last year.
The donations primarily come from ticket sales, but they also come from program advertisements and Friends of Rock Chalk Revue, a national mailing campaign.
Tad Gomez, Wichita senior and executive show producer, said he was surprised by the money raised.
Revue participants also donated time to the United Way. The 19,464 hours donated set a revenue record for the four-year history of the service program. Students donated time from September through February to service projects throughout Douglas County.
"The community service directors built me up like it wasn't going to be this big," he said.
Lee Saylor, technical director for the Lied Center, provided technical assistance for the revue. He said he
"They were willing to listen to what I had to say and vice versa," he said.
Saylor said the revue was as important as the other acts that performed at the center.
had had a good working relationship with the students.
"You don't get treated differently because you're a student group," he said. "Each individual performance of Rock Chalk Revue is just like 'The Secret Garden' or other shows."
By Cheryl Cadue Kansan staff writer
Statues not diverse students contend
Krista Morgan, St. Louis senior, said she saw a lack of monuments to minority students every time she walked on campus.
"I notice it, and it's in the back of my mind," Morgan said. "It bothers me because this is suppose to be a multi-culturally diverse university. There's nothing that represents that."
Morgan said she would like for that to change.
"For years, there's been talk about making it a more multicultural campus," she said. "And I'm tired of hearing people talk, and I want to see something happen."
No statues, monuments or plaques commemorating a nonwhite person stand at the University of Kansas, said Sherwood Thompson, director of the Office of Minority Affairs. But he said the University of Kansas should have had statues or markers that recognized the contributions of people of color to the University.
"They are a way of identifying and acknowledging the diversity of the campus," Thompson said. "And they are also a way to give a signature to the type of place we are."
Thompson said that because a diverse group of people helped make University history, marking those contributions would show that the University was accepting of all cultures and recognized the roles that all people have at the University.
Thompson said statues or symbols that recognized white contributions expressed attitudes of an era that had no longer existed at the University.
"Education transcends textbooks, classrooms and research laboratories," he said. "Education is part of the environmental impact that a person is confronted with on a day-by-day basis."
Andrea Norris, chair of the Art and Public Places Committee, said that even though the KU campus had no sculptures that portrayed minorities or women, the absence had not been noticeable because there were only a few sculptures on campus.
Oread Forum
Do heritage celebrations help?
The Kansan wants to know what you think about the effectiveness of heritage celebrations such as Black History Month, which ends today.
Please call the Oread Forum at 864-9040 and share your ideas. The Oread Forum will stop taking calls at 6 p.m. today. Responses will be printed Wednesday.
KANSAN
were 100 sculptures and none were of a minority," Norris said. "The absence is not conscious or intentional because there's not much public art in the first place."
James Banning, editor of Campus Ecology, said the institutional values of a university could be seen in statues, architecture and other physical features of the college campus.
"Statues and other physical features on a college campus are basically cultural artifacts," said Banning, who studies the physical features of campuses across the United States. "These artifacts communicate institutional values. Especially in regard to historical features, you can give a message that is unwelcoming."
"It would be a lot different if there
Banning said campus statues and architecture could be racist, sexist or homophobic, and these kinds of messages made a university setting uncomfortable.
"We put things in our culture, and we typically don't spend time thinking about the message were giving minorities, women and the physically disabled," he said.
Arthur Jackson III, third-year law student, said he would have liked to see a statue recognizing an African American for academic contributions rather than athletics.
"If they decided to put one up, I'd want it in front of Wesco Beach or somewhere that will give the white student population a chance to see it and know who it is and why it's there," Jackson said. "I just don't want to have it in some corner."
INSIDE
In the shadows
Backstage moments on opening night show the essence of Rock Chalk Revue.
Page 6.
NASA leader: Military research no longer flies
By Stephen Martino Kansan staff writer
Director spoke at KU, pushed general aviation
NASA's leader, Daniel Goldin, came to the University of Kansas to learn what headway the school was making in space- and aviation science research.
However, at the end of the two-hour presentation, Goldin was the one who had given the lesson.
Often using a terse and pointed tone, Goldin, administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, delivered several chastisements when discussing the future of general aviation in the United States.
Goldin met with University professors, administrators and students Saturday at
the Adams Alumni Center. The meeting was arranged by U.S. Rep. Jan Meyers, R-Kansas, who was in attendance.
Goldin spoke forcefully after a presentation by Steven Smith, Lawrence graduate student in aerospace engineering. Smith had explained a military airplane model, which had won first place in a national contest.
"It's wonderful you're designing military planes that will never fly, but you could make a wonderful impact in general aviation," Goldin said. "General aviation is becoming a national disaster. Soon we will be training our pilots in French planes."
As recently as 1978, the United States produced about 18,000 general aviation planes, Goldin said. But it produced only 899 in 1992 and 644 in 1993, he said.
had to use what technology was available.
But Goldin disagreed with Roskam.
Jan Roskam, distinguished professor of aerospace engineering, said that the emphasis in the aerospace industry was not on the design of general aviation planes but on military aircraft and that designers
"You have a self-fulfilling prophecy for failure," he said. "That's why American industry is lagging so far behind other nations."
Roskam said he understood Goldin's concerns, but manufacturers of planes would rather see quicker results than develop new technology.
"What the director did not know is that since 1981 most of the contest projects have been for military designs," Roskam said. "We have participated because I've always felt students deserve a chance to win national championships."
The University's aerospace engineering students participate in three major national plane design competitions each year, Roskam said. The contests are sponsored by manufacturers such as United Technologies, Lockheed and Pratt and Whitney. The University has won first in at least one competition every year since 1981.
Goldin said that NASA could be more involved in designs. He said it would try to plan a national competition focusing students' efforts on general aviation design.
The proposed contest would promote long-range general-aviation design, said Robert Whitehead, deputy associate director for aeronautics for NASA.
Whitehead said that even though the contest idea was a product of Saturday's discussion, NASA would work hard to see it happen.
"The idea came from the director, the very top," he said. "That's a pretty good place to have an idea come from."
Goldin said that he did not like being an irritant, but his style was necessary to get the United States moving in the right direction for general aviation.
Chancellor Gene Budig, who spoke at the forum, praised Goldin's idea.
A
"You are a refreshing irritant," he said.
"We would welcome such a competition."
}
2
Monday, February 28, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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The University Dally Kanaan (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.
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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
π 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
ON CAMPUS
The Office of Study Abroad will hold an informational meeting about Spanish study abroad at 9:30 a.m. today at 4065 Wescole Hall. For more information, call Ellen Hart Strubert at 864-3742.
Narcotics Anonymous will meet at 11 a.m. today at Alcove I in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Andy B. at 843-9461.
School of Journalism Student Senators will sponsor an informal brown bag lunch to discuss upcoming Student Senate legislation at noon today at Alcove D in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Tim Marks at 841-2108.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today at Danforth Chapel
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a Catholic law student discussion group at 12:30 p.m. today at 109 Green Hall. For more information, call the center at 843-0357.
KU Nippon Karate Club will meet at 4:30 p.m. today at 207 Robinson Center.
KU Kempo Karate Club will meet at 6 p.m. today at 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Mandana Eshadhi at 8427138
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 Anishanshii at 843-3099.
Harambeen 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, "Fundamentals of Catholicism," at 7 tonight at the center, 1631 Crescent Rd. For more information, call the center at 843-0357.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor "Exploring the Faith" at 8 tonight at the center, 1631 Crescent Rd. For more information, call the center at 843-0357
The Douglas County AIDS Project is sponsoring two support groups, one for those living with HIV or AIDS and one for friends and family members supporting loved ones with HIV or AIDS. For more information, call 843-0040.
KANSAN
Weather around the country:
WEATHER
Atlanta: 64'/59'
Chicago: 34'/21'
Houston: 62'/49'
Miami: 76'/68'
Minneapolis: 29'/14'
Phoenix: 56'/33'
Salt Lake City: 50'/29'
Seattle: 59'/46'
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O
High: 45' Low: 30'
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Tomorrow Wednesday
Partly cloudy
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Dry and mild
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CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, February 28,1994
知
Engineers display their wares
Expo provides fun educational exhibits
By Susan White
By Susan White
Kansan staff writer
The lights went out, and the room became silent — but not everyone was left in the dark.
Some people had a perfect view with the aid of infrared night-vision goggles.
Second Lt. Johnie Gallegos of the Kansas Army National Guard said soldiers used the goggles at night for a light source to see where they were going.
"If infantry are out patrolling, the guy in front wears the night vision goggles to detect where the roads are or to guide the way when moving from point A to point B," he said. "Also, if a guy is on guard duty, he has to make sure that nobody steals the equipment. The goggles were used a lot in Desert Storm for terrain perception."
The demonstration was just one of several exhibits and demonstrations — including a flight simulator, a hover craft and a laser show — from the 1994 Engineering Expo on Friday.
All the departments from the School of Engineering participated in the Expo.
Donna Payne, Colony senior, said the civil engineering department had a variety of items on exhibit and a few demonstrations.
"We have cement canoes that we use for racing in a Big Eight competition," she said. "If we win, we get to go on to the nationals. We also compete in a steel bridge-building contest. We also have a quicksand trap where students can experience the real feeling of quicksand."
Shawn Shelton, Overland Park senior,
put on wader boots and stepped into the
sand trap. Payne slowly released water from a spigot attached to the pit. As the water rose, Shelton sank into the sand.
Shelton said it felt like being in real quick-sand.
"I hope I never have to experience the real thing," he said. "But it's a great way to spend a Friday afternoon."
One of the aerospace engineering demonstrations simulated a wind tunnel.
Jason Frank, Great Bend graduate student, said the demonstration used a triangular-shaped wing to show the effects of the wind on an airplane.
"The wind over an airplane delta wing creates a tornado flow," he said. "When an airplane produces lift, the low pressure wants to go down, and the high pressure wants to go up. We use a laser and a sheet to demonstrate the flow. Lots of wind sucks the airplane up and gives it that extra lift."
The aerospace engineering department also offered students rides on a hover craft.
Mike Unger, Herdson senior, said the idea to build the hover craft came from a friend.
"He had built one in junior high from a kit," Unger said. "All the wood and supplies came from the hardware store, and the hover board runs on a grain aerator fan off a farm."
Once the students had all their supplies, they were able to build the hover board, Unger said.
"When we knew the amount of pressure the fan put out, we decided how big we wanted it," he said. "There is a hole underneath that catches the plastic skirt and makes it float."
Unger said the hover craft had been popular all day long.
"We start out with about five people and usually end up with about 25," he said. "People are not just looking at a display but seeing and experiencing how it works."
Greg Litterick, Shawnee senior, struggles to free his legs from quicksand. Experi-
menting with quicksand was just one of the exhibits on display during the Engineer-
ing Expo Friday in Learned Hall.
Groups promote engineering to women
By introducing girls to the world of engineering, two KU women's engineering groups are hoping to attract more women to the field.
Activities sponsored by the KU women's engineering program and the Society of Women Engineers have played instrumental roles in the 5.3 percent increase in the number of women enrolled at the School of Engineering since 1988.
One of the groups' recruitment activities was the eighth annual "A Day of Engineering." Twenty-seven Kansas high schools attended the event on Friday.
By Roberta Johnson Kansan staff writer
In addition to listening to speakers, students participated in hands-on activities, such as building a tower of marshmallows and toothpicks.
"One guy showed us a project where he put matches in a glass container, and the egg slipped through to show us about aerospace engineering," said Toyin Adeyarju, Lawrence High School sophomore.
"We're trying to get young girls to think about engineering now so they aren't afraid to do it later," said Cindy Travinek, El Dorado senior and SWE president. "In high school, I was told that not too many women were in engineering."
SWE members also spoke with the girls about the engineering programs and degree choices.
More female engineers
More female engineers
The number of women in the School of Engineering
has increased since 1988. The most popular
programs are chemical and electrical engineering.
female students
1988 1989 year 1990 1991 1992 1993
Source: Kansan Staff Research Dave Campbell / KANBA
Mary Plumb, director of the KU women's engineering program, said that contact with women students helped destroy the myth that women cannot do math and science.
"If they see women students that can relate to, then it makes engineering more achievable," she said. "It helps them understand that engineers aren't just nerds." During Friday's student program, math and science teachers attended seminars about gender equity in the classroom.
"Relationships are very important to young girls," she said. "Many girls feel they could jeopardize their relationship with friends and boys, so they don't take math and science."
Plumb said one reason that few girls decided to enter science programs was that they felt it was not socially acceptable to take those classes.
$ ^{C} $R. Herpish, a math teacher at Baldwin High School in Baldwin City, disagreed with Plumb.
"The upper-level classes at our school are predominantly girls," he said.
Plumb said if the women did not take those classes in high school, they could start out being behind in the engineering program. The idea of an additional year of classes could discourage them from continuing in the program, she said.
In addition to working with high school teachers and students, the women's engineering program and SWE encourage young girls to consider an engineering career.
Plumb said that many engineering students worked in the elementary schools, helping children with science projects.
The Lawrence school district does not have a specific science curriculum, she said.
SWE also volunteers with Girl Scout troops, helping them earn science-oriented badges such as engineering, Travinek said.
"Many young girls choose engineering because of some personal contact with someone who encouraged them," Plumb said.
Martin or Malcolm? African Americans take both sides
By Jennifer Freund Kansan staff writer
Malcolm X
---
Robert Vaughn, Chicago senior, said he supported Malcolm X.
"Martin was for turning the other cheek," Vaughn said.
Malcolm was for not turning the other cheek. I'm for not turning the other cheek. If someone violates me, I have the human right to violate them."
Harold Harris, Lawrence junior,
said that although he related more to
the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., he thought more African Americans preferred Malcolm X.
"People don't want to be into passivity," he said. "They want to be into Black power."
A week after the 29th anniversary
Malcolm X was assassinated Feb. 21, 1965, and Martin Luther King was assassinated April 4, 1968.
of the assassination of Malcolm X and one month prior to the 26th anniversary of King's assassination, many still debate about which leader's message should lead the African-American community.
Harris said that despite popular sentiment, he still followed King's philosophy.
THE TALKING CLOUD
"I look at things from a Biblical standpoint of 'love thy neighbor," he said.
Harris said that he thought Malcolm's message exacerbated racial problems.
"Martin Luther King didn't want to fight," he said. "Fighting just eggs people on and causes more fights."
Martin Luther King
While many students think Malcolm's message is more popular, many African-American faculty still see King as the dominant leader.
John Tidwell, Langston Hughes visiting professor of English, said that King continued to dominate Malcolm in popular thought.
"King is acknowledged in ways that Malcolm never was," Tidwell said. "We don't have a holiday on Feb. 21, the anniversary of Malcolm's assassination."
Samuel Adams, associate professor of journalism, said that although many African Americans started to question King's tactics, he still remained a dominant leader.
"Black frustrations lead to questioning of the King tactics, which, to many, smacked of accommodation." Adams said. "Those who respond to that way of thinking fail to understand King's message. He was a revolutionary, not an accommodationist."
While King may have been viewed as an accommodationist, Malcolm was best known for his senatorial views.
Some African Americans think that this image of Malcolm may threaten whites.
"Any time the system is threatened, people feel threatened," Vaughn said. "But for the most part, educated white people will respect Malcolm for his role and position."
Sherwood Thompson, director of the Office of Minority Affairs, agreed that whites should not feel threatened by Malcolm X or any African American.
"No one's plotting to kill white people," he said. "It's not on our minds."
Charles Hargadine, Lawrence senior, said that he was not threatened by either Malcolm's or King's messages.
"I don't feel threatened by Malcolm X, but I relate more with Martin Luther King's message because I believe in his teachings of peace." Hargardine said.
But while others debate over the slain civil rights leaders, Thompson said, their messages may be outdated for the '90s.
"Today Blacks are more American in their profiles than in the '60s," he said. "Now when you look at Blacks in the '90s, most people see Americans that happen to be Black. In the '60s, you saw Blacks wanting to be Americans."
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Monday, February 28, 1994
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Race-based scholarships improve ethnic diversity
The Department of Education announced last week that it would support schools in granting scholarships to applicants only because they are racial minorities. The decision is the right one.
The Bush administration tried to ban this kind of scholarship, alleging that merit should be the only standard. But colleges and universities have good reasons to choose race in some cases.
All students benefit from ethnically diversified campuses in at least two ways. First, in what is sometimes a difficult lesson, diversity teaches people tolerance, and graduates lacking this virtue are unlikely to become open-minded professionals. Besides, before being graduates, students have to learn how to be human beings, and tolerance is part of that.
Second, graduates fit more easily into any job when they have been prepared to live, work and cooperate with people different from themselves. The current trend in several job markets, perhaps in the majority of them, is to seek ethnic diversity.
Minorities should have more opportunities to demonstrate their talents in school. They have been condemned to an ignorance-and-poverty cycle that deprives them of good jobs because they do not hold college degrees, which they could not afford because their parents did not find good jobs.
The long exclusion of minorities from campuses, based on both financial reasons and simple prejudice, has to be remedied. The department's support for race-based scholarships attempts to break this circle of inequity just as Affirmative Action does. The scholarships are a counterbalance to an unjust social system, and as such, they should be welcomed.
GERALDO SAMOR FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Town's fight is futile; law is unconstitutional
The affluent, unyielding city of Ladue, a suburb of St. Louis, Mo., is wasting the Supreme Court's time by trying to protect a law that violates the First Amendment's guarantee of free speech.
Margaret Gilleo already has won a decision by a federal court supporting her right to display a sign in her bedroom window expressing her views on the Persian Gulf War. But Ladue has continued its ludicrous push to the Supreme Court. The city is wasting time and money because of a sign that stated simply "For Peace in the Gulf."
What possessed Ladue to make a law limiting the kinds of signs that can be displayed on private property? Did the city council ever stop to think that it may be infringing upon the rights guaranteed to everyone in the First Amendment? Did it care?
Apparently the city did not care.
Ladue contends that the law is not restricting the content of speech but the medium in which it is presented. Ladue's desire, according to its lawyer, is to protect the city's "unique aesthetic character." If that is truly the case, the law should not allow real estate or no-trespassing signs either.
The Supreme Court has ruled in countless cases that free speech only can be restricted under circumstances presenting a clear and present danger to the security of the nation and its people. This time should not be any different.
Ladue should not have carried on this illogical battle to control the expression of its residents under the pretense of keeping the suburb beautiful. There is nothing beautiful about a city that makes laws violating the most precious of rights: the freedom of speech.
Permitting all speech on campus necessary for university freedom
DONELLA HEARNE FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Brian Dirck, in a column in the Feb. 17 Kansan, argued that the Nation of Islam representative Khalid Abdul Mohammad did not have "a right to express his reprehensible views on American college campuses because Mohammad and others of his ilk demean the goals of reason and intellectual discourse to which our universities are dedicated." Dirck went on to assert that "speech restrictions [on campuses] are unavoidable. [The university] is not a landfill for unsubstantiated verbal garbage."
Dirck fails to recognize our schools for what they are. "Public" school is a euphemism for "state-owned" school. Dirck correctly notes that all state-owned universities have speech codes. Individual expression is inconsistent with the smooth operation of a large organization.
COLUMNIST
ALLEN
TIFFANY
John Dewey, the educational theorist who arguably has had the greatest influence on our modern education system, put it thus: "The children who know how to think for themselves spoil the harmony of the collective society that is coming, where everyone [will be] interdependent." This is
remarkably consistent with John Stuart Mill's fear, expressed in "On Liberty," that "A general State education is a mere contrivance for molding people to be exactly like one another." And since the university is owned by the powers that be and the powers that control the government's education monopoly, curtailing free speech is a relatively easy thing to do.
Despite Dirck's assertion that "The issue is not sensitivity, but intellectual legitimacy," his argument is not intellectually sound. Though Dirck says we should not argue "about whether or not it is possible to distinguish between legitimate and illegitimate discourse," I insist that we
should. Any time someone asserts that the correctness of his argument is so manifestly obvious that it need not be questioned, I suggest rigorous scrutiny is eminently and immediately appropriate.
The first flaw in Dirck's argument is that no person can make the distinction Dirck thinks obvious (remember when it was not "legitimate discourse" to say the sun did not orbit the earth?). Second, the best thing we can do to defeat the ugliness expressed by people such as Khalid Abdul Mohammad is to allow them to be heard. The majority of us can decide for ourselves what we want to hear and what to avoid. We can certainly do it better than any university speech code.
I am not suggesting that anything goes. I only advocate forms of expression that do not entail the use of force or the destruction of property.
I suggest we worry more about teaching critical thinking than what rabble-rousers such as Mohammad say. Hitler's infamous achievements did not come about because he was allowed to present his doctrine of using force. What precipitated Germany's aggressive World War II doctrine was the collapse of its education system prior to Hitler's emergence. Individualism and critical thinking were replaced with collectivism that destroyed Germany's ability to critically consider Hitler's program and understand where his policies would lead. Restrictions on speech in our nation may give rise to a collectivism and anti-individualism similar to what swept Germany.
If our universities are really about higher education, they could tolerate freedom of speech. If state schools feel they need to control the expressions on campuses, then Mill was right. State-owned organization's such as this University are more interested in instilling conformity than inspiring critical thinking and rigorous inquiry. Dirck's argument, the often-used claim that ugly comments are not legitimate discourse, give the opponents of free speech a reasonable-sounding cover to hide behind.
Allen Tiffany is a Lawrence graduate student in English.
IF RUSSIA WANTED TO BUY INTELLIGENCE...
IF RUSSIA WANTED TO BUY INTELLIGENCE,...
CONTINUALLY INEPT ASSOCIATION
CIA
WAS THIS REALLY THE PLACE TO SHARP?
CONTINUALLY INEPT ASSOCIATION
CIA
WAS THIS REALLY THE PLACE TO SHOP?
Hood
UDK
94
News like this doesn't need tabloids
1994 has been quite an eventful year already, and with everything that's happened so far it may be hard to keep up. So I've put together some of the major happenings of the past month, complete with the "inside scoop" that you get from such respected programs as "A Current Affair."
In the widely publicized Lorena Bobbitt trial, the Ecuadoran-born manicurist emotionally states, for the record, that she "has no idea what the heck those little white spots on people's fingernails are."
To benefit two worthy charities, '70s geek figures Donny Osmond and Danny Bonnaducci agree to enter a boxing ring and exchange obscenities for two hours without even swinging within six feet of each other. Bonnaducci wins a split decision, after which Osmond claims he "was robbed." The follow-up card, pitting Greg Brady against Ernie from "My Three Sons," is only moderately successful.
In response to the senseless Long
COLUMNIST
SCOTT
AGN
Island Rail Road Massacre, Surgeon General Joycelyn Elders calls for "safer guns and safer bullets." Weeks later, Elder's plan shows visible results as a Chinese student from the "Committee for Pulling Dramatic Stunts to Get on TV" attacks Britain's Prince Charles with a handgun produced by Nerf Toys, Inc.
In 1988, Michael Jackson turned down a merchandising promotion peddled to him by a practicing dentist. Strangely, charges surface this year that the dentist's son was molested by Jackson at his personal estate, although the man can produce no evidence. A class-action lawsuit is filed against Jackson who, claiming his innocence, settles out of court for a sum of $11 million. At a press conference later, reporters express their consternation over Jackson's ability to perform such intricate turns, twists and gyrations on stage while apparently lacking a backbone.
To "get a jump" on freshmen planning to enter KU next year, the math department prints up several grade cards with failing grades for Math 002 and mails them to area high school seniors. (Just kidding, I think.)
ly influenced by "Jurassic Park," sign longtime veterans Dave "Hendu" Henderson, Steve "Bye-Bye" Balboni and Gary "God, I Need a Cool Nickname" Gaetti to one-year contracts. General Manager Herk Robinson refuses to comment on speculation that all three signees are collecting Social Security.
In a stroke of advertising genius that only could be described as *cost-*
ing $900,000 each half-minute," Lays Chips employs former Vice President Dan Quayle for a Super Bowl spot. Quayle's brilliant performance entails pulling "a potatoe chipe" out of the bag and eating it, which is arguably more than he accomplished in his four years at the helm of the Senate.
Finally, in a strange twist on the traditional Groundhog day festivities, Pennsylvania's "Punxsutawney Phil" rises from his snug bed, rubs his weary eyes, pokes out of his cozy little hole and is immediately beaten up by Tonya Harding's bodyguards.
I think it can be ascertained from these stories alone that 1994 will be quite a year for Unique News Developments. By "unique" I mean stories that, if you hear one more word about you, are going to hurl several blunt objects at the television set. Aim for Geraldo's nose.
Scott Agin is a Topeka sophomore in jour nallam.
KANSAN STAFF
The Kansas City Royals, apparent-
BEN GROVE, Editor
LISA COSMILLO, Managing editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
BILL SKETT Systems coordinator
BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator
JUSTIN GARBERG Business manager
JENNIFER BLOWEY Retail sales manager
Editors
Asst Managing Editor...Dan England
Assistant to the editor...J.R. Clairborne
News...Kristi Fogler, Katie Greenwald
Todd Sellert
Editorial...Colleen McCain
Nathan Glon
Campus Neal Dollom
Sports...David Dorsey
Photo...Douse Hesse
Features...Sara Bennett
Wire...Allison Lipper
Freelance...Christina Laue
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 Texas at Austin are required.
business staff
Campus sales mgr ... Jason Eberly
Regional Sales mgr ... Troy Tairwater
National Sales mgr ... Robin King
Special Sessions mgr ... Shelley Kotter
Production mgr ... Luke Guth
Gretchen Koerthleinbrig
Marketing director ... Shannon Kelly
Creative director ... John Canton
Classified mgr ... Kelly Connelys
Tearehats mgr ... Wing Chan
Guest columns should be typed, double-space and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer Flint Hall.
Government should work to approve drug RU-486
If it's OK for a woman to go to England to take the French abortion pill, what's stopping the United States from letting it in?
More than anything, it appears to be politics — and the typically American L-fears: litigation and liability. Developed in France, the drug was approved for use there six years ago and is licensed in Britain and Sweden with strict rules not to administer it to non-residents — until now.
NATIONAL PERSPECTIVES
On Feb. 16, British authorities decided to allow a clinic to offer RU-486 to women from other countries. This is an indication that the United States is slow on the uptake with a drug that could transform the way women get abortions and could eventually make the procedure quicker, cheaper and less painful.
For now, though, an American woman who wants to use RU-486 — which basically induces a miscarrage — must pay $500 in England and pay for her round-trip ticket there. She also has to stay at least a week to ensure the drug has done its work. All this can add up, clearly making it unaffordable and impractical for most American women who have little extra time or money.
The government should work harder to bring RU-486 into this country.
Although the pill route sounds unpleasant, it is less so than surgery. And ultimately, it should be up to a woman to decide which procedure she wants. She cannot make such a decision if with only one alternative.
Once the Food and Drug Administration has thoroughly investigated it and found it safe, the French abortion pill should be allowed into the United States. With Bill Clinton in the White House and a Health and
The Daily Gazette Schenectady, N.Y.
Human Services secretary committed to abortion rights, the move to import the pill soon should speed up considerably.
Hiring Limbaugh is like sucking bitter lemons
*If you can't please 'em, offend 'em.
That's what Florida's State Citrus Commission must have figured by hiring -wing whiner Rush Limbaugh to promote orange juice.
Limbaugh's tattness apparently isn't going down well with some consumers. The Florida chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People is threatening to boycott the homegrown product as long as he promotes it. The National Organization of Women is mulling a national protest.
The group that fired representative Anita Bryant for moonlighting as a gay-rights basher has hired Mr. Insensitivity himself.
Maybe his legions of "dittioheads" can make up for juice revenues lost from these "insignificant protesters," as he calls them. The protesters will not look so insignificant if they are joined by "environmental wackos," "feminazis," liberals, animal lovers, Clinton Democrats and others Limbaugh revels in insulting.
The State Citrus Commission's claim that it never expected such a fuss is incredible. This group has experience with fusses. Not only did it fire Bryant in 1980, but it canned actor Burt Reynolds last year for his sour divorce from Loni Anderson.
For the sake of Florida citrus growers, it should be ditto soon for Limbaugh.
The Hartford Courant Hartford, Conn.
2
CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, February 28,1994
5
Forum focus: Rebuild the African-American family
By Gennifer Trail Kansan staff writer
OVERLAND PARK — In September, about three-fifths of the children in the Kansas Social and Rehabilitation Services were African-American, according to a study by the KU School of Social Welfare.
This was the basis on which about 100 social welfare students and alumni discussed "Family Permanence: The African-American Child at Risk." The forum was held on Friday at the Regents Center.
Social and Rehabilitation Services is a state program that cares for children who are not receiving proper care in the home. Social workers either can give in-home assistance, assign children to foster care or find adoptive parents for the children.
Lemuel Kimes, coordinator of the forum and assistant to the dean of the school, said that a goal of family permanence is to reunite African-American children in the program with their biological parents. He said that another goal is to increase the number of African-American adopting parents.
The panelists, from the University of Kansas and the field of social welfare, said they supported these ideas.
Harold Washington, assistant professor of social welfare, said that an increase in adoptions by African Americans could occur if social workers were more knowledgeable of African-American culture.
"African-American families very much believe in adopting informally within their families," he said. "We need to build on this strength."
Alonzo Owens, recruiter for Black Adoption Program and Services, also said he encouraged the need to increase African-American adoptions by African-American parents.
"The need to increase adoptions is very severe," he said. "More than 600,000 kids are in foster care in the U.S. Three-fourths are African-American. And Black boys, aged 2 to 17, stay in foster care longer than any other group."
Owens said that social workers
need to work at the origin of the problem by educating parents.
"When parents are empowered children are better," he said. "S'ht up, get out of my face, I don't want to hear it." Parents say this. Disrespectful behaviors are learned by kids. Parents have got to model and teach love and respect."
Vonzella Bryant, research assistant in the school, said that social workers needed to work as a team to improve life for African Americans.
"I'm pushing cooperation and organization," she said. "Social workers need to get together and say, 'This is what we want.' For example, if we advocate better housing, we need to talk to the people who allocate government money."
Kimes said that he hoped the forum would make a difference in the daily work of social workers. *
"People working in the field on a day-to-day basis are frustrated," he said. "We hope to give them some tools and inspiration to make a difference for African-American children."
Med Center relief plans set to fly
By Ashley Schultz Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
KANSAS CITY, Kan. — About 150 benefactors mingled within the sights and sounds of the Republic of Kyrgyzstan Thursday night as they kicked off efforts to get a medical airlift to the country.
But the one evening was the result of months of work.
The gathering at the University of Kansas School of Medicine combined fund raising with a press conference and crafts fair. The airlift project is being coordinated by the Med Center and Heart to Heart International, an Alathe-based relief organization.
"A public university, certainly one such as the University of Kansas, does not serve its state or its nation if it does not strive to understand the world," he said.
Chancellor Gene Budig said Kyrgyzstan offered the University an international opportunity.
The participation of Heart to Heart and the University will mean life to the people of Kyrgyzstan, said Roza Otunbayeva, Kyrgyz ambassador to the United States.
"My small country today is in great trouble." Otunbaveva said.
Kyrgyzstan is struggling under the pressures of a newborn free-market economy, Otunbayeva said. But despite shortages such as the ones experienced in hospitals, the Kyrgyz are eager to make their new democracy succeed, she said.
Fred Holmes, professor of medicine, is responsible for the involvement of both the Med Center and Heart to Heart in Kyrgyzstan. He saw the medical shortages in Kyrgyzstan when he visited with his wife, Grace, a professor of preventive medicine, to set up a personnel exchange with the republic.
blessed from the very beginning," said Holmes.
"There are some enterprises that are
Holmes said he was warned that getting a hold of the Kyrgyz Minister of Health could be difficult and might take several attempts. An assistant fluent in Russian made the call.
"We said, 'Here's the number, go for it,' Holmes said. "Alexander reached out and touched someone — the first time, direct dial, he got the Minister himself."
But initial contact with Heart to Heart was not so successful.
The first time around, Holmes was told that the organization probably could not help the Med Center help Kyrgyzstan, said organization founder Gary Morsch.
But shortly thereafter, Morsch was discussing objectives in the former Soviet Union with members of the State Department in Washington. Kyrgyzstan came up again, and a partnership was born.
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For general admission tickets, call the KU box offices (Murphy: 913/864-3982, Lied: 913/864-ARTS); KU student tickets are available through the SUA Office, Kansas Union; public $3, students and senior citizens $2; VISA/MasterCard accepted for phone orders.
The KU Bands are partially funded by the KU Student Senate Activity Fee.
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UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
D+E=G
1. 单项选择题
A. A. 2023年1月,某地实现人均纯收入4500元,居民可支配收入4800元。
B. B. 2023年1月,某地实现人均纯收入4600元,居民可支配收入4900元。
C. C. 2023年1月,某地实现人均纯收入4700元,居民可支配收入5000元。
D. D. 2023年1月,某地实现人均纯收入4800元,居民可支配收入5100元。
---
A
Three actors watch the production of "You Are What You Eat" from backstage.
Quiet backstage moments prove that there is more to Rock Chalk Revue than the performance.
WAITING IN THE WINGS
PETER MASON
Matthew Reiss, second-year law student and member of the improvisational comedy group Single White Men, horses around to develop ideas before the act. The group performed between shows.
LAMBDA BROTHERS
Kevin Downs, Lawrence senior and member of a cappella group Eight Men Out, chats with Marnie Dodson, Amarillo, Texas, senior. Dodson played the Kidney in "Does Antibody Know?" Eight Men Out sang between acts.
Colonel Cranium, played by Jay Ruf, Overland Park senior, waits to go on stage for the grand finale, while Megan Carson and Kristin Knightley, Wichita freshmen, visit. Ruf performed in "Does Antibody Know?" Carson and Knightley were in "You Are What You Eat".
CAM
Stephanie Sears, Manhattan sophomore, checks to see that all the actors are present for the performance of "Does Antibody Know?"
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, February 27, 1994
7
A year later, mother still defends Koresh
Acquittal of AFT murders finally justice, she says
The Associated Press
CHANDLER, Texas — A year ago, on a misty Monday morning, the mother of doomsday prophet David Koresh returned to her East Texas home and found a chilling message.
"They shot me and I'm dying," Koresh said in a call recorded on his mother's answering machine. "But I'll be back real soon, OK?"
Koresh, born Vernon Howell, did in fact die at Mount Carmel, the Branch Davidian compound outside Waco, but not until fire engulfed the compound, 51 days after the Feb. 28 gun battle that left him wounded and 10 others dead
A year after the shootout, Bonnie Haldeman still defends her son.
She insists the raid on the cult compound was a travesty rivaled only by the murder trial of 11 cult members.
"Justice prevailed, in one sense," she said, after a jury acquitted them of murder and murder conspiracy charges Saturday in San Antonio.
The charges, she said, were a joke.
And, she maintains, the April 19 inferno that destroyed Mount Carmel could have been averted. Koresh and 78 of his followers died in the blaze, some by gunshots.
"I think if they had waited, two weeks at the most, every one of them would have come out of there," Haldeman said.
She said she was still upset that the FBI denied her requests to see her grandchildren or speak with her son during the standoff.
Could Haldeman have prevented the tragedy?
"I don't think I could have prevented it," she said after a long pause. "I do wish I had been given an opportunity to try."
Koresh, 33 when he died, proclaimed himself the son of God. Haldeman said his message was not all that unusual.
"Sure, he taught that the world was going to come to an end, that they would have a confrontation with the authorities some day," she said. "But anybody that belongs to the church and studies Revelations knows that's what is in the prophesy.
"He did not teach that the ATF was coming on Feb. 28, and we're going to have a shootout, and we're all going to die. He didn't say that."
Before the jury's verdict Saturday, Haldeman insisted none of the Davidians were conspirators.
"The conspirators were the FBI and the ATF, or whomever, that spent eight months — eight months — planning on going in there and killing those people," she said. "Why should these 11 people pay? These people lost their families and everything they have, and they're still having to sit in jail and go through this."
She said she felt sorry for the families of the slain agents.
"The officers were just doing their job," she conceded. "But I think it was wrong what they did, what our government did to us."
Haldeman was at home alone and watching television on April 19 when Mount Carmel went up in flames after the FBI used armored vehicles to punch holes in the walls.
She realized that her son, her daughter-in-law, Rachel, her three grandchildren and some of her dearest friends were dying or dead.
Arafat: Israel not tough enough
TUNIS, Tunisia — Seeking to capitalize on the worldwide outcry over the Hebron mosque massacre, Yasser Arafat said yesterday that Israel's pledge to crack down on Jewish extremists was not enough and demanded international protection for the Palestinians.
The Associated Press
The Palestine Liberation Organization leader left the door open for resuming peace talks with Israel, despite pressures to quit in protest over the slaying of 39 worshipers on Friday.
But he and top aides said that if the talks resumed, the focus would shift to the need for removing 144 Jewish settlements before the implementation of the Sept. 13 Palestinian self-rule accord.
Friday's bloodbath plunged Israel and the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip into chaos. By yesterday, the death toll from the massacre and subsequent rioting had climbed to 65, with about 360 wounded.
The Israeli Cabinet yesterday ordered the arrest of Jewish extremist leaders and pledged to disarm hard-core settlers in a crackdown designed to lure the Palestinians back to the negotiating table.
But Arafat said the measures were "hollow and superficial."
"These are empty decisions which have no relation with the seriousness of the crime or with the
He renewed his rejection of Israeli claims that a lone, mentally unstable extremist was responsible for the massacre. He said a "gang of settlers" carried out the shooting and army soldiers later opened fire on the worshippers.
basis of resolving it" Arafat said.
The Israeli Cabinet decisions, which also included a pledge to release hundreds of Palestinian prisoners, were designed to absolve the government of any responsibility, Arafat said.
"Why didn't the Cabinet say anything about the involvement of some elements of the Israeli army in the killing?" he asked.
"These elements not only let the criminals flee the scene, but they opened fire on our people who were trying to take the injured to the hospitals or came to see their dead," Arafat said.
Unless the U.N. Security Council "takes concrete decisions to provide international protection for the Palestinians, the whole peace process will be in jeopardy," he said.
Israel has vehemently rejected stationing peacekeepers in the territories.
Asked if he accepted President Bill Clinton's call for resuming the peace negotiations in Washington, Arafat said the PLO leadership would meet yesterday and today to decide on the issue. Arafat has recalled his chief delegates from peace forums in Cairo, Paris and Washington to discuss Clinton's call.
Arafat's credibility among his own people has been on the decline because of delays in implementing the Israel-PLO accord on self-rule, which was to take effect Dec. 13, 1993. Many Arabs are opposed to the peace process entirely.
Faisal Hussein, a leading PLO official in the West Bank, complained that despite Palestinian warnings that the settlements were a potential powder keg, Israel had been looking for ways to keep the settlers in the occupied territories.
"If anyone would like to talk about the continuation of the peace talks, first he must know that the matter of the settlements must be the priority and on the agenda immediately," Husseini said.
The Hebron massacre "proved there is no way to have peace and settlements together," he said.
But, he said, "There are extremist elements within the Israeli army and within the government, especially in Hebron, that try to abort the peace process."
Jibril al-Rejeib, Arafat's security adviser for the West Bank and Gaza Strip, said in Tunis that the PLO leadership would "commit a grave mistake if it ignores the national mood of outrage" and returned to the peace talks.
Bomb rips through Lebanese church as worshipers line up for Communion
The Associated Press
JOUNIEH, Lebanon — A bomb exploded beneath the altar of a Maronite Catholic Church yesterday as hundreds of worshippers lined up to take Communion. At least nine people were killed and more than 30 were wounded, police and witnesses said.
Four more unexploded bombs were found in the church organ after the blast, Interior Minister Bishara Merhejsaid.
off the walls, benches broke into pieces and shredded bible pages flew through the air.
Pools of blood covered the floor of the Notre Dame de la Deliverance church in the port city of Jounieh, survivors said.
A 4-year-old girl was among the dead. The priest leading prayers, Father Antoine Sfeir, was wounded. Ambulances rushed the victims to hospitals, and troops sealed the area.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility, and investigators have not established the motive or identified the culprits, district police chief Brig. Gen. Rafik Hassan said.
An Associated Press reporter who saw the explosion said the bomb went off as worshippers lined up before the altar table to take Communion during morning Mass. Churchgoers screamed as icons fell
"I think the aim is to disrupt government efforts to improve security conditions in Lebanon." he said.
Lebanese Information Minister Michel Samaha, a Greek Catholic, claimed the attack was part of an Israeli "plot whose execution began with the massacre at the Ibrahim mosque in Hebron." Thirty-nine Muslims were killed in the attack Friday by a Jewish settler.
"It is not a coincidence that whenever Israel finds itself isolated it resorts to such harsh actions," Samaha said, but he gave no details to support his claim.
The explosion took place in the Zoqu Mikael neighborhood of Jounieh, 12 miles north of Beirut. Jounieh is the key stronghold of the Maronite community, Lebanon's largest Christian denomination.
The blast came as Lebanon prepares for a visit from Pope Paul John II in May, the first ever to Lebanon by a Roman Catholic pontiff.
Lebanon's 1 million Maronites, who had dominated the country since its 1943 independence from France, were the main losers in the Arab League-brokered peace treaty that ended the civil war in 1898. The act forced them to share power equally with the Muslims, who make up a 55 percent majority of Lebanon's population of 4 million.
I
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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From Tuesday, March 1 thru Friday March 4, "vouchers" for the lecture will be available for KU students, faculty, and staff, one per KUID, on a first-come basis, at the SUA box office, Level 4, Kansas Union. If any vouchers remain, they will be made available to the general public from Monday, March 7, until 5:00 p.m. Tuesday, March 8. Each voucher will be worth one ticket to the lecture, and these tickets will be given, in exchange for the vouchers, at the Lied Center, from 7:00 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. on the night of the lecture. The vouchers become invalid as of 8:30 p.m., after which time, all remaining tickets will be given, at the Lied Center, on a first-come basis. For more information call 864-3477.
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Critics decry Kansas statute of limitations on molestation
WICHITA — When Debora Lyon was 6 years old, her stepfather started molesting her, and he did it over and over until Lyon's mother divorced him.
The Associated Press
Once he was gone, Lyon told her mother what had happened. But her mother kept quiet, afraid that going to the police would hurt her daughter more.
Lyon wanted him punished. By but the time she was an adult and felt confident enough to report the abuse, it was too late. The statute of limitations had long since run out.
Lyon, 28, now married with a daughter of her own and living in Derby, is still angry. She does not see why she cannot prosecute him now.
"I have no idea why they even want to put a limit on it," she said. "If there was a crime done, I think they should be punished for it."
report abuse, they say, especially when it comes at the hands of a family member. In some cases, children repress any memory of the abuse and do not recall it until years later in therapy.
Dozens of victims like Lyon, as well as psychologists and therapists who work with molestation victims, say Kansas' statute of limitations in such cases is much too short. Victims younger than 16 have five years to report sexual abuse, meaning a child abused at age 6 must report it by age 11.
They want the statute abolished or at least broadened so adults who were victimized as children have a second chance to report the crime.
Children are often too fragile to
At least 20 states have revised their statutes within the past few years to help victims who are afraid to report or who have repressed memories. Some states have no limit now. Some start the clock ticking when the child turns 18, and some time limits go into effect when the crime is first reported.
But other psychologists and many lawyers say the statute should not be changed. Opening the door to prosecution 10 or 20 years after the crime would be impractical and unfair, they say.
And they denounce the idea of adults with repressed memories coming forward after therapy to report crimes. They say no scientific evidence has proved that such memories are anything more than wild ideas implanted by overzealous therapists. The great danger, they say, is that innocent people would be accused.
There are no statistics on how many children in Kansas are sexually abused each year. Victims' advocates say nationally, as many as one in three children are molested by the age of 18. Critics believe the numbers are lower.
Lyon said she was stripped of her self-esteem. She said she felt as if he controlled her and she was powerless. And she did not know, while the abuse was allegedly happening, that it was against the law. Although her mother believed her — and in many cases that does not happen — her mother did not want to go to the police.
The House Judiciary Committee, which is considering changes in the law, has heard impassioned pleas from both sides.
report the abuse within five years of their 18th birthday.
Rep. Mike O'Neal, R-Hutchinson, chair of the committee, said it probably would endorse extending the time frame — but not as long as Lyon and others would like. Under the latest proposal, victims would be able to
"That's real common. Real common," said Barbara Walker, a social worker at Family Consultation Services in Wichita. "And oftentimes a child thinks they're going to be blamed for it, so therefore they don't come forward."
Cigarette ban may become reality if FDA classifies nicotine as drug
WASHINGTON — The Food and Drug Administration is considering classifying nicotine as a drug, a move that could allow it to ban most cigarettes and have "dramatic effects on our society."
The Associated Press
"When the smoke clears ... the FDA's fundamental position remains unchanged: Tobacco is not a food and is not a drug and as such, has special regulatory protection," said Tobacco Institute spokesman Thomas Lauria.
The FDA's statement Friday, a major shift in policy, sparked Congress to set hearings on the topic for next month. But the tobacco industry dismissed the talk as rhetoric.
That addictive quality and the intent could put nicotine under the legal definition of a drug that the FDA is required to regulate.
In a letter to anti-smoking advocates Friday, FDA Commissioner David Kessler said evidence was mounting that tobacco companies intended for people to become addicted to nicotine, and in some cases increased the amount of nicotine for that purpose.
products containing nicotine at levels that cause or satisfy addiction," Kessler wrote.
The FDA has not made a decision and asked Congress for direction. But if it does declare nicotine a drug, that would mean "ultimately, removal from the market of tobacco
Sen. Jeff Bingaman, D-N.M., immediately requested hearings. The Senate Labor and Human Resources Committee has tentatively scheduled them for Thursday.
Kessler's letter followed the surgeon general's report Thursday that labeled smoking an adolescent addiction rather than just an adult habit. Some 46 million American adults and at least 3.1 million teen-agers smoke.
More than 400,000 Americans die every year from cigarette smoking, not including deaths attributed to cigars, pipes and smokeless tobacco, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Last year it calculated that every cigarette steals seven minutes from a smoker's life.
Tobacco is currently regulated to some degree by a hodgepole of federal agencies.
The Coalition on Smoking or Health, composed of the American Heart, Cancer and Lung associations, had pressed the FDA to change its position, and praised Kessler's statement, but coalition chairman Scott Ballin said he didn't expect the FDA to ban cigarettes.
Kessler and other FDA officials declined to discuss the issue, but the letter indicated any change wouldn't come lightly.
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Lied Center Presents A New Directions Series Event
"The Kronos Quartet is rooted in the classical-quartet tradition, but its members look and sometimes sound more like escapees from the college-music circuit."--Rolling Stone Magazine
kronos
q u a r t e t
S
Jimmy Mackenzie
8:00 p.m. Tuesday, March 1, 1994 Lied Center
Murphy Hall Box Office (864-3982); and any Ticketmaster outlet (913) 234-4545 and (816) 931-3330; public $16 and $14. KU, Haskell and K-12 students $8 and $7, senior citizens and other students $15 and $13; KU student tickets can be purchased through the SUA office, Kansas Union; phone orders can be made using MasterCard or VISA; all seats reserved
Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office (864-ARTS);
Partially funded by the National Endowment for the Arts, Kansas Arts Commission, KU Student Senate Activity Fee, Friends of the Lied Series, and the Kansas University Endowment Association. Special thanks to this year's Very Important Partners: Hallmark Cards, Inc., Kief's Audio and Video, Payless ShoeSource and W.T.
Kemper Foundation, Commerce Bank Trustee.
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XIV
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, February 28, 1994
9
Needle exchange programs aim to stop spread of AIDS
Andrea Hamilton The Associated Press
NEW YORK — It's 5:30 p.m., the appointed time, and people start lining up. Slowly, the storefront office begins to fill. The room is thick with cigarette smoke, heat and the funky smell of dirty clothes and unwashed bodies.
Business is conducted quickly, and conversation consists of a quiet "hello," "thank you" and "goodbye."
Jack sticks his needles into a red container for contaminated medical waste, and replenishes his supply at a table covered with new syringes, alcohol, condoms and paraphernalia for cooking drugs.
The homeless, 31-year-old man with stringy red hair has been shooting heroin since he was 12, and he's been coming to the needle exchange for about a year.
"I have AIDS, and I don't want to give it to nobody else," he says. "I don't want to kill someone just because I want to party."
There are more than 200,000 intravenous drug users in New York City, and about 50 percent of them are infected with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS.
It is the highest HIV infection rate in the world among drug addicts, and when people like Jack do not share needles, other addicts, spouses, lovers and unborn children are spared.
At least 37 cities have needle exchange programs, including New York, San Francisco, Tacoma, Wash, New Haven, Conn., and the college town of Boulder, Colo. More are being established all the time.
A growing number of studies indicates that needle exchange programs are slowing the spread of AIDS. And maybe most importantly, supporters say, the studies show there is no proof that needle exchange increases drug use.
Supporters want the federal government to lift a ban against funding the programs, most of which now receive county, state or foundation money.
But they face opposition from people like Herbert Kleber, a deputy of federal drug czar William Bennett during the Bush administration and now a professor of psychiatry at Columbia University.
Kleber said that stopping the spread of HIV through needle exchange is laudable but that the main goal should be to get people off drugs.
"I have no problem with local volunteer organizations doing needle exchange," he said. "But I don't think the government should be involved, or pay for it. I think that's exactly the wrong message to send."
Supporters say more drug treatment would be great, but meanwhile, people are spreading HIV and dying.
"This is a completely preventable epidemic," said Brian Weil, a referral specialist with the Bronx-Harlem Needle Exchange, one of five programs in New York City. "It's not realistic to expect everyone to quit using drugs and go into treatment. It just doesn't work that way."
The way it works can be best described through the story of Dan, a first-time visitor to the Lower East Side needle exchange.
The 27-year-old began injecting heroin after he lost a leg four years ago after being hit by a truck while
riding his motorcycle.
The heroin dulled the pain of his injuries. Dan is a locksmith, but he has never returned to work full time. He says he lives off his insurance settlement and his disability pay.
"You pay about $2 to $3 for a new one," he said. "But it's a hassle. There isn't always someone at a set location selling them."
New York is one of nine states where syringes cannot be sold without a prescription. Before he heard about the needle exchange, Dan, like many addicts, was either sharing needles with others or buying them on the street, sometimes used, sometimes new.
In discussions about needle exchange, advocates raise the specter of paying for needles now or paying for AIDS later, and they cite New York City as their worst nightmare.
The lifetime cost for a person with AIDS is estimated at $102,000, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Boulder began its program in 1989 after health officials learned that three couples and a single man were HIV positive.
"We tried to get ahead of the game," said Anne Goulofille, the adult health program manager with the Boulder County Health Department.
Guilfoile said no one in the exchange program has become HIV positive. She estimates the rate of infection among the city's 800 intravenous drug users at 2 percent.
"Look at New York, where it is so out of control," she said. "We're trying to do prevention at a point where we can still win."
THE NEWS in brief
Weigand dies, leaves behind him a legacy of real estate in Wichita
WICHITA — Nestor Weigand Sr., who turned a father-and-son business into one of the largest real estate firms in south central Kansas, died Friday at age 86.
Funeral services are scheduled for 11 a.m. Tuesday at Church of the Magdalen.
Weigand graduated from Cathedral High School in Wichita and attended Notre Dame University before returning to Wichita without a degree. He joined the firm in 1927.
Weigand once was described as a "walking encyclopedia for real estate in the Wichita-core area." Until his death, which was caused by complications from a stroke three weeks ago, he served as chairman of the board of J.P. Weigand & Sons.
Weigand also is survived by his sons, Nestor Jr. and Michael, of Wichita; two daughters, Joan Sargent of Wichita and Kathryn Greenleaf of Liberal; a brother, Gene Weigand of Wichita; 13 grandchildren and one great-grandchild.
---
"This was just a mechanism to get her into the system," police Sgt. Bob Disbennett said yesterday. "We don't anticipate her going to jail.
Girl admits to killing cousin
"They're not here to crucify a 12-year-old who committed a crime when she was 3," he said. "This is a situation where they try to get this girl the help she needs."
ALAMEDDING, WA
The girl admitted to the committing the crime on Friday and turned herself in on Saturday to face the murder charge. The charge was placed under a category of juvenile delinquency.
CINCINNATI — A 12-year-old girl turned herself in for the nine-year-old death of a 13-month-old cousin and has been charged with murder so she can get help, police said yesterday.
The girl, whose name was not released, was 3 years old at the time of Lamar Howell's death.
Police and the Hamilton County coroner originally had determined that the boy accidentally drowned in a bucket of bleach and water on July 22, 1984, while playing with his cousin.
Police believe they know the motive, but would not discuss it, Disbennett said. He also would not say why the girl decided to go to police.
A hearing was scheduled in Hamilton County Juvenile Court for today.
The judge could dismiss the case, require counseling, commit her or take other actions, Disbennett said.
Kids to design new stamps
WASHINGTON — America's youngsters are being invited to design a set of four postage stamps focusing on the environment.
The U.S. Postal Service and McDonald's Corp. are co-sponsoring the stamp design contest. The post office said it would use the designs on stamps to be issued in 1995.
The four winning designs will be printed on nearly 200 million first-class stamps next year, said William Henderson of the Postal Service.
The contest opens March 4, and entries must be received by April 30. The contest is open to children ages 8 to 13 who are legal residents of the United States.
Enter forms will be available at post offices and McDonald's restaurants and also will be included in environmental information packets being sent to elementary and middle schools across the country.
Stamp designs must focus on ways to protect, preserve or restore the environment.
The four winners will be selected from a group of 102 finalists. The winners each will receive an additional $3,000 in savings bonds and a trip for three to Washington to attend a stamp ceremony.
Individuals also can get a contest entry form by sending a stamped, self-addressed envelope to Stamp Rules, P.O. Box 698, Gibbstown, N.J., 08027-0689.
Compiled by The Associated Press.
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In my opinion...
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As a result of the efforts of many students saving the furniture and art objects while providing invaluable service to the firefighters during the Kansas Union fire on April 20,1970 insurance carriers decided to present the Kansas Union with a gift. The Student Union Activities Board will again choose a student deserving of being awarded a scholarship from the interest on this gift.
Qualifications:
- Must be a regularly enrolled KU student this spring semester and be enrolled for the fall '94 and spring '95 semesters.
- Must have demonstrated service to the university and/or the Lawrence community.
- Scholarship, financial need, and references will be a minimal consideration in application reviews.
Applications:
Available in the SUA Office, Kansas Union,
864-3477. Must be received by 5:00 p.m.
Wednesday, March 16 in the SUA Office.
Interviews will be held on Tuesday, April 5.
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- Must have been an active member of the Student Union Activities organization.
Qualifications:
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Nominations accepted up to March 16, 1994. Forms available at the SUA Office, Kansas Union, 864-3477.
10
Wednesday, January 15, 1992
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SPORTS EDITOR
DAVID
DORSEY
Merger means more money new rivalries
The transformation of the Big Eight Conference to the Big 12 means at least two things: more money and new competition for Kansas athletics.
With the possible exception of men's basketball, the restructured league will bolster the competition and add excitement to the Jayhawks' athletic programs.
Two years from now, Texas, Texas Tech, Texas A&M and Baylor likely will join Oklahoma and Oklahoma State in a southern division, and Kansas, Kansas State, Missouri, Colorado, Iowa State and Nebraska will form a northern division.
Kansas athletic director Bob Frederick, who arrived in town Friday night after spending five days at the Olympics in Lillehammer, Norway, said the larger league would benefit Kansas athletics.
"I'm really excited about it," Frederick said before the tipoff of the Kansas-Colorado basketball game. "I think it will help all of our sports."
Because of Frederick's position on the NCAA Division I men's basketball committee, he was invited to be a guest of CBS at the Olympics. CBS, which televised the games, also televises the NCAA basketball championships.
During his time in Norway, Frederick saw U.S. speed skater Bonnie Blair win one of her gold medals. But he also spent a lot of his time on conference calls with other officials about the impending changes in the Big Eight.
"We've been talking about it for three weeks," Frederick said. "A television contract right now is our No.1 priority. All we know is that several networks are interested."
Betsy Stephenson, Kansas associate athletics director, said that the Big 12 would improve most, if not all, of the non-revenue sports. She also said that television possibilities existed for the non-revenue sports.
"People are understandably focusing on the revenue aspect of it, because that's what has driven it," Stephenson said. "But the opportunities for our sports will expand with the addition of those four schools."
Each of the four schools has enjoyed recent success in non-revenuesports. Consider the facts:
Texas Tech is the defending national champion in women's basketball.
Baylor has one of the top volleyball teams in the nation.
Texas women's tennis is the No.1 team in the nation.
Texas A&M and Texas baseball consistently are ranked in the Top 10.
The only downside of the four Texas schools appears to be in men's basketball, and Kansas coach Roy Williams did not sound nearly as excited as Frederick about the merger.
"Right off the top of my head, I don't know how it's going to be better for us basketball-wise," Williams said. "We're already pretty strong in basketball. But if it helps our athletic department, then it should help us, too."
Williams should not be concerned with the competitive aspects of adding the Texas schools. None of them are ranked in the Top 25, and none of them made it to post-season play last season:
Texas, which made the NCAA Tournament for five consecutive years, finished last season 11-17 and watched March Madness at home on television.
The Texas Tech Red Raiders have not made the NCAA Tournament since 1986.
Texas A&M is coming off an NCAA probationary period and finished its previous two seasons with 6-22 and 10-17 records.
Baylor finished last season 16-11, the only winning record of the four schools.
Only Baylor and Texas have ever reached the Final Four. Baylor last reached the Final Four in 1950. Texas did it in 1947 and 1943.
But the four basketball teams can prepare and improve their programs in time for the 1996-07 season. Meanwhile, the Kansas sports can gear up for their own increase in competition.
Kansas dominates court at K-State
For decades, fans have relished the rivalries between Kansas, Missouri and Kansas State. Perhaps 40 years from now, they'll be talking about the intensity of the Kansas Jayhawks-Baylor Bears rivalry.
Team preps for Big Eight tournament
By Matt Siegel
Kansan sportswriter
MANHATTAN — Kansas State may have come into Saturday's game with a 9-2 home record, but it was the No. 12 Kansas women's basketball team who owned the court Saturday night. The Javahawks defeated K-State 65-54.
"We really ran the ball effectively," junior forward Angela Aycock said. "We tried to wear them down. We knew that they didn't sub too many players and that we play 9 or 10 players."
The victory gave Kansas its fifth consecutive 20-win season as it improved to 20-4 overall and 11-3 in the Big Eight Conference. K-State fell to 12-13 and 5-9. The Jayfawks locked up the No. 2 seed at the Big Eight Tournament, which starts Saturday in Salina.
Kansas coach Marian Washington said tonight's game would give the Jayhawks a good chance to fine tune some things as well as to recognize center Lisa Tate, guard Ericka Muncy and guard Michelle Leathers, all seniors who will be playing in their last home game for the Jayhawks. Tate said that it would be an emotional game for the seniors and that the team was looking forward to the tournament.
Against K-State, in the Jayhawks' final regular-season conference game, Kansas used a 19-1 scoring run in the first half to put away the Wildcats.
At 5:47 in the first half Kansas led 28-27. But then things changed — drastically.
After Kansas had run off four consecutive points, the Wildcats tried to end the momentum by giving the ball to one of their go-to players, junior forward Shanele Stires. Stires tried to take the ball inside but Aycock blocked her shot, grabbed the ball and hurled it down the court to Muncy. The senior guard caught up to the ball near K-State's end line, momentarily lost the ball but somehow managed to collect the ball and find freshman guard Angela Halbleib for a lauvn.
The Kansas defense limited the Wildcats to 35.7 percent shooting in the first half, while the Jayhawks shot 58.1 percent from the field. Aycock made eight of 16 field goals.
"It was just a really good shooting night for me," Aycock said. "During that run I was in a zone. Some players just get to where they can shoot with their eyes closed, and that happened in the first half."
Aycock finished with a game-high 17 points. Four Kansas players scored in double figures.
"If you take away the way we shot the basketball, we did things we had to do to win," Agler said. "There were four things that I told my team we needed to do to win this game. We only had 10 turnovers. We only gave them 11 offensive rebounds, and we kept them off the free throw line. The thing that we didn't do a good job of, because we missed shots, was transition baskets. We did three of the four, but you have to do all four."
Washington said that at every time-out the Jayhawks talked about how to stop K-State's top two players, DeCamp and Stires. The two players shot a combined seven for 30 Kansas State coach Brian Agler said that the Wildcats did some good things but that they were not enough.
Although the Wildcats managed to cut a 20-point Kansas lead to 11 in the
Player fgm/fga ftm/fta tp
Stires 4-13 8-10 17
Holzman 1-2 1-2 3
Larson 0-0 0-0 0
O'Neal 3-9 0-2 6
DeCamp 3-17 6-8 14
Graftan 3-5 0-0 6
Decker 2-5 0-0 6
Neal 1-2 0-0 2
Pollock 0-1 0-0 0
Totals 17-54 15-22 54
KANSAS STATE (12-13, 5-9)
Kansas 65, Kansas State 54
KANSAS (20-4.11-3)
Player fgm/fga ftm/fta tp
Aycock 8-16 0-1 17
Trapp 5-7 1-1 11
Tate 4-6 3-4 11
Sampson 4-5 3-4 11
Muncy 2-4 0-0 4
Slatter 0-1 0-0 0
Halbleib 2-7 1-1 5
Dixon 3-8 0-1 6
Canada 0-1 0-0 0
Leathers 0-1 0-0 Ø
Thalmann 0-1 0-0 0
Totals 28-57 8-12 65
Halftime Kansas 41, Kansas State 28, 3-point goals Kansas State 51-7 (Decamp 2, Decker 2, Stires 3, 1-O'Neal 0), Kansas 1-7 (Aycock 1-2, Hailebelle 0, Samp泉 0, Leather 0-1), Rebounds Kansas State 31 (Stires 5, Holzman 0, O'Neal 2), Kansas 40 (Tate 9), Assists Kansas State 13 (Holzman 3, Larson 3), Kansas 12 (Aycock 6), Total fours Kansas State 16, Attendance 2,000.
second half, they never could get within striking distance of the Jayhawks.
"They have been real tough at home," Washington said. "We knew we were coming in here facing a very confident ball club, and we had to do some things to make sure they didn't get on a roll."
A player who did not get on a roll was DeCamp, the 15th leading scorer in the nation. She averages 21.8 points a game but was stymied for most of the night and finished the game with 14 points, shooting 3 of 17.
Junior forward Alana Slatter, left, and senior center Lisa Tate, second from left, block the shot of Kansas State junior forward Shanele Stires as freshman guard Angie Halbleib, right, gets ready to pick up the ball.
52
30
"On my three-point shots, I got
James Wilcox / KANSAN
As for the upcoming conference tournament, Agler said the Jayhawks could be the team to beat.
fouled a couple of times," DeCamp said. "I should have took it to them. Instead I got my arm knocked off."
"I think both Kansas and Colorado are really good basketball teams," Agler said. "Kansas is a little bit more athletic. I think Kansas could be a better team than Colorado. I think they are capable of being as good as there is in the country.
Rebounds boost Jayhawks over Buffaloes, out of slump
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
For the No. 10 Kansas men's basketball team, "rebounding" was the catch phrase in its 106-62 victory against Colorado on Saturday at Allen Field House.
Not only did the Jayhawks rebound from a three-game losing streak, but they also set a new school record in the game with 72 team rebounds.
KANSAS
20
COLORADO
24
The victory improved Kansas' record to 22-6 and 7-5 in the Big Eight Conference. Colorado lost its fifth consecutive game and dropped to 10-14 and 2-10.
Kansas junior center Greg Ostertag said he was glad he could contribute to a new school record. Ostertag had 16 points, seven rebounds and seven blocked shots.
"Anytime you become a part of history at this school, it's an honor," he said.
The Jayhawks used a fast-paced offense that was jump-started by their defense in the first half. Kansas coach Roy Williams said he was pleased with how his team played.
"We did need it," he said. "If we can get the positive feelings back, I think that could be important to us."
Tom Leininger / KANSAN
Kansas senior guard Steve Woodberry attempts a shot over Colorado junior guard Donnie Bove in Allen Field House. The Jayhawks won Saturday's game 106-62.
Although Kansas started a bit slow, Williams said some long defensive rebounds helped get the Jayhawks rolling. At one point in the game, Kansas went on a 32-7 run.
“If we box out and keep them from second shots and beat the boards to death ourselves, I think that will be a huge factor in the game,” Williams said. “We out-rebounded them 72 to 29, and it was a big factor in the game.”
In one play during that run, Kansas freshman guard Jacque Vaughn took on a fast break. He faked a pass to freshman center Scot Pollard, who was to his left. Senior guard Steve Woodberry to his right. He jumped, faked a pass to Woodberry and finger-rolled a layup from 10 feet away, giving Kansas a 35-11 lead. The Jayhawks led at halftime 52-21.
Williams said that a key to the huge halftime lead was Kansas' defense against Colorado junior guard Donnie Boyce.It was a game where Kansas players came out of their shells somewhat. Six Jayhawks scored in double-figures, including Junior guard Greg Gurley's 19 points and Pollard's 18 points, both career highs. Gurley was the team's leading scorer and went five for five from the three-point line.
"That's the Greg Gurley we see everyday in practice," Scott said. "We were wondering when it was going to come out, and it came out today."
Kansas senior forward Richard Scott said he knew Gurley had the potential to score.
The scoring did not stop for the Jay- hawks in the second half, and the Buff.
"It's embarrassing." Golgart said. "It's like sitting in a dull class, and you can't leave. People are taking shots, and I don't know if it's for themselves or for the team.
faloes could never recover. Colorado sophomore guard Sande Golgart, who scored five points, said finishing the game was painful for the team.
Although Kansas won decisively, Williams said he was angry at a fan who wrote him a letter last week. Williams said the letter was from an Asian studies professor who asked if there would be a pep rally for students because Kansas had lost three consecutive games. The professor made reference to Nebraska's pep rally before its game against Kansas on
Wednesdav
The field house was 600, people shy of capacity for Saturday's game.
"It's a little discouraging." Williams said. "Nebraska's got a two-game losing streak. They have a pep rally at four o'clock in the afternoon, and their crowd is going absolutely crazy. We lose three in a row, and people are wondering what we're going to do for them.
"Our team's spoiled rotten, our coaching staff's spoiled rotten, and our fans are spoiled rotten. I love the students that were here. I do find it discouraging that we're spoiled so much that all of the sudden Kansas basketball is going down the tubes."
Great Scott, Sir Richard is back
Kansan sportswriter
Bv Garrv Fev
Kansas senior forward Richard Scott is back — sort of. Scott scored 18 points in 22 minutes of play in Kansas' 106-26 victory against Colorado Saturday at Allen Field House. It was his most productive output since the Southern Methodist game on Jan. 8.
Despite his offensive production, Scott said he still had not fully recovered. Scott injured his left shoulder in practice Jan. 24 before a game against Oklahoma State.
"Right now I'm getting a lot better," Scott said. "It's close, but not yet. There's still some things that I try to do that I can't do. I've got to do a lot with my right hand."
One thing Scott brings to the team is his leadership, whether he is in the game or not.
Kansas coach Roy Williams said Scott seemed to have played without any pain in the game. He wore a harness around his shoulder in practices earlier in the week but did not wear it during the game.
"It's been a busy
Scott said. "A lot of
the younger guys
were panicking. We
talked amongst
everybody and told
everybody to get
those feelings out."
Even when Scott was injured he rebounded. It was his scoring that Kansas missed. With 9:55 remaining in the game, Kansas's 6-foot-6 senior looked like the Richard Scott of old. Kansas freshman guard Jacque Vaughn took the ball on a fast break and found Scott underneath with a bounce pass.
He made the layup,
giving Karsasa 76-38
lead, and was fouled
in the process. After
COLORADO (10-14, 2-10)
Kansas 106, Colorado 62
Player fgm/fga ftm/fta tp
Jensen 0-5 2-2 2
Dean 5-13 2-3 12
Allen 1-10 3-4 6
Golgart 2-3 1-1 5
Boyce 10-32 6-8 29
Frandeen 2-3 0-0 4
Hefty 0-1 2-2 2
Williams 1-4 0-0 2
Totals 21-71 16-20 62
KANSAS (22-6.7-5)
Ballistics Rating Player fgm/fta tfm/fta tp
Vaughn 1-1 2-2 4
Woodberry 4-16 0-1 10
Richey 1-10 0-4 2
Scott 7-13 4-6 18
Ostertag 7-7 2-2 16
Pollard 5-9 8-12 18
Rayford 2-4 0-0 4
Gurley 6-6 2-2 19
Pearson 4-9 2-4 10
Williams 2-2 1-2 5
Whatley 0-2 0-2 0
Weichbrodt 0-1 0-0 0
Totals 39-80 21-32 106
Halftime Kansas 52, Colorado 21, 3-
point goals Kansas 4-19, Bingham 3-11,
Allen 1, Williams 0, Jensen 1, Hefty
0,川克斯 1, Gurley 5, Woodberry
2-8, Richey 1, Pearson 41).
Rebounds
29 (Boyce 8), Kansas 72 (Pollard
11).
Assists 7 (Boyce 2), Hefty
2), Williams 2), Kansas 22 (Vaughn)
7.
total fouls Kansas 20, Colorado 21. Attend-
ance 15, 200.
the play, Scott was his boisterous self, bumping chests with Vaughn and shouting to the Kansas bench.
Kansas junior center Greg Ostertag said Scott's presence was beneficial for the team.
"It helps a lot because with Richard we have a double threat on the inside," he said. "Peams have to worry about us again with Richard."
After Scott's injury, Kansas had lost four of its last eight games.
Scott said that although he was not yet at his best he was close to being healthy. With Scott hurting, Kansas has depended on senior guard Steve Woodberry. Woodberry and Ostertag are the only Kansas players besides Scott averaging more than 10 points a game.
"I'm coming back pretty good, pretty effective," Scott said. "I think about a week or two from now I'll be fine. Right now, all I want to do is keep playing and playing hard."
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, February 28, 1994
11
Kansas smashes way past Louisiana State
Victory lifts tennis team to 7-1 record
By Dan Lara
Special to the Kansan
After defeating No. 9 Mississippi recently, the No. 15 Kansas women's tennis team was worried about a let-down against unranked Louisiana State.
MARCUS JOHNSON
But those worries proved to be unnecessary as the Jayhawks beat the Tigers 8-1 Saturday at the Alvamar Racquet Club.
The Jayhawks lost only one of their nine matches and improved their record to 7-1.
Kansas freshman Amy Trytek returns the ball during her 6-1, 6-4 victory against Louisiana State's Margaret Sale. The Jayhawks won the meet 8-1.
"We are playing with a lot of confidence right now," Kansas coach Chuck Merzbacher said. "Louisiana State is really young, but we have more experience, and we're on a roll."
Louisiana State coach Tony Minnis said, "We played OK. It was great to play KU and see where we are. They are a top-10 team."
In No. 1 singles, junior Nora Koves defeated Nelly Pardo 6-3, 6-2, and
junior Rebecca Jensen won the No. 2 singles match against Suzana Rodríguez 6-2, 6-4.
In No. 3 singles, senior Mindy Weiner defeated Kirsty Llewellyn 6-2,6-0,
and senior Kim Rogers overcame a slow start to defeat Natalie Johnson in No. 4 singles 6-4,6-0.
"I always start pretty slow in my matches," Rogers said. "But I played pretty today and with a lot of confidence. It was just a matter of keeping focused and keeping the ball in play."
Merzbacher said that senior Abby Woods, who played in the No. 5 singles spot, turned in the team's best performance. Woods beat Elina Rocha 0-0, 6-1.
Freshman Amy Trytek played a strong first set then withstood a surge from Margaret Sale before beating her 6-1, 6-4 in the No. 6 singles.
"I played smart in the first set but then wanted to get the match over with in the second set because I felt sick," Trytek said. "I lost my poise on the court."
In No. 3 doubles, freshmen Chessa Bieri and Heather Heidel lost the only sets and match of the day for Kansas. They fell to Rocha and Llewellyn 6-1, 6-4.
- defeated Pardo and Cymantha Owen 6-2, 7-5. In No. 2 doubles, Woods and Rogers, who are ranked No.15 nationally in doubles, defeated Johnson and Rodriguez 6-4, 5-7, 6-1.
In No. 1 doubles action, Koves and Jensen - ranked No. 10 in the TIA toll
Kansas will look to build on its success Thursday at the Intercollegiate/United States Tennis Association National Team Indoors in Madison, Wis. The Jayhawks face Wisconsin at 2:30 p.m.
Wisconsin will prove to be a tough first round opponent, Merzbacher said. Last year, the Badgers beat No. 8 Arizona State at home.
"They're the home team, and they
have had a lot of good matches at home," he said. "We need to go out and have composure."
Kansas defeated Wisconsin last season 7-2.
Despite the home court advantage for Wisconsin, Kansas is ready, Rogers said.
"Even in our practices, everyone is
practicing tough and playing well," she said.
Kansas should beat Wisconsin if the Jayhawks play as well as they did against Louisiana State, Minnis said.
Kansas track shows progress in Big Eight
Should the Jayhawks prevail, they would play the winner of the match between Pepperdine and Duke, both of which are top-10 teams.
By Andrew Gilman
Kansan sportswriter
Although the Kansas track team had only two victories during Friday and Saturday's Big Eight Conference indoor meet, it scored well enough to capture a tie for second place on the women's side and a fourth-place finish for the men.
Nebraska won both the men's and women's competitions.
The lack of first-place winners did not discourage Kansas coach Gary Schwartz. He said that it was one of Kansas' better meets.
"We did extremely well," he said. "The kids worked hard for this, and they have a lot to be proud of."
Bazzoni, who approached each jump with a shout, was not completely satisfied with his efforts.
Senior John Bazzoni won the pole vault championship with a jump of 17.23/4, and junior Kristi Kloster ran the 800-meter in 2:09.20 to secure the victory.
Bazzoni's jump of 17-7 earlier this season provisionally qualified him for the NCAA meet, March 11-12 in Indianapolis.
Kloster, who took the lead in the 800 race right before the final lap, extended it all the way to the finish in recording her second-conference championship.
"I just had the little things go wrong," Bazzoni said after missing at 17-8 3/4. "My goals were to do better than this. I hit it once with the tooth and once with the chin. I give up," he said jokingly.
A provisional qualification does not guarantee that he will be competing, but it assures him that someone must better his mark for him not to go.
Kloster, who won the 1993 outdoor championship, gained a provisional qualification to the NCAA meet as well.
"I felt confident the whole time," she said. "I hung behind until I saw an opening and started to kick all out."
Although she admits that a trip to
NCAA's was in the back of her mind, Kloster said she was more concerned for the team.
"Earlier in the week I was thinking about nationals," she said. "But today, I was focusing on the team. I wanted to get some points for them."
Along with the winners there were many second-place finishers.
Kansas had six people who finished second, but none were as vocal about their finish as senior miler Michael Cox.
Cox, who placed ninth at nationals a year ago and won the conference championship as well, was edged by a tenth of a second by Iowa State senior Steve Green. Cox vowed revenge.
"I wasn't happy at all," he said. "I'll beat him next time, it doesn't matter where we are, I beat him. I wouldn't have been happy with anything but a win."
Cox's defeat in the mile came shortly after junior Melissa Swartz was passed on the last turn of the mile run and finished second with a time of 4:52.14.
"I have no excuses," she said. "I was thinking about the team and trying to finish in the top three. But, maybe next year."
Perhaps the biggest disappointment came from senior Harun Hazim.
Hazim, who finished third the last two years in the long jump at the indoor championships, failed to show up for the 55-meter dash and was disqualified from any further competition.
"There was a lack of communication," Schwartz said. "As the head coach I'm responsible for the misunderstanding. I compare it to not showing up for your own wedding. It's very disappointing."
On a brighter note, junior Natasha Shafer placed second in the 55-meter dash and fourth in the 200-meter run, behind freshman teammate Latanya Holloway.
"I was pleased that I was able to get second," Shafer said, after running a 7.09 in the 55-meter dash. "I thought I
Big Eight Indoor Championships
1. Nebraska 175
2. Kansas 88
Oklahoma 88
3. Colorado 81
4. Missouri 67
5. Iowa State 18
6. Oklahoma State 10
Men's results
1. Nebraska 143
2. Iowa State 119
3. Colorado 75
4. Kansas 73
5. Oklahoma 62
6. Missouri 35
7. Oklahoma State 19
Note: Kansas State did not compete as a team but as individuals.
Source: Kansan staff research KANSAN
ran well."
More scoring came from the women's triple jump. Kansas placed second, third, fifth and eighth in the event. Junior Cassandra Bryant-Wans, who finished second, said that the Kansas jumpers helped each other.
"I did not jump very well," she said. "But we were pumping each other up. That tells you a lot. It's consistency."
Bryant-Wans was talking about junior teammates Heather Schorling, third, Tarita Triplette, fifth, and Debbie Jacobs, eighth.
The women's improvement was also impressive. They scored 88 points, an improvement of 36.5 points from last year's 51.5.
"Overall, I'm pleased," he said. "We did better in some places, and so-so in others."
The men scored only 19.5 points and finished seventh last year, 53.5 points less than this year's 73 points.
The final results are substantially better than last year's indoor results.
These results satisfied Schwartz.
KANSAS
BIG 8 CHAMPIONSHIP
205
UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA
KANSAS
BIG 8 CHAMPIONSHIP
179
UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA
Justin Bickford/SPECIAL TO THE KANSAN
Senior Joe Pickett takes a hand-off from freshman Kerry Boize in the 4x400-meter relay. The 4x400 team placed third Saturday and provisionally qualified for the NCAA Championships.
Women's basketball signs four fledgling Jayhawks for next year
Keshana Ledet is a 5- foot -11-inch forward who attends Central Arizona College. Ledet averaged 14 points and 10 rebounds in her first year at Central Arizona and garnered NJCAA honorable mention All-America honors.
The Kansas women's basketball team has signed four recruits.
SPORTS in brief
Three of the players are high school seniors and the other is a junior college transfer.
Cynthia Hogg, a 6-foot-2-inch power forward, is from the same high school that produced junior forward Angela Aycock. Hogg was a freshman at Lincoln High School in Dallas when Aycock was a senior. Hogg averaged 22 points and 16 rebounds as a junior.
Tasha King, who plays at Harding High School in Memphis, Tenn., averaged 16 points, 5.8 rebounds and 5.3 steals a game and shot 51 percent from the field as a junior. She was named Memphis player of the year.
Koya Scott could replace senior center Lisa Tate. As a junior, Scott , a 6-foot-3-inch center, averaged 9 points and 12 rebounds a game. She was a first team all-district selection.
Kansas has a chance to sign up to three more players this spring.
Tennis team suffers narrow loss
The Kansas men's tennis team almost pulled off an upset against No. 15 Texas Christian, losing 4-3 Thursday night at the USTAITA Men's National Indoor College Championships in Louisville, Ky.
Although the Jayhawks lost the match, there were some bright spots for the Jayhawks. Sophomore Reid Slattery, ranked No. 22, upset Paul Robinson, the No.19 player in the nation, 6-2, 2-1, 6-7, Freshmen Tim Radoga and Trent Tucker also were victorious at the No.5 and 6 singles spot.
As for doubles play, the Jayhawks No. 3 tandem of junior Manny Ortiz and sophomore Victor Fimbres won, pushing their match winning streak to six.
Kansas is 10-2 this season in dual match competition. Both losses have been by the same score, 4-3.
The Jayhawks will play again March 4 against Wichita State at 6 p.m. in the e Alvamar Racquet Club in Lawrence.
Season opener rough for golfers
The Kansas men's golf team struggled in its season opener Friday and is currently in 15th place out of 18 teams in the Ron Smith/University of Florida Invitational in Tampa, Fla.
The Jayhawks trail Texas Christian, the overall leader, by 25 strokes.
Junior Tyler Shelton is leading the Jayhawks and is tied for 42nd place with a score of 77. Seniors Casey Brozek and Matt Gogel are tied for 53rd place. Jay Hepler a score of 80 for 76th place. Senior Jeff Moeller is in 89th place.
South Alabama is in first and second in individual positions.
Compiled from Kansan staff reports.
12
Monday, February 28, 1994
OLYMPICS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
'Magic Games' come to dazzling end
The Associated Press
LILLEHAMMER, Norway — This year's Winter Olympics were declared the "Magic Games," and few would disagree.
Trolls and sprites from Norway's foldore, and skiers and skaters from across the world took one last curtain call in the Lillehammer snow as the Olympics came to a dazzling end at closing ceremonies yesterday.
Fireworks burst over the illuminated skl jumps, torches lit up the hillsides and 40,000 spectators held aloft a twinkling sea of tiny flashlights, compensating for the snuffing out of the Olympic flame.
Juan Antonio Samaranch, president of the International Olympic Committee, called the people of Norway "the real winners of these magic Games."
1994 Winter Olympic Games
There were video clips of the Games' most memorable moments, a look ahead to 1998 and a remembrance of Sarajevo - the war-raveled host of the 1984 Winter Games.
The U.S. flag bearer was Dan Jansen, who was still savoring the gold medal he won here after failures in three previous Olympics.
As in the opening ceremonies on Feb. 12, the festiveness was muted briefly when Saranarch evoked the sufferings of Sarajevo.
"Let us hope that this truce — to which, in our very limited way we may have contributed — let us hop that this truce will turn into lasting peace."
"After many horrors, the situation now seems to be improving," he said.
Pocket flashlights issued to the spectators bore the inscription "Remember Sarajevo."
In the end, attention shifted to the next Winter Games host — Nagano, Japan.
"You have also demonstrated that the Olympic Winter Games can be staged perfectly in a small community," he said.
The ceremonies marked the launch of an environmental expedition that will travel to Nagano during the next 18 months. The group will use no mechanical help in their 10,000-mile trek, traveling on skis, sailboats and four sleds that were pulled into the arena yesterday by 40 dogs.
LILLEHAMMER, Norway — Lillehammer's Games transcended the Tony Harding debacle to become one of the most memorable in history. Before any athletes had left the Olympic Village, Lillehammer already was set as a candidate for the 2010 Olympics.
The Associated Press
Hosts of its first Games since 1952, Norway collected 26 medals, its best showing ever. The country itself fared even better. With its snow-covered landscape, gorgeous venues and manic fans, Lillehammer won the hearts of all who visited.
Lillehammer sparkled as host of Games
Before a fireworks show ended the evening, IOC president Juan Antonio Samaranch announced
that Norway had "presented to the entire world the best Olympic Winter Games ever."
Few left these Games disappointed. The Olympics offered an indelible image before they officially started: A skid jumper, sailing 1,000 feet above downtown Lillehammer, carrying the Olympic torch.
"The people here were unbelievable toward all the athletes from all the countries," said speedskater Dan Jansen, who after four Olympics won a gold medal. Jansen's medal helped boost the United States to its highest winter medal total ever at 13.
Throw in Bonnie Blair, who said goodbye to the Olympics with another victory in the 1,000 meters. She has more gold, five, than any
The tally
I
A list of the top six countries winning medals in the Olympic games.
Source: the Associated Press Dave Campbell / KANBA
female U.S. Olympian.
Country Gold Silver Bronze
Norway 10 11 5
Germany 9 7 8
Russia 11 8 4
Russia 11 8 4
United States 6 5 2
Canada 3 6 4
The Tony Harding-Nancy Kerrigan saga boosted CBS' television ratings to Super Bowl-like numbers. At its peak, 126 million Americans tuned in.
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30.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 31.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 32.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 33.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 34.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 35.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 36.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 37.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 38.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 39.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 40.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 41.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 42.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 43.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 44.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 45.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 46.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 47.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 48.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 49.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 50.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 51.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 52.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 53.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 54.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 55.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 56.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 57.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 58.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 59.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 60.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 61.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 62.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 63.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 64.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 65.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 66.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 67.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 68.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 69.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 70.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 71.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 72.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 73.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 74.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 75.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 76.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 77.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 78.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 79.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 80.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 81.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 82.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 83.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 84.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 85.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 86.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 87.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 88.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 89.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 90.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 91.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 92.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 93.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 94.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 95.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 96.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 97.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 98.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 99.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 100.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 101.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 102.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 103.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 104.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 105.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 106.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 107.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 108.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 109.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 110.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 111.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 112.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 113.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 114.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 115.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 116.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 117.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 118.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 119.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 120.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 121.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 122.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 123.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 124.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 125.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 126.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 127.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 128.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 129.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 130.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 131.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 132.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 133.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 134.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 135.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 136.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 137.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 138.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 139.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 140.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 141.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 142.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 143.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 144.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 145.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 146.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 147.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 148.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 149.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 150.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special promotions of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 151.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special促销 of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 152.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special促销 of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 153.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special促销 of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 154.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special促销 of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 155.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special促销 of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 156.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special促销 of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 157.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special促销 of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 158.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special促销 of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 159.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special促销 of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 160.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special促销 of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 161.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special促销 of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 162.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special促销 of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 163.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special促销 of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 164.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special促销 of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 165.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special促销 of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 166.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special促销 of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 167.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special促销 of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 168.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special促销 of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 169.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special促销 of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 170.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special促销 of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 171.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special促销 of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 172.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special促销 of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 173.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special促销 of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 174.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special促销 of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 175.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special促销 of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 176.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special促销 of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 177.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special促销 of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 178.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special促销 of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 179.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special促销 of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 180.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special促销 of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 181.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special促销 of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 182.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special促销 of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 183.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special促销 of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 184.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special促销 of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 185.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special促销 of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 186.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special促销 of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 187.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special促销 of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 188.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学(DKC) whose res偿able personal possession to total purchase was determined by PK; if more DKC purchaser agrees to purchase, that additional office or special促销 of PKs by 5.10 are applicable to such purchase; 189.apply only to certificated by a卡里克大学
1420 Crescent Road 843-3826
Kansas and Burge Unions • 864-4640
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358
UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
Jayhawk Bookstore
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
1116 W. 23rd St · 749-5206
forDRIVING
The Etc. Shop
---
928 Mass. 843-0611
Ray-Ban
SUPPLIES BY
BAUCH & LONF
Classified Directory
100s
ANIMALEMENTS
105 Personal
110 Business
Personal
Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
Employment
205 Help Wanted
200s Fmlowzm
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional
225 Professional 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 nationality, race, religion, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or policy.
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are subject to change.
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 dis-
110 Bus. Personals
Jayhawk Spirit
20% OFF Greek Merchandise
Thur end of February
University Unique Sterling Silver Jewelry
Uniqo, Pendants & More!
For Guy & Gals
The Etc. Shop
928 Mass. Downown
I
100s Announcements
Holiday Inn, Steamboat Springs, Co. Party with someone you know. Free beer and appetizers every night from 5 p.m.-7 p.m. when you stay with them. 1-800-429-3232 or book to your Break Thank Day.
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO
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 Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11:30am
Pharmacy Hour
Monday, Thursday 8am-9pm
Saturday 8am-12:30pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services
120 Announcements
NOTAKING Workshop. How to get the most from lectures and your notes. FREEB! No registration required. Wed, Mar 2; 7-9 pm, 403 Wescoe. Tax preparation. Short Form $15. Long Form $7. Electronic filing $27, refund loans $7. Call 865-2786.
Available through February 28, 1994 at
Kansas and Burdure Universities; University Book
Kansas and Burdure Universities; University Book
Brother,can you spare a dollar?
Buy your Kansan Card for only $1.00 today
X
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
- Kansan Classified: 864-4358-
Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
Spring Break
*All taxes and tips
*7nights
*7 nights
*Beachfront Hotel
*Central Location
Daytona Beach from $129
Dale 842-9129
130 Entertainment
Daytona's Beach is 23 miles long. Don't let a bad location ruin your Spring Break
Ski Trip- Spring Break - March 21-25, sleeper bus
Ski Trip- (316) 825-1914
140 Lost & Found
FOUND: A gold ring in Fraser Hall on Wednesday
morning. Call 864-3891.
Lost cellular phone in front of Strong Hall. Can't be unlocked. Nested questions asked. 816-744-3920
Ladies Ladiess gold ring, 223 Frazier Mac lab.
Reward. Contact Joaul 841-239.
男 女
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
300 SUMMER CAMP OPPORTUNITIES in NY, PA and NEW ENGLAND. Instructed by Coach David Barrett, Beachball, Basketball, Swimming/WSL/Lifeguards, Sailing, Water-skiing, Windsurfing, LaCrosse, Archery, Gymnastics, Ceramics, Jewelry, Volleyball, Soccer, Dance, Dramaics, Equestrian, Flippering, Diving, Surfing, Physicist, Phys. Ed Majors, Nurses, Chefs, etc. All Arlene at: 1-800-432-6489 or www.summercamp.org
APPLY NOW!
Adult and youth unites interested. Anyone interested in working as umpire for Lawrence Parks and Recreation Dept contact Bob Stancliff 861-7234 or Lisa Stanciflo and Lee Ice at 841-4414 for youth baseball/softball
APPLY NOW!
•Need income for Spring Break?
*Holiday bills to pay?
*Need resume experience?
45 yr. old national corp. needs 25 positive, professional students before spring break. Free training provided. $9-10 starting, advancement possible. Call 843-8381 NOW!
Bike Source full and part time help needed in services and Service Overland Park location. 1-800-728-8792
94
KU SENIORS
✓ RESUMÉS
✓ COVER LETTERS
✓ INTERVIEW.TRAINING
832-8100
RESUMÉ SERVICES
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, February 28, 1994
13
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
Counselors/Support Staff-Children's Camps, Northeast-Total salary, MR/BD/Laundry, travel allowance. Must have skill in one of the following activities: archery, arts & crafts, baseball, bass lacrosse, golf, gymnastics, field hockey, football, golf, gymnastics, hockey, horseback riding-hunt seat, karate, lacrosse, mature, photography, piano, pioneering, rocketry, rollerblading, ropes, sailing, soccer, swim team, tennis, theater, technicians, Kitchen steward, cooks, bus drivers, maintenance, nurses, secretaries, masters, callers or write: Camp Wilndu for Boys, 225 Glades Rd., Suite 402, Boca Raton, FL. FL.33413 (407) 984-5500. Women DUEB, Boca Raton, Vega Girls for Gina, P O. Box 1717, DUEB, Boca Raton, Vega Girls for Gina, P O. Box 1717, campus in the student union from 11am-pm on 6/3/13 in the Oread and Regional Roomets.
CAMP COUNSELORS for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach; swim, canoeing, sailing, water skating, gymnastics, camping, crafts, dramatics, OR riding. Also camp, crafts, dramatics, OR riding. Also plus RD, maintenance, Salary $150 or more plus RS, C/W/CWC / GWC Nilda, MIPL. 60038, 700-446-2441
Cottonwood inc, a service provider for adults with developmental disabilities is currently accepting locations for the full time position of receptionist mgr. Please visit www.cottonwoodinc.com as well as the organization, administration and management of a group home. Must have 2 yrs of experience in a related field. Position requires 4 sleep overs, M-TH. A good driving record is a must. Please at Cottonwood inc. 280 I.W. 31st by March 4th EOE
Cruise line, entry level, on-board positions available great benefits. Summer or round the岛 (813).
Freelance graphic artists need to create designs for a leading company Call 811-1366 for more information.
Gourmet Bistro now hiring terrace server, waitstaff, bus person, host. Min. manger + tips. The Cafe Society, 69220 W. 105th OP, KS (813) 643-110.
EARN
$50 - $250
FOR YOURSELF
plus up to $500 for your club!
This fundraiser costs nothing and lasts one week.
Call now and receive a free gift.
Nannies Wanted. Positions nationwide, summer
travel. (612) 643-4398. Great salary and benne
free travel. (612) 643-4398.
Need reliable sitter for my 8 old daughter, 7 to
8:45 am. 3:45 to 6:45 pm, M-F. Must have own
trans. and ref. 841-7068. Leave message.
*nDBDT* Topka-Lawrence commuter to give
will pay for gas mileage. Call
(813)233-3408.
Mandatory question & answer session
Interested In Becoming A Naismith R.A.
1800 Naismith 843-8559
Tuesday, March 1 at 10pm Meet at the Front Desk Application will be given out
NAISMITH
Hall
Part-time maintenance person needed for apartment complex. Experience required. Call 749-1587.
Pool Room-225 Ibs. Bartenders and waitresses part-time. In apply in person, 11am-6pm, M-F
Top private girls resident camp looking for athletic trainer. 6/20/8/4/94 Excellent salary, RM/BD/laundry, travel allowance. Women call or camp. Vega for girls: P.O. Box 1771, Chicago, IL 60658. We will be on campus in the student unit on 1:45 pm on 3/3/4, Regionalist Room.
$$ Premiere Tax Service $$
225 Professional Services
$$ Premiere Tax Service $$
1040E $21 - E10 - 1045 *1 plus extra fee for other forms to be filed with 1040 State returns $$5-11.
Will pick up and deliver. Call Brian at 265-2527.
SCHOLARSHIPS FOR
Or your money back
Guaranteed
We are a scholarship matching service
With a 300,000 source database
Our fee for use $75.00
STUDENT SCHOLARSHIP CONSULTANTS
1229 Almira Lawrence,KS 66044 For more information call 832-1555
Customized Library Research -don't get lost in the stacks, let us bring stacks of information to you. Research and Information gathering for students and faculty. Call 841-3765.
BRAXTON B. COPLEY
Attorney at Law
General Practice
Traffic Laws, Municipal
Landlord/Tenant
Personal Income Tax
719 Massachusetts 749-5333
Driver education offered through Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 yrs. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749.
For a confidential, caring friend, call us.
We're here to listen and talk with you.
Brightbird #5-421. Free pregnancy testing
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
Criminal Defense For free consultation call
INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS: We transfer Videos from US mode to your system or from your country to US mode. B$ includes tape and mailing. Video will be sent to: WVU-OTawa, KS 68067, C1-1-429-8530 or 1-800-6530-8777.
Rick Frydman, Attorney
823 Missouri 843-4023
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 842-113
2021 Stagg N., Canaoga Park, CA 91308
Tel. (818) 772-7168; (818) 998-4425
Monday - Sunday: 10 a.m.-11 p.m.
OUI, TRAFFIC, Criminal Defense Divorce and Civil Matters
Attorneys at Law
Former Prosecutors-Near Campus
Elizabeth Leach Craig Stancifle
749-0887 61W. 14th 842-6432
VIDEO EDITING AND
PRODUCTION SERVICES
A/B roll video tape editing with edUL
Bid field production package.
Award winning screen writer.
PRIMAL SCREEN UNICATIONS
913-841-0001
Brother,can you spare a dollar?
Buy your Kansan Card for only $1.00 today
Available through February 25, 1994 at the Kanban Business office; KU Bookstores, Kansas and Burge Urns; University Book Shop and Jayhawk Bookstores.
235 Typing Services
1-der Women Word Processing. Former editor
quality type. 84-2083
www.lawrence.edu
30 Pages and under. 24 hour turn around. Any size accepted. $1.25/page. Cash at 843-648-1634 per month. Beach Publication Services-Quality word processing, resumes, later printing; call 843-648-1734. Resumes, later printing; call 843-648-1734.
- Looking for a good type?
* Papers, Applications, Spreadsheets, Charts
* Laser engraving with thermo-proofs
* Grammar and spelling free
* 18 years experience
call Jack at
Makin' the Grade
on web site
Prototype for all your typing needs. Word process.
Professional quality. Mail check free. 814-764-2901
Word processing, applications, term papers, dis-
tribitious articles, online databases, job read-
hip. Masters Degree, 841-6234.
Word processing, spread sheets, resumes, mail merges or No job too small. Laser printing, Call
Words by Chris Word Processing.
High quality typing; spell check
requirements. 86-295-2090
www.mathpastime.com
X
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
*BASS BED, firm, orthopedic mattres set and frame,
needed, cost $1000, price $33 cash, deal
with
*LIVING ROOM SEP. safa, love seat and chair
Plush hip chair, price $1500,
dealer, dealer 714-824-3228
Bass Guitar for sale. Bianze soundgear Aah body.
Bass guitar perfect condition.
NADY wireless. Mike123. 854-767-9000.
For sale 29 gallon aquarium, excellent condition,
all accessories. call 811-7415.
MACINTOSH SSH Computer. Complete system including printer only 500. Call Chris at 899-289-5685.
Want to live life by your own rules? Want to experience world? Read. Life as an Odyssey, guide to Meaningful Careers and Unique Lifestyles. For more info, call 1-800-7424.
Three year old 286 personal computer with 43 MB hard drive, 1 MB RAM, two high density floppy drives, and recently purchased 14" VGA color screen kits of software. $500 or best offer. Call 864-5641
**Hymalu** Excel GLS in good condition. 1dif
350-speed tikz-mk II, acM, AC/MF cassette
$300; Cassette
340 Auto Sales
H
360 Miscellaneous
Aquarium, 30 gallon "long" tank with walnut stand, undergirded with rock lots of goods. Aquarium, C1423-8395. C1423-8395.
405 For Rent
400s Real Estate
2 bdrm w/surroom and 6 storage space, 2 bathrooms, D/W, W/D, central air, fire place and pool. On KU bus route, $550 + utilities, avail. March 1. Melinea 1-1897-4685
Avail. June or Aug, m 3 & 4 BR, 2LA. rooms & closets, total kitchen, coin- or laundry, storage unit, cable p. CALL. 1-913-266-769 (Topela) or 841-8074 (Cindy) after 6 p.m.
4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished,
nice 604-813-2531 Interested Call 784-0495 or
nice 604-813-2531
1 Bedroom Apt. available now! Call 841-1212.
1900 NAISMITH
Available at West Hill Acp. Spacious i bed unfurnished apt. $275 per month. Water pd. Great location near campus. 101 Emery Rd. No pets. 841-3800, 542-3884.
Available now, two bedroom at 875 Tennessee.
Large basement, $75 plus utilities.
小盆房, K9-790-248.
FORENT: Sunflower House student living coop.
1406 Tennessee, has rooms available for summer.
Low rent, close to campus/downtown, cooperative living.
Office # 911-0483.
Trailridge Apartments
Newlans in Summer and Fall
Studios, Dwells, and TownHouses
KU Bus Route, Dillons, Basketball,
Tennis Court, 2poost!
Call Town for more information
843-7393. 2800 W. 6th St.
Furnished room for rent with shared kitchen and bath. Two short rooms from KU. Off street parking.
GOTA GROUPF Stately 9 bedroom, 4½ bath; half
accented conference to campus, many extra-
841-BA781 (702)
Furished rooms in house close to campus, WD-AC. Short term lease available $250. Call 611-493-8700.
Lorimer, Lormart
Now renting for $400 each and 2 & 3 bdms,
dishwasher, microwave, W/D/, fireplace, ceiling
fitting, water heater.
Hanover Place Apt. for rent. Near Campus.
$870/MO. MAIL 181-1212.
Boardwalk
1&2 Bedroom Apts.
Now leasing for Summer
& Fall Move-ins.
524 Frontier 842-4444
524 Frontier 842-4444 Open 6 days a week for your convenience.
Mac Kinze Place now leasing for Aug 1, 4yr. of luxury apts, close to campus. All 3 BR, mri movea, washer & dry all kitchen appl. 2 docks or 3 baths, energy efficient. Call 749-1168.
MORNING STAR
Rooms, apartments, older, elderly homes available. 941-STAR (7827)
Naismith Place
*2BR from $407*
*Jacuzzi each apt*
*Nak, to KL bus route*
*Pelican Park/Petonics*
*Pd cable TV/TVPs*
*Basketball court/Park*
*On-site management*
*Ouseley Office*
*15 call for Appointments*
*5 15pm - Fri 10-28 sat*
NOW LEASING
Chamberland Court Apts.
1-2 Bedroom
Call 749-1436
New 3 bedroom home, 2 bath, waher-dry hooker,
refrigerator, washing machine, bus route $800 a
month. Call 841-4415.
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
- 1 and 3 Bedroom
Apartments Available
• Quiet Location
• 2 blocks from KU bus route
• Call Gina at 843-4754
2040 Heatherwood
Now leasing for May through August. Quiet, nice,
affordable 28 bedroom apartments. Have all appliances including dishwasher, central air, gas heat.
Low utilities. Route: Pool. No pets. References. $340 per month.
Spanish Crest Apartments 911-868
**NOW LEASING**
Stadium View
Carson Place
Bradford Square
Oread
Call 749-1356 for more info.
or call by new office at
1202 Oread
Tuesday-Friday
Saturday 11-3
Saturday 11-3
Bradford Square
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
VILLAGE
SQUARE
apartments
- Close to campus
• Spacious 2 bedroom
• Laundry facility
• Swimming Pool
• Waterbed allowed
One bedroom apartment for sublease. Water and
floor heating. Free faxes.免 $45/mo. Now until Aug. Call 843-643-08
9th& Avalon 842-3040
Park25
Spacious i bedroom apt very close to campus. Fur-
rances. Call 814-1212. Ask about Coldwater flat $495
One bedroom apartment available now. On KU bus route. Small pets OK. Call 865-4289.
Room for rent $14 per month plus one additional utilities.
Call Mike at M1-8443, non smoker.
We are now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature studio 1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. We also have 3 bedroom, $2 \frac{1}{2}$ bath townhomes.
- Volleyball Court
- On KU Bus Route
- 2 Pools
TIME FOR TREASURES
- Some Washer/Dryer Hookups
- 2 Laundry Rooms
with 4 Stops on Property
Call or stop by today.
2401 W. 25th, 9A3
842-1455
(sorry no pets)
SUNRISE
VILLAGE
660 Gateway Ct.
(Behind Sonic)
NowLeasing for Fall
Mon.-Fri. 10-12, 1-5
Bedroom Town Homes
• Garages; 2½ Baths
• Microwave Ovens
• Some with Fireplaces
• On KUB Route
• Swimming Pool and
Tennis Courts
- Luxurious2.3.&4
841-8400 or
841-1287
Studio apartment avail. May 20 - Aug 10. May
15 - Aug 19. Furnished. B311 Call at 638-1292
Furnished. B311 Call at 638-1292
WOODWAY APARTMENTS
Each apartment features:
*Washer and dryer*
*Microwave*
*Gas, heat central air*
*Large bedrooms*
*Large bedrooms*
*On KRU bus route*
*Carpet available*
*bedroom $360 $480*
*bedroom $340 $476*
*bedroom $600*
611 Michigan Street
(across from harden'e's)
HOURS:
Mon., Wed, & Fri 2:00-5:00 pm
Tues., Thurs. & Sat 10:00am-12:00pm
483-1971
Please call Gretchen for an appt.
Studio apt. Private entrance, off-street parking,
walk to KU & downstairs. $290/mo. 84-9072
Sublease large one bedroom apt. on bus route.
Huge closet! Low waterities, water paid. PETKS OK
Open House
Saturday, March 5, 1 a.m.-2 p.m.
Sunday, March 6, 1 p.m.-2 p.m.
10
Leasing consultants will answer your questions about:
Fall Reservations Summer Leases Our Community
What kind of people
People Like You
Meadowbrook is a unique community of people from all walks of life, who all have one thing in common: they chose to step up to Meadowbrook's convenience, quality, and experience.
Situated among 42 acres of gently rolling hills, trees and flowers. Meadowbrook is gracefully designed and individualized to meet a diversity of interests and tastes. Within walking distance to KU and shopping and 3 KU bus stops.
Two children's playgrounds and several recreational sports areas.
Whether you're looking for an efficient studio or a spacious townhome, Meadowbrook can meet your needs.
Thermometer
Battery
Lamp
15th at Crestline
842-4200
Serving the community since 1968.
Apartments...Townhomes...Duplexes
meadowbrook
Susaleep top floor studio off 5th & Color, from
mapst top 17 to July 31st, $310 & pwd, Laudry
facilities. Near bus route, 641-5797 or 641-5789
Summer Susaleep 2- roommates needed. 3Bfdn
b3Mathroom Townhouse. Washer/Dryer. Pool
Tennis Courts. On Bus Route. Call 842-0497
MASTERCRAFT
Studio,1,2,3, &4 bedroom apart
ments and townhouses
Offers Completely Furnished
HANOVER
14th&Mass. : 841-1212
HANOVER
SUNDANCE
7th & Florida : 841-5255
REGENTS COURT
19th & Mass. : 749-0445
We're making life easier
- Weekly Maid Service
unlimited seconds
TANGLEWOOD 10th&Arkansas : 749-2415
TANGLEWOOD
Now leasing for FALL
- "Dine Anytime" with unlimited seconds
CAMPUS PLACE
1145Louisiana : 841-1429
- Front Door Bus Service
ORCHARD CORNERS
15th & Kasold : 749-4226
- Free Utilities
- Laundry and Vending Facilities
842-4455
Mon-Fri 9am-5pm Sat 10am-4pm
MASTERCRAFT
Equal Housing Opportunity
NAISMITH HALL
1800 Naismith 843-8559
West Hills APARTMENTS
NOWLEASING FORJUNE AND AUGUST
- Spacious one and two Bedroom apartments
* Furnished and unfurnished
* Great location near campus
* No Pets
OPEN HOUSE
Mon. Wed. Fri.
12:30-4:30 NoAp. Needed
1012Emery Rd.
841-3800
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
430 Roommate Wanted
1 or 2 room rooms to share apartment for the fall. Near campus. Call Nice at 832-0492.
How to schedule an ad:
- Byphone: 864-4358
1 Roomsite to share 3 birmn house, w/d, near bus
$175/month + 1/2 utilities. For more info call 749-826-
2340.
ROOMMATE NEEDED to share two bedroom
HOUSE 817/m² + utilities Call Dave 843-390 or
smith@roombate.com
Want to stay in Lawrence this summer? Looking for 1 or 2 mellow NSF housemates to share NEW 3 BR condo. W/D Sublease from 6/1- 8/15, $200/nop (nelo) + split. Call Ula. Callen @ 864-7212 today
I HAVE TO MOVE TO K.C.1 a female needed to share 3 bdm, spacious apt. $200/mon. + utilities on bus route, convenient location, no smokers or pets, call 842-7647 in the evening.
N/S to share 3 bedroom house, close to KU,
170/㎡/monthly bills paid. Call 749-7917 & leave a
A photo in may be submitted to your MasterCard or Vica account. Otherwise, they will be held still pre-payment is made.
In anenna: 119 Staffer Filed
- By Mail: 119 Stuaffer Flint, Lawrence, KS 80945
Stop by the offices between 8 a. m. and 5 p. m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on the MasterCard or Visa.
Classified Information and order form
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kasan 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 their expiration date.
When canceling a classified list 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.
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of again 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.
**induce:**
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00.
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.
**MEN'S HOUND HEADS**
3 Hems
4 Hems
5-7 Hems
8+ Hems
Please print your ad one word per box
105 personal
110 business persocals
120 announcements
130 entertainment
Cost per mile per day
1.2X 1-2X 4-7X 8-14X 15-25X 20+X
2.65 1.55 1.65 .85 .75 .95
1.90 1.15 1.00 .70 .65 .45
1.85 1.05 .75 .65 .65 .45
1.75 .60 .65 .60 .55 .35
Classifications
140 lest & bound 385 for sale
hawk助火 385 mate sales
225 gratientless services 385 miscellaneous
225 hybrids services
378 want to buy
405 for rent
438 roommate wanted
Date ad begins: Total days in paper
Total ad cost: Classification:
1
2
3
4
5
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
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:
Account number: ___
Print exact name appearing on credit card: ___
MasterCard
Signature:
The University Dialysis Kanan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, taylor university, ks.ks.60445
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1994 FarWorks, Inc./Dist by Universal Press Syndicate
Aarweaks, the忠士 by Universal Press Syndicate
RECEPTION
2-28
"The dentist just buzzed me, Mrs. Lewellyn — he's ready to see Bobby now."
14
Monday, February 28,1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
ROCK CHALK
REVUE
1994
The Results
These awards were presented after Saturday night's performance:
Most Charitable Award for Ticket Sales:
Alpha Kappa Lambda and Alpha Chi Omega Best Show:
"For Whom the Will Told," Delta Gamma and Lambda Chi Alpha
Best Original Song:
"Get a Clue (We're Nancy and Drew)." Delta Gamma and Lambda Chi Alpha, original song by Charles Van Middlesworth II, Jamey Welch and Brennan Smith. Best Production Number:
"Could You Ask For Anything More," from "You are What You Eat," Kappa Kappa Gamma and Sigma Chi.
Best Use of Sets:
"Does Antibody Know?" Kappa Alpha Theta and Phi
Gamina Delta
Best Use of Costumes:
Gamma Delta.
"Does Antibody Know?"
Kappa Alpha Theta and Phi
Gamma Delta.
Kara Meysenburg as Nancy Hardy in "For Whom the Will Told," Delta Gamma and Lambda Chi Alpha
Best Actor:
Best Actor:
Jamey Welch as Drew Hardy in "For Whom the Will Told," Delta Gamma and Lambda Chi Alpha.
Best Supporting Actress:
Amy Loftus as Ivana Rodham Frump in "For Whom the Will Told," Delta Gamma and Lambda Chi Alpha.
Best Supporting Actor:
University task force reviews non-traditional students' needs
Brian Goeser as Captain Antibody in "Does Antibody Know?" Kappa Alpha Theta and Phi Gamma Delta."
By Angelina Lopez
Kansan staff writer
With children, part-time jobs and commutes, non-traditional students have little time to get involved in student organizations.
lockers in the Kansas Union and in Hoch Auditorium
no penalties for students who miss class because of sick dependents
Lack of involvement on campus makes it difficult to determine non-traditional students' concerns and dissatisfaction with the University.
In April 1993, the task force submitted ten recommendations to the University Senate Executive Committee for changes on campus that would ease difficulties for non-traditional students. These recommendations included the following:
Issues affecting non-traditional students were discussed Wednesday by the non-traditional student task force, a group organized to address non-traditional students' concerns, present programs to the administration that deal with these concerns and make sure these programs are implemented.
extra parking for commuters
expansion of Hilltop Child Development Center
Alita Cooper, head of the task force and assistant professor of human development and family life, said she did not know what kind of progress had been made on the recommendations, but said she was looking into them.
There are approximately 5,000 nontraditional undergraduates at KU, said Kris McCusker, member of the task force and secretary for OAKS—NonTraditional Students Organization.
"Most of them are amazed when they hear that there are more than three," he said.
However, Ronnie Bryant, member of the task force and OAKS, said most non-traditional students did not realize how many of them there were.
Cooper said that non-traditional students do not realize each others' existence because they travel in small circles. With so many things to do in a day, she said, a non-traditional student goes directly to class then directly home.
At the task force meeting Wednesday, other issues that affect non-traditional students also were brought up.
McCusker said some administrative
The definition
the defendant
What defines a non-traditional student?
25 years old or older
married or formerly married
has dependents
veteran status
gap in formal education
commutes 10 miles or more
OKAS-Non-Traditional Students Organization, represents non-traditional students on campus. For more information call Gerri Vernon at 864-7317.
KANSAN
and department office hours made it difficult for them to get to these offices.
you may have time at lunch to go to a department, but most of the departments are closed then," she said.
She suggested that the departments affecting non-traditional students the most, like the School of Business and the School of Education, arrange their hours one day a week to accommodate non-traditional students.
the five-member task force also includes Shirley Hill, assistant professor of sociology, and Del Shankel, professor of biology.
Reno concerned about trafficway
Kansanstaffreport
The South Lawrence Trafficway controversy has caught the attention of U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno.
Stacy James, head of the Haskell Indian Nations University Save the Wetlands committee, said that Randy Rathbum, U.S. attorney for Kansas, came to Haskell last week to listen to concerns about the proposed trafficway, which would cut through Haskell's spiritually significant wetlands along 31st Street.
"We were just basically briefing him on the situation," she said. "Hopefully, he's going to follow through. We're trying to get it solved before it gets any further."
"I think it's a very positive sign," James said. "Hopefully people will be able to understand our views, why we're doing what we're doing. We're not trying to block anything for Lawrence. It's just something we believe in strongly."
Rings Fixed Fast!
Kiera Cummings
jewelers
749-4333
833 Mass • Lawrence, KS
Billiards, Video Games, Wilderness Discovery, & Engraving Service
Jaybowl
KANSAS UNION
...
Not just for bowling any more!
864-3545
$5 Off
Hair Design
Not valid with any other offer
EXPIRES 3/31/94
Discover
Our
Difference.
Holiday Plaza • 25th & Iowa
841-6886
Hair Experts D
SUNFLOWER
OUTDOOR
& BIKE SHOP
804 Manufacturers
Lawrence, Kansas
Sunflower offers a variety of clothing and outdoor gear for all types of women.
Boots
Tevas
Bikes
Clothes
Backpacks
Literature
Since 1972 Lawrences foremost name in outdoor clothing and camping gear.
S
843-5000
THE END TIMES... 00:00:01
Bible 99,999,999
Scholars 0
Q: Why are there so many natural disasters? Q: What is the new age? Q: Why is the theory of evolution absurd? Q: What is behind NAFTA and GATT? Q: What is the goal of political correctness? Q: Why the sudden interest in angels? Q: Will Israel make false peace with its enemies? Q: Why is gun control vital to the future of the U.S.?
Q: How many years until Jesus Christ returns to this earth the second time? Checked the standings lately? Why is it that after spending trillions and trillions of dollars scholars still can't answer the two simplest questions of all: who are we humans and why are we here? Fed up? Tired of hearing that a distant uncle was an amoeba brain? You should be...that is if you're an honest person who is willing to examine the facts. We invite you to open your mind to some stunning facts that you won't learn in religion class.
Bible Prophecy vs. Scholarship An open forum Tuesday, March 1, 1994 7:00 p.m. Kansas Union Alderson Auditorium - 4th Floor
STARBUCKS
KCBT STUDENT MINISTRIES