SPORTS From position to position, the Kansas football team looks ready for the upcoming season. Page 3B CAMPUS MOSTLY SUNNY The Regents will decide former law professor Emil Tonkovich's fate in September. Paste 3A AAAAAHHH High 85° Low 65° Weather: Page 2. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY VOL.104,NO.1 THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS TOPEKA, KS 66612 ADVERTISING 5644354 MONDAY AUGUST 22 1994 (USPS650-640) Daron Bennett / KANSAN NEWS 864-4810 School year ushered in at Lied Center 1907 After Chancellor Del Shankel's convoction address, student body president Sherman Reeves applauds. Convocation encourages intellectual curiosity campus involvement This year, the ceremony began with a video collage of the University's past and present, including testimonials from students and alumni about the grandeur of the University. About 1,000 students, parents and faculty filled the lower section of the center for the ceremony, which takes place every year before fall semester classes begin. A procession of deans and vice chancellors dressed in full-length academic robes filed onto the stage of the Lied Center yesterday afternoon, beginning the 129th Convocation of the University of Kansas. By David Wilson Kansan staff writer Chancellor Del Shankel gave the Convocation address, in which he told new students to be careful with their new-found freedom and to develop an intellectual curiosity during their years on Mount Oread. Shankel also told the audience that the University supports diversity. Sherman Reeves, student body president, also spoke at the ceremony. He told the audience about opportunities that existed in Lawrence and at KU. "It is up to you to learn, to question, to challenge," he said. "If you leave Mount Oread with only a narrow understanding of a limited field of knowledge, then no matter how deep that understanding, you will have failed." "In doing so, we act not out of what has been called political correctness. Rather, we act from a deep collective conviction. We share a strong belief that we have an obligation to lead our society by demonstrating that there can exist a meritocracy: a society in which each individual is judged by what she or he is and what she or he has achieved." Nirmal Sanganee, Dubai, United Arab Emirates, sophomore, took the short jog across Iowa Street from Templin Hall to the center to satisfy his curiosity about the ceremony. "Just to see," he said. Sanganee said he had never been to a Convocation. Crystal Collier, Kansas City, Mo., Junior, and an orientation staff member, handed out Convocation programs before the ceremony. Collier said she expected mostly new students to show up for the ceremony. "They're trying hard to adjust," she said. "They'll go for anything new and exciting just to say, 'Yeah, I went to Convocation." But not all new students went to Convocation. Josh Detar, Joplin, Mo., freshman, and two of his fraternity brothers from the Phi Kappa Psi house spent yesterday afternoon walking around campus with their class schedules to locate the buildings their classes were in. Detar and his friends said they had a good reason for missing Convocation: Nobody told them about it. NAACP tries to recover post-Chavis The Associated Press WASHINGTON — The NAACP began looking Sunday for a new leader and tried to measure how much damage Benjamin Chavis' painful ouster had caused its reputation in the world of civil rights. The NAACP turned to its interim administrator, Earl Shinhoster, 42, who had competed against Chavis for the executive director post. Shinhoster, NAACP national field secretary, met Sunday with a board-appointed committee to come up with a short-term plan for handling day-to-day operations until a new executive director is hired. Meanwhile, a worn but defiant Chavis picked up the remnants of a black leadership summit that was to start Sunday in Baltimore but was postponed by the NAACP. He pledged not "to let the lynching that took place here stop us." Chavis, 46, was fired Saturday for conduct that the board of directors said was hostile to the survival of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. The group's board of directors hopes to find a successor within 30 to 90 days. While Chavis' dismissal was triggered by his decision to settle a former employee's sex discrimination claims for $332,400, board Chairman William Gibson said Chavis was removed because of "an accumulation of things" that occurred during his combative 16-month tenure. Greatest among them was Chavis' alliance with controversial Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan, which many NAACP officials took as a sign that Chavis was moving the NAACP into a separatist posture. Saturday night, Gibson said he intended to return the group's focus to the mainstream, moderate agenda it has had throughout its 85-year history. He deflected questions on whether the NAACP would continue its relationship with the Nation of Islam. MARY MORGAN Kirk Vanderslic, Tulsa, OKa., freshmen and Sigma Nu pledge, prepares the coals for a barbeque at the Sigma Nu house. The barbeque was one of the last activities for County Club Week. Informal Black 'rush' begins Interviews, meetings decide membership selection for chapters By Ashley Miller Kansan staff writer Although formal rush for most fraternities and sororites is over, Black fraternities and sororites at the University of Kansas are just beginning. He said fraternities held informational meetings at the beginning of the semester for men interested in the organization. At the meetings, the houses give the criteria needed to join, including grade point average and college credit hours. Jacobs said the meetings would be informal "It's not really a rush," said Marc D. Jacobs, Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity historian and Black Panhellenic Council president. "It's a membership intake process." Stefanie Caruthers, Zeta Phi Beta sorority president, said sororites also held informational meetings for women interested in joining. Zeta Phi Beta will have an informational meeting on Sept. 7. Fliers providing details about the meeting will be posted after classes start, Caruthers said. After the informational meeting, Caruthers said interested men and women participated in an interview process. The interview session for both fraternities and sororities is a formal one, she said. Both Jacobs and Caruthers said that black fraternities and sororites did not have quotas for people pledging the house. Caruthers said that pledgeship began after the meeting and the interview. There are eight fraternities and sororities in the Black Panhellenic Council. Greeks finish rush process Fraternities and sororities add 641 new members to their rolls By Ashley Miller Kansan staff writer Making small talk is nothing new to Angela Hirt. The Shawnee freshman participated in formal rush August 13-18, where making small talk is a big part of success. "I'm glad it's over, but I'm really glad I did it," Hirt said. Hirt said she enjoyed meeting new people, but trying to look happy in the heat was tough. "The heat and the walking and the waiting were hard." Hirt said. Hirt pledged Alpha Chi Omega sorority. Mike Stanley, vice president for membership of the Interfraternity Council, said this year's rush was a success. "I thought rush went very well all around," Stanley said. "We had a lot of quality men going through." Formal rush for men was Aug. 12-16. Bill Nelson, coordinator for Greek programs and assistant director of the Organizations and Activites Center, said of the 763 women registered for rush, 585 received bids from sororities. Of the 78 men registered for rush week this year, Nelson said 56 pledged a house. Although the gap in the numbers looks large, Nelson said it really wasn't, because men and women often signed open bids and ended up in a Greek organization that way. Nelson said that because men can pledge a fraternity throughout the summer, six of the 23 houses at the University of Kansas were full before formal rush week started. This was a major cause for the A rush decline Rushees registered women 1992 123 844 1998 111 877 1994 78 763 Matched bids men women 1992 105 734 1993 80 656 1994 56 585 Rushes registered is the number of men and women that decided to participate in the rush process Matched bids is the number of men and women that pledged a house. decrease in people participating in men's rush, he said. The overall number of students participating in rush was lower this year than it had been in past years, Nelson said. He said the decrease in people rushing was due in part to people who dropped out when they didn't receive invitations to the more popular chapters. "What women and men fail to understand is that their experiences will be so similar, regardless of the chapter," Nelson said. Nelson said that Panhellenic also worked hard this year to reduce the number of women released from the rush process. Women that have been released are not invited back to the next round of parties. Only two women were released during this year's rush week, down from 14 in 1993. No men were released from the rush process, Nelson said. INSIDE After eight seasons under the guidance of Kansas coach Frankie Albitz, the volleyball team looks for new direction under its new coach. Karen Schonewise. Changing of the guard Page1A. Contract puts Fox back on cable Though "Beverly Hills 90120" fans will not be seeing Brenda this season, fans can look forward to seeing Dylan and Kelly again on Sunflower Cablevision in Lawrence. Sunflower Cablevision WDAF contract ensures Lawrence distribution Last Thursday, Sunflower announced that because of a pre-existing contract with WDAF-TV, channel four in Lawrence, the cable service would begin carrying the Fox network in September, pending approval by the Federal Communications Commission. By Shannon Newton Kansan staff writer Because of a recent merger between the owners of WDAF and the Fox network, WDAF and KSHB swapped That contract, which Sunflower has with all its channels, was a three-year agreement to carry WDAF as channel four on Sunflower free of charge. After WDAF became a Fox affiliate, the service decided that the contract was still valid. affiliations. KSHB, which had been the Fox affiliate in Kansas City, will now carry NBC. The WDAF-Fox network will be carried by Sunflower Cablevision because of a contract that the cable company and WDAF made in October. Fox has not been seen on Sunflower since October, when KSHB refused to sign a similar contract with Sunflower. At that time, Fox had demanded that all stations carrying it would have to add another Fox channel, called the FX Network. Sunflower was unwilling to carry the additional channel, and Fox was dropped. If the FCC approves the transformation Sept. 9th, Lawrence cable viewers will be able to watch Fox programs on channel four starting Sept. 12th. Should there be a problem, the approval would have to be sent through again. If that happens, Sunflower would not show the network until January so as not to interrupt the fall season said Dan Simons, new ventures manager of World Co., parent company for Sunflower Cablevision. Ann Lucy of the FCC said that switches such as the one at Sunflower were usually granted unless a problem arises. When Lawrence cable viewers do see Fox again, they will notice a few changes. Many of the children's programming and the classic reruns will be replaced by syndicated talk shows and local news casts. But the Fox prime time that KU students are used to will be seen again, only on WDAF instead of KSHB. Tom Eblen, general manager and news adviser for the Kansan, said printing the Kansan in color was one of several changes the newspaper would undergo this semester. The formerly black and white pages of the University Daily Kansan now will feature a spectrum of colors. "In addition to the most obvious change to color, we're changing our printing location, we're implementing earlier deadlines, and we will deliver the newspaper earlier each morning." Eblen said. Kansan features colorful changes Kansan staff report Stephen Martino, Kansan editor, said the Kansan would feature color on the front page of each section every day and often would feature color on the backpage of each section. The result of earlier deadlines is that the Kansan will be delivered by 8 a.m. each morning, Martino said. "In the end, it's going to be worth it, especially for our readers, but initially the changes will put a stress on the staff," Martino said. 2A Monday, August 22, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN A purse and its contents, valued at $352, were stolen from a KU student between Tuesday and Wednesday at the Gamma Phi Beta sorority, 1339 West Campus Road, Lawrence police said. Police said the purse was stolen between 9:30 p.m. Tuesday and 9:30 a.m. Wednesday. - Merchandise valued at $4,250 was stolen during the summer from General Maintenance, 1503 E. 18th Terrace, Lawrence police reported. Police said the thefts occurred between June 2 to Aug. 1 but weren't discovered and Hall and began to run when she ran, police said. He disappeared by the time she met her boyfriend at the Computer Center. She reported the stalking on Thursday. reported until Wednesday. Among the items stolen were a refrigerator, two air conditioners, windows, a cellular phone, a paint sprayer, a shovel and other merchandise, police said. A KU student reported she was stalked by an unfamiliar male Wednesday afternoon, KU police reported. Police said the student, an 18-year-old freshman, left Watson Hall at about 4:45 p.m. to go around the Computer Center but got lost. As she approached Fraser Hall, police said, she noticed a male in his late 20s following her. He followed as she walked behind Wescoe ON THE RECORD A rented car was stolen Wednesday afternoon from the parking lot of the Bismarck Inn, 1100 N. Third St., Lawrence police reported. Police said the car, a 1949 maroon Ford Taurus, was stolen sometime between noon and 2 p.m. The value of the car was not available from the Hertz Corporation in New Mexico, where the car was registered, police said. ☆ Horoscopes HAPPY BIRTHDAY! IN THE NEXT YEAR OF YOUR LIFE! Stay on your toes where financial and romantic opportunities are concerned. You do not want to miss the chance of a lifetime! An exciting new partnership or alliance can higher profits by Christmas. Have more confidence in your abilities. Freelance projects you undertake early in 1995 could bring lasting wealth and prestige. Be willing to work longer hours. A generous gift or gesture reveals your tremendous capacity for caring. MESSAGE: singer John Lee Hooker, baseball player Paul Molitor, actress Cindy Wilmer, writer Dorothy Parker 8 T (March 24-19 April) You need to obtain additional information before signing a contract. Take a peek behind the scenes. A special appearance is required in connection with an organization. Taurus Aries (April 20-May 20). Frequent interruptions are likely today. A personal relationship is still strong despite a brief period of discord. Astonishing news is a source of great pleasure. Gemini (May 21 June 20): Contractual agreements are in the spotlight. Trust your own judgment. A gracious and diplomatic approach is essential when dealing with business partners. You've views but show that you are also willing to listen. 69 Cancer (June 21- July 22) Someone may be trying to pick a fight. Be mature; squabbling will only compound an error. Ignore anyone who makes jealous comments and matters yourself if a family member is irresponsible. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22): A plastic relationship suddenly changes course. An office romance can cause troubles at work, be very disheartens. Be careful not to allow your workplace to produce extra income. Showcase your talents. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Tend to your family responsibilities before putting any new irons into the fire. Romance enjoys highly favorable influences. Enjoy a night on the town with special friends. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Making light of your talents and contributions is a mistake. Accept compliments gracefully. Various conflicts could be inhibiting love and marriage. Be patient. Discuss a recent misunderstanding in a calm manner. Say "no" to additional debts. Scorpio π (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Show initiative now and potential employers or investors will come to you. The romantic outlook brightens for those who are unattached. Travel is best postponed. When clothes shopping. Travel is best postponed. Sagittarius ♂ Nov. 22, Dec. 21): Your niceness can backfire if either people take advantage of it. Ask for money. A neighbor will help with a child-care problem. Let your spouse know what is really wrong. fact help! (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Routine activities and chores should go more smoothly this week. Married couples may be tempted to argue over unimportant matters. Try to avoid quibbling. Constant squabbles will undermine even the strongest relationship. Be a romantic! Capricorn (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Try not to fret if the week gets off to a somewhat slow start. Loved ones are looking on the bright side now, and you should follow their lead. Stand up for your principles. ON CAMPUS Aquarius (Feb. 19-Mar 20) Maintain a low profile today and keep any family problem to yourself. The atmosphere at home will become less strained if you exercise more diplomacy. TODAY'S CHILDREN are hard-working, proud and lucky. They always seem to be in the right place at the right time! Friends they make at school could help these Leo attain a position of power at a fairly early age. Wise parents will encourage these bright children to read widely. They have a keen intellect which should be exercised regularly., Affectionate and responsible, these Leos have a deep appreciation for family life. They make exemplary parents. KU Crew will hold an informational meeting at 4:30 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 25, at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Bryan Tylander at 832-9055. KU Champions Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 25 at the Parlors in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Erik Lindsley at 841-4585. S Pisces Stock market report .32 3,755.11 Horoscopes by Jeane Dixon Dow Jones Shares ↑ Advances 1,158 ↓ Declines 920 - Unchanged 779 NYSE .32 255.81 NYSE .32 255.81 Nasdaq .24 742.41 ASE .1.90 445.45 Nasdaq .24 742.41 ASE 4.90 445.45 Weather NATIONAL TEMPS H I G H L O W Lawrence Kansas City Topeka Wichita Omaha Tulsa Des Moines St. Louis Chicago Atlanta New York Los Angeles Seattle HIGH LOW 81° • 62° 92° • 62° 93° • 62° 99° • 68° 85° • 54° 92° • 70° 89° • 60° 89° • 73° 88° • 66° 88° • 71° 78° • 70° 86° • 70° 76° • 60° EXTENDED FORECAST MON. Mostly sunny TUES. Partly cloudy HIGH LOW 8565 HIGH LOW 8570 C WED. Chance of storms in mid afternoon 8565 Source: Associated Press HIGH LOW 8565 What's New This Month in THE UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES? Orientation Tours Watson Library has scheduled oriental: Mon. Aug. 22 at 10:30 & 2:30 Tues. Aug. 23 at 9:30 & 3:30 Weds. Aug. 24 at 11:30, 3:30, & 7:30 Thurs. Aug. 25 at 10:30 & 2:30 Audio-cassette self-guided tours are on tours at the following times: Mon. Aug. 29 at 9:30 & 2:30 Tues. Aug. 30 at 10:30, 3:30, & 7:30 Weds. Aug. 31 at 10:30 & 4:30 Thurs. Sept. 1 at 9:30 & 3:30 Available at Watson's Reserve Desk New Circulation & Fines Policies Effective August 1st, 1994, the Libraries implemented revised circulation policies and fines. Among other changes, the loan period for undergraduate students is increased from four to six weeks. For more details, pick up a copy of Guide for Readers #5: Circulation & Fines Policies in Brief; see posted information; or ask for a copy of the complete KU Libraries Lending Code at any circulation desk. Marilyn Clark Electronic Resources Lab In the former location of the Typing Room on Watson's main floor is the new Marilyn Clark Electronic Resources Lab. It houses ten microcomputers that provide access to the Libraries' Online Catalog as well as Expanded Academic Index, the Local Area Network of over twenty-five electronic databases, and selected Internet resources. It will occasionally be used for instructional sessions, but is otherwise open for public use. Trained student assistants are on duty during Lab hours. Check the display case outside the Lab for hours and policies. Lexis-Nexis, a mega-database focusing on legal, legislative, business, political, economic, and medical information, is now available on several LAN workstations in Watson and Anschutz. A printed guide, "Basics of Using Lexis-Nexis," is available at most reference desks. Our contract restricts use to KU students and faculty for classroom assignments only. New on Our Local Area Network Mel DeSart is KU's new Engineering Librarian. Mel comes to KU from the University of Illinois—Urbana/Champaign, where he was Assistant Engineering Librarian. New to Our Staff Currently on Exhibit Zee Galliano is the new supervisor of Watson Library's Circulation Desk. Johnnie Love is a new Reference & Instruction Librarian in Watson who will also develop our multicultural and diversity initiatives. Cindy Pierard is the new Coordinator of Instructional Services. To learn more about the Libraries' instruction program, call her at 864-3366. In Watson: "Rome and the Germans As Seen in Coinage" In The Kansas Collection*: "Preserving Our Heritage" In The Department of Special Collections*: "London: Flower of Cities All" In The University Archives*: "The Three Faces of Spooner" (opens Sept. 9) * Located on the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th floors of Kenneth Spencer Research Library The University of Kansas Libraries Publications Office • 350 Watson Library • To Comment, Call 864-3378 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 $90. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer - Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045. 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When James Kitchen took a job as director of the Office of Affirmative Action at the University of Nevada at Las Vegas in 1976, enrollment was 6,000. By the time he left as associate dean of students in 1994, enrollment was 20,000. By David Wilson Kansan staff writer "I was involved with a lot of different programs," he said. So Kitchen, the newly-hired dean of student life at University of Kansas, knows the complexities of coordinating the dozens of programs designed to guide a large number of students through university life. Kitchen said his duties at UNLV included overseeing the student assistance center, psychological counseling, recruiting programs for high school students, advising for student athletes, graduate student testing and advising to minority New Leadership "It was fun, but it was time to go," Kitchen said. "It was time for professional development." At KU, Kitchen's duties will include overseeing the Student Assistance Center, the Office of Minority Affairs, International Student Services, the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, Legal Services, and Organizations and Activities. Kitchen replaces Caryl Smith, who left to become vice president for student affairs at the University of Akron in Akron, Ohio, said Danny Kaiser, assistant dean of student life. Kaiser said Kitchen had been working to meet people at the University, including students. "I think he's going to be very inclusive." Kaiser said. Kitchen already has settled into his new office on the third floor of Strong Hall. Shortly after moving in, he took down the prints that were already on the wall. "Ugly frames," he said. In their places are framed portraits of Martin Luther King, Jr. and Nelson Mandela. In the month since he moved from Las Vegas to Lawrence, Kitchen said he had been meeting non-stop with various staffs and program heads to set agenda for the semester. "We're building from where we are," Kitchen said. "I'll be working very closely with student government and expanding programs where we can." Kitchen's advice for new students is to make academics their first priority. He said a second priority for new students should be getting involved with campus organizations. That's where Kitchen comes in. "Get involved with student activities—athletics, governance," he said. "Just get involved. Get a chance to know the campus and at The Times and Trials of Tonkovich Mav 1991 A group of female law students complain to Rober Jerry, dean of law, that Emil Tonkovic sexually harrassed them. Aug. 22, 1991 Former law student Tammee McVey submits a written statement to Del Brinkman, vice chancellor for academic affairs, alleging that Tonkovich pressured her to perform oral sex on him during the summer of 1988. Sept. 1991 Tonikov is placed on paid leave Aug. 26, 1992 Chancellor Gene Budig moves to dismiss Tonkovich. Aug. 27, 1992 Faculty Senate Committee on Tenure and Related Problems begin hearings on Tonkovich's case. May 12, 1993 Hearings conclude. Julv 30.1993 Faculty committee votes 3-2 to uphold Bulig's recommendation to fire Tonkovik. Aug. 2, 1993 Tonkovich announces his intention to appeal to the Board of Regents. 72-1993 Oct. 22, 1993 Tonkovich files a 300-page brief with the Regents explaining why the Regents should review the $ ^{19} $ Nov. 11, 1993 The University files its response to the appeal with the Regents. February 1984 February 1994 The Regents form a three-member committee to review the faculty committee's decision. Regents to decide fate of fired professor September 15, 1997 The Regents' subcommittee will announce their recommendation to the Regents. Source: University Archives By Colleen McCain Kansan staff writer More than three years after former law student Tammee McVey alleged that Emil Tonkovick pressured her to perform oral sex, the former law professor hopes that his name soon will be cleared. The Board of Regents will decide Tonkovich's fate after a three-member subcommittee presents its recommendation at the Regents' Sept. 15 meeting. The subcommittee, composed of Regents Tom Hammond, Frank Sabatini and Phyllis Nolan, has spent the past six months reviewing a University of Kansas faculty committee's 1993 decision to uphold former Chancellor Gene Budig's recommendation to fire Tonkovon for sexual harassment and moral turpitude. The faculty committee made the decision after McVey and a group of female law students testified that Tonkovich had sexually harassed them. The subcommittee will present its findings at the Regents' meeting, and the entire board then will vote to accept or reject the recommendation. "In order for us to reverse the University's decision, we would have to find that there's no substantial evidence to support the decision or that Tonkovich didn't receive due process," Sabatini said. "It is possible that we would schedule further hearings." The subcommittee had planned to present its recommendation in July. but Hammond said the task was larger than he had anticipated. He said the subcommittee was reviewing all documents associated with the case, including the 8,176-page transcript of the University hearing. "The size of the record for this case is daunting and is more than we bargained for," Hammond said. Tonkovich, who was only the second tenured professor ever to be fired by the university, said a careful review of the case by the subcommittee should prove his innocence. Tonkovich maintains that the encounter described by McVey never occurred. "Obviously, I expect the Regents to find that I'm not guilty, because I truly am not guilty." Tonkovich said. "I hope to be reinstated at the university." Tonkovich said the lengthy appeal process was frustrating. "I have no control over when the Board of Regents makes their decision, but the appeal process has been ongoing for a year now." Tonkovich said. Tonkovich first announced his appeal to the Regents Aug. 2, 1993, three days after the Faculty Senate Committee on Tenure and Related Problems voted 3-2 to fire Tonkovich. If the Regents do not reverse the University's decision, Tonkovich said he would file a lawsuit. PROURLIGHTS "I won't comment on the scope of the lawsuit, but a lawsuit will be New a full service bar after 57 years of downtown tradition 1031 Massachusetts, Downtown Call Carol for college cash. If you need money for college, Carol Wirthman at Mercantile Bank has the answer. In fact, several answers, depending on your financial needs and college plans. 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Box 2, Lawrence, Ks. 66044 CDS & TAPES AUDIO & MUSIC EO 913-842-1544 913-842-1811 913-842-1438 4A Monday, August 24, 1992 OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN EDITOR Correspondents to enhance campus coverage STEPHEN MARTINO The Kansan invites all students to actively contribute to the paper and help increase our coverage. The fall represents a time of renewal and change at the University of Kansas. New students replace those who have graduated. New professors and instructors step in for those who have left or retired. Campus organizations take a new shape and direction as new leaders plot their courses. Refreshing and new, the fall makes campus seem even more alive than usual. However, this autumn change seems to have taken on an electric quality at KU. Gone is Gene Budig, the University's chancellor, to the presidency of Major League Baseball's American League. In his place is Del Shankel, professor of microbiology, to serve as intermant chancellor until a search committee can recommend a replacement for Budig. The exit of Budig, who had the chancellor's office for 13 years, will almost certainly spark a number of changes within the University. While these may only be cosmetic, Chancellor Shankel will undoubtedly leave an imprint on the institution he has been asked to lead. Obviously the organization I have been charged to lead this semester, the Kansan, has undergone a great deal of change. We are glad that we have been able to make the move to full color. We are glad that papers will be on campus before classes start each morning. We are also glad that we will be able to offer more coverage of campus groups, activities and people than ever before. The first two changes, color and earlier printing and distribution, will be up to the news staff — to incorporate new technology and new deadlines. We hope you will like the things that we have done to make the Kansan as modern, clean looking and convenient as possible. Our third charge for the semester, increasing our coverage of groups, activities and people, however, may be more dependent on you, our readers, than the news staff. In an effort to be more responsive the Kansan knows we have to cover the people of this university — want you do, what you think, what you believe — better. The Kansan has been criticized for how its covers the campus. But at a time when we are asked to do more, we have fewer numbers than we ever have had fun the past. At the same time, this situation provides us the perfect opportunity to open our doors to as many people as possible who would like to contribute to the Kansan. We call them Kansan Correspondents. At 4:30 Wednesday in room 100 of Stauffer-Flint Hall, the Kansan will have a meeting of the people interested in contributing to the Kansan, whether that contribution is as a reporter, a photographer or a graphic artist. While everyone is welcome to become a correspondent, this is an especially good opportunity for freshmen and sophomores who want to be journalism majors or are considering journalism to get a first-hand account of what working on the *Kansan* is like. If you can't make the meeting, feel free to stop by the newsroom at 111 Stauffer-Flint anytime and find out how you can contribute. With your help and contribution, a color Kansan won't be the only change you will notice in the paper this semester. Stephen Martinez is an Olathe senior major in journalism and political science. VIEWPOINT Search for new chancellor should include minorities Thirteen years ago Gene Budig became the chancellor of our University. This summer he became the president of the American League. And while we wish him happiness as he becomes a significant part of the sport he has always loved, we have to turn our rational in recruiting candidates for the position of chancellor. In order to find the best person to lead KU into the next century, the commit- CHANCELLOR SEARCH The search committee should actively seek to recruit high quality women and minority candidates for KU chancellor. attention to the more essential project of finding a replacement. To ensure that the committee passes that examination, it should consider the issue of diversity. The search committee has a great responsibility on its shoulders. Their selection will be scrutinized on all sides, and the selection process will be dissected and examined. To date, the University of Kansas has never been headed by a woman or a person of color. It should be the hope of the University community that the members of the search committee are One of the biggest movements of the '90s has been the re-examination of how we view minorities. Although some attitudes are still in need of overhaul, most rational people have come to realize that ability is not based on gender or race but on talent and intelligence. tee must seek out those who may not apply because they think their gender or ethnicity may be too great a handicap. Once they have found those people the committee has to let them know that they were sought out because of their abilities. It is important that this not be mistaken as a command to hire a minority or a woman, simply because he or she is a minority or a woman. Without considering the unique perspectives a woman or minority may offer, the committee would be decreasing its chances of bringing a great leader to KU. In addition to the request to consider all possibilities, it would be wise for the committee to keep the following in mind: A chancellor willing to make himself or herself accessible to students. An administrator willing to fight for the interests of students and faculty at any political cost. It is a tall order to ask anyone to fill but so is finding a high quality chancellor. DONELLA HEARNE FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD. KANSAN STAFF STEPHEN MARTINO Editor JEN CARR Business manager CHRISTOPH FUHRMANS Managing editor TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser CATHERINE ELLSWORTH Systems coordinator JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser CAMERON DEATH Retail sales manager News...Sara Bennett Editorial...Donella Heane Campus...Mark Martin Sports...Brian James Photo...Daron Bennett Melissa Lacey Features...Traci Carl Planning...Susan White Design...Noah Musser Assistant to the editor..Robbie Johnson Editors Business Staff Campur mgr ... Todd Winters Regional mgr ... Laura Guth National mgr ... Mark Mastro Coop mgr ... Emily Gibson Special Sections mgr ... Jon Perrier Production mgrs ... Holly Boren ... Regan Overy Marketing director ... Alan Stigle Creative director ... John Carlton Classified mgr ... Heather Nielshus **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 not permitted. Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed. The Kansas reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be nailed or brought to the Kansas newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. HOE D UDX 91 PLAYERS' STRIKE GENE BUDIG ENTERS HIS FIELD OF DREAMS Matt Hood/ KANSAN Finding a liberating education is not easy When I think of what a liberal arts education should be, I think of my seventh grade social studies class. Our teacher decided he wanted to expose us to a different view of education. He played the entire "Wall" album by Pink Floyd. He even printed the lyrics for us. Some of those lyrics challenged my complacent ideas about education. That album made me question the nature of the student/teacher relationship, especially the lines "We don't need no education. We don't need no thought control." This is what I think a liberal arts education wouldn't do. It would be, as its name implies, a liberating education. And yet so many classrooms are characterized by an authoritarianism that would make Chairman Mao proud. When you come to a university, it is reasonable to expect that you will be treated as an adult. How many times have you walked into a classroom to find yourself being treated as if you were back in junior high? Instead of calling your parents when you are not in class, the professor takes points off your grade. Punishment and discipline are still essential to your classroom experience. This is an unique situation especially when considered from a business perspective. I know that many of us in the University community find this distasteful, but when you pay your tuition, it becomes a business transaction. You or your parents pay the University in exchange for the services of its professors. What makes this arrangement unique is that it is the only one I know of that penalizes you if you do not use the service. For example, do you see Perry Farrell checking attendance at Lollapaloza? Do you have Roy Williams telling you that because you missed the last game, you have to forfeit one of your remaining tickets? Isn't the fact that you are missing class punishment enough? Why are professors compelled to punish you further? The COLUMNIST NICOLAS SHUMP As I enter what I hope will be the last year of my undergraduate experience, I continually think back to that seventh grade social studies class. I look back at all of the classes that I have had and try to evaluate my education in terms of what I learned that semester in junior high. For those of you starting your education here, I humbly offer this as a way of evaluating your education. Of all the lessons that I learned in seventh grade, a few lines of Lao Tzu come to mind: "Thus whoever is stiff and inflexible is a disciple of death. Whoever is soft and yielding is a disciple of life. The hard and stiff will be broken. The soft and supple will prevail." I know that facsim is a nasty word, but it's also the appropriate one because this issue centers on control. These draconian attendance policies are used by professors to get you into class. Considering that most of their published work is read by fewer people than fit into your average phone booth, the classroom is often their only chance for human interaction. Nicolaas Shump is a laureance senior majoring in comparative literature. best conclusion: latent facism and chronic insecurity. DONELLA HEARNE Opinion page welcomes your views, voices EDITORIAL EDITOR I. The time has come; we're back to school, and I'm back to life in Staufer-Flint. But this semester I will need to ask a favor of all of you. My job as editor of the Opinion page relies largely on your willingness to help me. Now it is your turn to ask: How could I (fill in your major, year and any personal descriptions here) possibly help make the Opinion page better? The answer is: You can help by letting me know what is on your mind. We still have room on our Editorial Board and are seeking to add some diversity to the group. This is your chance to speak your mind and be heard. That sounds easy enough, doesn't it? Well if not, there's always the second option. You could submit to me a column about whatever is nagging you. We often print guest columns as a way to expand our coverage of the issues affecting this campus. Option three is even easier than that. The most important thing to remembrer is you don't have to be a literarygenius to voice your opinions. Thebest commentary comes from regularindividuals who feel they have somethingto say. You can give me a call or write me a letter And now that I've made my appeal to you and have put myself at your mercy, I would like to take this opportunity to welcome you all to the University of Kansas, Fall 1994. In case you missed it this summer, there was more than base stealing happening on the baseball scene. At the beginning of the summer, America's national past time stole our chancellor, Gene Budig, when he accepted the position as American League president. The game also stole the income of hot dog vendors and ticket sellers when the millionaires decided they couldn't compromise, and the season ground to a halt. Also in the news: thousands of man hours have been spent to investigate Whitewater, while Rwandan refugees waste in camps that can't even provide toilets. And as we recover from seeing O.J.'s face on everything and the shock we felt upon hearing that 100,000 people got into Woodstock '94 without tickets, we can take comfort in the knowledge that classes will resume with little chaos, textbooks will cost as much ever and the parking lot where we want to park will always be full. Donelia Hamea is a Wichita senior majoring in Journalism. HUBIE DAY 1 YABBA DABBA DOO! DAY 36 MORE THAN YOU EVER WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT OJ! DAY 1 YABBA DABBA DOO! DAY 36 MORE THAN YOU EVER WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT OJ! DAY 67 LOLLAPALOOZA '94! IF YOU'RE NOT THERE, I WOULD NOT ALTERNATIVE! DAY 89 BARBARA IS SIMPLY AMAZING. SHE'S THE GREATEST. SHE'S — YAWN DAY 100 TODAY IS THE FIRST DAY OF THE MILIONAIRE TEMPER TANTRUM... DIE DIE DIE DAY 36 MORE THAN YOU EVER WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT OJ! By Greg Hardin DAY 67 LOLLA PALOOZA `99! IF YOURE NOT THERE, YOURE NOT ALTERNATIVE! DAY 100 TODAY IS THE FIRST DAY OF THE MIL- LIONAIRE TEMPER TANTRUM... DIE DIE DIE DIE DIE DIE DIE DIE DIE DIE DIE DIE DIE DIE DIE KA- POOM! DAY 10.8 DIE DIE DIE DIE DIE DIE DIE DIE DIE DIE DIE DIE Oh, how I'm going to miss Summer! KA- POPM! DAY 108 GM OH, HOW I'M GOING TO MISS SUMMER! UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N Monday. August 22. 1994 5A Fires rage in West Six states battling fires that continue to flout firefighters The Associated Press LOYALTON, Calif. — Crews used bulldozers, picks and shovels on Saturday to claw a protective path between a 38,500-acre forest fire and this tiny Sierra Nevada lumber town. More than 2,000 firefighters — nearly twice Loyalton's population — battled the fire that had threatened the community since Wednesday. "I'm tired of it. Tired of the smoke, tired of leaving, tired of the whole fire," said resident Mary Anderson. Many residents have taken to wearing bandanas around their faces to filter out smoke, which is visible 60 miles east in Carson City, Nev. Crews have managed to stop the flames' advance around only 20 percent of its circumference, according to Stacey Giomi of the Sierra Front Wildfire Cooperators. No structures have been lost and only minor injuries have been reported since the fire began Tuesday at the Cottonwood Campground south of Sierraville. Officials said it was set, but the cause remained under investigation. Thirty-one buldozers worked Saturday digging a wide firebreak around the south edge of town. More than 200 fire trucks were parked in neighborhoods to protect buildings from windborne embers. Airplanes and helicopters dropped water and fire retardant. Throughout the West, 28 major fires remained out of control Saturday. They had burned across nearly 400,000 acres in Idaho, Montana, Utah, Oregon, Washington and California, the National Interagency Fire Center said. Only seven of the major fires were outside Idaho and western Montana. Idaho had 10 fires that had covered 157,745 acres and Montana fire crews battled 11 major blazes that had burned 24,965 acres. Near Idaho City, a fast-moving forest fire doubled in size overnight to 7,000 acres but a threat to nearly 30 houses eased Saturday. An evacuation alert remained in effect for the subdivision. Montana also had scores of smaller fires and some 6,000 firefighters were stretched to the limit. More than 400 new firefighters completed emergency training Saturday, and 680 soldiers from Fort Lewis, Wash. were due to arrive Sunday for similar training. THE HARBOUR LIGHTS a full service bar after 57 years downtown tradition 1031 Minnesotaanta Downtown RO FREE! DRAWING PENCIL WITH EVERY ART SUPPLY PURCHASE BEROL TURQUOISE* LEAD POINTER Precision sharpening plus portable convenience R.F.C. $4.35 $25 FREE! DRAWING PENCIL WITH EVERY ART SUPPLY PURCHASE BEROL TURQUOISE® LEAD POINTER Precision sharpening plus portable convenience. $525 REC. $4.35 NEWSPRINT 30 lb bass weight, size 18" x 24". 1 ream. $830 REC. $9.40 VYCO BOARD COVER & TAPE Two sided vinyl cover gives a smooth surface to any surface. Matte white/non-glare green. Size 31" x 42". $1895 REC. $24.95 VYCO TAPE, 1" x 25" $2.69 PORTFOLIOS All sizes and styles to choose from. KOH-L-NOOR RAPIDOGRAPH PENS Seven pen set in a hinged-lid case with ink and nib keys. STAEDTLER MARSMAGNO 2 TECHNICAL PEN A refillable technical pen at an economical price. Sold in 4 and 7 pen sets. School Specialty Supply Tower Plaza Retail Center 2540 Iowa St. Suite M Lawrence, KS Phone 865-5071 NEWSPRINT 30 lb basis weight, size 18" x 24" 1 ream. CA-231 REL. $9.40 $830 500 SHEETS 1 REAM + + + + + Seven pens set in a hunged lid case with ink and nib keys. KOH-1-NOOR RAPIDOGRAPH PENS Seven pen set in a hinged- lid case with ink and nib keys. STAEDTLER MARSMAGNO 2 TECHNICAL PEN A refillable technical pen at an economical price. Sold in 4 and 7 pen sets. School Specialty Supply Tower Plaza Retail Center 2540 Iowa St., Suite M Lawrence, KS Phone 865-5071 CHURCH "Simplify, simplify." Henry David Thoreau "Hey, that's not a bad idea." AT&T AT&T Universal MasterCard. The credit, cash and calling card. All in one. The AT&T Universal MasterCard. No annual fee—ever. Access to cash at over 350,000 locations. Plus an AT&T calling card. Because life should be contemplated. Not complicated. Call 1 800 438-8627 to request an application. BNP Paribas Universal 51234 56789 1234 MasterCard 09/27/2016 10:20:00 Look For Free Start at The H&I Universal MasterCard Table at The AT&T --- 6A Monday, August 22, 1994 CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Sounds You Want To Hear! $1299 CDs $899 Cass. $1999 CDs $1199 Cass. Forrest Gump The Soundtrack HARRY COWBULL JIM SILVER Toad the Wet Spoonful Juliana KU Bookstore Kansas Union Level Two The only store that offers rebates to KU students Certain locks deter bike theft Registration use of u-lock enhance safety By Carlos Tejada Kansan staff writer Jeremy Wilhm's $410 Trek 820 mountain bicycle was a high school graduation gift last May. And he was a KU student for less than 48 hours before somebody stole it from the front of Hashinger Hall sometime Tuesday night. "I walk a lot every day now," said Wilhm, Roeland Park freshman. "I walk back and forth to the Union just to get exercise." Wilhm is one of four freshman whose bicycles were stolen last week from Daisy Hill residence halls, KU police said. In all, the thefts add up to $2,833 in value. Police have issued warnings to keep bicycle thefts from continuing in the future. bar shaped like a U that locks into a straight metal bar. The bicycle wheel and part of the bicycle then are circled by a single metal bar, which she said was more difficult to break than a chain. Sgt. Rose Rozmiarek of the KU police said that in all four thefts the bicycle owners used cable-type locks. Instead, she said, owners should use a U-lock, which consists of a bent metal "They're a better type of lock," Rozmiarek said. "They're not easily tampered with, unlike a chain or cable lock." Paul Kotz/ KANSAN Rozmirek cited an article in the August issue of Bicycling magazine, in which an experienced bicycle thief tested out different locks. The Ulocks were the most dependable, according to the article. Because newer bicycles are designed with snap-off wheels, the owner should detach the front wheel. Then the owner should lock the front wheel, the back wheel and part of the frame together and lock it to the rack. John Kidd, Glenn Ellyn, Ill. freshman, locks up his bike using a u-bolt type lock. Four bikes have been stolen in the last week, and u-bolt type locks are considered the most reliable. Rozmiarek also said students were required to register their bicycles with the KU police or Lawrence police. Registration improves the chance that a stolen bicycle can be found, she said. She also said registration costs $.25, while being ticketed for riding an unregistered bicycle costs $21.50. Bicycles can be registered at the KU police headquarters, 302 Carruth-O'Leary Hall, Lawrence police headquarters at the Judicial and Law Enforcement Center, 111 E. 11th St., and at the Student Union Activities office in the Kansas Union. Registra- tion also will be available from 5 to 8 p.m. Thursday in Ellsworth Hall, Rozmiarek said. YOU STILL dialing OPER 0 to CALL PEOPLE COLLECT? TIME to RETRAIN YOUR FINGER. DIAL 1-800-COLLECT INSTEAD SAVE THE People YOU CALL up to 44% DIAL 1-800-COLLECT INSTEAD SAVE THE People YOU CALL up to 44% USE IT EVERY TIME YOU MAKE A LONG DISTANCE COLLECT CALL. Marching Band class still open By Ashley Miller Kansan staff writer Attention: the class for marching band is not closed. "We haven't approached our maximum number ever." Foster said. The department of music and dance wants to make sure students interested in band understand that. Bob Foster, director of bands, said that students, mostly freshmen, were told at the enrollment center last week that the marching band class was closed. The center had the maximum capacity for the class listed about 165 people, but Foster said that the class would hold as many students as the marching band needed. Foster said the music department had this problem three or four times in the past, including last fall. Last year, about one-third of the band had been told the class was closed when they tried to enroll. As long as students are qualified to play, Foster said they were welcome to join the band. The name of the class is University Marching Band. The number is BAND 210. The class meets every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday in 102 Murphy Hall from 3:30 to 5:20 p.m. "We don't know how many kids were told no." he said. Foster did not want that to happen again this year. Foster said any students interested in joining the class should do so as soon as possible so as not to fall behind schedule. By Carlos Tejada Kansan staff writer Those cars are a major concern for police as public schools open today around the city. According to the Douglas County department of motor vehicles, most of Lawrence's population - about 70,000 - own a motor vehicle, although an exact number is not known. That number does not include students, many of whom bring their cars. Every August, more than 26.000 KU students - and their cars - descend upon Lawrence. The sheer number of vehicles has city officials concerned about school crossing zones, said David Corlisis, assistant to the city manager. He said added traffic made the streets more dangerous for children, some of whom will be crossing major traffic thoroughfares today on their first day of school. "The more people you have, the greater the chance of accidents," Corliss said. "That's not meant to blame anybody. That's just a fact." So the city is asking that drivers pay more attention when driving, Corliss said. And, said Lt. Mike Hall of the Lawrence police, patrol cars will be stationed around schools this week to make sure nobody exceeds the 20 mph speed limit. CAMPUS/AREA UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N Monday, August 22,1994 7A Student Senate Student senate president Sherman Reeves said his agenda included better student influence on the educational legislation in Topeka and improved recycling efforts on campus. POLICY LIST Jennie Zeiner/KANSAN Student Senate begins work Campaign goals will be reached president says By James Evans Kansan staff writer 804 Mass Last April, Student Senate presidential candidate Sherman Reeves made lots of promises. Reeves pledged to have more student influence on educational legislation in Topeka, better recycling on campus, improve economic conditions for students in Lawrence, and change some of the revenue codes that allot funds to organizations funded by Student Senate were high on Reeves' agenda. Four months later, Reeves hopes to implement his campaign promises. Gaining a better lobbying influence will be a very gradual process, Reeves said. Student Senate two years ago had a student lobbying influence in Topeka with the Associated Students of Kansas (ASK), he said. But during the fall of 1993, Attorney General Bob Stephan ruled that no student funds could be used for lobbying in Topeka. "So what we've done over the summer is we've taken a cursory look at the situation, and I've appointed two task force chairs," Reeves said. Along with addressing student representation in Topeka, the new Student Political Awareness Task Force will be setting up debates between all the major candidates in state races and organizing voter registration drives on campus and in the next couple of weeks in the hopes of giving students a greater political voice, Reeves said. expand newspaper recycling on campus in the next year. The big snag in implementing the newspaper program, he said though, is that Facilities and Operations will not take up any recycling project that is not self-fundable. To enhance recycling efforts on campus, Reeves said that he hoped to "We're hoping that we can get something worked out with F and O, so that we can get a pilot program started," Reeves said. The program would be similar to the aluminum can recycling effort already implemented, he said. The push for better economic conditions for students will be Reeves' pet project. Last year as the Chair of the University Affairs Committee, he said he helped the $*Student Dollars Task Force* conduct a survey of local businesses to see if they offered discounts for students. He said that he is planning to do the survey again this year, and will use the information compiled to create placards that will be displayed in merchants' windows to identify "student-friendly businesses." Eric Medill, student body vice-president, said he would work on improving the process of allocating money to organizations funded by Student Senate. "In the past, the way things have gone has been cumbersome," Medill said. He said that they will be looking at moving several organizations, such as LesBiGays OK and the Hispanic American Leadership Organization, from having to reapply for funds every year to gaining revenue code status, which only makes organizations have to reapply every two years for funding. SUNFLOWER He said that they will also be looking at improving the hearing and deliberation process for allocating funds, so every organization is looked at fairly. "No group deserves to be cut, if we don't know why we're doing it," Medill said. S 843-5000 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 Red Lyon Tavern A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence 944 Massachusetts 1993 832-8228 EPSON Equity 4SX/25+ - 486SX,25MHz - 4Mb, 240Mb, $3\frac{1}{2}$" Diskette, Mouse - DOS 6.x, Windows 3.1 - One Year Warranty only $899 or $29/mo. - Monitor extra. Limited quantity. With approved credit. Based on (6) APR, 48-month payments. See store for details. 5.9% tax. Not eligible for 10-year mortgage. C Connecting ConnectingPoint COMPUTER CENTER 813 Mass • Downtown Lawrence • 843-7584 Point COMPUTER CENTER MICROSOFTBORLANDAUTODESKCLARIS WORDPERFECTALDUSCORELLOTUS MICROSTATIONMULTIMEDIA SOFTWARE AT UP TO 80% OFF RETAIL VALID I.D. REQUIRED M ayhawk Bookstore 59¢ only at the top of Naismith Hill! 1420 Crescent RoadLawrence, KS 66044 Point 7 ml. lead Scripto 5 pack pencils 843-3826 Never Needs Sharpening Women's Wrangler Jeans Now $1399 SAC'S SPECIALS & CLOSEOUTS SUPER MATTRESS SALE! SACK THE SAVINGS 2525 Iowa Stuart Hall Spiral 3 subject 120 ct. Stuart Hall 70 ct Spiral Notebooks 4 for $100 Twin Size Mattress With Box Now...$99^{99}$ Full Size Mattress With Box Now...$139^{99}$ Queen Size Mattress With Box Now...$159^{99}$ Wide Rule Notebooks Now 2/$100 4 for $100 Stuart Hall 3 ring Binder 1/2 inch 88¢ OFFICIALLY LICENSED MINI BASKETBALL Stuart Hall 80 ct. Wireless Notebooks 4 for $100 80 Stuart Hall 200 ct. of selected college teams Men's Wrangler Jeans Sizes30-40 100 Notebooks 4 for $100 Filler Paper 2 for $1^{00} Now $1199 Laundry Hamper $999 Coca-Cola CLASSIC Coke 24 packs $499 Slim Design Telephones Ladies Sport Socks $499 Men's Tube Socks $479 $999 Bean Bag Chairs $999 Utility Grade Fully Assembled Bookshelves 6'...$29⁹⁹ 5'...$19⁹⁹ 12"...$14⁹⁹ T.V.VCR Shelf...$9 99 Econo Shelf...$9 99 Magazine Shelf.$8 99 Scotch T-120 HS VHS Tape $179 Scotch E 6 B 120 EYE KOPP E 350 Carpet and Room Deodorizer 79¢ WELCOME BACK KU STUDENTS!!! SPECIAL COUPON SECTION exclusively for students. Redeem at Sac's from now until 8-28-94 Coupon must be present for sale price COUPON 3 candy bars Regular size for 93¢ Valid until8-28-94 COUPON Rent 2 movies for $100 Valid until 8-28-94 93¢ COUPON 10 movie rentals Gift Certificate You can use them later Buy now and Save $750 save 25% Coupon Valid until 8-28-94 COUPON 12 pack of Microwave POP WEAVER'S' Popcorn $299 with coupon Valid until 8-28-94 COUPON Hi-Dri Single Roll Paper Towels 2 for $100 Valid until 8-28-94 8A Monday, August 22, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WE CAN'T HELP YOU WIN THE RAT RACE, BUT WE CAN HELP YOU FINISH. AIR BLASTER It's a busy world and it's sometimes hard to know what activity to pursue.And when we need medical attention it can be frustrating trying to find the best place to go for help. At times like these,it's comforting to know that the professionals at the new Mt. Oread Medical Arts Centre are there to lend a hand with expanded services. 1000 Lawrence PromptCare is a full service urgent care center and a fast, economical way to seek medical attention. Open from 6 pm until 11 pm, Monday Lawrence PromptCare. 865-3997 Lawrence Occupational Health Services 865-0700 Lawrence Occupational Health Services offers a full range of industrial medicine options, including injury management. drug screening, physical therapy, occupational therapy and work hardening. Prompt evaluations courteous and timely service, flexible hours and plenty of convenient accessible parking make Mt. Oread through Friday and noon until 11 pm Saturdays and Sundays, no appointment is necessary you'll be greeted by a nurse immediately and treated fast—some visits will cost you less than $60. Lawrence PromptCare is an excellent alternative to long waits in the emergency room or when you can't see your regular physician. Mt. Oread Rehabilitation Services 832-1900 Mt. Oread Rehabilitation Services offers a full range of industrial medicine options, including physical therapy and occupational therapy with specialization in sports medicine. Under the direction of Medical Director, Michael Geist, M.D. the program offers the broadest range of rehabilitation services and the most experienced therapists and specialists in Douglas County. M.T. OREAD MEDICAL ARTS CENTRE Medical Arts Centre an agreeable health care alternative. (3) 3 510 CLINTON PARKWAY PLACE LADY GODS Monday, August 22.1994 9A Red Lyon Tavern 一 944 Mass. 832-8228 LAWRENCE TAE-KWON-DO SCHOOL HAP-KI-DO • SUN-DO • KUM-DO (Technique for Body Restraint) (Meditation) (Sword Art) Learn Martial Arts from an Original Master MASTER KI-JUNE PARK. Ph.D. Special Student Rates 10th & Massachusetts • 843-2121 COFFEE SHOP I Can't Believe It's Yogurt! THE TASTE THAT'S WON THE WORLD OVER Treat Time! We'll Be Here With A... 50% Discount On small, medium or large cups or cones!* (Waffle Cones and toppings Regular Price) Limit two with coupon Not valid with any other offer. *offer expires September 15, 1994 NATION/WORLD Louisiana Purchase 23rd & Louisiana 843-5500 Orchards Corners 15th & Kasold 749-0440 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Clinton increases pressure on Cuba The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Confident the exodus of Cuban refugees will ease, the White House turned its attention yesterday to Fidel Castro, pledging to maintain an economic stranglehold on Cuba until the dictator moves toward democracy. Raising the distant possibility of a naval blockade, Chief of Staff Leon Panetta said the administration did not see the migration of asylum-seeking Cubans as its only concern. "It's the problems within the Castro regime," he said. House Minority Whip Newt Gingrich of Georgia said the policy is a A day after President Clinton announced new measures to punish and further isolate Castro, the administration came under attack from Republican and Democratic lawmakers. stop gap, aimed at curing a momentary ill with no thought of the next step. "The level of benign neglect with Cuba has been clear," he said on NBC's "Meet the Press." Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, D-N.Y., criticized Clinton's decision to increase economic sanctions, particularly by forbidding Cuban-Americans to send money home to relatives. "The last thing in the world we want to do is make life more miserable in Cuba than it already is," he said on CBS's "Face the Nation." Since the president reversed course and closed U.S. borders to Cuban refugees last week, the White House has been rebuked for focusing too much on the exodus, and not enough on pushing out Castro. Panetta said yesterday that the thrust of the new U.S. policy was to "demagnetize" the border, keeping Cubans from fleeing. "At the same time, we've got to continue to put pressure on Castro, because the problem here is not the problem of refugees, it's not the problem of migrants. It's the problems within the Castro regime," Panetta said on ABC's "This Week With David Brinkley." "We want to see Castro move toward a democratic form of government, and that clearly is not happening." Administration officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Panetta was referring to blocking trade from other countries to Cuba. The officials said there was no active Asked how much pressure a blockade would offer, he said, "That's obviously one of the options that we would look at in the future as we see whether or not Castro begins to make some legitimate movement toward democracy." effort to implement a blockade. Clinton said Saturday he was barring cash payments by Cuban-Americans to relatives in Cuba and putting new limits on flights between the United States and the island nation. He also pledged increased and amplified U.S. radio broadcasts into Cuba warning residents not to go to sea. There were no signs that the policy had stemmed the tide of refugees. The Coast Guard said it rescued 1,189 refugees from boats on Saturday and 678 by late afternoon yesterday. Florida Gov. Lawton Chiles, a Democrat who pressed Clinton to stem the tide of refugees, praised the measures Sunday. "I think the administration left it clear that these are the next steps. And if Castro continues to escalate, continues to push the rafters out, other steps could follow," Chiles told ABC. Want to maximize your performance on the GRE classStarts August29th Learn test-taking strategies and much more from the company that knows the test makers best. 842-5442 KAPLAN The answer to the test questions THE HARBOUR LIGHTS ce barr after 57 years of downtown tradition 1031 Massachusetts Downtown HEALTHY MALE? Receive up to $250 IMTCI, a pharmaceutical research company in Lenexa. KS is seeking men 18-40 years of age, to participate in a research study. You must be able to complete 2 overnight stays at our clinic. For more information on how to qualify Call IMTCI 1-800-669-4682 of 599-4100 International Medical Technical Consultants, Inc. 16300 College Boulevard-Lenexa, KS 66219 Sign up in the placement center, 110 Burge Union E/O/E m/f United Parcel Service Part time Jobs ups $8 Hour ups Interviews will be held Wednesday, Aug. 24 from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Pizza Hut. The Institute of Higher Eating. 39 This year, while you're in school, don't forget to order plenty of Pizza Hut $ ^{ \circ} $ pizza. It's required eating. For FREE Delivery or Carryout Call: South of 15th St. * 843-3000 In Lawrence Downtown 843-7044 North of 15th St. 843-2211 For Dine-In or Carryout: Lawrence 1606 W. 23rd St. 843-3516 842-1667 934 Massachusetts 843-7044 Student Savings! $3 Off any Large Pizza! | $2 Off any Medium Pizza! Get up to 5 more Medium Pizzas for $5 each. Dine-In, Carryout or Delivery Offer expires September 30, 1994 Pizza Hut. Please contact custor when ordering. One cagupan per party per cuat. work of the Please Team, redistributes and distributes orders. You will receive any other offer. Limited offers not valid. Use at NOURF ONLY. Pizza Hut. Please mention coupon when ordering. One coupon are party per visit at participating Fiji hotels, Fiji residents and abbreviated tourists only with any other entry fee. Polynesia Citi is the registered trader of Polynesia Citi. Survival Pack! Survival Pack! Medium 1-Topping Pizza, Breadsticks & a 6-Pack of Pepsi® $899! Carryout or Delivery Pizza Hut. Late Night Special! $8 after 8 p.m. One Medium Pizza and a Pitcher of Your Favorite Beverage '8 Dine-In Only Valid 8 p.m.-Close Please confirm coupon when ordering. One coupon per party per visit or participating Pizza Hut restaurants and differently answer units. Not valid with any other offer. And not valid on BUYPROOF meals. Pizza Hut. ©1994 Pizza Hut, Inc. 17201 cash redemption value. 10A Monday. August 22. 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THE NEWS in brief MEXICO CITY Mexicans go to polls, hope for change from fraud-tainted history Mexicans lined up to vote yesterday, wary about fraud but with high hopes of choosing a new president and lawmakers in clean elections. In the south, Mayan Indians trudged muddy roads all night to reach the polls. Three candidates were leading in the race for the presidency. Ernesto Zedillo represented the Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, which has ruled Mexico for 65 years. He was strongly challenged by Diego Fernandez de Cevallos of the conservative National Action Party and Cuauhtemoc Cardenas of the leftist Democratic Revolution Party. SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina Bosnian refugees flee battle Thousands of panicked residents fled their homes and flooded the roads of northwest Bosnia on Sunday after government troops captured the stronghold of a rebel Muslim leader. United Nations officials cited unconfirmed reports that 20,000 people were on the run, and said the number was growing. Many streamed northward into Serb-held areas of neighboring Croatia. By Sunday afternoon, thousands were trapped without shelter in no-man's land between Croatian troops and rebel Serb soldiers, with neither side wanting them. Some of the refugees were wounded in the fighting in Velika Kladusa, headquarters of rebel Muslim leader Fikret Abdic, or by land mines, said Peter Kessler, a representative for the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees. They had a "desperate need for water," he said. While fighting continued in and around Velika Kludas, U.N. officials said the town had apparently already fallen to Bosnian army forces who have been fighting for months to defeat the Serb-backed Ab迪 rebel. A ferry captain loaded hundreds of bags of rice on an already crowded boat shortly before it sank, survivors said yesterday. About 350 people were missing and feared dead in the disaster. CHANDPUR, Bangladesh Bags of rice overturn ferry The search for other victims was put off until today. The search for other victims was put off until today. Abdul Khalque, 35, said the rice's weight caused the ship to overturn. About 3,000 ferries operate across the many rivers in southern Bangladesh this time of year. One-third don't get authorized survey documents, and many carry cargo and passengers far above their legal capacity limits. MIAMI Youth dies after legal battle He endured two liver transplantes for the chance at life, but 15-year-old Benito Agrelo couldn't endure the sicknesses brought on by his anti-rejection medication. Benito died at his Coral Springs home in his mother's arms early Saturday, two months after going to court for the right to stop taking the medication. "Mami, hug." Benito said just before he died, opening his eyes and raising his arms to his mother. Armanda Agrelo. The two embraced, Benito smiled and took his last breath, said his sister, Ava Dressner. "A few days ago, my Mom told him that he was going to see Jesus before she did, and that when he sees him to give him a big hug for her." Dressner said. Benoito won the right to stop taking his medication in June, after the Florida Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services forcibly hospitalized him for three days — until a judge intervened. Bentito said he couldn't stand the medicine's side-effects — fierce headaches and irritability — and wanted to die in peace. HONOLULU Elephant goes on rampage A rampaging circus elephant killed a trainer and injured another before it was shot down in the streets. It was the second elephant attack in a week at Circus International. The 21-year-old African elephant named Tyk went berserk just before she was to perform with four other elephants in Saturday's matinee. "All of a sudden, the elephant kicked the trainer into the arena," said Ann-Marie Pesa, who was in the audience. Tyk picked up the apprentice trainer and threw him down, then tried to stomp his head. Another trainer was crushed by the animal as he tried to help the first man. Compiled from The Associated Press. 1908 "Liverpool since 1908." Red Lyon Tavern *Universal since 1983 944 Mass.832-8228 THE HARBOUR LIGHTS Service after 57 years of downtown tradition 1031 Massachusetts Downtown Everything But Ice Everything But Ice BEDS DESKS BOOKCASES Everything But Ice 936 Mass. KU STUDENTS ONLY! $1 OFF COUPON World's Greatest Haircut Reg. $795 BUT WITH COUPON $695 ONLY HIS OR HERS - "MATNEE" PERMS $23⁹ Complete with cut! (MON - THURS. Till 4 PM) Long Hair. Extra II snip'n'clip FAMILY HAIRCUT SHOPS OPEN NIGHTS AND SUNDAYS JUST DROP IN! Orchard Shops 842-5151 14th & Kasold Under 12 KIDS CUTS $5 EXPIRES: 12-31-94 BACKPACKS BRIEFPACKS, BOOKBAGS, ETC Eastpak and Outdoor Products 15% OFF WITH THIS AD EXPIRES AUGUST 26, 1994 Jayhawk Bookstore only at the top of Naismith Hill! 1420 Crescent RoadLawrence,KS 66044 843-3826 Not Valid With Any Other Coupon or Offer! BETTER EMPLOYEE OWNED Hy-Vee FOOD STORES JOIN A WINNING TEAM! Now Hiring In Lawrence, Kansas - Career Opportunities - Flexible Hours - Good Wages - A Growing Company - Excellent Benefits -Equal Opportunity Employer APPLY NOW AT THE STORE LOCATED AT 3510 CLINTON PKWY BETWEEN 8-12 & 1-5 MON.-FRI. Full & Part-Time Positions UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Monday, August 22, 1994 11A T J CLASSIFIEDS 100s Announcements 105 Personals ROOMMATES FROM HELL: Have you or a friend had a roommate problem so serious that one of you had to move out? If so, call our research colleague (212) 852-5809, m-3.m p-M Backpacks, berts, Jackets, and Purse SUNGLASSES Bausch & Lomb Rayban, Killer Loops, I's, Révo, Serengeti, and Vuartret 120 Announcements 男厕 CASH FOR COLLEGE 900,000 GRANTS AVAL QUALITY OR EMPLOYMENT QUALITY IMMEDIATELY. 1-800-243-5121 COMMUTERS. Self Serve Car Pool Exchange Main Lobby, Kansas Union. Free dog to a good home 2 years, 15 hours of energetic, attentive and happy. Need 1988-5698. NEEED A RIDE/RIDER? Use the Sell Server Pool Exec Tool Main Lobby, Kansas Union. - fostering adopter education - supporting adoptive family Living family investment/begal help select adoptive family Familial investment/legal begal help Ful- mentation TUFOTS List your name with you. We refer to you to you. Student Assistance Center, 133 Shrimp WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 133 Strong YOUR ACADEMIC SUCCESS, PART 3: PREP. viewing, predicting exam questions, preparing for different types of tests. FREE! Thurs, Aug 25, 4:59pm - Presented by the Student Assessment Team. 130 Entertainment FREE POOL DAILY 3-8 pm Bottleneck 737 New Hampshire St 140 Lost & Found Found: Face plate for car stereo at 9th & Main. Call and give proper identification by leaving a message on my machine. If you cor- nection, I will return your call after 10p. m84-734-784 男士厕所 女士厕所 200s Employment 205 Help Wanted Beautician/Barber Part-time Babysitter Neded! Family in need of babysitter 4pm to 6pm in Brooklyn, NY Babysitter 9am to 12pm in Brooklyn, NY Babysitter 8am to 10am in Brooklyn, NY Babysitter 9am to 12pm in Brooklyn, NY Babysitter 8am to 10am in Brooklyn, NY Babysitter 9am to 12pm in Brooklyn, NY Looking for two part-time hair stylists who want to earn great money on vacation or evenings in a bustling city. Bucky's Drive-in is now taking applications for part-time employment. Flexible hours, 1/2 price on meals. Apply in person between 10-5. Bucky's Drive-in @th & Iraa Care given needed for disabled man, Hillcrest care. Mon./Wed. nights 10pm-7am. Minimal work involved, pays $12.50/night. Quiet place to study. Must be reliable. 841-1981. Classified Policy COLLEGE STUDENTS $10.25-11.65 STARTING Local branch of natl.co. Fill immediate entry level openings. Flex time schedules 3-5 days. Serve with kends opt. All majors accepted. For info 841-895. The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against race, color, age, color, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law. All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise 'any perfume, cosmetic, fragrance, color, religion, sex, handcap, 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 subject to change. 205 Help Wanted EARNCASH ONTHESPOT $15 Today $30 This week By donating your life saving blood plasma WALK-INS WELCOME! WAR TO WELCOME: NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750 205 Help Wanted Domino's Pizza is hiring. 10 delivery positions available, two inside positions available. Apply online at dominopizza.com or email lowa.benefitsinclude.com. Benefits include: free meals, flexible schedule, drivers take home cash nightly, discounted menu items, pay based on hours available. Should be willing to work nights & wee- Graduate Assistant Position The Emily Tytler Women's Resource Center has a quarter-time graduate assistant position available. Qualifications 1. Bachelor's degree required, and enrollment as a graduate of the University of Reno at 1994. 2. Experience in women interests and concerns of women students; 3. Training or experience in facilitating small and large groups; 4. Training or experience in writing articles for educational assistance. Associate evidence familiarity with operations and services of one or more of the units of Student Life. Job description available at the Women's Resource Center. Salary: $325.00 Position Available: September 6, 1998 (Headline: Elimination of Women's Resource Center), application, resume*, and names of two (2) references by 5:00 p.m. Monday, August 29 to Dr. Barbara W. Ballard, Director. The Emily Tytler Women's Resource Center, 115 Strong Avenue, Nanaimo, Lawrence, KS 60043. (913) 843522, EO/AA KU Adams Alumni Center is now hiring for part-time banquet server and host positions. Looking for responsible, hard working applicants who have a Bachelor's degree or 500-750 Oread. dcorv corner from the Kansas Union KU GAME PARKING Attendance 40 people needed for parking attendants at the KU home football & basketball games. Must be able to work consistently throughout both seasons. If interested, please apply immediately. Looking for an individual to publish InSider series. We finance start-up costs. Earn $50/hr $30/week & gain valuable experience. Great for marketing or advertising major, call 708-673 Loving Nanny required for 4 yr old boy in our other school at day all day. Day KU 823-981 NEED SPENDING CASH? B.P.I. Building Services now accepting applications for a variety of permanent part-time custodial positions Call today for an appointment. 842-6264 Ask for Jeannie. Preschool Sub Part-time clerical position in medical office. 124 hours per week, flexible with class schedules. Send resume to: Lori Hamm. 304 Sharon Drive, Lawrence, KS. 60049 Prefer 7-11, 30-5-30, or all day any weekday. Help us create a sunshine Acres School #842-2232 or help us Sunshine Acres School #842-2232 STUDENT DISTRIBUTION TECHNICIAN. Deadline: 08/29/94. $ salary: 43 per hr. Duties include performing bursting and decolling functions; delivery of computer output and information to the classroom; shredding functions; on occasion will assist in receiving shipments, stocking and maintaining inventory figures, tape library duties, and other warehousing functions; on occasion will operate office equipment. Open Landscape Furniture maintenance; performs duties in conjunction with the campus wide recycle program; uses personal computer or mainframe software as part of record keeping function. To apply, complete an application form on the Computer Center in room 202. EO/AA EMPLOYER. United Child Development Center is taking applications for nap aides. Hours needed!2:30-2:30. Apply at UCDC, 946 Vermont St., Lawrence KS 60044. United Child Development Center has immediate openings for full or part time teaching assistants. Call 842-5292 or send to UCDC. EOE, 946 Vermont Lawn. KS 66044. United Child Development Center is accepting applications for the position of lead teacher with children age 3-5 years old. A degree in education with an emphasis in Early Childhood or a degree in related field required. Salary based on experience and grade level. Work-related references must accompany each application. Send to Director, UCDC, 946 Vermont St, Lawrence KS 60404. EOE UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER seeking student hourlies (especially work-study eligibleness) to provide motivated familiar with KU and community resources in computer-literate, good communicators, interested in helping others, have wide range of interest areas, and wish to apply. Info, 420 Kansas Union for application. Need sophomores/juniors who can make KU info m.p. Friday, August 26, 1994. 205 Help Wanted Classified Directory WANTED 100S Announcements 106 Personal Enthusiastic people who don't need constant supervision. NO SLACKERS NO SLACKERS 205 Help Wanted 225 Professional Services THE CAFE SOCIETY 435 & Metcalf Overland Park ZARCO 66 FOOD PLAZA SEEKS FULL AND PARTIME CASHIERS TO WORK ALL SHIFTS FOR STORE 7 MI SOUTH OF LAWRENCE. MUST BE NEAT, CLEAN AND ENJOY WORKING WITH THE PUBLIC. IF INTERESTED APPLY IN PERSON. 100s Announcements 105 Personal 110 Business 235 Typing Services Hostess, cashier servers,bussers counter help & prep cook at 2005 Employment 2008 Help Wanted 2025 Professional 200s 305 For Sale 10 speed bicycles: Ladies Schwinn, $95; Men's $85; Excellent condition. Call Steve at 844-731 (days only) or evening. Beds, Deks, Bookcases Besides Everything But Ice DUL/TRAFFIC TICKETS OVERLAND PARK KASAN'S CITY AREA CHARLES R. GREEN ATTORNEY-AT-LAW X EOE Full& Part Time Be heathen and happier! Receive with massage therapy! Student discounts available. 729 1/2 Massachusetts Suite 216. Call Ann A Lumaria and Laure Face at 841-1587. Trot card readings. Career advice in the U.D.K. and 105 9 The Larger Macintosh computer and printer $600.00 w/ programming, Roland keyboard synthesizer $600.00. $100.00 w/ case Free dog to a good home. 2 yrs. and 25 lbs. Very energetic and boony. Needs a. lock. 748-908 United Child Development Center, 946 Vermont St. is accepting enrollment applications for children 2-5 years old. Full and part-time child care available. Mail 842-5239 for information. BLUE HERON937 King size waterbed deluxe everything, 12-drawer pedestal. Headboard $300 841-749. Full size futon and frame (Oak Sled Bed) non- slippery. Excellent condition $150 Call 411- 4692 Quality typing/word processing/indexing. Free estimate. Call 842-7217 after 5pm. - FUTONS & FRAMES offered thru Midwet Driving School, serving KU students for 2 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-749. Call for a free consultation (816) 361-0964. • ONSALE • 300s Merchandise Mass.St.841-9443 300s Merchandise 238 Typing Services As featured in the U.D.K. and 106.9 The Lazer. *Call Anna Turner at 841.1597* 130 Entertainment 140 Lost and Found 400s Real Estate 406 Real Estate 430 Roommate - Kansan Classified: 864-4358 - 340 Auto Sales 360 Miscellaneous 370 Want to Buy 205 Help Wanted Wanted Lawrence-based, technical publishing company has several part-time (15-20 hours per week) positions including office orders; stuffing and mailing statements; copying computer disks for inventory; daily mail delivery to and pickup from the post office; inputting subscription orders into a computer; and sorting customer information. Requires high volume and working as a team required. Ability to maneuver up to 50 pounds and type 50 wp preferred. These positions are part of a larger group of workers which bela area of the company as needed. R&D Publications, Inc. is an equal opportunity employer concerned with creating a pleasant work atmosphere. If you are looking for an enjoyable work environment with a reliable company, please come by and fill out an application at 601 West 23rd Street, Suite 200, Lawrence, KS. SHIPPING AND DATA ENTRY ASSISTANTS NEEDED 305 For Sale R.D. 225 Professional Services The law offices of Donald G. Strohe Sally G. Kelsey 16 Eat13th 842-1133 TRAFFIC-DUI'S TRAFFIC-DUI'S Fake ID, alcohol or offenses divorce, criminal and civil matters The law offices of Need to sell immediately: one red bicycle . decent condition. $05 obo call: 123-4567 SHARP-PC 4500 lpap top 2. floppy drives (no hard drive), battery and carry case, $350, $380 evenings. STUDENTS! Rent a computer, software, and printer for $125 per month. Call 1-800-939-6048 Refrigerator for sale. Sanity 3.5 cubic foot. Used for 2 semesters. Good condition $100. Call 843-697-3900. Two Schwinn bike 10-speed 27" Boys-$50, Girls-$175. $115 86-1790 For free consultation call Rick Frydman, Attorney 7011 843-4023 A 340 Auto Sales 1993 Poncita Grand Am GT (G), V6. Loaded $14,500. Day: 749-9520 Visit: 836-1357. 400s Real Estate 405 For Rent ORCHARD CORNERS COMPLETELY FURNISHED 4 BEDROOM OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense 4 BR house for lease at 15% and 18% invence. Clean house, furnishings, school supplies, $90/mo. no pets: $62,749. Call anytime. 405 For Rent - On KU Bus Route • Close to Campus • Swimming Pool • Stop By Today! Equal 749-4226 M-F 9-5 Opportunity 15th & Kasold Sat 10-4 LA Looking for a place to live? Check out these housing options... - Computer room with - Fullyfurnished IBM Computers Apple Macintoshand and carpeted - Free Utilities - Quiet Study Areas NAISMITH Hall Call Naismith Hall for More Information at 843-8559 Looking for a place to live? Check out these housing options... - Frontdoor bus service - Fitness room - Dine anytime meals - Weekly maid service - Private parking NAISMITH Hall Call naismith Hall for more information at 843-8559 405 For Rent BERKELEY FLATS September rent free on a 2 BR apartment Only 2 left! Call today 843-2116 Semester leases available 11th & Mississippi POUR BEDROOM APARTMENT Great Eloi plan, 2 bath, on KU bus route, NO PETS Bathroom Kitchen Bathroom Bedroom 430 Roommate Wanted Semi-private room/apt., spacious and comfortable, in nice home in West JH neighborhood. KBU bus route or walking distance to campus. Private bath. Microwave; laundry privileges; washroom facilities. Sponsible adult/student @ $350/mo. for one or $450/mo. for two. Possible work in exchange for partial rent. No pets. Refs. req. 843/7736 after 5 or leave message. 405 For Rent PETS WELCOME No Sublease Fee South Pointe APARTMENTS 2166 W. 26th St. 843-6446 - Close to KU Bus Route - Swimming Pool - Sand Volleyball Court - Ample Private Parking - Water & Trash Paid Outstanding New Staff!!! 430 Roommate Wanted Avail to mature ferr grad. Studa Share Attr. newer home w/many comforts. Fireplace, deck, patio, hot tub, W/D. $300/mo w/ul. Ref. req. please. 749-3834. Female roommate, beautiful 3 bdmr. condo on bus line 52$m/o. we do not, pet 749-2886 Female wanted to lease 1 barm of 3 barm duplex at Hawkstone. B44-7479 for information Roommate warrant for spacious, close to cam- fellow. **Next to Yellow Subi** 144 Louisiana *Call 832-8931* ROOMMATE WANTED! FE N/ s. House w/ own Room. Bedroom w/ Dogs. Dogs Quail room. Please call 811.429-7601. Check out these housing options... One non-smoking roentel wanted to share big. A 268-square-foot town house $205/month+1/4 illiums. Call 832-230-7831 - Great campus location 405 For Rent Looking for a place to live? - A few steps from Allen Fieldhouse - Laundry Facilities NAISMITH Hall THE UNIVERSITY DAIX KANSAN Call Naismith Hall for More information at 843-8559 How to schedule an ad: - By Mail: 119 Stauffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 66045 Are phoned in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made. Classified Information and order form Step by Step the Kansas office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on Maus Calculating Rates: You may print your custodied order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas office. Or you may choose to have it your MasterCard or Visa account. Ada that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before expiration date. Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of ages列的ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of days in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run. When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused day. Refunds on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available. DO NOT HURT THE MARKET. The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kaman office for a fee of $4.00. Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Num. of insertions:Cost per line per day
IX2-3X4-7X8-14X15-29X30+X
3 lines2.051.551.05.85.75.50
4 lines1.901.15.80.70.65.45
5-7 lines1.851.05.75.65.60.40
8+ lines1.75.90.65.60.55.35
105 personal 110 business personals 120 announcements 130 entertainment Example: 3 lines for 5 days — 3 lines X 5 days X $1.05=$15.75 Classifications 140 lost & found 385 for sale 202 help wanted 340 auto sales 225 professional services 366 miscellaneous 370 want to buy 405 for rent 430 roommate wanted ADS MUST FOLLOW KAMSAN POLICY Classified Mail Order Form • Please Print: Please print your ad one word per box: 1 2 3 4 5 Date ad begins:___ Total days in paper_ Total ad cost: ___ Name: ___ Phone: ___ - Address: Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □ Visa (Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansan) Furnish the following if you are charging your ad: Account number: Print exact name appearing on credit card: Signature: Expiration Date: MasterCard The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 60445 12A Monday, August 22,1994 U N I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N JUST DO IT!! STAND UP FOR THEIR LOVE Mr. and Mrs. Don Booth head instructors You always wanted to try martial arts,but never quite got around to it until now. You knew that the martial arts had a lot of benefits such as stress relief flexibility, fitness and weight loss. One Week Intro $19.95 And you always wanted that confident feeling that comes from knowing that you could defend yourself or your family. Now is the time to start. Call us today and set up an appointment for a FREE trial lesson. Call now! 749-4400 New Horizons Black Belt Academy of Tae Kwon Do Holiday Plaza Shopping Center 25th & Iowa, Lawrence (Across the street from Food For Less) J.V. POM K.U. CHEERLEADING 94 95 TRYOUTS JR. VARSITY CHEERLEADER AND POM CLINICS AND TRYOUTS 6:30 - 9:30 pm Monday - Thursday, August 22-25 Anschutz (west of Allen Field House) Cost: $5 For more information, call 864-3002 Must bring physical in order to participate CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 1984 Jay Thornton / KANSAN Jim Slattery, democratic gubernatorial candidate, and Troy Findley, democratic candidate for the 46th state house district, discuss campaign issues with Harriett Dickey-Chasins, doctoral student, during door-to-door campaigning. Slattery voices good intent By James Evans Kansan staff writer A Tropicana Twister and a glazed donut was all that Democratic gubernatorial candidate Jim Slattery needed to start his door-to-door campaign march on Barker Street in East Lawrence Friday morning. "I've always been for grass roots campaigning," Slattery said at 9:15 a.m., wearing his trademark cowboy boots. Slattery, along with Troy Findley, Democratic candidate for the 46th District Kansas house seat, began walking and talking to neighborhood residents. Slattery, the current U.S. House Representative from the Second District, said he had learned the importance of neighborhood campaigning in past elections. During his successful initial run for state house in 1972, he said he knocked on more than 6,000 doors in his district, trying to get his name into the community. 2200 blocks of Barker Street. Two of Stlaffer's staff members did the actual knocking, going ahead of the candidate to insure that people were home. "It's always effective to go door-todoor," he said while approaching another house between the 1900 and At each of the 20 houses Slattery visited, he tried to relate to the resident, answered any questions about his agenda, and encouraged them to support him in his campaign for governor. "I think it's good they come out," said Randy Asberry, of 1950 Barker St., who met with Slattery for a short chat. But he added, "I'm usually pretty well decided before this point on who I'll vote for." Two doors down, Harriet Dickey-Chasins, fourth year doctoral student in counseling psychology at KU, was "very pleased" that Slattery stopped by her house. She spent several minutes with him discussing his education and jobs agenda for the state. She said that she regularly voted independent, but she said she voted in the democratic primary this year and might vote for Slattery and Findley. A couple of doors down, Douglas Bell, who was standing out in front of his residence, said that Slattery's personal visit was nice, but would not affect how he voted in the Nov. 8 election. He said he would have to do more research before he made up his mind. Barker Street is just one of the many places that Slattery will be stopping at the weeks before the election, said David Unekis, communications coordinator for Slattery's campaign. He said that in the next week the Slattery campaign will head to western Kansas to gain support. Unekiis said ten towns will be visited in the three day "Good Intent Tour" of western Kansas. During the days, Slattery will divide his campaign time between 11 rallies and doing door-to-door visits in the communities. "People are a little turned off by only seeing candidates on T.V., Unekis said. "We want to give people the opportunity to meet him." After talking with residents on Barker, Slatter spoke to the Kansas State Carpenters Association at the Lawrence Holidone and on KLWN radio. stronger than this man's aftershave. stronger than this man's aftershave. Call 1-800-262-8282 and find out where to buy one. BAGS THE HARBOUR LIGHTS will service bar after 57 years of downtown tradition 1031 Massachusetts Downtown LOUISE'S DOWNTOWN 1009 MASSACHUSETTS ST. MONDAYS | 75 IMPORT BOTTLES 2:50 PETE'S PALE KILLIAN'S TUESDAYS WEDNESDAYS | 50 DOMESTIC 1:50 DOMESTIC THURSDAYS FRIDAYS | 50 LONGNECK PABST BLUE RIBBON 1:50 LONGNECK PABST BLUE RIBBON SATURDAYS SUNDAYS | 2.00 PREMIUM COCKTAILS LAWRENCE FINEST DIVE ID REQUIRED THE HARBOUR LIGHTS new with service bar after 57 years of downtown tradition 1031 Massachusetts Downtown LOUISE'S DOWNTOWN 1909 MASSACHUSETTS ST. MONDAYS 75 IMPORT BOTTLES 2.50 PETE'S PALE, KILLIAN'S TUESDAYS WEDNESDAYS 50 DOMESTIC 1.50 DOMESTIC THURSDAYS FRIDAYS 50 LONGNECK PABST BLUE RIBBON 50 LONGNECK PABST BLUE RIBBON SATURDAYS SUNDAYS 2.00 PREMIUM COCKTAILS LAWRENCE & FINEST DIVE I.D. REQUIRED SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN FRIDAY AUGUST 22 1994 MARCUS MICHAELS GERRY FEY SECTION-B This year, fans can put more stock in Mason It arrives through the late evening breeze in August. It travels through the sound waves as the Kansas marching band practices its routine in Memorial Stadium. Its scent floats through the smoke of an open grill. The college school year has started, but for me, there is something more important. It seemed the season was exactly that — a plague. Although injuries are always scapegoat for coaches, in the Jayhawks' case, injuries tore the team apart. Not only would one player be lost from the offensive or defensive line, but an entire side of the line was wiped out at once. To Mason's dismay, players were moved and put in unfamiliar situations. The season begins on Sunday when Nebraska faces West Virginia in the Kickoff Classic. This is the same season-opener the Jayhawks competed in last year when Florida State pasted them 42-0 and kicked off a so-season for Kansas football fans. From that vantage point, I can see Kansas being much improved over last year. However, pardon me if I don't jump for joy from hearing Mason's comments. Forget about classes resuming. College football is close — so close I can almost touch it. Coach Glen Mason claims the outlook is different this year. The team's attitude is optimistic, and the past seems to be forgotten. Kansas ended last season a dismal 5-7, but injuries continually plagued the Jayhawks. FLASHBACK TO THREE YEARS AGO — my freshman year. As I make my way from Omaha, Neb., to Lawrence with my parents, we are able to catch 105.9 the Lazer on the FM dial. A commercial comes over the radio promoting Kansas football, and it gets me psyched for the season. The announcement ends with the comment, "Track the Jayhawks all the way to the Big Eight Championship." My dad and I have a good laugh, and I wonder if Kansas really does have a shot at a title usually reserved for Nebraska or Oklahoma. They didn't, but the season did end with a 6-5 record. I could understand the promotion because the program was looking for a boost. Attendance was down and the usual questions at football games were, "Where is the pizza stand?" and "When does basketball start?" Since I am a Nebraska native and I like the Cornhuskers, I usually gauge the Kansas season on how well they do against Nebraska each year. This is one of the reasons I am putting a little more stock in Mason's predictions. My first year of being exposed to Kansas football, the Jayhawks took a 17-0 lead against Nebraska after the first quarter. I looked through the crowd hoping to see a friendly face, but I was in my Cornhusker attire. I looked toward the north end zone and found about 14,000 friendly faces. I heard a comment over my shoulder, "God, I wish those Nebraska fans would stay in their own state." What this student did not know was that the fan support is a huge part of what makes a good football program. The only reason the entire end zone was a sea of red was because the Kansas fans did not buy the tickets. Rather than have empty seats, the Nebraska crowd almost turned Memorial Stadium into a sell-out. Needless to say, the Jayhawks could not hold onto the lead, and Nebraska left Lawrence with a 59-23 victory. Kansas has facts instead of fiction to back up their optimism. The facts include 14 returning starters, a proven quarterback in senior Asheikh Preston, the conference's best running back in sophomore June Henley, and a decent player at each position. After that game I have been skeptical, at best, when talk surfaces about Kansas football success. But I still enjoy college game day. Maybe Glen is speaking the truth this time. I hope so, because I am a Jayhawk fan, and I want them to do well this season — except when they play the Cornhuskers on Nov. 5 in Lincoln, Neb. And maybe it's that feeling and my school spirit that gives me hope for the Jayhawks this season. It's more than that, though. Gerry Fey is an Omaha, Neb., senior in journalism. Gators savor No.1 in preseason poll 1993 Final Top 25 The Top 25 teams in the final 1993 Associated Press college football poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, season records, total points based on 25 points for a first place vote through one point for a 25th place vote, and previous ranking: | | Record | Pts | Pts | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 1. Florida St.(46) | 12-1·0 | 1,532 | 1 | | 2. Notre Dame (12) | 11-1·1 | 1,478 | 4 | | 3. Nebraska | 11-1·1 | 1,478 | 1 | | 4. Autumn (4) | 11-0·0 | 1,375 | 5 | | 5. Florida | 11-2·0 | 1,307 | 8 | | 6. Wisconsin | 10-1·1 | 1,228 | 9 | | 7. West Virginia | 11-1·0 | 1,090 | 3 | | 8. Penn St. | 10-2·0 | 1,074 | 13 | | 9. Texas AAM | 10-2·0 | 1,043 | 7 | | 10. Arizona | 10-2·0 | 992 | 16 | | 11. Ohio St. | 10-2·0 | 971 | 11 | | 12. Tennessee | 9-2·1 | 870 | 6 | | 13. Boston College | 9-3·0 | 817 | 15 | | 14. Alabama | 9-3·1 | 685 | 18 | | 15. Miami | 9-3·0 | 611 | 10 | | 16. Colorado | 9-3·1 | 574 | 17 | | 17. Oldhamia | 9-3·1 | 521 | 19 | | 18. UCLA | 8-4·0 | 460 | 14 | | 19. North Carolina | 10-3·0 | 447 | 12 | | 20. Kansas St. | 9-2·1 | 444 | 20 | | 21. Michigan | 8-4·0 | 397 | 23 | | 22. Virginia Tech | 9-3·0 | 321 | 22 | | 23. Clemson | 9-3·0 | 184 | 24 | | 24. Louisville | 9-3·0 | 159 | 25 | | 25. California | 9-4·0 | — | — | ProseasonTop25 The Top 25 teams in the pressure 1994 Associated Press college football poll, with first place wins in parenthesis, 1993 records, total points based on 25 points for a first place vote through one point for a 25th place vote, and 1993 final ranking: Source: The Associated Press KANSAN | | Record | Pts | Pts | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 1. Florida (15) | 11-2-0 | 1,416 | 5 | | 2. Notre Dame (13) | 11-1-0 | 1,414 | 2 | | 3. St. Louis (10) | 12-1-0 | 1,407 | 1 | | 4. Nebraska (18) | 11-1-0 | 1,398 | 3 | | 5. Michigan (2) | 8-4-0 | 1,283 | 21 | | 6. Miami (1) | 9-3-0 | 1,190 | 15 | | 7. Arizona (2) | 10-2-0 | 1,070 | 10 | | 8. Colorado | 8-3-1 | 1,057 | 16 | | 9. Penn St. | 10-2-0 | 1,012 | 8 | | 10. Wisconsin | 10-1-1 | 932 | 6 | | 11. Autumn | 11-0-0 | 924 | 4 | | 12. Alabama (1) | 9-3-1 | 923 | 14 | | 13. Tennessee | 9-2-1 | 793 | 12 | | 14. UCLA | 8-4-0 | 661 | 18 | | 15. Texas A&M | 10-2-0 | 603 | 9 | | 16. Oklahoma | 9-3-0 | 560 | 17 | | 17. Southern California | 8-5-0 | 557 | — | | 18. Texas | 5-5-1 | 527 | — | | 19. North Carolina | 10-3-0 | 526 | 19 | | 20. Ohio St. | 10-1-1 | 320 | 11 | | 21. Illinois | 5-6-0 | 249 | — | | 22. Virginia Tech | 9-3-0 | 235 | 22 | | 23. Washington | 7-4-0 | 181 | — | | 24. West Virginia | 11-1-0 | 121 | 7 | | 25. Clemson | 9-3-0 | 113 | 23 | Notre Dame gets 13 first-place votes in opening ranking Source: The Associated Press KANSAN The Associated Press The Florida Gators, No. 3 in their own state for the past decade, are now No.1 in the nation. Long overshadowed by Florida State and Miami, the Gators are the preseason pick as college football's top team in The Associated Press poll. "We're certainly honored," coach Steve Spurrier said. "Being No. 1 is very special to me, my players and all Gator fans." Florida edged Notre Dame by two points, the narrowest margin since the preseason poll began in 1960. Spurrier, whose team won a schoolrecord 11 games last season, said he's not worried about the pressure that The Gators received 15 first-place votes and, 1,416 points from a nationwide media panel, while the Irish got 13 first-place votes and, 1,414 points. "I'm glad I'm No. 1 sometime in my life," said Spurrier, a Heisman Trophy-winning quarterback at Florida in 1966. "It's better than never being No. 1." comes with being No.1. Although Florida is the largest university in the state, Florida State and Miami have been more prominent in football. Miami has won four national championships since 1983 and compiled the best record in the country over that span. Florida State has finished in the top four for seven straight years, culminating with its first national title last season. It's only the second time Florida has been ranked No. 1. The Gators topped the poll for one week in 1985 before losing to Georgia 24-3. Now, Florida is ranked ahead of both teams. Florida State is No. 3 in the preseason poll, and Miami is No. 6. Twelve starters return from last year's Florida team, which pounded previously unbeaten West Virginia The Gators must replace career rushing leader Errict Rhett, but quarterbacks Terry Dean and Danny Wuerffel are back to direct the explosive "Fun N' Gun" offense. 41-7 in the Sugar Bowl. The most important newcomer on defense may be coordinator Bob Prauett, brought in to shake up a pass defense that finished last in the Southeastern Conference. Notre Game, which finished No. 2 last season, is starting in the same spot this season. "People have as much business picking us No.2 in the preseason this year as they did picking us No.2 at the end of last year," Holtz said. "Neither one of them makes sense to me." Notre Dame coach Lou Holtz thought his team was ranked too low at the end of last season. Now he thinks they're ranked too high. Nebraska, which finished third last season after losing to Florida State 18-16 in the Orange Bowl, is fourth in the preseason poll despite getting more first-place votes (18) than any other team. PROFILE Richard Devinki / KANSAN Kansas volleyball coach Karen Schonewise gives instructions during a practice at Robinson Gymnasium. Schonewise replaced former coach Frankie Albritz, who had been with the Kansas program for eight years. Setting up success aim of new coach Bv Cheslev Dohl The whistle and schedule are the only tell-tale signs of her title as "coach." Kansan staff writer Tall, lanky, athletic and young, she blends in with the athletes she coaches Karen Schonewise, the new Kansas volleyball coach, makes her rounds on the practice court — whistle hanging from her neck and practice schedule in hand. "As a player I never thought I'd end up coaching," said Schonewale, 30. "But I worked at a few camps, and after working with athletes I realized how much I enjoyed giving something back to the sport." numerous awards at Nebraska, she was the number one draft pick in the first year of professional women's volleyball. Schonewise played volleyball at Nebraska where she was an athletic and academic All-American. In addition to earning and with good reason: Only eight years ago she was a student-athlete at Nebraska. Schonewise said she realized she couldn't play forever. So the next logical step in continuing her love for the sport, she said, would be through coaching. BRIEF "I like the challenge of evaluating the talent we have and putting the strongest team See NEW COACH, Page 4. Kansan staff report Kansan tennis player to receive top honor After a year that culminated in an NCAA Division I Tennis Doubles Championship, Jayhawk Nora Koves continues to add to her honors by being named a member of the 1994 Rolex Collegiate All-Star Team. Koves, who is a resident of Budapest, Hungary, will receive the award on Friday in New York. The 24-member team is selected annually by TENNIS magazine and the Intercollegiate Tennis Association. Members of the team represent the nation's top men and women from the college ranks. junior middle linebacker Nathan Penny runs a drill during practice at Memorial Stadium. See **NOTBOOK**, Page 3. SOCCER Sophomores Jon Nygard and Will Stelle struggle for a ball in an intrasquad soccer game. Members of the Kansas men's soccer team planned the game as a final warmup for the regular season. Yumi Chikamori / KANSAN Soccer team sets sights on nationals By Kent Hohfeld Kansan sportswriter Saturday's intra-squad scrimmage at Robinson Gymnastics the east field gave the men's soccer team its first chance to see some of the talent that will be available for the upcoming season. Last year's team finished with a 11-3-2 record and went to the 16-team National Collegiate Club Soccer Association Championships in Phoenix Arizona. This year's team will be trying to continue to build on the success that the soccer program has enjoyed in the past five years. Last season ended for Kansas when they failed to advance out of first-round play play. Advancing beyond the first round of play is a major goal for this year's team, said second-year coach Mark Salisbury. "The first round of the championships is round-robin play," he said. "The rest is single elimination, so if you get past the first round anything can happen." The teams that annually compete for the Before they get to the tournament the team will have to get through a regular-season schedule that, while not the toughest in the nation, should provide a challenge for the team. national title are from Texas and Utah. Brigham Young University is the NCCSA's defending national champion. Kansas plays in the southern division of the NCCSA Plains conference. The division includes Kansas State, Emporia State, Wichita State and Oklahoma. The division winners meet in a conference playoff to determine a champion. "I think we have the talent to win our division and possibly the conference," Sailswirl said. Winning the division would give Kansas an automatic bid to the tournament. Last season the team finished second in the division and had to wait for an at-large bid. Matt Jones, a fifth-year engineering student, has witnessed the progress that the team has made in the last five years. "My freshman year we went to the semi's at the national tournament," Jones said. "We're usually one of the best teams in the tournament." Jones credited the team's organization and experience as key components of its success. "We've always been one of the better organized teams and that really helps to prepare us when we get to tournament play," Jones said. "We have people who knows what it takes to be successful." 4 1 1 2B Monday, August 22, 1994 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Senior men's golfers will be missed By Jenni Carlson Kansan sportswriter Some say a little friendly competition is good for the body. Whether that's true or not, the men's golf team is bound to get its dose this year. Gone are five of the top eight players on last year's squad, which placed second at the Big Eight Championships behind top-ranked Oklahoma State. "We gave them a run for it," Coach Ross Randall said. Two of the seniors on last year's squad, Matt Gogel and John Hess, have plans to enter the professional ranks. Their presence and low scores for the team will be missed, Randall said. Because several returning players participated in leagues during the summer, the blow of losing Gogel and Hess might be softened. Senior Tyler Shelton won the Kansas Match play and the Missouri Amateur Championship. Shelton was a semifinalist in the Kansas State Amateur Championship and posted the lowest score of any amateur in the Kansas Open. Most recently, he qualified for the United States Amateur Open, which will be held in Jacksonville. Fla. "Everybody on the team still has tournament experience, just not college experience." Sims said. Several returning players are expected to step up and fill the void left by last year's graduated seniors. Junior Dan Rooney showed his ability to win this summer as he claimed titles at events in Arkansas and Texas. ning of the summer," Randall said. Adding to Rooney's experience are fellow juniors Jason Seeman and Alan Stearns. "He played quite well at the begin- Two faces who are not new to collegiate competition but new to Kansas are sophomore transfer Kit Grove and junior transfer Slade Adams. Grove is transferring from New Mexico State, and Adams is coming from Texas Christian University. With a wealth of upperclassmen, freshman Chris Thompson, Ryan Zug and Andy Bengston may not see much tournament action. Randall said. "We're really a lot deeper this year," he said. "I think the upperclassmen are going to play a lot." The fall will be a time of shuffling positions and competing for the final spots on the travel squad. "There's really going to be a lot of competition at three, four, and five," he said. The coming of the fall semester means a lot of work for the members of the Kansas rowing team. By Kent Hohfeld Kansan sportswriter Crew prepares for a new season It also means trying to elevate awareness of a club that depends on a constant infusion of new rowers for success. "During this time of the year, we really try to increase membership in the club," said Bryan Tylander, president of the Kansas rowing club. Tylander said most rowers started in college with little or no experience with the sport. New rowers begin on the novice team where they learn the mechanics and intricacies of the sport. "We're constantly having to replace people who don't return either for financial reasons or graduation," Tylander said. "We also don't get a lot of people with experience coming out of high school so we have to train rowers." Tylander said it took about two years for new rowers to become proficient in the sport. The uncertainty associated with the women's team being elevated to varsity status next fall might hurt turnover for the women's squad, he said. The task of finding a coach and upgrading equipment and facilities for the varsity team will begin early next year. Poyas said that she thought those on the squad this season would be considered for the varsity squad next season. This season's club will be trying to improve on last year when the men's lightweight four-member team won the Midwestern Championships. The women's lightweight four-member team finished fourth at the National Collegiate Championships. "We've been told that it won't affect this season at all." Lara Poyas, women's captain, said. "We won't receive any assistance from the athletic department until next year." Fifth year head Coach Rob Catloth said the success of this year's team would be dependent on who returned for the team because club sports like crew did not have the stability that varsity sports had. He said about 50 to 60 people usually went out for the men's team and about 100 women usually tried out. 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Preston is not big, and at 5-foot-11, 185 pounds, he often gets into trouble when he's in the pocket. Preston does much better running the ball and is at his best when he is rolling out of the pocket. GRADE: B-Minus. **Running back:** The Jayhawks are loaded. Everyone is back this season including the 1993 Big Eight Conference's offensive newcomer of the year, sophomore June Henley. This is a talented bunch, a group so good Mason said he could not even say who should start. Sophomore Mark Sanders and junior L.T. Levine will also see plenty of playing time and Jayhawk fans possibly could see two 1,000-yard rushers. The only problem could be living up to high expectations. **GRADE:** A. **Receivers:** Regardless of the talent that the Kansas receivers have, the Jahawks would rather run the ball. Flanker Akaaundai is back for his junior season, a year after he led the team with 27 receptions for 256 yards. Senior Robert Reed is back at the wideout position and is complimented by sophomore Hosea Friday and senior Rodney Harris. Brent Willeford, a fifth-year senior, is at tight end and has played in 34 consecutive games and will provide consistency. **GRADE:** B. **Offensive Line:** Not only does Kansas have the best offensive line in the Big Eight, guards John Jones and Hessley Hempstead have the potential to be the best in the country. Jones, a senior, has already been named All-Big Eight and has been tabbed by numerous handappers as a presseason All-American. Hempstead, a junior, again should be named All-Conference and dominate opposing defensive lines. The offensive line should get plenty of attention this season. **GRADE:** A. **Defensive Line:** Stopping the run this season could be a problem. The defense is unproven and untested. Worse news came when Kansas found out that junior college transfer junior Alani Pahulu, who was projected to start at defensive tackle, suffered a career-ending neck injury. Senior Harold Harris, who was moved from the linebacker position to end provides some quickness and has experience. Senior Darnell Britt is expected to start at defensive tackle, but played in only half the games last season. Junior Derek Fairchild will play the other end, but saw action in only four games last season. Kansas ranked 84th in the country last season in rushing defense and it won't get any better this year. Cover your eyes. **GRADE:** C-Minus Defensive Backs: Solid. Opponents should have difficulty this season passing against the Jayhawks talented secondary. Three-year starter, senior Gerald McBurrows will lead the defense from his strong safety spot. Sophomore cornerback Tony Blevins, the Conference's defensive newcomer of the year is back and he is joined at the cornerback spot by junior Dorian Brew. The Jayhawks received a boost when the NCAA allowed senior Kwamie Lassiter another year of eligibility. GRADE: A ■ Linebackers: Three starters return and quickness will be the key for the Jahyahs at linebacker. Senior Don Davis will be at outside linebacker and will be joined by senior Steve Harvey at the other outside spot. Junior Ronnie Ward will play the inside position. GRADE: B-Plus. Special Teams: Don't expect any more 50-yard field goal attempts, Kansas' strongest leg, kicker and punter Dan Eichloh is gone. Redshirt freshman Jeff McCord is expected to handle the place-kicking responsibilities, and senior Darrin Simmons, a junior college transfer will do the punting. GRADE: C Notebook compiled by Kansan sports staff. Richard Devinki / KANSAN 72 72 Senior offensive linebacker Keith Rodgers and junior offensive linebacker Eric Galbreath run drills during practice Friday at Memorial Stadium. The Jayhawks' first home game of the season will be against Michigan State on Sept. 10 at 7 p.m. Kansas returns 14 starters from last season. 1994 Kansas Football Schedule Sept. 1 at Houston 7p.m. Sept. 10 Michigan State 7p.m. Sept. 17 at Texas Christian 1p.m. Oct. 6 Kansas State (ESPN) 7p.m. Sept. 24 Alabama-Birmingham 1p.m. Oct. 15 at Iowa State 1p.m. Oct. 22 Oklahoma (Paren'ts Day) 1p.m. Oct. 29 Oklahoma St. (Homecoming) 1p.m. Nov. 5 at Nebraska 1p.m. Nov. 12 Colorado 1p.m. Nov. 19 at Missouri 1p.m. 804 Mass * 843-5000 SUNFLOWER OUTDOOR & BIKE SHOP 1993 Kansas Football Results (5-7 overall, 3-4 Conference) Florida State L 42-0 Western Carolina W 46-3 at Michigan State L 10-9 Utah L 16-41 Colorado State W 24-6 at Kansas State L 10-9 iowa State W 35-20 at Oklahoma L 38-23 atklahoma State W 13-6 Nebraska L 21-20 at Colorado L 38-14 Missouri W 28-0 Statistical leaders Rushing Rushes Yards Avg. TD. June Henley 233 1127 4.8 12 L.T. Levine 123 558 4.4 2 f Attempts Comp. Yards TD. Int. President 159 97 1233 3 3 Van Davis 1 1 8 0 0 Recolving Catches Yards Avg. TD. 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Aug. 16 thru Fri. Aug. 26 STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Time: Mon. - Fri. 9 am-5 pm Saturday 10 am-4 pm Sunday 12 noon-4 pm Place: Kansas Union Gallery 4th Floor 35 YEARS OF SOUND EXPERIENCE AWARD WINNING DEALER ALWAYS COMPETITIVE PRICE OPTIONS & TERMS AUDIO/VIDEO HI-FI GRAND PRIX AWARDS BOOKSHELF SPEAKERS All Award Winning Models In Stock! OF THE YEAR Music louders and audiophiles agree that loudspeakers influence a sound of your system more than any other. Although it's relatively easy for a speaker to look at the loudest brands available - building a natural music loudspeaker, capable of reproducing an amazing number of careful choices and decisions. PARADIGM ATOM (11-1) $75.oo AUTOMATIC $75.00 PSB ALPHA (11-2) $100... - All are in stock and on SALE...Now! MIRAGE M-190I (11-3) $120.** --- NHT SUPERZERO (11.4) $125_+ The '94 Winners BOSTON HD-8 (11-5) $130.** BORTON HD-8 (11.5) $130 ... Bookshelf speakers prices range from $80, to $82.70. Resonate quality and fidelity start at approximately $100 B & W V2002 (11.6) $150..n $150.00 £165.00 M & K SX-7 (11.7) £165... TOOLS INCLUDE ADJUMPAD BOSTON MIRAGE PSB MBK M M K K LUPSCH K LUPSCH B W B PHASE TECH 180. KLIPSCH KG-1.5 (11-8) $180.** PARADIGM 3SE-Mk (11-9) $195... PARADIGM 3SE-Mk (11-9) $195.00 IMAGE TECH PC-80 (11-10) $290 ... PHASE TECH PC-80 (11-10) $290.. SNELL Type K-II (11-11) $375.00 ALL AWARD WINNING MODELS IN STOCK KIEF'S TAPE CDs AUDIO/VIDEO 4. The image contains a series of Arabic words, each followed by a period and a comma. For example: - أَبِيُهُمْ - الَّذِينَ آمَنُوا - بَلَعَا - فَالَّذِينَ آمَنُوا - بَلَعَا Let's re-read the text one more time. 1. أَبِيُهُمْ 2. الَّذِينَ آمَنُوا 3. bَلَعَا 4. fَالَّذِينَ آمَنُوا 5. bَلَعَا Yes, that's it. Final check on the spacing: Line 1: أَبِيُهُمْ / الَّذِينَ آمَنُوا / bَلَعَا / fَALَّذِينَ AMANNU / bَL A D A / F A LَّZ WINN U Line 2: أَبِيُهُمْ / الَّذِينَ آمَنُوا / bَلَعَا / fَALَّذِينَ AMANNU / bَL A D A / F A LَّZ WINN U Wait, looking at the image again, it's "أَبِيُهُمْ / الَّذِينَ آمَنُوا / bَلَعَا / fَALَّذِينَ AMANNU / bَL A D A / F A LَّZ WINN U". One last look at the word "fَALَّذِينَ". It's written as "fَALَّذِينَ". I will use a simple line break to separate it from the rest. Final check on the spacing: Line 1: أَبِيُهُمْ / الَّذِينَ Am 24th & Iowa St.P.O. Box 2, Lawrence, Ks. 66044 913*842+1544 913*842+1811 913*842+1438 4B Monday, August 22,1994 NEW!NEW!NEW! NEW!NEW! Zenith Data Systems Z-SELECT ES 486DX $1,389.00 THE FRENCH RAILWAY i486DX/33MHz, or future PENTIUM processor 4mb RAM (expandable to 64mb) 210mb IDE Hard Drive3.5" 1.44mb FD 14" SVGA Color Monitor VL Local Bus SVGA 1024 x 768 @ 16 colors EPA Energy Compliant One year On-Site Warranty Zero Insertion Force Pentium OverDrive Upgrade socket, 3 open ISA slots, 2-button mouse, 101-key keyboard, MS-DOS, MS Windows 3.1 your campus computer alternative... THE WORLD Jayhawk Bookstore only at the top of Naismith Hill 1420 Crescent Road Lawrence, KS 66044 843-3826 WELCOME BACK EARN CASH $15 Today $30 This Week Plus a $3 Bonus By donating your blood plasma Show your current student ID card between January 11 and January 28 and receive an extra $3 bonus on your second visit of the month. Lawrence Donor Center Walk-ins welcome $ NABI The Quality Source 816 W.24th Behind Laird Noller Ford Hours: M-F 9-6 Sat 10-3 749-5750 See our ad in the classified section UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS New coach knows old system Continued from Page 1. out on the court." she said. Chonewise isn't a stranger to the inner-workings of the Kansas women's volleyball program. She was assistant coach to Frankle Albitz for six years. And when Albitz left KU, she had the experience required for the head coaching position. Making the switch from assistant to head coach wasn't a problem for Schonewise. "It hasn't been a hard transition but it's more demanding in a lot of ways," she said. "Different commitments and different responsibilities. Things are done on a daily basis now — working with schedules and analyzing the team and plavers." Playing for one of the best volleyball programs in the nation at Nebraska. Schonewise said more than 75 percent of her philosophy about the game and coaching ethic came from her head coach at Nebraska, Terry Schonewise said she was looking forward to the coaching dual with her former coach in October. "Obviously it'll be exciting for us," she said. "Nebraska is currently ranked number two in the national poll." Petit. A long term goal of Schonewise's is to build the Kansas volleyball program up like that of the Nebraska program. "The program is seeing change now," she said. "I have the philosophy of building the system around the strengths of the players rather than molding the players to fit into a set system." Liz Berg, Kansas assistant volleyball coach, said having a head coach like Schonewise simplified her job of recruiting and selling the Kansas volleyball program. "She's an easy sell," Berg said. "She's the ultimate role model for young women. She attracts students athletes because she was successful at academics as well as athletics." "Even though Karen is young she has a wealth of experience behind her," she said. Being one of the youngest head coaches in the division will not hinder Schonewise's success as a coach, Bergsaid. "The team has had a major facelift," she said. "It's very obvious to see that there's a lot of respect and pride within the team. Outwardly, I think they feel a lot of support from the administration and community." Senior outside hitter Janet Uler said the women's volleyball team was pleased with its new head coach. "Since she played the game so recently she knows the game very well," Uher said. "She studies the game and we respect that — so we respect her. They (Berg and Schonewise) compliment each other so well. They're both so good at what they do." Driver's injury shocks race world Rv Mike Harris By Mike Harris The Associated Press BROOKLYN, Mich. — It couldn't happen to No. 28. It shouldn't happen. Those guys in the No. 3, No. 2, No. 6, No. 28 — no names needed — are the best of the best. They supposed to be invincible. They race at breakneck speeds, bump, bang and rub sheetmetal. Occasionally a wall gets in the way. No problem, they clamber through the driver's side window, wave to the crowd and go on to race another day. That's why it's so hard to believe that Ernie Irvan is lying helplessly in a hospital bed, on life support and in critical condition following a one-car crash Saturday at Michigan International Speedway. When Alan Kulwicki, the reigning Winston Cup champion, died in the crash of a private plane on April 1, 1993, everybody was able to say, "Well, it wasn't on the racetrack. Anybody can die in a plane crash. And he wasn't even the pilot." Then, when Davey Allison, one of the most popular young drivers in NASCAR's top stock car series, died on July 13, 1993, of injuries sustained in the crash of his own helicopter, the word was, "Well, it wasn't on the racerack. He didn't have the experience in flying helicopters. And air disasters do happen." The deaths of veteran Neil Bonnett and rookie Rodney Orr in separate crashes during practice for the season-opening Daytona 500 in February could also be explained away. Bonnett was trying a comeback after a terrible accident in April 1990 in which he sustained head injuries. Maybe he wasn't quite as sharp as he used to be, or needed to be, to be back in a race car. Orr was inexperienced and was running lans faster than he ever had. But how does any of that explain why the 35-year-old Ivan, the father of a 1-year-old daughter, considered one of the best race car drivers in the world and driving one of the best prepared cars, is in the Intensive Care Unit at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital in Ysilanti, Mich. "We hit these walls all the time," said Mark Martin, Ivran's good friend and the driver of the No. 6 car. "My first reaction was, 'So what?' He'll have to use his backup car, and his backup car might be better than his first car anyway." Not this time. This time, Irvan, who veered nearly head-on into the wall after a tire deflated, is paying the heavy consequences of driving a 3,500-pound car at speeds sometimes approaching 200 mph. Still, this is shocking — the same kind of shock the world felt when Brazil's Ayton Senna died in May in Formula One crash. Senna was perhaps the world's best driver, and this wasn't supposed to happen. Neither should Ivan be on a ventilator. fighting for his life. There have been 26 deaths since NASCAR was formed in 1949. Most have been journeymen drivers or stars past their prime. The last real star to die in a Winston Cup crash was Dewayne "Tiny" Lund in a crash at Talladega, Ala., in 1975. Maybe we've just been lucky through the last 20 years. Maybe the cars are that much safer. Maybe talent makes all the difference. Whatever the reason, it isn't supposed to happen to No. 28. ( FACULTY CONVOCATION Monday, August 22,1994 4:00 p.m. Kansas Union Ballroom A wine and cheese reception will follow Stephen Jordan Executive Director Kansas Board of Regents will speak 142345678901 SUNFLOWER OUTDOOR & BIKE SHOP 804 Mass • 843-5000 GREATER NORTH AMERICA "Unhurried since 1993' Red Lyon Tavern 944 Mass. 832-8228 ATHLETIC MIDNIGHT MADNESS! 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Spaghetti + Garlic Toast + 32 oz. Coke Expires 10-31-94 $5.25 + tax (With Maertel cards - add 1) SPORTS UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N Mondav. August 22. 1994 58 Study shows increase in number of black administrators The Associated Press OVERLAND PARK — Minorities still account for less than 10 percent of all college athletics administrators, with few gains reported in the past year, according to the results of a National Collegiate Athletic Association study released Wednesday. mittee. increased slightly to 8.7 percent in 1993-94 from 8.6 percent in 1992-93, according to a report from the NCAA's Minority Opportunity and Interests Committee. The committee's findings are part of a four-year study of race demographics at colleges and universities in the NCAA. The percentage of black athletics administrators "I am deeply concerned but not necessarily shocked that movement has not progressed as I would have liked since the last study," said Charles Whitchom, head of the com- Meanwhile, the percentage of white athletics administrators dipped slightly to 86 percent in 1993-94 from 86.9 percent in 1992-93. The percentage of minorities other than blacks remained unchanged at 2 percent, and the percentage of those listed as "unknown" rose to 3.2 percent last year from 2.4 percent in 1992-93. In the past four years, 5,889 new athletics administrator positions became available. Of those, 597 or 10.1 percent, were filled by blacks. The study defined administrators as those in a variety of positions serving from tinklet manager to athlete director positions ranging from ticket manager to athletic director. Blacks accounted for 3.6 percent of the 897 athletic directors in the NCAA in 1993-94. Whites comprised 93.5 percent, other minorities accounted for 1 percent and the remaining 1.9 percent represented unknowns, according to the study. fifiS Camera America ONE HOUR PHOTO Lawrence's Largest Supplier of Darkroom Materials 1610 West 23rd Street 841 925 IOWA 841-7226 Lunch & Dinner Great Food STONEBACK'S APPLIANCE DORM SIZE REFRIGERATORS FOR RENT 2 cu. ft. $45 4 cu. ft. $65 school year 929 Mass. 843-4170 FREE DELIVERY MOVING? Let Lawrence Paper Company Solve your moving hassles. Sturdy boxes for moving and Storage Boxes with handles for easier moving Large quantities at discount prices Small quantities - walk-ins welcome Call 843-8111 Ask for Sales/Service Dept. CAMPUS REP WANTED The nation's leader in college marketing is seeking an energetic, entrepreneurial student for the position of campus rep. no saler involved. Place advertising on bulletboard for companies such as American Express and Microsoft. Great part-time job. Earnings. 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AT&T - Discount off MCI basic rates. Friends & Family provides an extra discount on qualifying calls. * Discount off AIRT basic residential rates. Available in most Certain excisions apply. © 1994 AT&T 6B Monday, August 22,1994 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Major league strike puts Little Leaguers in media spotlight The Associated Press WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. — Baseballhungry fans turn their attention to Williamsport this week for the Little League World Series, where the United States can win a first consecutive title for the first time since 1966. Long Beach, Calif., which won the last two titles, isn't back after losing two games in its state tournament. Nearby Northridge, Calif., is in the eight-team field and plays Mon day night against Brooklyn Center, Minn. Springfield, Va., plays Middleboro, Mass., in Monday's other opening-ground U.S. game. Glace Bay, Nova Scotia, faces Taiwan and Venezuela plays Saudi Arabia in Monday's other games. A strike by major-league players has brought a new awareness to the tournament, which ends Saturday. 'Nobody likes the fact that they're on strike, but the impact here is an incredible amount of interest," Little League vice president Steve Keener said. Already, more than 200 reporters and photographers have received credentials, above last year's record of 150. "This has been such a media blitz." Middleboro manager Steve McKenna said. "It's possibly the biggest even of their lives." And the Venezuelan players, as well, are looking forward to replacing professional ballplayers on cable television back home. "They know they're going to be on ESPN," said Rafael Avila, the father of Esteban Avila, Venezuela's center fielder. "That's about all they talk about." United States teams haven't won three World Series titles in a row since Staten Island, N.Y.; Windsor Locks, Conn.; and Houston won from 1964 to 1966. Japan took the next two titles, then Taiwan started a string of 15 titles in 25 years. The scandal prompted a change in Little League's enforcement of age and residency requirements. Little League formerly didn't investigate complaints of overage or ineligible players until matters were brought to its attention. The 1993 rule change made teams prove their players were eligible before they came to Williamsport. The rule change kept Taiwan and four other countries out of last year's tournament Merriam Webster Collegiate Dictionary, Tenth Edition Merriam Webster's Collegiate Dictionary TENNESSEE EDITION Brand-new edition of America's best-selling dictionary. The clear, comprehensive definitions found in Merriam-Webster's Collegiate lead users toward more precise, unambiguous communication. This essential resource contains 160,000 entries, 214,000 definitions, and more usage paragraphs, synonym paragraphs, and illustrations than ever before. 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Deliveries made next business day 1994 Kansas Swimming KU KU and Diving Schedule Sept. 17 Open Water Invitational Oct. 14 Intraquad, 7 p.m. Oct. 21 Missouri, 7 p.m. at Colorado State (Women only). 7 p.m. Oct. 26 at Colorado State Invitational at Southern III., Michigan, Nebraska at Nebraska Invitational at North Carolina Invitational Georgia (Women only). 2 p.m. at Minnesota, 2 o.m. iowa State and Arkansas (Men only), 6 p.m. Jan. 28 at Nebraska Feb. 11 at Arizona State (Men only) at Men's NCAA Championships. All Day Iowa State and Arkansas (Women only). 1:30 p.m. at Women's in NCAA Championships, All Day Iowa (Men only), 2 p.m. at Big Eight Championships. All Day New recruits supplement swim teams By Jenni Carlson Kansan sportswriter "It's something that's been on everyone's mind since the meet." he said. With 30 new faces on the roster, the swimming and diving team might be short on college experience, but they won't need to look far for motivation. The men's and women's squares are looking to avenge last year's second place finishes behind Nebraska at the Big Eight Championships. The memory of last year's performance has lingered with squad members, said assistant swimming coach Dan Mendenhall. The Jayhawks added two breast-strokers, signing Kelly Williams and Kristin Nilsen. Last year's deciding factor for the Jayhawks at the championship was a lack of depth. Mendhenl said the squad was even with Nebraska at the top position but fell short farther down the roster. To rectify the problem, the Jayhawks went on a recruiting binge during the off season, luring 30 freshmen to the program. Several newcomers will be ready to contribute immediately. Mendenhall said. Kansas continues to build a strong diving team with three freshmen recruits, led by high school All-American Kenzi Zeller. Several returners, including AllAmericans Rebecca Andrew and Jennifer Davis will need to step in and perform at a high level again this year, Mendenhall said. Seniors will stabilize the program, however. The four seniors include three captains, Kristen Carlson, Frankie Hanson, and Heather Switzer. Ronda Lusty is the fourth senior. "They seem to work really well together," Mendenhall said. "The young girls seem to look up to them." Like the women's team, the leadership of upperclassmen will be essential on the men's team which has 14 freshmen. The support begins with senior captains Marc Bontrager, Marc Hensel, and Jeff Wilson. "We're looking for their continued help," Mendenhall said. Bontrager and Dan Phillips lead a strong core of returning swimmers. "These two definitely stand out as our elite returning swimmers." Mendenhall said. Freshmen Roberto Iglesias and Justen Clossen immediately will add depth to the squad. Breaststroker Iglesias and backstroker Clossen are the fastest recruits ever introduced into the program. Mendenhall said. With so many freshmen, he said the biggest hurdle to overcome will be the heightened level of intensity. "It will definitely be a learning process for them," he said. "The work ethic seems to be there already." Adding to the motivation to beat Nebraska this year is the impending Big 12 Conference. Swimming and diving competition will be under the Big 12 banner next season. Texas and Texas A&M will bring the number of swimming and diving schools to six. Four Big Eight schools currently compete in swimming and diving. "We want it to start right away," Mendenhall said. "Our swimming against them is only going to make us better." Mendenhall admitted that the team wants to avenge last year's tournament loss, being the last team to win the Bie Eight Conference title. "It gives us another chance to beat Nebraska," he said. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Monday, August 22,1994 7B --- SUA is looking for you! Are you currently an SUA committee member? Committee meetings are scheduled for this week in the Kansas Union: Spectrum Films: Monday, 8/22, 5:30pm, Governor's Room Live Music: Monday, 8/22, 6:00pm, Alderson Auditorium Fine Arts: Monday, 8/22, 6:00pm, Regionalist Room Special Events: Tuesday, 8/23, 6:00pm, Alcove I Forums: Wednesday, 8/24, 5:30pm, Governor's Room Public Relations: Wed., 8/24, 5:00pm, Regionalist Room Recreation and Travel: Wed., 8/24, 5:00pm, Alcove A Feature Films: Thurs., 8/25, 6:00pm, Regionalist Room Upcoming SUA Events: - Chiefs individual game tickets on sale August 25th. - Print and Poster Sales in Union Gallery through September 2nd. - Films in Woodruff Auditorium this week : The War Room, An Angel at My Table, - The Killing, Four Weddings and a Funeral, and Repo Man. - Lecturer Jean Kilbourne on "The Naked Truth: Advertising's Image of Women" in the Lied Center on September 1st, 8:00pm. - Canoe Trip on the Niangua River over Labor Day Weekend. - Lecturer Zev Kedem on "Schindler's List: A Survivor Celebrates Life" in the Lied Center on October 3rd. - Comedian Jeff Foxworthy in the Lied Center for Parents' Weekend, October 22. STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUK THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Would you like to become an SUA Committee Member? Informational Meetings will be held September 6 & 7 at 7:30pm in the Burge Union. Call the box office for more details. STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Programs With Personality. For more information, call the SUA Box Office: 864-3477. 8B Monday, August 22,1994 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Strike threatens postseason play The Associated Press Just like thousands of other out-of-work Americans, Barry Bonds went to court to lighten the load of his child support payments. Bonds, having to make due without his $4.75 million salary during the baseball strike, obtained a court order cutting his $15,000-per-month child and spousal support payments in half. After making the decision, San Mateo County Domestic Relations Commissioner George Taylor asked for Bonds' autograph. "To have the courts look upon him as a superhero made her feel like she was not playing on a level playing field," said Lawrence Stotter, the lawyer for Bonds' wife. Sun. Sun Bonds was getting the higher payment as part of a temporary arrangement in a divorce proceeding that began in May. Although the payment was reduced to $7,500 per month, she continues to have access to a credit card account, according to court records and lawyers for both sides. As the strike completed its ninth day, Colorado Rockies owner Jerry McMorris said small-market clubs have too much power at times and said owners should allow some of the small-market teams to move. Executive council chairman Bud Selig said the expanded postseason would be jeopardized if the walkout continued into mid-September. Fourteen more games were canceled Saturday, raising the total to 117. Management negotiator Richard Ravitch and union leader Donald Fehr both took the day off, and talks aren't scheduled to resume until tomorrow or Wednesday. McMorris said small-market clubs were the moving force behind management's bargaining position. "They have a lot of power — they got themselves into this position." McMorris said in an interview broadcast by CBS Sports. "It didn't happen overnight. Do I think the pendulum is maybe a little far some days? Yes I do, there's no question about it. By the same token, I think if we make it easier for some small-market teams to move — they can't all move — I think a couple could move. That might help the situation." Selig, in an interview broadcast by ABC's "Wide World of Sports," said the question of when the strike would effect the end of the season hadn't been addressed. "Once we get into September, you're getting into some very, very tense ground relative to the rest of the season," Selig said. "So starting Wednesday, we've got to sit down and really get serious — all parties — and make a deal so that we don't have to start confronting dates, because September becomes a problem, and obviously when you get into mid-September, you really have a lot of problems." Selig said owners hadn't yet decided if they would implement the salary cap after the season if there isn't an agreement. They would risk the strike continuing at the start of the 1995 season. "It's something that we've talked about but haven't really confronted yet because we're going to play this day by day," Selig said. "I want to be more of an optimist. I want to believe starting Tuesday and Wednesday we're going to sit down, we're going to confront our problems. That is something the industry just has not done over the past 21/2 decades. And that's why we're in the position we find ourselves today." McMorris, whose team generates the sport's highest attendance, repeated Saturday that he believes a salary cap isn't necessary. "I don't have a problem with trying to find a solution addressed to the fundamental problems of the game," McMorris said. "If we can do it without a salary cap, I can live without a salary cap. The best solution we've been able to come up with, including the Colorado Rockies, is a salary cap." The Associated Press If you want to blame the major league baseball shutdown on someone, consider the National Basketball Association, which invented the salary cap a decade ago, and the National Football League, which embraced it this season. League negotiators, including Jeff Mishkin, senior vice president for legal and business affairs for the NBA, proposed a salary limitation. That idea landed them in court, sued by the NBA Players Association, which claimed that was an antitrust violation. After that was settled, talked took a different direction. Larry Fleisher, then head of the union, and David Stern, not yet commissioner, discussed revenue sharing. That concept appealed to Fleisher, provided the players had up side of the equation. The two sides met halfway, creating the 53 percent solution. In 1983-84, that meant a $3.6 million share of the take for the players on the 23 NBA rosters. For 1994-95, it means $15.17 million on 27 teams. "It was an enormous breakthrough." Mishkin said. "It was the first time a union and an employer had agreed to share revenue." Charles Grantham, successor of the late Fleisher as union leader, said the cap was not designed in perpetuity. "We were joining the partnership to help the NBA grow," he said. The NFL got its first taste of the salary cap this season with the limit set at 64 percent of designated gross revenues, which translated to a maximum of $39 million and minimum of $31 million per team, including benefits. Although some players have felt squeezed by the cap, Doug Allen, NFL Players Association assistant executive director, said the brief experience with the system has been positive. "We think the system is working well," he said. "It's a system that forced teams that traditionally paid low salaries to be lifted up. The average payroll went up 51 percent last year." Baseball players, armed with the experience of football and basketball brethren, are apparently permanently opposed to any kind of cap. Could that change as this strike drags on? Don't bet on it. "There's a better chance," said agent Tom Reich, "of the United States returning to a monarchy." PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS "NO COUPON SPECIALS" EVERYDAY "NO COUPON SPECIALS" EVERYDAY TWO-FERS PRIMETIME PARTY "10" 2-PIZZAS 3-PIZZAS 10-PIZZAS 2-TOPPINGS 1-TOPPING 1-TOPPING 2-COKES 4-COKES $9.00 $11.50 $30.00 1601 W.23rd Southern Hills Center 842-1212 DELIVERYHOURS SUNDAY-THURSDAY 11am-2am FRIDAY-SATURDAY 11am-3am SINCE 1972 LAWRENCE'S FOREMOST NAME IN OUTDOOR CLOTHING SUNFLOWER 804 Massachusetts 843-5000 Now is the time to get rid of that old, stinky thing. Bring in your old, stinky, worn out book bag and we'll give you $5 off any backpack in the store. Vs. POSITION OPEN Hester Systems Inc., a California corporation since 1982, is offering a position auditing retail stores in your area. We supply a handheld computer which has been programmed to allow our auditors to answer questions in supermarkets relating to the marketing objectives of our clients. We specialize in customize* systems which supply marketing research data for consumer packaged goods companies. We provide all necessary training. We look for responsible students with good organizational skills who can perform responsibly when given flexibility in organizing their work schedules. We pay 4 per question. Our auditors earn in excess of $10 per hour. You will need a dependable automobile to perform this position. We reimbure all mileage required for this position at 274 per mile. We will be interviewing in your market in the near future. If you wish to interview for this position please call us collect at (805) 653-2512 Two of the most popular bundles on campus this year. A distinctively fragrant assortment of wool, denim, nylon and poly-cotton blend. Now you can really clean up when you buy a select Macintosh® Performa. For a limited time, it comes bundled with a unique new student software set available only from Apple. It's all the software you're likely to need in college. You'll get software that takes you through every aspect of writing papers, the only personal organizer/calendar created for your student lifestyle and the Internet Companion to help you tap into on-line Macintosh Performa G36 4/250, Apple Color Plus 14" Display, AppleDesign' Keyboard and mouse. Only $1,399.00. Macintosh Performa G36 8/250 with CD-ROM, Apple Color Plus 14" Display, AppleDesign' Keyboard and mouse. Only $1,699.00. research resources. Plus ClarisWorks, an intuitive, integrated package with a spreadsheet, word processor, database and more. Buy a select Performa with CD-ROM, and you'll also get a multimedia library of essential reference tools. And now, with an Apple Computer Loan, you can own a Macintosh for less than a dollar a day! It's the power every student needs. The power to be your best. Apple POWER through it. Offer expires October 17, 1994; available only while registration last. ©1994 Apple Computer Inc., All rights reserved. The apple logo, Macintosh, Performance and 'The power be your best' are registered trademarks of Apple Computer Inc. Apple Design is a trademark of Apple Computer Inc. *Clarity Corporation*. An estimated based on an Apple Computer Loan of $15,499 for the Performance 436m, and $18,829 for the Performance 436m with CD-ROM system absent. Price and loan amounts are subject to change without notice. See your Apple Computer Borrower or Representative for payment prices. A 5.5% loan origination will be added to the requested loan amount. The interest rate is variable, based on the commercial paper rate plus 5.35%. For the month of August 1994, use 10.17%, with an APN of 11.36%; 8-year loan term with no prepayment penalty. The monthly payment about assume no depreciation of principal and interest. Students may defer principal payments up to 4 years, untilual graduation. Deferment will change your monthly payment. The Apple Computer Loan is subjected to credit approval. 1. 2017年10月31日 2. 2018年1月1日 3. 2019年1月1日 4. 2020年1月1日 5. 2021年1月1日 6. 2022年1月1日 7. 2023年1月1日 8. 2024年1月1日 9. 2025年1月1日 10. 2026年1月1日 11. 2027年1月1日 12. 2028年1月1日 13. 2029年1月1日 14. 2030年1月1日 15. 2031年1月1日 16. 2032年1月1日 17. 2033年1月1日 18. 2034年1月1日 19. 2035年1月1日 20. 2036年1月1日 21. 2037年1月1日 22. 2038年1月1日 23. 2039年1月1日 24. 2040年1月1日 25. 2041年1月1日 26. 2042年1月1日 27. 2043年1月1日 28. 2044年1月1日 29. 2045年1月1日 30. 2046年1月1日 31. 2047年1月1日 ... JOCK'S NITCH SPORTING GOODS The Sports Look of Today! SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Monday, August 22, 1994 9B EASTPAK MADE IN USA JOCK'S NITCH SPORTING GOODS The Sports Book of Today! Brief Cases Leather Packs Satchels 842-2442 Book Bags Flip Tops Waist Packs LIFETIME GAURANTEE! 800 Massachusetts SPRING AIR SPRING AIR Authorized Factory outlet SpringAir for Mattress Co. Bobbis Bedroom Off-season scandals tarnish Seminoles' crown The Associated Press Seven months after experiencing their greatest moment, Bobby Bowden and his Florida State Seminoles are trying to recover from the worst off-season in school history. Since beating Nebraska 18-16 in the Orange Bowl on New Year's night, the Seminoles have been rocked by a series of scandals that have taken some of the luster off their first national championship. The problems include a rape charge against one player; another illegally recording a sexual encounter; another charged with reckless driving; and four others suspended as the result of a $6,000 shopping spree with agents. "We didn't get much time to celebrate," Bowden said. "It seems like it's been one problem after another." While the incidents were unrelated, their cumulative effect was to soil the image of the national champions and raise questions about whether Bowden, one of the nation's most popular coaches, had lost control of the program. Bowden denies any wrongdoing, but admits that "like a general in the army, I feel responsible for the actions of my troops. "Some of our kids have made mistakes, and they're going to have to pay for them," he said. It wasn't the kind of off-season Bowden had in mind after finally winning the national championship that had eluded him for so many years. "After a while, you start to ask, 'Why me?' " said Bowden, who has more victories (239) than any active Division I-A coach except JatePaterno. Bowden said he was disappointed but not shocked by the behavior of some of his players. "It just shows that football players are human beings, just like everyone else," he said. "They're as good as other people and as bad as other people. All you have to do is pick up the front page, and you'll see the same things." NATURALWAY Florida State hire a Kansas law firm to conduct an investigation into possible NCAA violations at the school, and the firm's report led to the four suspensions in the Foot Locker incident. The NCAA still hasn't decided whether to do its own inquiry, which could lead to probation or other sanctions against the school. 820-822 Mass.841-0100 A Is there a Secret to doing well on the LSAT? ABSOLUTELY! The LSAT is proven to be a highly coachable test. KAPLAN can prepare you for the LSAT better than anyone. KAPLAN The answer to the test questions 842-5442 KANSAS SPORTS CLUB FAN SHOP Live it! Wear it! Love it! KU! COED NAKED SPORTSWEAR 837 Massachusetts We have Coed Naked & Big Johnson. Come in and see our great selection of NBA, NCAA, NFL, NHL, & MLB merchandise. 842-2992 KU Welcome Back KU The only place with all the textbooks. --- The KU Bookstores stock all required and recommended textbooks at both student unions. Supplies at low prices! Pencil Great prices on Art and Drafting Supplies the official BOOKstore of KU KU Theme Cover Sheets 9"x12" Recycled Sketch Pad, save $2.70...only $4.45 Art Bin Tool Box #8199,save $4.10...only $8.25 Weber Gesso, One Gallon, save $12.55...only $20.95 18"x24" Recycled Newsprint, save $4.47...only $5.98 500 ct. Filler Paper, college ruled...only $3.79 200 ct. Filler Paper, college ruled...only 1.59 50 ct. Canary Pad...only 40¢ Single Subject Spiral Notebook, 80 ct...only 85¢ 3-subject Spiral Notebook, 120 ct...only $1.29 5-subject Spiral Notebook, 200 ct...only $2.19 Notebooks feature micro perforations and pocket dividers (3 & 5 sub.) Receive a rebate on cash or check purchases. We return an average rebate of 6% of your purchase next semester. All you need to do is save your receipts*. DOLLAR KU KU BOOKSTORES KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store offering rebates to KU students Buy it here! KANSAN CABE Use it here! All stores open until 7:00 p.m. August 22-24 Kansas Union Store (general merchandise)...864-4640 Textbook Hotline...864-5285 Burge Union Store (all merchandise and books)...864-5697 Mt. Oread Bookshop (general books)...864-4431 Union Technology Center...864-5690 *See details in store 1 --- 8TH STREET TAPROOM 801 NEW HAMPSHIRE MONDAYS 1.50 WELLS 1.50 ANY THING TUESDAYS WEDNESDAYS 3.00 PITCHERS 1.50 PETE'S LONGNECK THURSDAYS FREE POOL#3-8 FRIDAYS SATURDAYS 1.00 KAMI'S 3.00 BREGKENRIDGE SUNDAYS 22.00 BREGKENRIDGE SUNDAYS 22-00 GEORGIA CARPET OUTLETS Endorsed by K.U. Association of University Residence Halls. STUDENT ROOM SIZE CARPETS STARTING AT $48 EACH. FREE DELIVERY TO CAMPUS! AUGUST ONLY GUC GARPET OUTLETS We're in LAWRENCE G C O CARPET OUTLETS Train 1 Train 2 Train 3 F-Can Phone: 841-3838 3000 Iowa Street, Lawrence, KS 1 Block North of K-Mart Mon-Thurs.9am-8pm, Fri.-Sat.9am-6pm,Sun.1-5pm MAJOR CREDIT CARDS NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Increase in officers weapons ban result House approves anti-crime bill Clinton said he was "very grateful" to the Republicans who helped negotiate the package with Democrats after the House shelved an earlier $33.5 billion version on Aug. 11. The Associated Press WASHINGTON — With moderate Republicans providing the margin of victory, the House last night approved a $30 billion anti-crime package that would help put 100,000 more police on the streets and ban assault-style firearms. The vote gave President Clinton a needed victory. "This is the way Washington should work, and I hope it works this way in the future," Clinton said of the bipartisan effort. Sen. Joseph R. Biden Jr., chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, said he expected his chamber to begin debate on the bill today. Democrats will need Republican help to obtain the 60 votes needed to overcome procedural obstacles that most GOP senators are expected to support. Biden predicted he will get the votes. "They're going to do everything they can to stop it, but it's going to be awfully hard to stop." Biden said. But the Senate Judiciary Committee's ranking Republican, Orrin Hatch of Utah, said he will demand that even more funds be moved from prevention to punishment. "It still may collapse," Hatch said. Nonetheless, the House vote was a victory for Clinton and for the moderate Republicans. The president lobbied strenuously for the bill and dispatched several top Cabinet officials to Capitol Hill to lobby in person yesterday. It was a defeat for the National Rifle Association, which lobbied to block the bill. But NRA's chief jobbisty, Tanya Metakaş, did not see it that way. "It'a defeat for the American people," she said. White House has doubts on health care The Associated Press WASHINGTON — In public, a determined President Clinton urges the nation onward on what he calls the final leg of a long journey toward health reform. In private, some in the White House are starting to think the unthinkable: Is it possible that there will be no health care reform this year? Behind the upbeat public pronouncements by administration officials, there are doubts. - White House officials who have devoted much of the last year to the health care reform effort are reluctant to admit even in private that they might not reach their goal. But they acknowledge that the outcome is largely dependent on an uncertain and deeply divided Congress. Chief of Staff Leon Panetta sounded less than sure about White House prospects Sunday. "I still think there's a good chance we'll get universal coverage," he told ABC. Clinton himself reflected that uncertainty at a news conference Friday, when he exhorted Congress to "keep working, keep working at it." "If we don't move now, there's a chance that it won't happen at all," he said. "If you delay, you may well lose it altogether." Delay is exactly what is occurring on Capitol Hill. Where each chamber once was to have completed its version of health reform before Labor Day, no House votes are expected until after that date and Republicans want to hold off on Senate action as well. Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, D-N.Y., told CBS yesterday that a health care bill would pass this year, but not until October and not with tax increases other than on cigarettes. Even Democrats in Congress talk in increasingly gloomy terms these days. Sen. Bob Kerrey, D-Neb., said lawmakers were suffering from "sticker shock" at the potential costs of health reform. Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga, predicted the Senate was "weeks if not months away" from casting meaning-ful votes. With legislators hoping to adjourn for the year in early October, that doesn't leave much time. One White House official who spoke on condition of anonymity described Clinton as hopeful about prospects for health reform, but "realistic about the magnitude of the task and the enormity of the issue and the forces that are out there to shoot it down." Clinton recognizes, the official said, the possibility "of the calendar running out." PREPARE FOR VICTORY. Reebok Reebok Get ready for a winning season in the Scrimmage Mid or Low from the PreseasonTM Collection by Reebok. Both come in full-grain leather with HexaaliteTM technology in the heel for lightweight cushioning. And a turf outsole for sure footed traction. LIFE IS SHORT. PLAY HARD. Reebok VISA MasterCard DISCOVER AMERICAN EXPRESS The Athlete's Foot. Hours: Mon-Sat. 9-5:30 Sun: noon-5:30 Thurs. 9-8:30 914 Mass 841-6966 THE HARBOUR LIGHTS a historic pier once bar after 57 years of downtown tradition 1031 Massachusetts Downtown Jayhawk Bookstore S "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 THEATRE Monday Night Football Come see the game on the big screen - no cover until 11 * music afterwards * $.50 draws WEDNESDAY 8/24 Hawk Night All your favorite hits from the 70's, 80's and 90's $1 big beers $4 cover with KUID THURSDAY 8/25 Reggae Night with New Riddim * $1.50 Red Stripe * $4 cover for 21 and over * $5 cover for 18 to 21 21 to drink all shows 18 to enter 21 to drink PowerPC Acquire DOORS OPEN 9AM TO 2AM 1020 Mass. Lawrence KS (913)842-1390 The Power is here! The Power Macintosh 7100/66 8/250 CD with an Apple 14" Color Monitor, Apple Design Keyboard, StyleWriter II printer, Supra 14.4 Lc Modem, Claris Works 2.1 and Red or Blue Mouse Pad all only $2797^{90} POWER IRVING HILL RD MASSMITH DR LEVEL 3 BURGE UNION Machinists. The Power to be your Best at RK. union technology center Academic Computer Supplies, Service & Equipment Burgun Union * Level 1 + 913-860-5600 IRVING HILL RD WASHTIM DR. LEVEL 3 BURGE UNION Macintosh, The Power to be your Best at KU union technology center Academic Computer Supplies, Service & Equipment Burg Clinton Level 5 - 913-860-6500 Monday, August 22, 1994 11B UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N NATURALWAY 820-822 Mass.841-0100 Raise Your Scores: LSAT GRE GMAT MCAT It's Easy When You Know How The LSAT, GRE, GMAT, and MCAT can be tough, but we can make them a whole lot easier. The Princeton Review has helped thousands of students dramatically raise their scores. Small classes (no more than 12 students) and a detailed, personal computer analysis throughout the program make us the most effective, efficient, and enjoyable way to dramatically improve your scores. You'll score more when you know how. And we'll teach you how. THE PRINCETON REVIEW We Score More (800) 865-7737 The Princeton Review is affiliated with neither Princeton University nor the Educational Testing Service. PETIONVILLE, Haiti — About 300,000 Haitians live on the run, fearing for their lives if the army finds them, while their families suffer brutal retaliation at home, a human rights report said. The report accused the United States of ignoring internal displacement, the ruling military's latest terror tactic to eradicate supporters of deposed President Jean-Bertrand Aristide. The report by Human Rights Watch- Americas, Jesuit Refugee Service-USA and the National Coalition for Haitian Refugees was to be released yesterday. The Associated Press Haitian government forces democracy Haiti's military-backed government is unrecognized internationally. It said Saturday that its legitimacy must be acknowledged before it will talk peace with U.N. negotiators. An estimated 3,000 of Aristide's followers have been killed since the army ousted the popular leftist priest in September 1991. Many more have been arrested illegally, beaten, tortured and raped. Starting late last year, the military has been increasingly forcing people into hiding, a technique called marronage, the report said. The word refers to Haitian "marrons," fugitive slaves who fled 18th century plantation owners to hide and organize in the hills. They eventually banded together to defeat French slave owners in 1804, making Haiti But those who hide now can't organize. If they haven't found safe houses, they must move from place to place, always fearful of discovery. the world's first black republic. "They said they would walk over my dead body," he said. If he goes home, he fears he will be executed or arrested as a traitor. David Bien-Aime has been on the run since police last month tried to force the pro-democracy activist to help resist a possible U.S.-led invasion of Haiti. She said the tactic leaves families vulnerable to attack and often takes away their income. State agents looking for activists have raped daughters, wives or sisters; beaten family members and ransacked and even burned homes. "It's a deliberate practice," said Gretta Tovar of Human Rights Watch. "It's part of the systematic repression that we've seen since the coup and certainly at high, high levels since last year to completely scatter and neutralize support for Aristide ... or opposition to the regime." Bien-Aime, a 26-year-old father of three, was a community leader who vigorously campaigned for Aristide's December 1990 election. He narrowly, escaped being shot by police-linked gunmen on June 24. In late July, police tried to persuade him to become an anti-invasion resistance volunteer, hoping he would use his influence on others. He said no. HEALTHY MALE? Receive up to $250 IMTCI, a pharmaceutical research company in Lenexa, KS is seeking men 18-40 years of age, to participate in a research study. You must be able to complete 2 overnight stays at our clinic. For more information on how to qualify COLUMTSI 1-800-669-4682 of 599-4100 @ International Medical Technical Consultants, Inc. 16300 College Boulevard-Lenexa, KS 66219 MICOM COMPUTERS & SERVICE CENTER 947 E.23rd St. 832-8831 Back to School Sale Intel Inside talent media Intel 486 DX2-66 Green PC System --only $1,439.00 4 MB MM, 420 MB HD, 14".28 Color M 32-bit High Speed Video Controller 32-bit High Speed HD/FD Controller 31/2" 1.44 MB Floppy Drive DOS, Windows, Keyboard, Mouse, Preloaded Software 486 DX2-66 $1,439 $20.00 off with coupon Just Look at ALL of These Ways YOU Can Save Some Cash THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN C A R D Valid Through July 31, 1995 NCCS KU THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Available at these locations: UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP 1116 W 23rd MUSTANG Jayhawk Bookstore KU KU BOOKSTORES 1420 Crescent Rd.·Lawrence, Ks. 66044 - Second level in the Kansas Union Bookstore - First Level in the Burge Union Bookstore Restaurants & Bars BLIMPIE'S SUBS AND SALADS 265 400, 865 1,000 1819 W. 23rd * 842-1620 Get the daily special prices every day of the week AMIGO'S 1810W/29rd:840 1620 BUY 1 6" Cold Sub Sandwich, get 1 for 79g BONANZA DURANCA 2329 S. Iowa St.*842-1200 $3.99 Freshstates Food Bar DOMINO'S PIZZA 832 Iowa St • 841-8002 25% OFF Any Delivery Order(not valid with any other offer) DOS HOMBRES DUS NUMBERS 815 New Hampshire-841-7286 815 New Hampshire 641-728-198 BUY1 Menu item, and get the Second One at 1/2 Price 1006 Assessusheta-843-0561 10% off any purchase of $2.50 or more FULL MOON CAFE 803 MOONwatters 828 044 824 W1 12h-84H -2310-FREE Cup of Our House Coffee (Certified Organically Grown) with Any Meal Purchase $1.00 OFF Any Purchase Over $3.50(Includes food and coffee drinks) $1.00 OFF Sandwiches and Dinners Before 6 P.M., Tuesday through Friday GLASS ONION JOHNNY'S TAVERN 2907 W 6h-841-1688+FREE Soft Drink (with FREE refills) with Dohy of Daily Buffet Specials IMPERIAL GARDEN 401 N 2nde+842-0377*BUY a cheeseburger with fries at reg. price, get second $1.00 Mon thru Fri 4-9m PERKINS FAMILY RESTAURANT 1711 W 23rd 8040 PIZZA SHOPPE 601 Kasold*842-0600 $1.00 OFF Any Entree, Anytime, 24 hours a day PIZZA SHUTTLE Med Pizza $5.95, 2 for $9.95; Lg Pizza $7.95, 2 for $13.95 One Pizza with One Topping $2.60 plus tax Carry Out Only PYRAMID PIZZA 14th & Ohio@842-3232>$4.00 $m, add, tops 509; Md.$6.00, add, tops 759; $8.00 $L, ad topts 1.0; Carry Out Only RUNZA 2700 Iowa·749-2615-FREE Medium Drink with Purchase of TACOJOHN'S 1626 W 32d/84d-8185-1101 W 6th/84h-0936-0236 Haskell Ave.8/523-533-3 Hardshell Stool 's for 99 (NO LIMIT) WEST COAST SALOON 2222 Iowa St.+841-2739 $1.50 OFF Anv Sandwich Retail/Merchandise ATHLETE'S FOOT 914 Massachusetts+841-6966 15% OFF Regularly Priced Shoes ATHLETE'S FOOT BARB'S VINTAGE ROSE BOBBI'S BEDROOM CENTRAL DATA 20% OFF Entire Inventory (sale items excluded) 20% OFF Any Purchase Over $20.00 Excluding Rentals 745 New Hampshire@843-3282-$2.50 Discount for Diagnostic, Upgrade Labor, System Cleaning on IBM Compatibles 731 Massachusetts@843-4191+15% OFF All Apparel+ FREE FRANK T-Shirt w/ purchase Over $25.00 CLEOPATNA'S CLUSET 742 Massachusetts*749-4664 15%OFF Any Pro-Performance & 24-Hour Diet Item GENERAL NUTRITION CENTER FRANCIS SPORTING GOODS 10% OFF All Academically Priced Computer Software JAYHAWK BOOKSTORE 129 Congress Flds 418-3000 743 Massachusetts-749-464 15% OFF Any item (excludes sale items) JAYNAWK BOOKSTORE JAYHAWK BOOKSTORE 1420 Crescent Rd-843-3826 10% OFF Any Reference or Study Aid JAYHAWK TROPICALFISH 10% OFF Any Typewriter, Printer Ribbon or Printer Ink Refill 846 Illinois, Suite D-842-5950-20% OFF Whisper Brand PowerFilters, and All Other Brand Undergraduate Filters JOCKS NITCH 840 Massachusetts*842-2442 15% OFF All Footwear, Excluding Sale Items KARSA SPORTS CLUB 837 Massachusetts-842-2992 20% OFF KU Sweatshirts KU BOOKSTORE KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS-864-4640 Any Size Exam Book (Blue Book) 5¢ KANSAS AND BURGE UNION$-864-4840 $5.00 Off Any JawYah Clothing Item or Hat Over $20.00 KU BOOKSTORE KU BOOKSTORE KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS-864-4640 10% OFF Any Art, Engineering or Drafting Supply KIZER-CUMMINGS % OFF Non-Sale Gold Chains LAWRENCE ONE HOUR PHOTO MERLE NORMAN 2340 S. Iowa*842-8564*30% OFF C41 Process (Not Valid MIRACLE VIDEO 9th & New Hampshire-841-5324 10% OFF All Skin Care Products 910 N 2nnd/841-8903-1891 Haskell Ave. Suite 1/841-7504 $1.00 OFF Movie Rental(limit one per visit) NATURAL WAY 820 Massachusetts*841-0100*20% OFF All Cotton T-Shirts Men and Women's (Organic Cotton, Green Cotton, and Recycled Cotton) OUTFITTER'S 740 Massachusetts*843-3933 15% OFF Any Regular Priced Item PRO SOUND Lawrence, Ks=865-0692 10% OFF All Sales RECYCLED MUSIC CENTER 716 Massachusetts-841-1782-200 OFF (CD-Tapes, Movies, Video Games) Tuesday & 15% (More on CDs) on Buybacks RECYCLED SOUNDS RENTCO USA 622 W 12th St. *841-9475-$2.00 OFF Any One CD, Tape, or LP (with Value Greater Than $5.00) 1741 Massachusetts=749-1605 25% OFF All Monthly Rentals SHARK'S SURF SHOP 15% OFF Any Non-Sale Purchase (excluding Stussy) VIDEO BIZ 832 lowa*749-3507*2 for I Vide Rental Monday. Thursday (limit one per day) Services SPRINGMAID/WAMSUTTA 1025 N. 3rd+832-1100 10%OFF Any Purchase B.C. AUTO & CYCLE 510 N 684-8195 10% OFF All Parts BRADY OPTICAL 737 Massachusetts+842-0880 15% OFF Complete Eyeglass Purchase CHIROPRACTIC HEALTH CENTER CHIROPRACTIC HEALTH CENTER 3320 Clinton Pkwy843-0367 Initial Consultation at No Charge (Usually $30-$70) 1019 Massachusetts=843-3844+$25.00 OFF All Fashion 1019 Massachusetts=843-3844+$25.00 OFF All Fashion EUROPEAN TAN 1601 W23rd84-6232-FREE 2 Tans with Purchase of 7 Tans For $20 and FREE Trial Formula One (1/customer) MANETAMERS $3.00 OFF Haircut or $5.00 OFF Chemical Service PLANNED PARENTHOOD 1001 E 47th St:832-0281+25% .OFF Initial or Annual R.C. '8 STADIUM BARBERY R.J.* STUDIUM BARBERY 1033 Massachusetts* 749-536 Any Haircut or Hairstyle $5.50 SPECTRUM OPTICAL $35.00 OFF Lenses and Frames w/ FREE Adjustment TWIN OAKS GOLF COURSE K-10 & County Rd. 1057-(913)542-1747 Buy One Small Bucket of Balls, Get One Small Bucket ULTIMATE TAN 2449 iowa St.*b14-4949-i FREE Session with the Purchase of a 9 Session Package (Save $5.50) UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 119 Stauffer-Flint-864-4358 20% OFF Any Private Party Classified Ad 12B Monday, August 22, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Kansas & Burge Unions One stop shopping at the Official University Source your student unions, for all your,needs - all on campus Eat, shop, study and have fun in your newly renovated unions where your purchases pay you back through scholarship awards and bookstore rebates! our rds s on The Kansas & Burge Unions operate the following areas on the Lawrence campus: KU Bookstores, SUA, Union Food Services, the Jaybowl and KU Concessions. 45 NATION DNA tests implicate O.J. Simpson in the murder of his ex-wife and her friend, prosecutors say. Page B7. FEATURES --- University of Kansas students' account of the peace and love experienced at Woodstock's 25th anniversary. Page 4B. CHANCE OF RAIN High 89° Low 67° Weather: Page 2. KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA, KS 66612 KA THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS VOL.104.NO.2 TUESDAIR AUGUST 23 1994 ADVERTISING 864:4358 Shanks faces one less rape charge (USPS 650-640) By Manny Lopez Kansan Staff Writer The trial of former KU graduate assistant football coach Jeffrey Shanks began yesterday with a new development. Shanks, who was to be tried on three counts of rape together, now is facing two counts after one of the plaintiffs decided not to pursue her case. Frank Diehl, assistant district attorney, would not comment on why the charges were reduced. (USPS 650-640) NEWS 874342. Shanks, 27, was charged with raping a registered nurse from Parsons last February and a Kansas City, Kan., woman in March. Both incidents were said to have taken place at Shank's apartment in Jayhawker Towers. The third woman had alleged that she was raped by Shanks in February in her apartment off campus. Yesterday, Shanks maintained his innocence. About 15 people sat in the Douglas County Division One Courtroom to hear Diehl and Shank's lawyer, Mike Warner, give opening statements. In his statement, Warner described Shanks as a bad student who had trouble communicating with people, especially women. had a low confidence level," Warner said. "Jeffrey Shanks has always been shy and "Jeffrey Shanks has been charged with two counts of rape," Warner said. "He is many things — maybe self-centered, maybe promiscuous — but he is not a rapist." had a low confidence level, "Warner said. One thing he said Shanks was confident about was becoming a college football coach. Shank's lawver disagreed. But Diehl said the series of events that lead to the alleged rapes were calculated. He said Shanks used his size and strength to control the women. "Both women knew him," Warner said. "They only reported the incidents after a period of time passed, and they spoke to someone else." The first victim said she did not report the rape because she thought she could handle the incident and did not want to have to explain it to her two children. She testified yesterday that she had intercourse with Shanks three times Feb. 26. She said she initially tried to resist Shank's advances but stopped struggling because she was afraid of further injuries. Nine men and three women will hear testimony in the case, which is expected to last through the end of the week. The second plaintiff is scheduled to testify today. Jeffrey Shanks, left, looks on as his attorney, Mike Warner, gives opening remarks at the beginning of Shanks' trial. Paul Kotz / KANBAN Wetlands debate continues No solid plans set for trafficway construction By Carlos Tejada Kansan staff writer A line of pink flags snakes its way down the hill. A few feet away, the ground has been cleared for construction. The only way to get there is by the dirt road climbing up the hill's bank. It's not very impressive by itself. But this clearing near the intersection of U.S. Highway 40 and Douglas County 14 is the beginning of the South Lawrence Trafficway, one of the most contested issues in the past two years in Lawrence and Douglas County. Plans to build it along 31st Street in the vicinity of the Baker Wetlands and Haskell Indian Nations University have led to fiery debate in public hearings and plenty of hard feelings on both sides. But like it or not, the clearing indicates the four-lane traffic definitely will be built The only question now, say county officials and trafficway opponents, is where it will eventually go. But that's not the end of problems with the trafficway, said John Pasley, Douglas County project coordinator. He said the county wants to work with Haskell students, who say the trafficway will ruin the spiritual quality of the wetlands, and with environmental groups. The official ground-breaking Aug. 11 followed a victory for the trafficway in a lawsuit filed by a local environmental group. On July 1, a federal court ruled in favor of the Federal Highway Administration, which wrote the final environmental impact statement. So the final plan has been altered, he said. Only the western half of the trafficway will be developed for now. That part starts at Interstate Highway 10, extends south toward Clinton Lake, then curves east until it hits U.S. Highway 59. And after that? Nobody is quite sure, Pasley said. Carlos Tejada / KANSAN "People come up to me and ask me, 'Where's it going to go?' he said. "And I have no idea." Pasley said the county has three options. It can build it along 31st Street, as was originally planned. Or it could be built south of the Wakarusa River. The third option is to build it along 35th Street, which lies between 31st Street and the Wakarusa. The 31st Street option is the option being challenged, but the other two have complications as well. The 35th Street route, which is off Haskell property, would put the trafficway right through the wetlands, angering environmental groups. And Pasley said traffic studies 530167 Construction crews begin making way for the South Lawrence Trafflowy near U.S. Highway 40 and Douglas County 14. Construction has been delayed by a lawsuit, environmental concerns and protests from students at Haskell National Nations University. Interchange Route Proposed Route showed drivers wouldn't use the road if it dipped as far south as the Wakarua. The county won't decide until it consults with Haskell students, who return this week, and with environmental groups, Pasley said. But, he said, the change in the plan had helped calm the debate down a bit. "I think everybody now understands the process," he said. "We agreed to stop work, and that made for a better atmosphere." The problem now is time, Pasley said. He said the county was expecting a report from Haskell students on the religious and spiritual significance of the wetlands by the end of September. Plus, the county has ordered a supplement to the final environmental impact statement, which won't be ready until the end of 1994. Then comes a series of public meetings, which won't be finished until September. "And that's just round one," Pasley said. Lena Johnson, representative for the Alliance for Environmental Justice, said a lot of problems still had to be ironed out with the trafficway before student and environmental groups would agree to it. Specifically, she said, a human-made wetland about a mile east of the current wetland would not make up for the loss of natural wetland if the trafficway goes through. She also said the wetlands comprised almost 95 percent of the county's total wetlands, an amount too precious to endanger. Students find voice by voting By James Evans Kansan staff writer The newly created Student Political Task Force is trying to get a greater, more respected political voice for KU students. The task force, a new committee within the Student Senate, started a voter registration campaign yesterday on campus, said Marc Wilson, Hiawatha senior and co-chairperson of the task force. "Right now, our age group has the lowest voter turn-out," Wilson said of the 18- to 24-year-old bracket. "We want to bring students into the political system." With the voter registration drive, Wilson and David Stevens, Wichita junior and the other co-chairperson of the task force, said they hoped that they could help make students have an "active effect" on Kansas politics. The task force will have voter registration tables in front of Wescoe Hall every Wednesday starting Aug. 31, and every Thursday at the Kansas Union starting Sept. 1. To help increase KU students influence as a lobbying group, Stevens said that political debates are being set up now between all the major political races. "The debates will help in getting students educated about the upcoming November elections," Stevens said. He said that the debates would also show help the major candidates that students are an important constituency that should be addressed. "In November we'll be able to flex our political muscle." Stevens said. Wilson said that U.S. House Second District candidates, Jan Meyers and Judy Hancock, have already agreed to a debate in October. Gubernatorial candidates Jim Slattery and Bill Graves have not yet agreed to a debate he said. The great student political push on campus is largely do to the demise of Associated Students of Kansas, said Sherman Reeves, student body president. In the fall of 1993, Attorney General Bob Stephan ruled that student funds could not be used for lobbying in Topeka, he said. "The way we're trying to hit Topeka is by hitting them here in Lawrence," Wilson said. INSIDE Damage control INSIDE Damage control The Kansas football team's running game hinges on the contributions of senior guard Hessley Hempstead and the amount of damage he creates at the line of scrimmage. Page 2. 1 KU, EPA discuss misspent funds The University of Kansas may owe the Environmental Protection Agency more than $500,000 for missent funds an EPA official said this week. By Shannon Newton Kansan staff writer In June, the EPA's inspector general's office in Washington released a 14-month audit of the expenses from a 1989 EPA conference hosted and organized by KU. Among the allegations was that both KU and the EPA broke federal laws by spending $506,929 of the federal government's money on items such as alcohol and a billboard welcoming conference participants. The EPA was given 90 days after the audit's June 17 release to respond with what action, if any, it planned against the University. Scott McMoran, chief of Grants Information and Analysis for the EPA in Washington, said that the EPA planned to work with KU to come to an agreement over what expenses should be paid back. "We plan on working with the university for input and justify with them the costs that were spent that were unnecessary and unreasonable," McMoran said. "We will ask for repayment of those unnecessary cost." But Tom Hutton, director of University Relations, said that KU was not to blame for the mishandling of funds. Hutton said that the EPA in Kansas City, Kan., had approved all of the expenditures. "The EPA approved the costs every step of the way," he said. In a statement released in July, Hutton said KU had acted appropriately in organizing the conference. "KU fulfilled all its obligations to this project as established in the award document," he wrote. "By now EPA costs Some of the costs from a 1989 EPA conference in Kansas City, Mo., hosted and organized by KU $1,233 for alcoholic beverages from an open bar. $2,058 for a robot from California entertain conference partial pants $4,125 for hotel phone rentals and to install additional lines. $5,623 for meeting space. $2,458 for rental chairs. $3,480 for a photographer. $4,239 for a highway billboard that "EPA Welcome You to KC!" KANBAN suggesting that the University return funds, the report effectively denies EPA's responsibility and accountability." Mexico announces newest president By Nathan Olson Kansan staff writer The victory of Ernesto Zedillo in Mexico's presidential elections Sunday brought both relief and anxiety from observers of Mexican politics. With 32 percent of the votes counted by yesterday afternoon, Zedillo, of the Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, had 48 percent of the vote. Diego Fernandez de Cevallos, of the National Action Party, or PAN, was second with 30 percent. Cuauhtemoc Cardenas, of the Democratic Revolution Party, was third with 16 percent. The PRI has won every presidential election in Mexico for the last 65 years. Local reaction to Zedillo's victory was generally positive from a political perspective. Zedillo succeeds President Carlos Salinas de Gortari, who leaves office Dec. 1 "Most of the interests of the United States will be best --- See REACTION, Page 8A. 2 Tuesday, August 23, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Horoscopes HAPPY BIRTHDAY! IN THE NEXT YEAR OF YOUR LIFE: You will get several wonderful opportunities to increase your assets. Move quickly. Family influences are very strong and could determine certain business choices. Projects that will showcase your creative and artistic talents deserve top priority. Romance will be both fun and challenging. Home life improves when you conquer a habit which annoys your loved ones. Avoid acting overly protective of offspring. CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DATE: actress Barbara Eden, comedian Mark Russell, dancer Patricia McBride, baseball player Mike Boddicker. 8 ARIES (March 21-April 19): After you have studied all available facts and figures, proceed straight to your chosen objective. Associates will tag along. Do not lose faith if an obstacle suddenly appears in your path. Persistence pays off. TAURUS (April 21-May 20) You are more apt to drift with the tide than to swim against it. An occasional break from work lets you catch your breath and review your options. Shared spiritual interests create a strong bond. T II GEMINI (May 21- June 20) Friends will be especially important to you this week. Your career could soon take a different direction, guard against accidents and paperwork slip-ups. Someone you admire shows an interest in your work or ideas. 69 CANCER (June 21-July 22): Keep jointly-owned funds intact, and postpone making new financial commitments. Work harder to boost your income. Flaunting a personal relationship could inflame a competitor. Be discreet. Gambling with hard-earned funds is a no-no. WP LED (July 23-Aug. 22): Material possessions could play an important role in a revision of the family budget. A "sacrifice" is easier than you dreamed possible. A relative shows unusual patience and understanding. Romance beckons tonight. Wear a welcoming smile. a VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sep. 22): Certain career hopes can be realized now if you avoid haste. Determine to do nothing that could cause personnel problems for an employer. Escaping a romantic trap could be difficult if you drop your guard. M LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Unexpected cooperation from overseas contacts could make this a profitable week. Share secrets with a trusted loved one. Family harmony is at an all-time high. Older relatives do you a favor. Show your gratitude. **SCORPIO** (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): People or events at a distance could complicate things today. Use the telephone to get the answers you need. Postpone launching new projects until you are better organized. Turn to creative writing tonight. π SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): A blend of friendship and financial success will reward your efforts this week. A member of the opposite sex plays a key role in a business turnaround. Avoid investing in speculative ventures for now. Build savings. ♞ CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Music has a direct effect on your spirits today. You may need to include more love in your life. Curb a tendency to take on too much work. Welcome offers of assistance. VS P AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Do not be diverted by views that are not in accord with your values. One person's golden dream could be another person's nightmare. Self-discipline and finesse are the keys to success in big business. water TODAY'S CHILDREN are thrifty, organized and methodical. From childhood on, these Virgos display a flair for handling money as well as for persuading other people to part with theirs. They make wonderful salespeople, fund-raisers and investment counselors. Highly selective when choosing a mate, these Virgos will stick like glue once they make a commitment. Their homes will be cozy and tastefully decorated. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): If legal advice appears necessary, get some as quickly as possible. Do not forget the music when planning a romantic evening. Find out loved one's favorites and tape them. A favor will be repaid. Student Political Awareness Task Office will have a Voter Registration Drive from 9 a.m. until 3 p.m. today and tomorrow at the Kansas Union. For more information, call Mark Wilson at 865-0066. ON CAMPUS istries will sponsor a University Forum, "Traditional Informalities in the Kansas State Legislature," at noon tomorrow at 1204 Oread. For more information, call Thad Holcombe at 843-4933. Ecumenical Christian Min- ON THE RECORD A laser printer and its accompanying cartridge were stolen between Wednesday night and Thursday morning from the Big 8 Room in the Kansas Union, KU police reported. The printer was owned by the KU Controllor's office and was being used as part of enrollment, police said. A cashier at Christie's Toy Box, 1206 W. 23rd St., was attacked Friday night because of a dispute about a bathing suit, Lawrence police reported. Police said a woman bought the suit earlier in the day, then returned at about 11:30 p.m. with the suit and her boyfriend. She demanded a cash refund, and when the cashier pointed to the sign that said cash refunds were not allowed, the man grabbed him by the collar of his shirt with one hand. The man then hit the cash register, damaging it. Police said the man was a white male, '5'11', in his 20s, with his right arm in a sling and driving an orange Ford pickup truck. A mattress burst into flames Saturday morning on the third floor of Oliver Hall, KU police reported. Police said they responded to a call about smoke on the third floor at about 8:45 a.m. but could not find a source. But police said they eventually found the source of the smoke—a mattress smoldering in one room. It was taken outside and extinguished. Police said they could not determine a cause of the fire. The occupants of the room slept through the fire, police said. about 1:45 a.m. Sunday, 1501 Sigma Nu Pl., Lawrence police reported. Police said the victim was attending the catered event when a man approached him and asked what fraternity he was in. When the victim told him he was a Sigma Nu, the man started accusing him of talking about his girlfriend. A fight then began involving onlookers as well as the two, and the KU student was struck across the jaw. He suffered an inch-and-a-half cut to the lip. The stranger walked away, police said. A 15-speed bicycle valued at $650 was stolen from a KU student early Sunday morning, Lawrence police reported. Police said the bicycle was stolen between 3 and 6 a.m. from the front of the Delta Chi fraternity, 1245 West Campus Road. A 20-year-old KU student was attacked by a stranger during a gathering at the Sigma Nu fraternity at A 1992 light blue Ford Ranger pickup truck valued at $9,000 was stolen from a residence in the 100 block of Pinecone Drive Sunday morning, Lawrence police reported. Police said the vehicle was stolen between 4 and 11 a.m. A 19-year-old KU student was arrested early yesterday morning after police drug paraphernalia in his room on the third floor of Oliver Hall, KU police reported. Police said the smell of marijuana was reported on the floor, and they suspected it was coming from the student's room. When they knocked on the door to investigate, the student admitted to smoking marijuana. He had two bags of marijuana and a bong in his possession. He was taken to Douglas County Jail and released on $1,000 bond. The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stairwater-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 6045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $20. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045. Weather | NATIONAL | Lawrence | 88° | 62° | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Kansas City | 81° | 57° | | | Topeka | 85° | 61° | | | Whitesburg | 83° | 54° | | | Omaha | 82° | 57° | | | Tulsa | 82° | 62° | | AL | Des Moines | 79° | 56° | | | St. Louis | 80° | 64° | | TE | Chicago | 74° | 55° | | MPS | Atlanta | 85° | 68° | | P | New York | 85° | 68° | | S | Los Angeles | 84° | 68° | | | Seattle | 78° | 58° | Weather NATIONAL Lawrence 88° * 62° Kansas City 81° * 57° Topeka 81° * 56° Wichita 85° * 61° Omaha 85° * 57° Tulsa 82° * 62° Des Moines 79° * 56° St. Louis 80° * 64° Chicago 74° * 55° Atlanta 80° * 65° New York 85° * 68° Los Angeles 84° * 68° Seattle 72° * 58° EXTENDED FORECAST TUES. Chance of thunder- storms later in the day. 89 67 WED. Chance of thunder- storms in the morning. 86 70 THUR. Partly cloudy! 89 69 EXTENDED FORECAST TUES. Chance of thunderstorms later in the day. 89 67 WED. Chance of thunderstorms in the morning. 86 70 THUR. Partly cloudy! 89 69 August 23,1994 $ Stock Market Report Dow Jones 3.9 3,751.22 ⬆ Shares Advances 917 Declines 1,241 Unchanged 713 ⬅ 0 NYSE 64 255.27 NYSE Naadaq ASE .54 .44 .93 285.27 743.99 445.78 Nasdaq 44 741.99 ASE 0.33 445.78 The Great Blues Are On Verve!! JAMES COTTON living the blues Vinyl 3145210238-2 CATCH UP WITH THE BLUES JOHNNY COPELAND Vance LUCKY PETERSON BEYOND COOL 31405210239-2 $11.97 ea. on CD 314521147-2 Joe Louis Walker Tower Of Power Horns Terry Adams·James Cotton Angela Strehli JLW 314523118-2/4 Blues Fans... Look for other great titles from Verve... 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Box 2, Lawrence, KS. 66044 CDS & TAPES - AUDIO VIDEO - CAR STEREO 913·842·1544 913·842·1811 913·842·1438 Interviews will be held Wednesday, Aug.24 from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. United Parcel Service Part time Jobs ups ups $8 Hour ups Sign up in the placement center, 110 Burge Union E/O/E m/f 1. 解答题号 CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Tuesday, August 23, 1994 3A SUNFLOWER OUTDOOR & BIKE SHOP 804 Mass • 843-5000 STONEBACK'S APPLIANCE DORM SIZE REFRIGERATORS FOR RENT 2 cu. ft. $65 4 cu. ft. $65 school year 929 Mass. 843-4170 FREE DELIVERY Patients No.1 with dean fifty 925 IOWA 841-7226 Lunch & Dinner Great Food 南湖公园西门 西湖公园东门 东湖公园北门 西湖公园中门 西湖公园中门 Editor's note: This is the second of five stories that will appear this week profiling KU's five new deans. By Carlos Tejada Kansas staff writer He received a bachelor's degree from the University of Nebraska in 1975 and a doctorate from the University of Minnesota in 1983. Between degrees, however, he and his brother, Gary, bought a pharmacy in Montross, Colo. There he said he learned that medicine was as much talking to people as treating people. 240 The patient comes first. During that time, Fincham said, he realized the future in medicine lay in treating the patient, not treating the patient's illness. Jack Fincham, KU's new Dean of the School of Pharmacy, comes to KU from Creighton University, but is no stranger to KU. He was born in Marysville. After graduating from Minnesota, Fincham was appointed to academic positions at the University of Georgia, the University of Mississippi, Sam- ford University in Birmingham, Ala. That has been Jack Fincham's philosophy, whether he was studying pharmacy or owning one. And as the new dean of the School of Pharmacy, Fincham said, he hopes to instill that philosophy into KU pharmacy students. Fincham, who began his new job July 1, was born and raised in Marysville, a town of about 4,000. His father ran a drug store, but he himself did not get interested in pharmacy until college. "The science is still there." Fincham said. "We need it. But we're also keeping the patient out in front." Such beliefs are what led a search committee to hire Fincham, said Valentino Stella, distinguished professor of pharmaceutical chemistry "He brings a unique balance between scholastic recognition, concern for students and concern for the science of pharmacy," Stella said. "It's a nice balance of strengths." and head of the committee. Stella said Fincham's school of thought was the direction modern medicine was moving into as interest in health care reform grew. KU students should learn to think the same way if they wish to be com- and at Creighton University in Omaha, Neb. His previous job before coming to the University of Kansas was as an associate dean of pharmacy at Creighton. New Leadership "That's the greatest need we have in the school," he said. "We should show them how to help patients." petitive in pharmacy's future, Finch said. Fincham said recent curriculum changes had been made with that philosophy in mind. And, he said, he has become attached to KU. In his spare time, Fincham said, he likes to get out of the office and jog, ride his bicycle or play golf. He also doesn't fish as much as he would like to, he said. Fincham said he was glad to return to his home state. In addition to his wife, Melinda, and his children, Derek, 15, and Kelcie, 12, Fincham spends time with his mother, brother and niece in Lawrence. "This is a terrific school," Fincham said. "The faculty is energetic, and the quality of research here is tremendous." Pharmacy Ph.D.s in six years Pharmacy Pharmacy students receive new prescription Pharmacy students who graduate from the University of Kansas will be required to complete an extra year of study beginning with the class entering KU in the fall 1996. Some faculty also said a six-year program was essential because of the increasing role pharmacists played in patients' health care. By Jennifer Freund Kansan staff writer Currently, students may choose between earning a five-year bachelor's degree or a six-year doctor of pharmacy degree. The new program will require all graduates to have earned a doctor of pharmacy degree. Students now enrolled in the school are unaffected by the new requirements. Some pharmacy faculty and students agree that the change to the six-year program is necessary. "Those going into retail pharmacy will not be at an advantage with the six-year program," said Lynette Cousens, Wichita senior and pharmacy student. "The extra year would mean putting out the money without getting a return on it." "The six-year program is a national trend," said Jack Fincham, dean of the School of Pharmacy. "In many parts of the country, it's been in place for years. Most California schools have had a six-year program for 30 years." "Pharmacists are more accessible in the community than physicians," said Kenneth Audus, associate professor of pharmaceutical chemistry. "Pharmacists are playing a greater role in drug therapy and health care." "They will have more information to share with patients, and they will do a better job," she said. Students who enrolled prior to the fall of 1996 will be given the option of applying to complete the extra year for their doctorate. Audus said some students who had completed the five-year program already had begun applying to return to finish their doctorates. However, some students are not as enthusiastic about the change. But Cousens, who will complete her bachelor's degree, said she thought the program would be beneficial for hospital pharmacy students who deal with patients on a one-on-one basis. "There are a lot of B.S. pharmacists out there who will want to come back," he said. "I don't think there will be a problem with that. This is occurring now, and the school is receptive to that." Tuition also will increase $4,775. However, Fincham said that KU's tuition-still would be lower than tuition at the University of Missouri-Kansas City, Ohio State University, the University of Michigan and Purdue, and would be comparable to tuition at the University of Illinois. Finchah the available slots in the doctorate's program would be increased from 25 to 85 to accommodate the six-year program. Fincham said that the costs for additional classes and faculty needed for the extra year would not burden the University, which has cut funding for other programs. "The additional funding is coming from students," Fincham said. "We're not taking from anyone else." "We made the program affordable to students while making sure the program was balanced with high quality," he said. But Fincham said that the school had given consideration to students' finances. WELCOME BACK WE'RE ANXIOUS TO GET YOU BACK "ON WHEELSI" Student semester pass gives you unlimited rides for $50.00 Non-student rate is $60.00 Cash fares are $1.00/ride. Passes can be purchased in the Kansas Union Banking window and at the Burge Union Candy Counter after Aug. 22,1994. K STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE Fall bus passes ordered through Options can be picked up in the Kansas Union 6th Floor,Aug.18,19, 22-9 a.m.-4 p.m. HAVE A GREAT SEMESTER! The 125 Subject Notebook OLYMPUS Pearl camera S924 MICRO CAMERA FX3 36.0 MPH Becoming a Great Dictator Marine Biology 234 Observing Human Anatomy Pondering Your Future The Poet to You Ruud the World Physical 101 Intense French The Inner Voice Quoting Kerouac Cafeteria Catransh Geology 109 Muttering Observations Psychology 203 Capturing Your Coach Getting Payed Political Science 215 Coffee Tea 198 The Roommate The Morning Of Life Phone Numbers Hot Phone Numbers Top 10 Answering Machine Greetings Chilling 405 Things You Should Tell Your Parents Confessions to Father Mock Interviewing Massacring Shakespeare Narcissistic Vulnerability Theories of Knowledge and Reality Recalling Marx, Lennon and McCarrney Soap Opera Analysis More Electives ... OLYMPUS MICROCASSETTE'SYSTEM Never miss another ogrstwxywzabdefeghiiklm. If you can't find the Olympus Micro cassette Recorder you want (the S924 is pictured here) please call 1-800-221-3000 for more information. Best read book on campus. Power and versatility make the PowerBook 150 4/120 the best way to handle all your computer needs on and off campus. This compact wonder is small enough to fit into a backpack, and large enough to handle new, sophisticated software. Antl though the PowerBook will never come out in paperback, it is now at its lowest price ever... only The PowerBook 150 4/120 with Claris Works UFC Blow-out August 29th - 30th at the Kansas Ballroom $125700 POWER through it. File Edit Worksheet Range Graph Data Style Tools Window Force File Edit Worksheet Range Graph Data Style Tools Window Institute of the Future to be managed at UT union technology center 4A Tuesday, August 23.1994 OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN COLUMNIST --- HEATHER KIRKWOOD Approach to learning makes the difference Some people may finish college without ever knowing what education has to offer those who desire to learn. Hopefully, this is not the point. The point is to learn to view the world in a different way than you did when you started. The point is to learn how to think about the things you might already know in a different way. Intimate details about Plato, Aristotle and Locke are only tools to do that. A student also enrolls in classes, attends, does homework, reading, term papers, and maybe even makes an A. Students might know what they are supposed to do, say, or be, but they don't care. They also try to fulfill course requirements and sometimes hope to get a piece of paper at graduation that could allow them to make more money. The difference is they always receive more than that. Can you remember every detail from every class you have ever taken? If you can't, then why are you taking them? Is the point of taking Western Civilization, for example, that you can Grades, tests and terrific notes don't make a good student. Instead, a good student is the person who perhaps doesn't earn any academic recognition, but goes away from a class changed by it. A great student is one who walks away from a class changed by it, and acts on what changed them. know every intimate aspect of the teachings of Plato, Aristotle and Locke? life, there is nothing wrong with being an enrollee. However, there is the other choice. Please don't misinterpret me my assuming that I think I am a student and not an enrollee. I only wish I could become a student. It is much easier to memorize notes and answer questions in a manner you think the professor will like than it is to look beyond. It also involves less risk. As a result, I find myself being an enrollee even when I want to be a student. That all sounds pretty lofty. "Are you a student or are you an enrollee?" This was the first question that was put to me during the first class of my freshman year. I had chosen to attend a small college, in part, because I thought professors would somehow be friendlier, yet there stood a short, stout, seventy-year-old Cuban. His voice bellowed and I think my tongue must have been dragging on the floor from shock. This semester, when I am spending hours trying to memorize information that might seem totally useless, I will try to remember this to help me put it all into perspective. Somehow, I think I mustered up the courage to answer, "I'm a student." I can't be sure because I spent the next three hours trying to devise a way to get out of his class. As a result, I really can't remember anything else he said. Luckily, there was no way out. A person in college can be a student or an enrollee. An enrollee is a person who enrolls in classes, attends, does homework, reading, term papers, and maybe even makes an A. Enrollees always know what they are supposed to say, do or be. At the end of the class, they check it off their list of requirements and go on to the next class. Their goal in college is to graduate with a piece of paper that will help them earn more money than they might have otherwise. He couldn't have asked me a better question to start out my college career. At the time I didn't realize it, but there are two ways to go to college. Depending on what you want out of Foreign and national news taking back seat to baseball's strike VIEWPOINT Heather Kirkwood is a Wichita junior majoring in magazine journalism. Major league ballparks emptied nearly two ago and people apparently are still coming to terms with the absence of professional baseball. Ironically, we've passed a lot of our BASEBALL STRIKE ple live in our streets, half of whom have chronic mental illnesses. Can we justify our The country mourns the potential end to a season full of promise. time lamenting the loss of our pastime. But in the grand scheme of life it is only a game. agame. It is truly unfortunate that a season with so much record-breaking potential has ground to a halt. However, the strike must be kept in the proper perspective. We must ask ourselves whether a financial squabble between a bunch of athletes and a group of millionaires is more important than thousands of Rwandan refugees dying of famine and disease. Even President Clinton became involved as he asked Labor Secretary Robert Reich to personally intervene and help bring the strike to an end. Sadly, most Americans would have difficulty finding Rwanda on a map. Even fewer would have any clue why people there are fighting. Meanwhile, our own nation has forgotten thousands of peo- justify our detailed knowledge of a baseball strike in light of such ignorance and indifference? Perhaps baseball links us to our past It takes us back to the days of Ruth, Gehrig, and Mantle a time when we believed anything could be accomplished if our nation set its mind to do it. We had faith in our country and in ourselves. Baseball is a refuge. But sadly, so much has changed. Baseball is not what it was and neither are we. ERIC MADDEN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD. Fifty years ago, fathers taught their children how to throw a baseball in the backyard. While baseball will always be a favorite past time, we must not let it become a distraction from seeing what we are. Today, many children do not live with their fathers. Players once played simply because they loved the game, not because it would make them rich. Now, we would never let our children go to a game alone. KANSAN STAFF STEPHEN MARTINO Editor CHRISTOPH FUHRMANS Managing editor TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser JEN CARR Business manager CATHERINE ELLSWORTH Systems coordinator CAMERON DEATH Retail sales manager News...Sara Bennett Editorial...*Onella Hearne Campus...Mark Martin Sports...Brian James Photo...Daron Bennett Melissa Lacey Features...Tracel Carl Planning Editor...Susan White Design...Noah Muusser Assistant to the editor...Robbie Johnson JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser Editors Business Staff Campus mgr...Todd Winters Regional mgr...Laura Guth National mgr...Mark Mastro Coop mgr...Emily Gibson Special Sections mgr...Jen Perrier Production mgrs...Holly Boren Regan Overy Marketing director...Alan Stiglic Creative director...John Carton Classified mgr...Heather Niehaus 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 have their surname clearly printed. 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. BEARING IN MIND OUR RESPONSIBILITY TO THE COMMUNITY, RESPONDING TO ACCUSATIONS THAT, WHILE THE AVERAGE AMERICAN IS IN HYSTERICS OVER THE BASEBALL STRIKE, MOST COULD NOT POINT OUT RWANDA ON ANAP, MASOR LEAGUE BASEBALL IS TAKING STEPS TO SEE THAT AMERICANS ARE BETTER INFORMED ABOUT RWANDA Michael Paul / KANSAN INTRODUCING: THE RWANDA SLUGGERS Careful observation leads to new theory There is a place for us all. I think there might be a chance, a very slight one, that I have finally figured it out. I have been contemplating this for quite some time now, and, through hours of research conducted during lunch breaks, at concerts, on campus and just basically anywhere, I have developed a theory. It is not exceptional, earth shattering, or even clever. I have decided that most humans, forgive me for the broad generalization, fall into two categories. The first category is the one that I, and a significant portion of the population, have been nominated for by peers. I have chosen to entitle this classification as The Person Who Gets Attention. Not very creative, but, they, you would remember it if it were on a test. The Person Who Gets Attention is a person we all know, love and frequently take advantage of. They are the person who always gets asked everything. If the following questions sound familiar, you belong to this category. (Keep in mind that the asking is being done by a perfect stranger.) Do you happen to know what time it is? Do you have change for a..? You got a lighter that I could use? Would you be able to tell me how to get to...? COLUMNIST COUNTRY KATHY KIPP Another qualification for this category is that when walking down the street you acquire obscene amounts of flyers. Allow me to illustrate. During the summer I worked downtown in the wonderful city of Chicago. Everyday on my lunch break I chose to hike about six blocks to Daley Center (there is a plaza there where all the hard-core business types like to eat). On an average day I would collect at least three flyers, get asked what time it was at least once, and, on more occasions than not, get asked for directions. Bad idea. One day I even had the pleasure of becoming an elderly man's sounding board about blood clots after he asked me what time it was. This is the life that a Person Who Gets Attention lead The other classification is, People Who Do Not Get Attention. There are not so many of these, but still enough to make a difference. These are the people who never get asked anything and rarely, if ever, get handed flyers. The friend who used to go to lunch with me is the perfect example. I don't know what it is about him, maybe it's that he doesn't look particularly friendly, or maybe it's because he just doesn't want to be bothered. Whatever it is, it works. On our daily treks to Daley Center I never saw anyone try to hand him a flyer. The one day I forgot my watch and got asked what time it was, the lady doing the asking walked across the street instead of asking him. Whatever the reason, such is the life of a Person Who Does Not Get Attention. So you see, my theory is not very exciting, anyone could have thought of it, it just so happens that I was the one. I still need to work out the bugs, but until I do so, this is how it stands. There are two types of people, and you're one of them. Kathy Kipa is a Woodridge, ill., sophomore majoring in English. COLUMNIST CONNIST ERIKA RASMUSSEN Rock climbing challenges the body and mind I took a break from the everyday drone of working as a waitress this summer and challenged myself to do something new and exciting. I wanted something that was not just physically tough but mentally challenging. The perfect opportunity was as close as a phone call to a friend and an hour's drive from my hometown to Taylors Falls, Minn. My challenge: rock climbing. In the past, my experience was limited to a few random sessions on indoor climbing walls, which is still challenging, but doesn't compare to the real thing. There is something about the great outdoors where no walls surround or protect you. So, armed with borrowed gear and high hopes, my friend and I approached an intermediate-level route called "column-meister" and began our journey upwards. Not wanting to look like the novice I was, I began to climb confidently. I almost felt like I knew what I was doing. I was about 40 feet up at a difficult part of the route when it hit me. I was scared. My breathing was heavy, and I wasn't sure what to do next. I felt so small, clinging to this great gray piece of rock. This was the challenge I had been searching for. And despite my sudden fear, I was overcome with the thought of getting to the top of it if it was the last thing I did. Sitting at the top, I realized that rock climbing is not just about being strong enough physically to pull yourself up the side of a cliff. It is also a head game, a mental challenge. Up on that rock, it's you vs. nature. Sure, you have a partner on belay and safety equipment, but getting to the top is your job. It is a challenge of your trust, your fear and your body. But it is also a refreshing challenge. So many times in our lives our challenges come from other people: bosses, family members, coworkers, teammates and professors. We tend to work to please others rather than ourselves and put our own personal challenges on the back burner. But rock climbing is one challenge that is truly your own. It is a sport not made up of winners and losers but of goals — those that have been achieved and those that haven't. From ground to peak, it is you and you alone. When fear hits, you must confront and overcome it. If you fall, you must decide to get back up and try again. But if you climb on and achieve your goal you will gain more than just the magnificent view below. Erika Rassmussen is a Minnetonka, Minn.. senior majoring in magazine journalism. HUBIE HEL! NOTHING IS MORE FUN THAN WATCHING PEOPLE GO TO SCHOOL. By Greg Hardin HEH. NOTHING IS MORE FUN THAN WATCHING PEOPLE GO TO SCHOOL. HE LIVES! UMM... HEY DUDE! BIG PARTY TONIGHT! ONLY 5 BUCKS! OOP! Dude? HE LIVES! LIAH MARRIED PACE UMM... HEY DUDE! BIG PARTY TONIGHT! ONLY 5 BUCKS! OOO! Dude? CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Tuesday, August 23, 1994 5A Mama mia! Union has pizza Pizza Hut Express offers students long-awaited treat By Ashley Miller Kansan staff writer This year, students will be able to stop and smell the pizza without leaving campus. The Pizza Hut Express, located in the Kansas Union, opened Aug. 15, said Jay Glatz, manager of food services for the Kansas and Burge Unions. The new food station is part of the Hawk's Nest, located on the third level of the Union, and is open everyday. PERSONAL PAN PIZZA SWITZERLAND PEPPERONI SUPPLEMENT 1.80 2.40 2.80 He said the Union and its employees run and control the Express and the point of including the Express was to increase the variety of food the Union offers. "I think it will bring more people to the Nest because it offers students a little something extra," Glatz said. The Express sells cheese, pepperoni and supreme personal pan pizzas for $2.40 to $2.80. Breadsticks cost $1.25. Glatz said the Union decided more than a year ago to put a Pizza Hut Express in the building because they didn't offer pizza at any of the other snack bars on campus. "The response has been real positive," Glatz said. Glatz said the concept of putting brand name restaurants on college campuses had been around for two or three years. Last year, Union Square, also located on the third level of the Union, introduced a TCBY station with an Oscar Mayer grilling station. "Students want name brand items," he said. The Union does not have any plans right now to start another name brand station, Glatz said, and he does not want the Union to be a food court. Tom Field, Marietta, Ga., senior, was pleased with the new station. "I love pizza," Field said. "Most students do, so I think it's a great idea to put one in the Union." Cris Aiken, assistant supervisor of the Pizza Hut Express, said business was steady the first day of classes. Midori Oka, Lawrence graduate student, takes a personal pan pizza from Pizza Hut Express located in the Hawk's Nest located inside the Kansas Union. Paul Kotz / KAMRAN New hires at minority affairs office By Nathan Olson Kansan staff writer Three new faces can be seen at the Office of Minority Affairs this semester. Julius Williams replaced Enrique Torres as assistant director, Laurie Ramirez replaced Verna Austin as office manager and Lavonda Key replaced Johnnie Young as office receptionist. Williams, who began yesterday, previously worked as a counselor at Washington University in St. Louis. Torres left to pursue a legal career in Texas. Williams will coordinate the Students Together Excelling as Peers program, which helps minority freshmen acclimate themselves into the University. "The program helps students adjust to college through peer mentoring," Williams said. Williams said he hoped to use his experience to improve the office's services. "My goals would be to be as innovative as possible while maintaining and improving on what we have," he said. Ramirez replaced Verna Austin, who left her job for health reasons. Ramirez, who began at the end of May, is responsible for setting calendars, coordinating meetings and establishing correspondence with minority students. She said she hoped to expand her responsibilities. "Imight start looking at grants for Native Americans," she said. Ramirez also said she wanted to help make students feel comfortable using the office. "I want students to come in here and feel relaxed," she said. "I want this to be a safe place for students to come." Key, who started as office receptionist in July, replaced Young, who also left her job for health reasons Key, a former KU student, declined to comment on her duties. Sherwood Thompson, director of the Office of Minority Affairs, said he hoped the personnel changes would improve the office. "The staff has a cumulative experience of over 40 years," he said. "I look forward to using that experience to help the new staff. Thompson said the new employees would bring enthusiasm to the office. "Their track record is great," he said. Wednesday Wednesday .25¢ Draws $1.25 Margaritas $1.25 Swillers and Suns of Brazil DOS HOMBRES RESTAURANTE 815 New Hampshire 841-7286 Personal Checks Accepted DUCOVER MasterCard HOMBRES RESTAURANTE Shoe, Boot & Leather Repair 1509 W.6th Also!! Dillons dropoff at 23rd or 6th!! 1974 BUCKS 20th ANNIVERSARY Total trail GIANT Iguana oversize cromoly frame oversize alloy fork alloy rims with QR lifetime warranty free 30 day tuneup $419.95 save $50 FREE lock & cable FREE water bottle & cage FREE T-shirt any bike purchase ends 8/31/94 IGUANA RICK'S BIKE SHOP Inc. 916 Massachusetts, (913)841-6642 Orthopedic Prescriptions Filled AVAILABLE BIG TIT IGUANA Hours: 9:00-6:00 Tues.-Friday 9:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m. Sat. Phone (913) 843-0959 The Etc. 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Lawrence Ks. 66046 (913)865-3636·(913)8435995 - Mail Box Rentals •United Parcel Service •Airborne Express •Business Cards •Office Supplies •Facsimile •Rubber Stamps •Photocopies •Money Orders •Bulk Mailing •Shipping Supplies •Packaging Service •Passport Photos •Greeting Cards ATTENTION STUDENTS! 10% Discount on shipping with student ID. WANTED All students who are interested in working for the #1 college newspaper in the country The Daily Kansan is looking for students with an interest in reporting, photography and graphics. No experience necessary but enthusiasm and dedication are a must. Freshman and sophomores welcome REWARD Gain real world experience and learn first hand how a newspaper operates. Find out what it takes to work on the Daily Kansan Meet the Kansan editors and learn all about the Kansan Correspondents program at 4:30 p.m Wednesday in room 100 of Stauffer-Flint. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN COFFEE I Can't Believe It's Yogurt! THE TASTE THAT'S WON THE WORLD OVER Treat Time! We'll Be Here With A... 50% Discount On small, medium or large cups or cones!* (Waffle Cones and toppings Regular Price) Limit two with coupon Not valid with any other offer. - offer expires September 15, 1994 Louisiana Purchase 23rd & Louisiana 15th & Kasold 843-5500 749-0440 KU student filmmaker explores human nature Ernest Leek, Olata junior, is making a movie about one of life's little mysteries: Why people are like they are. By Ashley Miller Kansan staff writer "A lot of it has to do with education," he said. "It's a window into the mind," Leek said. Leek persuaded both friends and strangers to play the eight stereotypical characters, ranging from a hippie to a jock. He also hung posters in Westport advertising the movie, he said. The 40-minute movie explores the thought processes of young adults sitting in a waiting room waiting for a class to start. While there is no dialogue in the film, Leek said narration in the movie was in the form of each character's thoughts. The characters react to each other's thoughts as if they are talking out loud, Leek said. "There's some insination that something is said." he said. Leek got the idea for the movie while sitting in a room waiting for his math class to start at Johnson County Community College last year. Leek said he made the movie for several reasons. One of the characters is very anti-education, Leek said. He said he created the character to show contempt for people that downplay the importance of education. Leek said he hoped audience members would watch the movie and leave with an awareness of their surroundings. I thank David Outhman, the said. Leek said he wrote, directed, produced and filmed the movie with his own money. The movie will cost him about $3,000 for cameras, lights and other equipment. Leek used a 16 mm camera to film the movie, which will be transferred to video tape. Leek said he did not have plans to market the movie. He plans to submit the film to four film contests in the United States and Canada before Christmas so it will get some exposure. Leek said the contests would give him a feeling for how successful the movie could be. The largest part of the movie was filmed in the Kansas Union lobby Aug. 2. A few exterior shots were taken at Rockhurst College in Kansas City, Mo, he said. Edward Small, professor of theatre and film, said many students promote their films through national contests. "It happens all over the United States," he said. Leek, who has not decided on a major but does not plan to study film, said he planned to direct and produce films. He is already working on another movie. "It's going to be the 'Dazed and Confused' of the '90s," he said. Paul Kotz / KANSAN Ernest Leek, Olathe junior, has been editing a film that he produced and directed. Leek plans on entering the film into festivals to see if he has a future in the film industry. TEXAS INSTRUMENTS T1-B2 ?=20 W?=.5393042 STAT V= TRSM WINDOW ZOOM DALC TRACE TABLE GRAPH QUIT MODE IND DEL A-LOCK LRN A.1.0 UST STAT TEST A ANGLE B DRAW C VARSE VARS CLEAR MATH MATRIX PRGM VARS VARS ABS D SIN E COS TAN G T AN x² ( ) ( ) ( ) x² ( ) ( ) 10³ N Un J Q Var P a Q R LOC 7 8 9 X 6 S L4 X L5 Q L6 V 3 W LN 1 0 0 RGL X L1 Y L2 Z L7 O MEM H + STOP 1 0 0 OFF ON ANS ENTRY ENTER The T182 Graphing Calculator has comprehensive, easy-to-use graphing features and a unit-to-unit link for sharing data and programs. The Tt-68 solves up to five simultaneous equations, performs complex number functions and offers formula programming. cos (5+1.8)_ ALOOK ALPHA There's A Prerequisite For Every Class. Get the year off to a great start with a TI Scientific or Business Calculator. They're designed for students and professionals. Recommended by professors. And perfectly matched to your major and coursework. No matter which classes you're taking, TI Scientific and Business Calculators are what you need to succeed. Try one at your local TI retailer today, or for more information, call 1-800-TI-CARES. TEXAS INSTRUMENTS TH-36X SOLAR 1234567890 99 DND+ YZ AC/ON 36 HYP LOG LN CE/C D A SIN COS TAN YF STAT1 B C R UZ VZ YZ CR STAT2 ORE HEX OCT BIN AND OR XOR XOR XOR X NOT SKO COR FLO SCI ENG RCL F+D ON ON ON ON DMG AM2 C R+P 0 SCENTIFIC The TI-36X SOLAR, a general purpose workhorse, is powered by ANYLITE™ solar cells so you never need batteries. The BA II PLUS" has unique display prompts that guide you through problems. It offers basic business functions like time-value-of-money, plus cash flow analysis for internal rate of return (IRR) and net present value (NPV). PV = 12,345,678.90 CLST CIT SET ENTER DEL INS OWNT Znd CF MPV BR AFT UV Amount PV BOM PM1 GLR FVM PV % % % % % % % VZ IZ IZ IZ IZ IZ IZ BNV SNV ALSO LAK VZ LAN LON SMALL MID HIGH BTG IN BETWEEN NC RSH IN BETWEEN NC RBH IN BETWEEN NC RRH IN BETWEEN NC NTH IN BETWEEN NC NTH IN BETWEEN NC EXTENDING YOUR REACH" TEXAS INSTRUMENTS e-mail: ti-cares@lobby.ti.com In Canada, call 1-800-661-2007. © 1994T1 HI000183 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Tuesday, August 23, 1994 7A 100s Announcements 108 Personal 110 Business Annual 120 Announcements 130 Entertainment 140 Lost and Found Classified Directory 200s Employment 200s Help Wanted 200s Professional Services 200s Tipping 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, gender, ethnicity, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or I All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 and requires discrimination on an emergency, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or dis- Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing are published in this newspaper are 100s Announcements ROOMMATES FROM HELL! Have you or a friend had a roommate problem so serious that one of you had to move out? If so, call our research collector: (212) 582-3880, m.t. m.p. 3.m. THE ETC. SHOP 928 Mass. STERLING SILVER JEWELRY Rings, Hoops, Bracelets, & Pendants LEATHER 105 Personals Backpacks, Belts, Jackets, & Purses SUNCH ASSESS Bausch & Lomb, Raybay, Killer Loops i's, Révé, Serengeti, and Vuarnet CASH FOR COLLEGE 900,000 GRANTS AVAL- ABLE QUALITY IMMEDIATELY 1-800-243-1234 120 Announcements COMMUTTERS: Self Serve Car Pool Exchange Main Lobby, Kansas Union Free dog to a good home 2 years, 25 lbs. Very energetic, affectionate and happy. **986-3088**. TUTORS: List your name with us. We refer name to you. Student Assistance assistance, 133强学。 WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of tutors. Student Assistance Center, 133 Strong 130 Entertainment YOUR ACADEMIC SUCCESS, PART 3: Preparing for exams using your notes to review, predicting exam questions, preparing for different types of tests. FREE! Thursday, August 25, 7-9 pm 4034 Wescoe Presented by the Student Assistance Center 140 Lost & Found FREE POOL DAILY 3-8 pm Bottleneck 737 New Hampshire St Found: Face plate for car stereo at 8th & Main. Call and give proper identification by leaving a message on my machine. If you corp later call a plane I will return your call. m. 842-741-6048 200s Employment 205 Help Wanted NOW HIRING For Little Caesars Pizza locations at 23rd and 18th or 15th and KASAR. EARN UP TO $10/HOUR! Apply in person. Drivers must have their own reliable transportation, proof of insurance and drivers license and be at least 18 years old. EARNCASH ONTHESPOT $15 Today $30 This week By donating your life saving blood plasma WALK-INS WELCOME! NABI Biomedical Center 816 W 24th 749-5750 300s Merchandise 400s Real Estate 408 Real Estate 430 Roommate Wanted 305 For Sale 340 Auto Sales 360 Miscellaneous 370 Want to Buy Kansan Classified: 864-4358 205 Help Wanted Dominio's Pizza is hiring. 10 delivery positions available, two inside positions available. Apply after 4 pm any day at Dominio's Pizza, 212-596-3788 or admin@dominio.com schedule, drives take home cash nightly, discounted menu items, pay based on hours available. Should be willing to work nights & wee DOORMEN NEEDED Must be friendly, but able to handle confrontation. Call 749-5839 - Ask for ZAC Graduate Assistant Position The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center has a quarter-time graduate assistant position available Qualifications 1. Bachelor's degree required, and enrollment 2. Master's degree required, Kansas, Fall 1942; 2. Experience in working with interests and concerns of women students; 3. Training or experience in facilitating small and large groups; 4. Training or experience in writing and editing. It is preferred that the Graduation Date be September 6, 1980, the graduation applications and services of one or more of the units of Student Life. Job description available at the Women's Resource Center. Salary: $252.00 Points Available: KU Adams Alumni Center is now hiring for part-time banquet server and host positions. Looking for responsible, hard working applicants who are proficient in Microsoft 268 Oread, corner corner from the Kansas University. Lab help/Partly pie photogrammetry needed. No experience necessary. Apply at Try Colors Photo Lab Looking for an individual to publish Nisner magazine's campaign manage local events. Occasionally We will interview you $30/$荷 hour & gain valuable experience. Great for marketing or advertising major call 788-6723 Loving Nancy required for 4 yr old boy in our other school. Child day near Kearn KL 819-2019 305 NEED SPENDING CASH? BPI. Building Services now accepting applications for a variety of permanent part-time custodial positions. 842-6264 Ask for Jeannie Packer Plastics, the largest plastics manufacturing plant in the U.S., has excellent entry-level opportunities for individuals to work as in-herder, packer, and offer complete benefits package. Part-time inspector/packers are also needed to work 9 a.m.-3.10 p.m. or 3.10 p.m.-11 p.m. Apply in person Mon-Pri, at Packer Plastics, Human Reason, 2300 Packer Road, Lawrence, KS, KOE/M/S Part-time clerical in medical office 12-14 hours per week, flexible with class schedules. Send resume to: Lori Hamm, 304 Sharon Drive, Lawrence, KS 66049. Philips & ZARCO at 6th and 9th needs immediate late night help. Ignore within. Preschool Sub Prefer 7, 11: 30-5. 30, or all day any weekday. Or Jr or Se in child related field. Center exper- ience. (Do not apply to students) SPRING BREAK '95- SELL TRIPS, EARN CASH & GO FREE!' Student Travel Services is now hiring campus representatives. Lowest $30. Call 1-800-644-6449 City Beach. Call 1-800-644-6449 Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, 115 Strong Hall, has a student position available Enrollment as student at University of Kansas academic year 94-95 is required. $4.25/hr. Applications available at Women's Center or Universities on Friday, Aug. 6. Complete job description available at Women's Center. 804-352-552 **STUDENT CLERICAL ASSISTANT:** Deadline: 08/29/94. Salary: $4.35/hr. Duties include assisting in invoicing, mailing & filing of Computer Center billing; maintaining Accounts Receivable ledgers; assists Accounts Payable Accountants; performs computer workshop registrations; performing receptionist duties on a fill-in basis; and miscellaneous Business office duties. Must be enrolled in 6 hours at the University of Kansas. Completes a job application available in Room 202 of the Computer Center. EO/AA EMPLOYER University Relation has 15-20 hr weekly position open immediately to assist Oreid editor. 2nd position begins after Oct. 10 to assist hometown news editor, 12-15 hr. s week. Positions continue through May 18. Required: knowledge of computer systems and paper experience preferred. Salary starts at $5.00/hr Dead lining Aug. 31. For application call 846-3256. 2 Editorial Assistants Lawrence-based, technical publishing company has several part-time (15-20 hours per week) positions including production orders, staffing and mailing statements; copy delivery to and pickup from the post office; inputting subscription orders into a computer; and sorting materials by type. Experience with high volume and working as a team required. Ability to maneuver up to 50 pounds and type 50 wpm preferred. These positions are part of a smaller group of workers which helps other areas of the公司 as needed. Babysitter Needed!! Family in need of babysitter: n/a, n/a, w/c, can (Please bake 841-2677 after 6pm R&D Publications, Inc. is an equal opportunity employer concerned with creating a pleasant work atmosphere. If you are looking for an enjoyable work environment with a reliable company, please come by and fill out an application at 1601 West 23rd Street, Suite 200, Lawrence, KS. SHIPPING AND DATA ENTRY ASSISTANTS NEEDED molly m gees grill & bar Now Hiring! Cooks and Dishwashers A.M. and P.M., Full and Part Time Apply between 2 and 4 p.m. 2429 IOWA R.D 205 Help Wanted molly mcgees United Child Development Center is accepting applications for the position of lead teacher with children age 3-5 years old. A degree in education with an emphasis in Early Childhood or a degree in related field required. Salary based on education and experience. Transcript and 2 work-related references must accompany each application. Send to Director, UCDC. 846 Verizon grill & bar UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER seeking student hourlies (especially work-study eligible) immediately, who are motivated, familiar with computer-literate, good communicators, interested in helping others develop interest, is helping online to pursue interests of humor. Drop by KU info, 420 Kansas University for application. Need sophomores/juniors who can make KU info their primary commitment. Deadline is 5 am August 18. United Child Development Center has immediate openings for full or part time teaching assistants. Call 492-5329 or send to UCDC. EOE. 946 Vermont Lawrence. KS 60044. Headquarters Counseling Center Caring people need to learn basic counseling. Information Meetings, 1419 Massachusetts *Ned. Aur. 24 on 31. 8-9 mn. 841-234. Volunteers needed ! Workers needed for all phases of KU home foot game, games concerts, and special events, games, banches, and supervision. Game day and part-time hrs. available. Applications taken 6/28-05/28, 8a. m. 4p., gate 30 Memorial Stadial STUDENT DISTRICT TECHNICIAN. Deadline: 08/29/94. Salary: $4.35 per hr. Duties include performing bursting and decolling functions; delivery of computer output and information to students; shredding functions; on occasion will assist in receiving shipments, stocking and maintaining inventory figures, tape library ties, and other warehouse functions; on occasion will operate a computerized lift system; Open Landscape Furniture maintenance; performs duties in conjunction with the campus wide recycle program; uses personal computer or mainframe software as part of record keepers' duties; completely complete an application available at the Computer Center in room 202/EO/AA EMPLOYER. ZAR CO 66 FOOD PLAZA SEEKS FULL AND WATERSHED FOR SHOP 7 M SIUHO OF LAWRENCE. MUST BE NEAT CLEAN AND ENTERED IN MICROCALL IP INTERESTED APPLY IN PERSON United Child Development Center is taking applications for nap aides. Hours needed:12-30:20. Apply at UCDC, 946 Vermont St., Lawrence, KS 65044 Beautician/Barber Part time Back at school and need extra money? Also want flexibility? Avon is for you. Get a 40% discount. Sell to friends or just yourself. Call Chris for more information 832-0025. Looking for two part-time hairstylists who want 10+ CO. operations, Contact Salma (913) 783-2016. Bucky's Drive-in is now taking applications for part-time employment. Flexible hours, 1/2 price on meals. Apply in person between 10-5. Bucky's Drive-in is 9:30 a.m. Care given needed for disabled man, Hillcrest care. Mon./Wed. nights 10pm-7am. Minimal work involved, pays $12.50/night. Quiet place to study. Must be reliable. 841-1981. CHILD CARE PROVIDER wanted by faculty and staff in the building. Please call early, also Tuesday evenings and one night each weekend. Some light housekeeping Carrion Kansan, Bong Kwan, 115 Staigler Hall. Call Kansan Kansan, Bong Kwan, 115 Staigler Hall. Call COLEGE STUDENTS $10.25-11.65 STARTING Local branch of nat'l ca! Coaching immediate en-level openings use time schedules 3-5 days before opening. Use opti. maj. Allows accepted. For info 841-8695. 360 Miscellaneous Call for a free consultation (818) 361-9944. United Child Development Center, 946 Vermont accepting enrolling applications for children in kindergarten and child care available. Call 842-5292 for information. DUI/TRAFFIC TICKETS OVERLAND PARK-KANKSASITY AREA CHARLES R. GREEN ATTORNEY-AT-LAW 225 Professional Services offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided 841-7749 MIRACLE VIDEC FALL ADULT VIDEO CLEARANCE $7.88 910.N.2d * 841-8903 225 Professional Services --and carpeted EARN CASH 4221 * $15 Today $30 This Week Plus a $3 Bonus Hours: M-F 9-6:30 Sat.10-4 Show your student ID car between Aug. 7 and Aug. 31 and receive a $3 bonus on your second donation of the month. By donating your blood plasma Walk-ins welcome Lawrence Donor Center $ TRAFFIC-DUI'S 816W.24th Behind Laird Noller Ford TRAFFIC-DU'DS Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of DONALD G. STROLE G. Strole Sally G. Kesley 16 East 13th 842-1133 749-5750 S OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense Rick Frydman, Attorney 701 Tennessee 843-4023 For free consultation call WANT YOUR WORK TO LOOK IT'S BEST? Put my service to the test. For anything you need at all, MAKIN' THE GRATE is the one to call. 865-2855 X 300s Merchandise 305 For Sale 10 speed bicycles: Ladies Schwinn, 39s Men's 36547371, ladies 8456739, Call Steve at 36547371, 8456739 Beds, Desks, Bookcases Everything But Ice 236 Mass FOR Sale.NEW Carpeting 11*28×50,12*24 WORKS in Window air conditioner, works real good real Free dog to a good home. 3 yrs. and 25 lbs. Very energetic and needs: Needs a rear, 748-5968 Full size futon and frame (Oak Sied Bed) nonfolding frame. Excellent condition $150. Call 841-723-6571. King size waterbed deluxe everything. 12-drawer, pedestal. Headboard $309 841-7479. Refrigerator for sale. Sanyo 3.5 cubic foot, for 2 semesters Good condition $100; Cali 841-7657 Need to sell immediately; one red bicycle . decent condition. 05b obc call 123-4567 SHARP-PC 450 lap top. 2 floppy drives (no hard drive) battery and carry case, $380, 872 890 days. STUDENTS! A computer, software, and a semester. Call 1-800-959-6049 for information. Two Schwinn bikes 10 speed 27" Boys-$50 Girls- $175. Call 843-1780 FUTON SOFA SLEEPERS ON SALE --- BLUE HERON 937 Mass. St. π 841-9443 405 For Rent PETS WELCOME South Pointe AQUARIUMS No Sublease Fee 2166 W. 26th St. 843-6446 - Swimming Pool - Close to KU Bus Route - Sand Volleyball Court - Ample Private Parking - Water & Trash Paid Outstanding New Staff!!! Renta WASHER & DRYER For Only $45 a *No Deposit *Free Maintenance *GE qualityTwo Speed, Heavy Duty, Large Capacity 400s Real Estate 405 For Rent 4 BR house for lease at 18th & Inverness. Clean and new, Sunflower & South schools, $995/mo., no pets. 824-7439. Call anytime. BERKELEY FLATS September rent free on a 2 BR apartment Only 1 left! Call today 843-2116 Semester leases available 11th & Mississippi FOUR BEDROOM APARTMENT Great room, 2 plains, 2 bath, on KU bus route, NO PETS. Avail any day. Semi-private room/apt, spacious and comfortable, in nice home in West WJ neighborhood. KU bus route or walking distance to campus. Private bath. Microwave; laundry privileges; utilities and rent negotiable. Please mature租房. $450/mo. for two. Possible work in exchange for partial rent. No pets. Refs. req. 843-7738 after 6 o'clock. So leave message. ORCHARD CORNERS COMPLETELY FURNISHED 4 BEDROOM - On KUB Routes * Close to Campus * Swimming Pool * Stop By Today! Equal 749-4226 M-F 9-5 Capacity 15th & Kasold Sat 10-4 Opportunity Looking for a place to live? Check out these housing options... - Laundry Facilities - Great campus location - A few steps from Allen Fieldhouse Call Naismith Hall for More information at 843-8559 NAISMITH Hall 430 Roommate Wanted 1. 1/5 Female needed to share farm 3 BR student 2. 6/4/3 1/7 adults. Student preferred 3. 8/4/4 94-94. 2 roommates to share 4 BR house. $240/mo. + deposit. Utilities paid. W/D, 1/2 blocks off KU bus route. NS, no pets, leave message for Jim. 832-2003. Avail to mature fern Grad. Studs. Shair Attr. newer home w/many comforts. Fireplace, deck, patio, batio W, D/W $300/m wo/ul. Ref req. please, 79-3834. Female wanted to lease 1 bdm of 3 dbm duplex at Haworthie. Call 842 4739 for information NEEDED! Two roommates (male or female) for a Orchard Corners 4-bdm apt. $200/mo. + meals, furnished and KU bus route. Call Derek or Chris 843-6160. One non-smoking room wanted to share big. broth in a new house. $295/month+1/4 utilities. Call 893-298- Female roommate, beautiful 3 bdm, condo on 89th St., 100-104 W. 20th Ave. no pets, call 749-286- or (913) 358-508-lee Roommateant wants for spacious, close to carriage, a suite. Next to Yellow Subi 144 Louisiana. Call 832-8253. - Bvnhone: 884-4358 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ROMATEM WANTED!! FE t/s House w/ own Dogs allowed.quiet昆请. Please call 941-908- Check out these housing options.. 405 For Rent How to schedule an ad: - Fully furnished - Free Utilities Looking for a place to live? Respondible & neat M/F/n, non-smoker for comfortable 2 BR, 1/12 bath 2C. Water, cable, water, A/C & heat贴. Nice pool. Near Checkers, on route $245+1/2 utilities. Anne N39-881. - Computer room with Apple Macintosh and IBM Computers - Quiet Study Areas NAISMITH Hall Call Naismith Hall for More Information at 843-8559 Step by the Kassan 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. Ads phoned in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made. 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 the deadline. Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day卧套es and the size of the ad (the number of apiles 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 cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run. When canceling a Refunded ad that was charged on MasterCard or VISA, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused data. Refunds on canceled ads that were are-not-a-bill or check with cash or are not available. Rates Cost per line per day The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kasan office for a fee of $4.00. Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. | | | Cost per line per day | | | | | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Num. of insertions: | 1X | 2-3X | 4-7X | 8-14X | 15-20X | 30+X | | 3 lines | | 2.10 | 1.60 | 1.10 | .90 | .75 | .50 | | 4 lines | | 1.95 | 1.20 | .80 | .70 | .65 | .45 | | 5-7 lines | | 1.90 | 1.10 | .75 | .65 | .60 | .40 | | 6+ lines | | 1.90 | .95 | .65 | .60 | .55 | .45 | Example: 3 lines for 5 days --- 3 lines X 5 days X $1.10=$16.50 Classifications 105 personal 110 business personals 120 amusements 128 entertainment 140 last & board 285 hot watered 225 professional services 225 kylies services 300 for sale 304 auto sales 360 miscellaneous 370 want to buy 405 for rent 430 recommend wanted ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print: Please print your ad one word per box 1 2 3 4 5 Date ad begins:___ Total days in paper_ Total ad cost:___ Classification:___ Address: Account number: Method of Payment (check one) ☐ Check enclosed ☐ MasterCard ☐ Visa (Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansan) Furnish the following if you are charging your ad: Account number: Print exact name appearing on credit card: Signature: Expiration Date: The University of California Davis Kaiser, 119 Squaw Creek Park Hall, Lawrence, KS. 600425 **The University of California Davis Kaiser, 119 Squaw Creek Park Hall, Lawrence, KS. 600425** MasterCard 8A Tuesday, August 22, 1994 CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Failed lawsuit may spur trafficway alternatives County says it will study problems associated with Lawrence trafficway "Although the plaintiffs believe that the FHWA's ultimate decision concerning the SLT project to be [a] serious error, the court is persuaded that the defendant has taken a 'hard look' at all the environmental issues implicated by the SLT project," he wrote in his decision. By Carlos Tejada Kansan staff writer A local environmental group may have lost the battle but won the war in its lawsuit against the federal government. Sam Crow, U.S. district judge for Kansas, disagreed when the decision was handed down July 1. The Federation to Rescue Our Greenpeace lost a lawsuit against the Federal Highway Administration on July 1 it had filed last year on behalf of the northern crawfish frog. They said the administration had made out the final environmental impact statement, which is a report required by the federal government to assess any environmental impact a federally funded project might have, without considering alternative routes for the South Lawrence Trafficway. The trafficway then was scheduled to go along 31st Street and through the Baker Wetlands, where a population of the frog lives. The state of Kansas lists the frog as a species in need of conservation. But the group was not upset at the loss, said Clark H. Coan, Lawrence resident and member of the group. He said the intent of the lawsuit was to get Douglas County to look at alternatives and to prepare a supplement to the federal study. And John Pasley, project coordinator for the county, said the county was doing both. He said the county also would seek the opinions of Haskell students and environmental groups before finalizing the eastern half of the trafficway's route. Pro and con County feud Trafficway proponents say: The debate concerning the South Lawrence Trafficway often gets confusing. But the arguments on both sides can be boiled down to a few key points. Trafficway proponents say: ■ Lawrence traffic is becoming unmanageable. John Pasley, Douglas County project coordinator, says he was driving an elephant about 30,000 cars each day but would soon exceed that. - The trafficway will provide easier access to Clinton Lake for visitors from the Kansas City area. Those visitors will take the trafficway instead of driving through Lawrence and adding to the traffic. County planners will work with environmental groups and Haskell Indian Nations University to preserve both the Bake wetlands and the area's spiritual qualities. They have already offered several realistic plans to accomplish this, including the creation of a larger wetland area for the northern crawfish frog. Trafficway opponents say: Trafficway construction and traffic will ruin the spiritual value of the wetlands, where Haskell students celebrate religious ceremonies. The Haskell medicine wheel and sweat lodges are located near there. The trafficway would destroy the fragile wetlands. It would destroy the habitat of the northern crawfish frog, which is listed as a species in need of conservation by the state of Kansas. Business would develop along the trafficw, making it just as crowded as 23rd Street. Source: Kansan staff report "Although we lost the lawsuit, we might get what we want anyway," Coan said. He said because the county was being cooperative, the group wouldn't appeal the decision. According to federal law, the study cannot halt construction of a project. Instead, the study is intended to present information to the local government body involved in the project. Reaction favorable to Mexican election Continued from Page 1A. served by the PRI continuing in power," said Elizabeth Kuznesof, director of the Center of Latin American Studies. Kuznesof said that the election would be a boon for Kansas in terms of agricultural exports because the PRI is committed to increasing trade with the United States through the North American Free Trade Agreement. The problem with another party winning the election, Kuznesof said, is the chaos that would probably result. That chaos would hurt the United States, which needs a stable Mexican president in its relations with Mexico. "I suspect that many Mexicans don't want chaos," she said. "I suspect that regardless of the unhappiness many feel with the election results, nothing much will happen." Kuznesof said that, in some ways, Mexico is a progressive country. "Compared to other countries, the military isn't dominant in Mexico," she said. "The structure of the government has kept the military subordinate. Also, education has been a very important issue in Mexico. And, third, they have had more agrarian reform than other countries." While Mexico remains an industrial leader in Latin America, Kuznesof said the country had the worst income distribution in the area next to Brazil. "Development is still a higher priority than social justice." she said. This year's presidential elections were full of controversy. Zedillo became the PRI's candidate in March after the assassination of Luis Donald Colosio, the party's first candidate. And the two losers in the elections claimed voter fraud as 20,000 protesters marched in Mexico City's central square yesterday. Despite the Mexican government spending $730 million to overhaul voter registration and to issue photo identity cards, protestors said a shortage of ballots in rural areas hurt non-PRI candidates. The 82,000 domestic and foreign election observers said the election was largely fair. "I think it was the first one that was fair in a long time," he said. Hector Perez, Mexico City senior said he thought the elections were fair. Perez said that loyalty to the PRI was based partially on fear of change and lack of valid alternatives. He added that Mexicans are becoming more informed politically. "People are becoming more politicized, less deceived, and less passive." he said. The Associated Press contributed Information to this story. Environmental concerns lead to safety council Environmental safety should improve with new consolidation By David Wilson Kansan staff writer The offices that oversee environmental concerns at the University of Kansas will undergo a major restructuring this semester. One change will be the creation of a new council called the Environmental Health and Safety Council. The council will be a consolidation of the approximately 10 committees on campus that address issues such as campus safety, radiation sources and disposal of toxic materials. lor, said a faculty member would be appointed as coordinator of the council within the month. Ed Meyen, executive vice chancel- Another change will be the renaming of the Department of Research, Health and Safety. The office, which is responsible for hands-on environmental tasks such as the disposal of chemicals from chemistry labs on campus, will be renamed the Office of Environment, Health and Safety. Mike Russel, an environmental health and safety officer for the office, said the removal of the word "research" was appropriate. "Really, that's not what we were doing." Russel said. A more accurate description of the office, he said, is "Making sure buildings don't blow up." Meyen said an additional person with a professional background in environmental issues would be hired to work with the people already on staff at the office. Ben Friesen, director of the department, will remain on staff. The office also will take on the duties once handled by the environmental ombudsman, Steven Hamburg. Hamburg, an associate professor of biology, left the position to do research for the Environmental Defense Fund in New York. He was responsible for making recommendations on environmental issues to the executive vice chancellor's office. Staffers and administrators say the restructuring will help the University better deal with state and federal environmental regulations and improve campus safety. "We have to be very concerned about what happens in our labs," Meyen said. "We need to make sure we have full compliance." Russel said a growing awareness of environmental issues on campus was another reason for the restructuring. In addition, the environmental ambudsman's duties had become too time consuming for a teaching faculty member. "There's a wealth of reasons why people want to see improvement." Russel said. "Programs have a tendency to mature. And faculty members need to teach and do research. We're at an evolution stage." With the new council and office, the University will get a more comprehensive picture of the ways in which it impacts the environment, Russel said. "We're trying to look at the total environmental, health and safety picture," Russel said. "There are a lot of pieces to the puzzle." 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BAGS SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN TUESDAY AUGUST 23,1994 SECTION B Markdin 100C Amy Solt / KANSAM Construction workers are making repairs to the roof and sewer system of Allen Field House to meet new safety standards. The changes to the field house also have affected the placement of many athletic offices. Field house gets renovated BRIEFS PITTSBURGH — Penguins owner Howard Baldwin, whose team was once promoted as the boys of winter, is again interested in buying Pittsburgh's boys of summer. Baldwin will meet Thursday with city officials and apparently hopes to convince them he's serious about making another bid to buy the Pirates. He initially approached the Pirates board of directors in February about buying the financially strapped team, but the board unanimously rejected his offer, reportedly worth $85 million. Pittsburgh professional hockey owner offers price for Pirates Pirates sources later said the offer was heavily leveraged, contained little up-front money and was worth considerably less than the reported amount in real dollars. Since his preliminary bid was rejected, Baldwin has moved to bring in more capital — and more clout — by forming a Penguins advisory board that apparently also is consulting him about a possible Pirates bid. Michael Keaton, the Pittsburgh-born actor best known for starring in the two Batman movies, is on the advisory board. A longtime Pirates fan, Keaton took part in the celebrity home-run hitters contest before the All-Star Game in Pittsburgh last month. The city's meeting with Baldwin is its latest in a series of discussions with potential buvers. Baldwin resurfaced Aug. 3 as a potential Pirates buyer when the board exercised its escape clause by putting the team up for sale. "He's bringing in his attorney from Boston, so I guess that means business," Mark Pollock, special counsel to Mayor Tom Murphy, said Monday. NEW YORK — Talks to resolve the baseball strike probably won't resume until tomorrow, union head Donald Fehr and management negotiator Richard Ravitch said. Talks resume in baseball's strike Both sides will meet Monday to set ground rules for the talks and today with federal mediators. Bargaining, which broke off when the strike began Aug. 12, will then resume with owners at the table for the first time since talks began on Jan. 13, 1993. By Chesley Dohl Kansan staff writer Allen Field House has aged nicely in its 40 years, hosting big games and capacity crowds. LAS VEGAS — While UNLV basketball coach Rollie Massimino plans to stay, the university has no plans to pay him the remainder of nearly $2 million promised in a secret contract. But now the field house is housing a 100-foot crane and 85 feet of scaffolding that spans the ceiling of the arena. Massimino said Monday he intends to finish the remainder of his five-year contract at UNLV, and believes the university will pay him some $375,000 promised in a secret supplemental contract with former university officials. Massimino says he will stay at UNLV Work began in the field house in early June to install a $600,000 sprinkler system. The sprinkler system is slated to be finished by Sept. 3., but the project is running ahead of schedule. The field house is in the process of receiving a $1.9 million facelift, which will add a fire- sprinkler system and an additional 500 seats. But UNLV interim president Kenny Guinn emerged from an hour-long meeting with the basketball coach to say Massimino will be paid only his base salary of $511,000. "The whole purpose of the project is to make Allen Field House a safer building in case of fire or emergency," said Darren Cook, director of facilities. "The changes will bring the 1955 building up to '90s safety codes." The pipes are being checked for leaks and being welded now, so the system could be installed as The cross astes will be eliminated and replaced with seating. In addition to the sprinkler system, more than $1 million of construction to install seats and stairwells will be completed at the field house by Nov. 1. early as the end of this week, Cook said. Construction administrator Doug Riat said, "People won't be able to see a change from the outside and the changes are not significant yet. All the pipes in the roof were painted to match the ceiling so "Right now when you walk into the field house you wouldn't notice a thing has changed," Cook said. "The sprinkler system was the first thing that needed to be completed in time for basketball season." These changes include 500 additional seats in the second and third levels, an additional stairwell on the west side of the field house leading down to the track, a bridge link leading to the Parrpt Athletic Complex and four new stairwalls up in the bleacher area located in the very upper corners of the field house. "There was an obvious concern voiced by city and state fire officials about the safety of the field house," Cook said. "Allen Field House is a building that is continually filled to capacity 15-16 times a year. When you fill this place up several times a year that's quite a liability." "The seating and construction is underway and will be ready for the basketball season opener." that's an interior change that will not be very noticeable. " The main seating addition in the field house will be on the third floor in the aisle ways. Outside the field house, contractors are working on installing a water pump system to increase water pressure in the field house to allow sufficient flow of water in case of a fire. Alumnus aids Kansas golf Golf tournament features network sports announcer By Jenni Carlson Kansan sportswriter Teamwork and golf are two words that are not normally associated with each other. If Roger Twibell has anything to do with it, they soon will at the University of Kansas. Twibell, who is a sports commentator for ABC Sports, was in Lawrence yesterday for the first Hawkers and Hackers Rock Chalk Golf Tournament. The event was conceived by Twibell to raise funds for both the men's and women's golf programs at Kansas. "Whatever money we raise is being divided right down the middle," said Twibell, who graduated from Kansas. "This year the money being raised will go to team transportation." Twibell said the idea for the fund raiser originated from the Team Championship, which is an annual tournament on the women's professional golf tour, the LPGA. Men from the professional tour are paired up for team competition in the tournament with women from the LPGA. "That's where I got the thought that maybe what we'll do is put the men and the women together in one tournament." Twibell said. Upon his arrival, Twibell immediately worked on his goal of becoming an announcer. One of his instructors, Tom Hedrick, still teaches broadcasting at Kansas, and another, Gary Bender, has worked for ABC and now does commentary for Turner Broadcasting System. At the heart of Twibell's concern for helping the golf program is his love for Kansas. He completed his first two years of college at the University of Arizona, where he played football and baseball. When an injury ended his sports career, he returned to his home state and transferred to Kansas. "I had some good people to learn from." Twibell said. Twibell has realized just how good the radio-television journalism program at Kansas is since he entered the work force. He continues to meet Kansas graduates at various television networks. "I would say there be schools that turn out more people, but — and I'm probably prejudiced — we turn out more quality people," he said. TWO SIX TEN THIRTY Since his graduation, Twibell worked eight years for ESPN before moving to ABC, where he has been for six years. "He has a lot of exposure in the sports world today," women's golf coach Jerry Waugh said. Jay Thornton / KANSAN Twibell has covered many sports during his time in the television business. He covers college football, college basketball, and professional golf and tennis tournaments. Traveling has taken Twibell all over the world, including this year's Goodwill Games in St. Petersburg, Russia. "I've been around the world with my job, which has been a great education in itself." Twibell said. The greatest thrill in Twibell's career occurred this summer as he was covering the World Cup final in Pasadena, Calif. "When I said, 'This is the largest audience in the history of the world to watch an event,' it didn't sound right, but it was right." Twibell said. "There's never been an event that more people have watched at one time. When you think about that for a second, it's really mind boggling." ABC sports commentator Roger Twibell, a Kansas graduate, begins his backswing in the Hawkers and Hackers Golf Tournament. Twibell participated in the tournament to help raise funds for the Kansas golf program. Twibell said Kansas gave him the opportunity to receive a quality college education and become what he is today. Twibell wanted to give something back to the university. In addition to helping the golf program financially, Twibell hopes the tournament benefits the collegiate players in learning more about themselves and others. "Obviously we want to raise money to help the program, but what I also want to do is help these kids that are coming here to play golf understand that it's more than just a game. It's all about people," he said. "It gives them a chance to intermingle with the people in golf, the people that support them." In the past, the men's team organized fund raisers, but this was the first attempt at fund raising for the women, and the first joint attempt between the men and women. "It's a relatively new experience for the women." Waugh said. Twibell said he believed this event, with well-known Kansas sports figures such as alumni golfers Holly Reynolds and Matt Gogel, and men's basketball coach Roy Williams in attendance, may be the beginning of something big. "What we want to do is make this a little bit better and bigger each year," Twibell said. Compiled from The Associated Press. D. K. Kansas senior guard Hessley Hempstead practices Monday afternoon. According to The *Sporting News*, Hempstead is the 10th-best guard in the nation, but he is battling senior teammate John Jones for the starting position. Jayhawk guard ranked 10th best in the country Hempstead still competes with teammate for top spot By Matt Irwin Kansan staff writer On most teams this would make him the pillar of the offense, but on the Kansas football team, being the second best guard in the Big Eight may also mean he is second-best on the team. Hessley Hempstead may be the second best guard in the Big Eight Conference and one of the best in the country, say Big Eight coaches and media. The Sporting News rated Hempstead, a senior, as the 10th best guard in the country. They rated senior teammate John Jones as the fifth best guard. "This week in practice, Hessley was number five and John was number 10," offensive line coach Golden Pat Ruel said. "That means Hessley is the number one guard at this school right now. Next week, John might take it back from him. We've got great competition going on right now." The competition between Hempstead and Jones over the past four years may be why both have developed into feared and respected lineman. "John and I compete with each other because we know it is going to make us better," said Hempstead, who has started every game since his freshman season. "We're both going out there trying to do the best we can and it helps us both raise our level of plav." That competition has helped them to be good enough to be considered by some members of the media as the best guard tandem in the country. One national publication rated the offensive line as a whole the ninth best in the country. But the opinion of the media is not the opinion Hempstead cares about. "Iget more out of my fellow players and my coaches coming up to me and telling me they thought I did a good job and they appreciated it." Hemstead said. From the way his teammates and coaches talk about him, he'll never need to read about himself in the media. "The two of them have had more domination blocks than any two players I've ever coached," Ruel said. "A domination block is a block where they drive their defender to the ground." Senior fullback Chris Powell, who has seen Hessley play the past four years, said he was just as impressed. Rugl's memory of some of Hempstead's best games "The first memory that comes to my mind is when he was a red-shirt freshman," Powell said. "We were playing Nebraska and Mike Petko was an All-Big Eight linebacker. I saw Hessley Hempstead come off and put him on his back three times. He was a big linebacker. It was amazing to see a red-shirt freshman get underneath him and put him on his back." include last year's 21-20 loss to Nebraska and the victory over Oklahoma State. "Against Oklahoma State he had several domination blocks and he had a couple of blocks on linebackers that were great," Ruel said. "He hit the linebacker and just knocked him back four or five yards." Powell said game film was the best evidence to show how good Hempstead and Jones were. "All you have to do is look at films of games and see all the people he's driven back into the ground," Powell said. "You kind of laugh when you see him block some people because it's just devastating." Hempstead believes the keys to his success have been hard work and listening to Ruel, who he considers one of the best offensive line coaches in the country. The hard work ethic is something he also sees in the athlete he admires most, Ervin "Magic" Johnson. Along with the leadership Magic displayed, Hempstead also tries to emulate his work ethic. "You look in the old interviews and he talks about how he was married to the game," Hempstead said. "He was dedicated to being successful, and he was successful." Hempstead also looks at great professional linemen like Nate Newton of the Dallas Cowboys as an example. "You watch guys like that, but beyond that the more important things are you have to be willing to put in the work and the time," Hempstead said. "You have a great coach here. If you're willing to listen to him and be coachable, he knows how to make you a great player." 2B Tuesday, August 23, 1994 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS in brief KU NASCAR driver remains unconscious; professional racing world waits, hopes ANN ARBOR, Mich. — Injuries to stock car driver Ernie Irvan's lungs continued to improve yesterday, but he remained unconscious on a ventilator two days after crashing during practice. Irvan, one of the top NASCAR drivers, hit the wall at about 176 mph during a practice session Saturday at Michigan International Speedway in Brooklyn, Mich. The right front tire on his Ford Thunderbird appeared to have been cut. He crashed into the wall in Turn 2 and sustained severe head and chest injuries. He remained in critical but stable condition Monday afternoon at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Dr. Errol Eriandson said in a statement No additional injuries have been discovered. pital, Dr. Errol Erlandson said in a statement. Irvan, 35, suffered severe injuries to his lungs and brain in the crash. His lung injuries remained severe but continued to improve. A CAT-Scan showed no worsening or hemorrhaging in the brain, Erlandson said. Recovery normally follows a slow and progressive course following neurological injuries, Erlandson said. Irvan, who has remained unconscious since the crash, was airlifted to the hospital minutes after the accident. Iowa State basketball adds experienced coach AMES, Iowa — In an unusual twist, Iowa State basketball coach Tim Floyd has hired a coaching veteran for the restricted-earnings coaching position on his staff. The hiring of Terry Reed, 45, completes Floyd's staff. Floyd got the Iowa State job in May, succeeding Johnny Orr. Because of the pay — a $12,000 salary plus $4,000 for working camps — the restricted-earnings coach is usually an entry-level position. But Reed has an extensive coaching background. He was an assistant under Floyd at New Orleans last season and coached high school basketball for 17 years in Louisiana, Indiana and Arkansas, compiling a 232-152 record. "We feel very fortunate to have someone with great on-the-court experience in this position," Floyd said. "He can bring a lot of maturity to the program. He also had a great knowledge of the way we ran things at UNO, which we brought here." Reed replaces Steve Krafcisin, who left to become a full-time assistant at North Dakota. Floyd's other assistant coaches are James Green and Gar Forman, who were hired in early Jane. Green came from the staff at Alabama. Forman was coaching at New Mexico State. U.S. track starties for first in Mobile Grand Prix NEW YORK — Jackie Joyner-Kersee's victory against Heike Drechsel of Germany in a battle of Olympic long jump champions at Cologne allowed her to gain a tie for first place in the Mobil Grand Prix women's overall standings. Joyner-Kersee, the 1988 gold medalist, won by less than four inches at 23-31/2 to boost her point total to 45. She shares the top spot with Olympic champion sprinter Wen Tor- Compiled from The Associated Press. rence, 100-meter hurdler Svetla Dimitrova of Bulgaria and 5,000-meter runner Sonia O'Sullivan of Ireland. Noureddine Morceli of Algeria, a triple world-record-holder, leads the men's point race with 51. Two Americans, Olympic triple jump champion Mike Conley and spinner Dennis Mitchell, are among six athletes tied for second with 45 points. Umps take it easy during strike When the baseball strike started, ampire Tom Hallion knew where to go. He escaped the angry crowds and drove straight to Woodstock. The Associated Press "My wife and I had talked about it with three other couples on New Year's Eve, about how much we'd love to go," Hallion said. "We ordered our tickets in June, even though we weren't sure I'd be able to make it." "It was great," he said. "Peter Gabriel put on a great concert. Traffic was good and so was Crosby, Stills and Nash. I'm so glad we got to do it." The mud bogs at Woodstock might be the last place anyone would expect to find a major-league umpire. But because of the players' strike, all of the umpires are showing up in unusual places this summer. For Dave Phillips, it's meant a chance to be part of his daughter's bridal shower. For Joe Brinkman, it's meant a lot of golf. "It was quite nice for a couple of days," said Brinkman, an AL umpire since 1973. "But your body is used to you going to the ballpark at 6 o'clock. It'll like it's 6 o'clock and time to go, but there are no games to go." At least, however, there is still a paycheck. The mumps' contract covers them for 75 days of a work stoppage, meaning they'll get paid through the end of what would've been the regular season. $175,000 after 25 years. But if there is no settlement for the strike that began Aug. 12 and no playoffs and World Series, the umpires will lose out, too — umps with at least five full years of service stood to get $20,000 from a postseason pool and all others were to get $10,000. In addition, umpires who work the World Series and league championship series were to get an extra $5,000. There is no agreement yet on how much money umpires would get for working the first round of the expanded playoffs; also, the NL still must find a way to get enough umpires for that opening round because not enough are eligible under the existing rotation system. Umpires' salaries range from $60,000 to The umpires' contract expires after this season. The last time the umpires negotiated for a new pact, there was a two-day walkout at the start of the 1991 season. "How the players' strike is settled probably will have some effect on what happens with our contract," said Bob Opalka, an associate of Richie Phillips, head of the umpires' union. "But it's tough to tell what it will be." "The first couple of days, I was keeping in touch with other umpires," Brinkman said. "But since then, I've just been watching TV, reading the newspapers to see what's going on. "I've stuck around so far, but if it gets past Wednesday and doesn't look like anything is going to happen, I might go away somewhere and play golf," he said. Because of the strike, Phillips, an AL staff member since 1970, saw his daughter's wedding shower in suburban St. Louis last weekend. He's spending this week at golf school. Hallion, though, took immediate advantage of the odd summer break. He had gone to Denver on Aug. 12, where he was supposed to call balls and strikes in a game between Colorado and Cincinnati. When the strike became official, he hopped a flight back home to Louisville, Ky. That night, Hallion, 37, his wife Elizabeth and three other couples drove to Saugerties, N.Y., his birthplace and the home of the Woodstock festival. For two days, they were part of the 350,000 mud people. "My wife was going, no matter what," he said. "But I've been on the NL staff for nine years, and I probably wouldn't have been able to do this in the past." Since returning home to Kentucky, Hallion has gone to two of his son's Little League games — as the plate umpire. No, he didn't eject anyone, either. "Yeah, everyone is giving me the business about umpiring during the strike," he said. "But I kid them right back. I tell that the National League sent out a directive telling all of its umpires to go work games, wherever they can find them." Israel, Jordan athletes play ball for peace "I'm enjoying the break right now," he said. "But I will muss baseball in about a week." The Associated Press WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. — As European Little League director, Brian Pompili was in charge of making sure everything went well when Israel and Jordan met on on a baseball diamond for the first time. He couldn't control the pitches, though, and that made for a long 33 outs. After years of hostility between their countries, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and Jordan's King Hussein met July 25 in Washington and signed a peace treaty. The contest in the Little League's European regional tournament came just after Hussein lifted a ban prohibiting Jordanians from playing sports with Jews. But to Little League president Creighton Hale it meant an end to an era of bigotry. "The one of Jordan's players was somebody's nephew or something from the royal family." Pompili said. "The last thing we wanted was for him to hit by a pitch." Israel joined Little League in 1989. Jordan joined in 1990. Through 1992, the teams drew lots and landed in opposite brackets, but there was still trouble. Hussein didn't want Jordanians riding the same bus as Israelis. Israel won 5-2, but the game in the last round of pool play meant nothing for the tournament standings. "Dr. Hale told them they had to ride the bus or walk," Pompili said. "They rode the bus and everybody had a great time." Last year, the teams drew spots to meet in the tournament's first round. Hussein ordered his team to forfeit rather than take the field. "As much as we tried, they had to do what was asked of them by their government," Pompili said. "Thanks to the peace talks, they decided to make a gesture this year and play." And as chance would have it, King Hussein was flying over Israeli air space for the first time during the game, Pompili said. After the game, the players exchanged ball caps and team pins. "You couldn't even imagine that there was a conflict between their countries," Pompili said. For Hale, the episode reminded him of the United States in the 1950s, when Little League rules allowed African Americans to play. "South Carolina's governor removed all Little League teams from our program to keep them from playing Blacks," Hale said. "All regional tournaments had to be played at military installations or with a police presence — and this is the United States I'm talking about." China has hosted teams from Hong Kong and Taiwan on Little League's behalf in 1991, but Hale doesn't know where baseball diplomacy will take him next. Pompili, of Szczecin, Poland, has a few ideas. "Croatia has potential. Africa has a lot of possibilities. Even Russia," Pompili said. "And it would be nice to take all the major leaguers back to their roots." Red Lyon Tavern A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence 12.50 944 Mass. © 2014 WILLIAM M. 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Gone are Albert Lewis, Kevin Ross, Lonnie Marts and Martin Bayless from last year's defensive squad. Never arrived was DT Tony Casillas, who reneged on a free-agent contract and didn't report to camp. Coach Marty Schottenheiner, now 0-3 in AFC Championship games, brought in veterans Mark Collins, Barry Wilburn and George Jamison, but only Jamison figures to be an improvement over the man he replaces (Marts). Derrick Thomas and Neil Smith are the stars of the big-play defensive unit that forced 38 turnovers in 1993. Except for nose tackle Dan Saleaunuma, the supporting cast doesn't approach their level. So Kansas City needs big production from an offense that, if healthy, could do the job. That means counting on more than 11 starts from 38-year-old Joe Montana, who will produce if available, and getting a repeat of the '93 season from 34-year-old Marcus Allen (AFC-high 15TDs, 1,002 total yards from scrimmage). Receivers Willie Davis and J.J. Birden and a talented offensive line will also be crucial to the team's success.. LOS ANGELES Maybe it's time for the Raiders to return and end the losing streak for the AFC. "We've got a very good foundation," coach Art Shell says. "I think we turned the corner and are headed for bigger and better things." Passing is the means by which the Raiders prosper these days. They've lost only one key figure, tight end Ethan Horton, from the offense, and have a collection of receivers unparalleled for speed in the league. Tim Brown is the "slow poke" of the group that includes James Jett, Rocket Ismal, Darryl Hobbs and Alexander Wright. Free agent Harvey Williams and rookie Calvin Jones figure to get first call in the backfield, working behind a veteran line anchored by Steve Wisniewski and Gerald Perry. "Speed is an integral part of fear," team owner Al Davis once said. "We always said we'd rather be feared than respected." The secondary has added Lewis, who left Kansas City along with Williams. Terry McDaniel (five intersections) is the best pass defender. The Raiders have lived by the sack and the heavy-duty pass rush since the days of Ben Davidson and Otis Sistrunk. They had 45 sacks in 1993, but Greg Townsend and Howie Long are gone, leaving Anthony Smith and Chester McGlockton to take up the slack. Los Angeles' linebacking situation is similar to running back, with no apparent take-charge guy. But there are plenty of them elsewhere. Players such as quarterback Jeff Hostetler, fullback Tom Rathman, tight end Jamie Williams, and guards Max Montoya and Don Mosebar are winners, champions. They just might lead the Raiders to that level again. It won't be easy in the league's best division. Denver and Kansas City are fully capable of winning a dozen games, while San Diego and Seattle should be strong enough to pull off some upsets. DENVER No team improved itself more on offense in the off season than the Broncos, which is a major reason John Elway's smile has been so prominent. "I can't wait to get started," Elway says. "Just look at what we've got here." Denver has a dynamic attack led by Elway, still a classic creator who might not have to be so resourceful with receivers such as Anthony Miller, Mike Pritchard and Shannon Sharpe. The offense also boasts runners Rod Bernstine and Leonard Russell and blockers Gary Zimmerman and Brian Habib. So what can stop the Broncos from a fifth trip to the Super Bowl — and a fourth under Elway's guidance? Defense, of course. Miller is the best receiver Elway has ever worked with, a versatile threat with great hands and greater moves. Sharpe is an All-Pro receiver at tight end and Russell is coming off a 1,000-yard rushing season. The Broncos get involved in too many shootouts, which is why Ray Crockett was signed away from Detroit and Ben Smith was acquired from Philadelphia to play the corners. American Football Conference Statistics American Football Conference Statistics TOTAL YARDAGE OFFENSE Yards Rush Pass 5812 1459 4353 Miami 363.3 91.2 272.1 Houston 5658 1792 3866 Houston 363.6 112.0 241.6 Denver 5461 1693 3768 Denver 341.3 105.8 231.6 Buffalo 5260 1943 3317 Buffalo 328.8 121.4 207.3 Pittsburgh 5235 2003 3232 Pittsburgh 327.2 125.2 207.3 New York Jets 5212 1880 3332 New York Jets 325.8 117.5 208.3 New England 5065 1780 3285 New England 316.6 111.3 205.3 L.A. Raiders 5014 1425 3589 L.A. Raiders 313.4 80.1 224.3 San Diego 4067 1824 3143 San Diego 310.4 114.0 196.4 Kansas City 4835 1655 3180 Kansas City 302.2 103.4 198.8 Cleveland 4740 1701 3039 Cleveland 296.3 106.3 189.9 Indianapolis 4705 1288 3417 Indianapolis 294.1 80.5 213.6 Seattle 4609 2015 2654 Seattle 291.8 125.9 165.9 Cincinnati 4052 1511 2541 Cincinnati 253.3 94.4 158.8 DEFENSE Yards Rush Pass 4531 1368 3163 Pittsburgh 283.2 85.5 197.7 New York Jets 4712 1473 3239 New York Jets 294.5 92.1 202.4 L.A. Raiders 4723 1865 2858 L.A. Raiders 295.2 116.6 178.6 Kansas City 4771 1620 3151 Kansas City 298.2 101.3 196.9 Cleveland 4778 1654 3124 Cleveland 298.6 103.4 195.3 New England 4796 1951 2845 New England 299.8 121.9 177.8 Houston 4874 1273 3601 Houston 304.6 79.6 225.1 Cincinnati 5018 2220 2798 Cincinnati 313.6 138.8 174.9 San Diego 5066 1314 3752 San Diego 316.6 82.1 234.7 Denver 5149 1418 3731 Denver 321.8 88.6 233.2 Miami 5150 1655 3485 Miami 321.9 104.1 217.3 Seattle 5313 1660 3653 Seattle 332.1 103.8 228.3 Buffalo 5554 1921 3633 Buffalo 347.1 120.1 227.4 Indianapolis 5638 2521 3117 Indianapolis 352.4 157.6 194.8 Steve Atwater is a star at safety, but Denver ranked 27th in pass defense in '93. If Denver doesn't get more of a pass rush, it could fade no matter how many touchdowns Elway produces. Simon Fletcher and newcomer Shane Dronett were terrific last year, but on offense, it will have a new look, with Natrone Means and Shawn Jefferson the key players. they need more help. The defense ranked dead-last against the pass, so Dwayne Harper, Reuben Davis, David Griggs and Denis Gibson were signed. Only Harper figures to make an impact, leaving Leslie O'Neal, Junior Seau and Chris SAN DIEGO San Diego won the division two years ago, then slipped to 8-8 last season. Without Miller and Marion Butts Seattle isn't quite ready to win, although it is making steady strides. Rick Mirer was a sensation as a rookie quarterback and Chris Warren is a 1,000-yard rusher. Howard Ballard will help at tackle, but fellow former-Bills Nate Odomes and Kirby Jackson were lost from the secondary with knee injuries. Mins to make up for the departures of Gary Plummer and Burt Grossman. SEATTLE Cortez Kennedy will get help on the defensive line from top draftraffle Sam Adams, but it won't be enough for a winning record — not yet, at least. Prediction: 1. Los Angeles (11- JUST DO IT!! 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PLAY HARD. Reebok Hours: Mon-Sat. 9-5:30 Sun: noon-5:30 Thurs. 9-8:30 914 Mass 841-6966 Exclusively for Women $19 PER MONTH 5th Year Anniversary Exclusively for Women $19 PER MONTH Call for Details Buy 10 Tans get 5 FREE Value $15 non-members welcome BODY BOUTIQUE The Women's Fitness Facility 749-2424 925 Iowa (offer ends 9/20/94) $19 PER MONTH BODY BOUTIQUE The Women's Fitness Facility ★ ☆ THREE MONTHS FREE FOR FIRST 50 MEMBERS THE INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL PANHELLENIC ASSOCIATION UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS The men of the Interfraternity Council and the women of the Panhellenic Association would like to welcome back all KU students. We hope that everyone has a fun and successful Fall semester!!! 1954 MEXICO 120km 1994 ACKER 20th Anniversary Total trail GIANT Iguana oversize cromoly frame oversize alloy fork alloy rims with QR lifetime warranty free 30 day tuneup $419.95 save $50 FREE lock & cable FREE water bottle & cage FREE T-shirt any bike purchase ends 8/31/94 IGUANA RICK'S BIKE SHOP Inc. 916 Massachusetts, (913)841-6642 ne $419.95 save $50 IGUANA nightlife The Next Nirvana? Five local bands try for fame and fortune. AHA By Jenny Brannan Vancouver staff writer Kansan staffwriter Jenny Brannan/KANSAN Wes Scantlin, Puddle of Mudd vocalist, gives an energetic performance during the fourth set of the Showcase competition. A national record label was at her fingertips. Within minutes the Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St., would be buzzing with the crowd that had gathered outside the doors for the Ticket Master Music Showcase. Shields, like the members of the other four bands who were invited to play for music industry representatives, realized the event, which cost $1.05 to attend, was a chance at national recognition. Shallow was the first to perform in a line-up of five local bands including Go Kart, Sacri- "Even if we don't win this showcase, it's still a great thing to do." Shields said, smiling. event was one of 36 music showcases featuring 180 bands around the country. Those 180 bands were chosen from applications and demos tapes. fice Isaac, Puddle of Mudd and Vitreous Humor. Saturday's Five bands will compete in the regional showcase in Dallas. The final national showcase in Los Angeles wins the grand prize — a week-long recording session at Bad Animals recording studio in Seattle. The winners are chosen by record scouts. A winner has not yet been announced for the Lawrence Showcase because the ballots have to be compared to all the ballots from the Midwest region. "One of these bands could be the next Pearl Jam or the next Smashing Pumpkins," Brian "the DJ" from KLZR said. "Whether they win or not, they could get a record contract with some national label." But that's not why Shields plays in a band. "It's like you're competing against people here, and that's a big thing," Shields said. "You usually don't have to compete." Though each of the bands realized how important winning was for their careers, they all came to play simply because they love their music. "It's a euphoric high when the magic's there," Carlos Bosso, bass player of Sacrifice Isaac said. The members of Sacrifice Isaac, from Kansas City, Mo. have known each other for nearly 10 years but have only been playing together for two. They take the inspiration for their songs from each other, instead of following any music trends, Spoons said. "We're the underdogs because we're not part of the music clique," said Paul Mitchell, guitarist for Sacrifice Isaac. The Beatles' music, on the other hand, inspired Vitreous Humor, the youngest group in the competition. the members of Vitreus Humor are between the ages of 19 and 20 and have known each other since middle school. They made their debut at a Topeka West High School talent show. By the time they were 16 and 17 they were playing in bars, even though they weren't old enough to be in them. "We've all been friends for so long, you can't break up the band," said Brad Benson, drummer and Topea junior. "You either have to stay in and enjoy it or hate each other for leaving." "We're used to being the young ones. Now we feel old." Benson said. The members of Vitreous Humor are KU students. That's where they met their newest member and guitarist, Brooks Rice, Kansas City, Kan, sophomore. "We're trying to balance this and school at the same time." Benson said. "It's a pain." Balance seems to be the most difficult part of being in a band. "You have to have a job outside the band," Shield said. "Because we have to travel so much and our schedules are so uncertain, we have to ask for time off and that's tough." Shields said this caused friction with employers and made it difficult to keep a steady paycheck coming in. "The worst part about being in a band is running out of funds," Shields said. "And falling asleep at the wheel when you're driving on road tour." Shallow began playing at the Rumblebox in Kansas City. The band has been together for nearly a year. Many strong relationships form during the time band members spend together. Shields and her husband, Jason, were married three weeks after the band Shallow was formed, but they had played together for years. They came up with their name after brainstorming for a title. "We just wanted something that sounded smooth and easy and that everyone could spell," drummer Stephan Krestin said, jokingly. Shallow said their greatest accomplishment has been Jenny Brannan/KANSAN TODD DUCKLEY Julie Shields, Shallow vocalist, finishes a sound check before the opening number at the Ticket Master Music Showcase. putting out two tapes in the past year. "My favorite thing is walking in a used record store and getting mobbed because people want a new tape that we made," Julie Shields said. Julie Shields has been singing in church choirs since she was 3 years old. "They never paid me to sing in church though," she said. Scott Magoon, drummer for Go Kart, said he remembers beating on a pillow with Tinker Toy sticks "I bought my first drum set with paper route money." Maeon said. Like Shields, many of the musicians that performed had a feel for music at an early age. Go Kart is made up of former members of the Grooveheads and the Kentes. The current band has been together for a year and a half. Go Kart hopes that this competition will move them to label exposure. "We hope to make a living off songs we like to play," Magoon said. "I'd like to be able to quit my day job and see the country." The members of Puddle of Mudd have already seen the country. Unlike many of the other bands in this contest who grew up together, each member of Puddle of Mudd comes from different places. Vocalist Wes Scantlin grew up in Kansas City, Mo., guitarist Jimmy Allen in Chanute, bassist Sean Sammon in Seattle, Wash., and drummer Kenny Burkitt in Fort Collins, Colo. They all met at the River Key Building on Woods Weather Road, a place in Kansas City where many bands practice. "People don't have to like our music," Scantlin said. "But at least they say we're a tight band." Their name, Puddle of Mudd, is a reflection of their view of life. "It's the world we live in. It's the environment. It's politics. It's war. We're stuck." Scaulin said. Puddle of Mudd's first album was dedicated to Burkitt's father, who was killed by a drunk driver several years ago. Puddl of Mudd uses the money they make from playing to help the YWCA in Kansas City. "We play our music to relate to people's problems," Burkitt said. "Our problems were solved through music." Puddle of Mudd's first album was dedicated to Burkitt's father, who was killed by a drunk driver several years ago. "People think we're really scummy when they look at Burkitt said he used to get beat up because he had long hair. "I learned to take my frustrations out on a guitar," Burkitt said. "It's better that taking them out with a gun like some people do." Sacrifice Isaac chose their name after one of the members brought an art book to practice that had a picture of the sculpture titled "The Sacrifice of Isaac." "I remembered it from bible school as an act of faith to God," Spoon said. "We're all making the ultimate sacrifice for this band. That's what's important to us." Even though the members of these bands don't have a spare second in the day, and many times they have to struggle to pay bills and keep jobs outside the band, they all said they wouldn't change a thing. "It's worth it," Spoon said. "We're all 26 years old, and we're living our dream." lifestyles Two firsthand accounts of peace, love and personal hygiene at By Casey Barnes Kansan staff writer While the concert in Sauerties, N.Y. was more commercialized than the first in Woodstock, with two stages, four video screens, pay-per-view television and MTV, Erin Glaser, St. Louis senior and Woodstock '94 concert-goer said the people were recreating the feelings of the original concert in 1969. Two KU students were amidst the naked bodies, the crowds, the rain, and the mud of Woodstock '94, and they say the 25th anniversary rock concert really was another two days of peace and music. "You can't explain it and you can't put it into words," Glaser said. "The people were so laidback and carefree. Everyone was eager to help, honest and uninhibited." One thing that has changed is the public. THE RIDGE BAY WEEKEND They learned the tickets were $135 each and had to be bought in blocks of four. Determined to go, they bought them and hoped to sell the other two along the way. They gave one ticket to a friend going into the Peace Corps and the other to a friend who flew from California to Kansas City to begin the long drive to New York. In two days, they drove from Lawrence to Albany, N.Y., which is one hour away from Saugeries. Then they parked their car and encountered what would be the first of many long lines and huge crowds. "Everyone was really patient and just happy to be going to the concert," said Julie Barnes, Oklahoma City senior. "There was no yelling or pushing to get on the bus." Woodstock attire: mud and few clothes. ity. Glaser and a friend found out about the concert from MTV. The line for the bus that took them to the concert was four hours long, but that didn't bother anybody. By 8 p.m. Aug. 12, they were part of the estimated 300,000 to 350,000 people that were setting up tents to become a part of history. "It was so fun to just sit and peoplewatch, listen to the bands or walk around to the vendors," she said. "You could talk to anybody or just hang out." But Wood- stock '94 didn't turn every- one into a love child. In addition to the crowds, Barnes said, the most lasting impression she has of the concert is that there was never a boring moment. "It was really wet and muddy and the tents were so close together that we were wet the entire time." Barnes said. "People were basically sitting on top of each other." The rain came Saturday night, but it didn't dampen spirits. Some left, and a few hundred gate-crashers got into the 850-acre concert site free. Barnes. But, have been there if she hadn't bought a ticket. The cold didn't stop people from taking their clothes off. But Barnes and Glaser decided to keep their on, even for three days. They only changed shirts while they were there. "We were standing in three inches of mud," Barnes said. "It was cold and we were wet, but we didn't care." The concert has received as much criticism as About 50 scheduled bands and numerous special guests performed at Woodstock '94, but everyone had their favorites. "Melissa Etheridge and The Cranberry's gave wonderful performances," Glaser said. "Peter Gabriel dedicated his performance to the people of Rwanda and that made the crowd more emotional." it has praise from both the public and the media. Some people believe the concert was an attempt to relieve something that cannot be relived, and the commercialism of the concert made the entire event less effective. Andrew Kupersmith, Wichita junior, said the whole event seemed like a joke. "It's a scam," Kupersmith said. "People who did it 25 years ago are bitter because they didn't make a lot of money and get as much publicity and now they want to capitalize on it." THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN But Glaser said you had to be there, because the television cameras couldn't capture what it was like to stand in mud, freezing and waiting for the concert to begin. AUGUST 23,1994 PAGE 4B KULIFE People and places at the University of Kansas. LEAD STORY news of the wierd A new TV game show ready to air early next year in England and Italy pits against each other couples who have decided to divorce with the objective of determining how the marital property will be divided. Instead of relying on costly lawyers or counselors, the spouses answer questions on the air about each other and their relationship. The spouse gives the "better" answers will get more of the property. THE ENTREPRENEURIAL SPIRIT In July, the Tokyo-based drug firm Dairim announced it would soon market a pre-meal pill to make bowel movements completely odorless. Although the pill was developed principally for the health care market to improve working conditions for nurses' aides, some commentators in Japan fear that the availability of the pill for consumers will increase Japan's obsession with cleanliness. Psychiatry professor Susumu Oda said that overreaction to unpleasant smells was already a cause of unsociable behavior. The Economist magazine reported in January that one of Secretary of Energy Hazel O'Leary's success stories about government research scientists hired out for civilian business uses was the Argonne National Laboratory's helping McDonald's to find a way to speed up french-frying. A team headed by physicist Tuncer Kuzay, who interrupted his work on advanced photons, placed sensors inside the frozen fries and was able to design special frying baskets to deal with the effect of steam created by melting ice crystals and to cut 30 to 40 seconds off each batch's frying time. The Minnesota Chamber of Commerce recently lauded the waste-management practice of the Crib Diaper Service of Plymouth, Minn., in capturing and donating the lint gathered from laundering 250,000 diapers per week to a casket manufacturer to use in stuffing casket pillows, which also saves the diaper service $3,000 a year. Reuters News Service reported in June that a men's underwear advertisement on a billboard in Tel Aviv, Israel, features the product with a photo of the late prime minister Golda Meir, and the slogan, in Hebrew, "Eventually we remember those who had balls." The Massachusetts board that regulates funeral homes took away the license of Robert Miller for two years in July after finding that he had dug up the ashes of two cremated bodies after relatives failed to pay funeral bills. The families said the bills had been inflated from the original estimates. EH-UUUH. GROSS! Milton Ross, 41, who was feeding with co-workers in St.Joseph, Mo., was fired in July after a video camera caught him urinating directly into the office coffee pot before co-workers arrived at work. The videotape trap was set after people noticed that the coffee's taste in recent days had become sour. The next day, in Lanagan, Mo., 200 miles south of St.Joseph, four arrests were made after witnesses reported seeing men urinating into the town's water supply. Residents were advised for more than a week to boil their water. NATION/WORLD THE NEWS in brief 5B UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN A Tuesday, August 23, 1994 BALTIMORE NAACP starts healing after rocky departure of former executive The interim head of the NAACP moved yesterday to put an optimistic spin on turmoil in the nation's oldest civil rights group following the ouster of executive director Benjamin Chavis. Earl Shinhoster, the new interim senior administrator announced a 30-day membership and fund-raising drive to help erase a $2.7 million deficit left by Chavis. Chavis was fired Saturday by the group's board of directors, who objected to the deficit, his use of NAACP funds to settle a sexual discrimination claim, and his overtures to black nationalists, Pan-Africanists and more radical groups. Chavis' alliance with Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan also upset some board members. "Those who believe in the cause of the NAACP will stick with the NAACP," said Shinhoster. Ben Andrews Jr., board vice chairman, said that while he supported much of what Chavis did, his leadership drew fire. "Being able to withstand that fire became an issue that affected his management," Andrews said. "I don't think he gave enough attention to the dynamics of the politics of the association." Andrews rejected the allegations of corporate influence, and said he suspected Chavis "spoke out of turn, or was emotional at the time." Andrews also said he did not believe Chavis' firing would split the black community but conceded time is needed to heal wounds. NORTH POLE Scientists study North Pole climate NORTH POLE A pair of U.S. and Canadian icebreakers smashed their way through the thick arctic ice to the top of the world yesterday, as part of a science mission looking for pollution and evidence of climate change. The U.S. Coast Guard's 399-foot Polar Sea and the Canadian Louis S. St. Laurent arrived at 90 degrees north latitude at 8 a.m. EDT, a first for surface ships from either country. The St. Laurent reached it first by about 300 yards. The vessels are carrying 70 scientists on a major study of the Arctic Ocean and its role in global climate change. The scientists hope to gather information about how the world's temperatures are affected by the arctic ice as it freezes and melts, use evidence in sea floor sediments to broaden their knowledge of climate changes and study the production of tiny marine plants in the cold sea. Their last port of call was Nome, Alaska, on July 26. They ran into the arctic ice pack near Barrow, Alaska, about 800 miles from the pole, and since then the two vessels have been leapfrogging, taking turns using their weight to crush a zigzagging path through ice as much as 12 feet thick. They also are trying to determine the extent of any radioactive pollution from years of dumping of nuclear wastes into the sea at high latitudes by the former Soviet Union. WASHINGTON Chase Bank charged with redlining The capital area's largest savings and loan association agreed yesterday to invest $11 million in black neighborhoods to settle unprecedented federal charges that it discriminated by falling to open offices and market mortgages in those areas. The Justice Department charged in U.S. District Court that Chevy Chase Federal Savings Bank and its subsidiary, B.F. Saul Mortgage Co., underwrote 97 percent of their This was the first time the government charged a lending institution engaged in illegal "redlining"—refusing to lend in an area on the basis of its racial makeup—solely by not opening offices or advertising its services in black neighborhoods. loans from 1976 through 1992 in predominantly white areas. All previous lending discrimination cases included allegations that specific black applicants had been denied loans normally given to whites with similar finances. HANOI, Vietnam U.S. diplomats to return to Vietnam The United States will open a diplomatic mission in Vietnam this autumn, 10 years after the chaotic evacuation of its diplomats at the end of the Vietnam War. U. S. officials are awaiting Vietnamese approval to open a Hanoi liaison office in September or October and are considering a three-story, French-style residence for a future embassy, sources said Monday. The liaison office is the first step toward full diplomatic relations, which could take place once the United States is satisfied Vietnam has done everything it can to help account for Americans missing from the war. Hanoi is to open its own liaison office in Washington. A U.S. presence in Hanoi would encourage American visitors and Vietnamese, especially the young, who want to visit the United States. Travel for Vietnamese now is restricted to a small number of students and diplomats. Typhoon leaves behind death in China HONGKONG A typhoon triggered landslides and flooding in China's eastern Zhejiang province, killing more than 450 people, a Chinese news agency reported yesterday. Typhoon Fred also whipped up record tidal waves when it slammed into the province Sunday, said the China News Service in Hong Kong. Terrorist's lawyer is no saint either The case of terrorist Carlos the Jackal is becoming increasingly bizarre, with accusations of assassination plots, stockpiled weapons and collaboration with spy agencies on both sides of the Cold War — all surrounding his attorney. Carlos, whose arrest was announced with great flourish by France a week ago, is fast being eclipsed by his attorney Jacques Verges, a perennial government gadfly. The circus atmosphere intensified yesterday with accusations that Verges stockpiled rockets used in a 1982 attack on a nuclear power plant in southeastern France and collaborated with the CIA. Verges countered with his own accusation that French President Francois Mitterrand personally ordered him assassinated in the early 1980s. LIGHTHOUSE POINT, Florida Fishermen score $1 million catch A group of anglers at a charity fishing tournament hauled in three bales of cocaine worth more than $1 million. The fishermen reeled in a white box covered with netting that they found floating about 20 miles offshore. When they disentangled the hook, it was covered with white powder. "I tasted it," said Mark Weingarden, 31, of Boca Raton, Fla. "When your face gets numb right away after you taste it, you figure it's cocaine." They found two more bales while waiting for the Coast Guard and spent anxious minutes wondering if the owners would catch up with them before law enforcement officials arrived. "We were worried that a cigarette boat with guys with Uzis might come cruising by," said Dan Barnett, 35, of Fort Lauderdale. Fla. Just Look at ALL of These Ways YOU Can Save Some Cash All they caught Saturday was the cocaine, though it outweighed the biggest fish in the tournament by more than 165 pounds. Compiled from The Associated Press. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN C A R D Valid Through July 31, 1995 NCCS KU THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Available at these locations: HP 119 Stauffer-Flint 1116 W 23rd KU KU BOOKSTORES Jayhawk Bookstore Restaurants & Bars -Second level in the Kansas Union Bookstore -First Level in the Burge Union Bookstore AMIGO'S 1819 W. 23rd • 842-1620 BLIMPIE'S SUBS AND SALADS 1420 Crescent Rd.·Lawrence, Ks. 66044 AMIGO'S BONANZA Get the daily special prices everyday of the week BUY 1 6" Cold Sub Sandwich, get 1 for 79c 2329 S. Iowa St.*842*1200 $3.99 Freshstastes Food Bar DOMINO'S PIZZA 25% OFF Any Delivery Order(not valid with any other offer) DOS HOMBRES 815 New Hampshire 01-2620 BUY1 Menu Item, and get the Second One at 1/2 Price ESPRESS O'HOUSE 10 E. 9th St;843-3007 1006 Massachusetts*843-0561 10% off any purchase of $2.50 or more ORAKE'S SNACK SHOP 624 W 12h*84H-2310*FREE Cup of Our House Coffee (Certified Organically Grown) with Anv Meal Purchase FULL MOON CAFE $1.00 OFF Any Purchase Over $3.50(Includes food and coffee drinks) $1.00 OFF Sandwiches and Dinners Before 6 P.M., Tuesday PERKINS FAMILY RESTAURANT 2907 W 6th-841-1688·FREE Soft Drink (with FREE refills) GLASS ONION IMPERIALGARDEN 401 N 2ncd-842-0377-BUY a cheeseburger with fries at reg. price, buy $4.24 for $1.00 Mth frun Tri 4-9 pm JOHNNY'S TAVERN $1.00 OFF Any Entree, Anytime, 24 hours a day One Pizza with One Topping $2.60 plus tax Carry Out Only PIZZA SHOPPE 601 Kasold*842-0600 PIZZA SHUTTLE Med Pizza $5.95.2 for $9.95; Lg Pizza $7.95.2 for $13.95 RUNZA PYRAMID PIZZA 14th & Ohio#842-3232> $4.00 $m, add_tops 50c; Md.$6.00, add_taps 75c; $8.00 $L.g, add_tops 1.00; Carry Out Only TACOJOHN'S 2700 Iowa*749-2615*FREE Medium Drink with Purchase of 1626 W3rd/824-B185-1101 W7th/W8th-0936-0396 Haskell Ave./842-5533-3HardShell T's fors' i99 (NO LIMIT) WEST COAST SALOON Retail/Merchandise 2222 Iowa St. 841-2739 $1.50 OFF Any Sandwich ATHLETE'S FOOT BARB'S VINTAGE ROSE ATLHEE'S FOOT 914 Massachusetts-841-6966 15% OFF Regularly Priced Shoes BOBBI'S BEDROOM 0400 | house: 840 7270 FRANCIS SPORTING GOODS 731 Massachusetts-843-4191+15% OFF All Apparel + EPFRE E-PRIDE T-Shirt $10.00 Over $25.00 CENTRAL DATA GENERAL NUTRITION CENTER 20% OFF Any Purchase Over $20.00 Excluding Rentals CLEOPATRA'S CLOSET 743 Massachusets>749-4664 15% OFF Any item (excludes sale items) 745 New Hampshire+843-3282+$2.00 Discount for Diagnostic, Upgrade Labor, System Cleaning on IBM Compatibles JAYNAWK BOOKSTORE 20% OFF Entire Inventory (sale items excluded) 15%OFF Anv Pro-Performance & 24-Hour Diet Item JAYHAWK BOOKSTORE 10% OFF All Academically Priced Computer Software JAYHAWK BOOKSTORE 1420 Crescent Rd-843-3826 10% OFF Any Reference or Study Aid JAYNAWK TROPICAL FISH 846 Illinois, Suite D=842-5950>20% OFF Whisk Brand PowerFilters, and All Other Brand Undergravel Filters 10% OFF Any Typewriter. 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Excluding Sale Items KANSAS SPORTS CLUB KANSAS SPORTS CLUB 837 Massachusetts 842-2992 20% OF KEI SWatshirts KU BOOKSTORE KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS-864-4640 Avn Size Exam Book (Blue Book) 5£ KU BOOKSTORE KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS*864-4640 $5.00 Off Any Jawny Clothing item or Hat Over $20.00 KU BOOKSTORE KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS-864-4640 10% OFF Any Art, Engineering or Drafting Supply KIZER-CUMMINGS LAWRENCE ONE HOUR PHOTO MIRACLE VIDEO 9th & Wear Hampshire481-5324 10% OFF All Skin Care Products MERLE NORMAN 910 N2nd/841-8903-1931 Haskell Ave. Suite 1/841-7504 $1.00 OFF Movie Rent/Limit (one per visit) 820 Massachusetts-841-0100>20% OFF All Cotton T-Shirts Men and Women's (Organic Cotton, Green, and Recycled Cotton OUTFITTER'S 740 Massachusetts*843-3933 15% OFF Any Regular Priced Item PRO SOUND Lawrence, Ks>865-0692 10% OFF All Sales RECYCLED MUSIC CENTER 716 Massachusetts+841-1762-00% OFF (CD: Tapes, Movies, Video Games) Tuesday & 15% more (On-cash or Buy Backs RECYCLED SOUNDS RENTCO USA 1741 Massachusetts*749-1605 25% OFF All Monthly Rentals 622 W 12th St. 841-9475-$2.00 Only Any One CD, Tape, or LP with Value Greater than $5.00) SHARK'S SURF SHOP 15% OFF Any Non-Sale Purchase (excluding Stussy) RINGMAID/WAMSUTTA VIDEO BIZ 832 Iowa*749-3507+2 for 1 Video Rental Monday - Thursday (limit one per day) SPRINGMAID/WAMSUTTA 1025 N. 3rd*832-1100 10%OFF Any Purchase Services B.C. AUTO & CYCLE 510 N 6th 841-6955 10% OFF All Parts CHIROPRACTIC HEALTH CENTER 2009 Chicago Players 04/18/06 737 Massachusetts+842-0880 15% OFF Complete Eyesight Purchase Initial Consultation at No Charge (Usually $30-$70) CRANDON & CRANDON OPTOMETRIST EUROPEAN TAN (019 Massachusetts\*b43-3844+$25.00 OFF All Fashion Express Frames Values Only (019 Massachusetts\*b43-3844+$25.00 OFF All Fashion Express Frames Values Only) 1601 W23rd-w84-6232-FREE 2 Tans with Purchase of 7 Tans For $20 and FREE Trial Formula One MANETAMERS 846 Illinois Suite E*841-5499 MANETAMERS $3.00 OFF Haircut or $5.00 OFF Chemical Service 1001 E 47th St*832-0281*25% .OFF Initial or Annual 3 C '15 STADIUM BARBERY R.C. *STATION BARBENT* 1033 Massachusetts*749-5363 Any Haircut or Hairstyle*5.50 SPECTRUM OPTICAL $35.00 OFF Lenses and Frames w/ FREE Adjustment TWIN OAKS GOLF COURSE K-10 & County Rd. 1057*(913)542-1747 Buy One Small Bucket of Balls, Get One Small Bucket ULTIMATE TAN 2449 Iowa St. *842-4949-1* FREE Session with the Purchase of a 9 Season Package (Save $5.50) UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 11 Stauffer-Flint*864-4358* 20% OFF Any Private Classified Ad 6B Tuesday, August 23, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Merriam Webster Merriam Webster Collegiate Dictionary, Tenth Edition Merriam Webster's Collegiate Dictionary ISBN 978-0-384-25316-8 Brand-new edition of America's best-selling dictionary. The clear, comprehensive definitions found in Merriam-Webster's Collegiate lead users toward more precise, unambiguous communication. This essential resource contains 160,000 entries, 214,000 definitions, and more usage paragraphs, synonym paragraphs, and illustrations than ever before. Also features a handbook of style and sections on biographical and geographical names. 1,600 pages. $7/3^8$ x $9/7/8$. BEST $22.95 hardbound Jayhawk Bookstore only at the top of Naismith Hill! 1420 Crescent Road Lawrence, KS 66044 843-3826 OPEN EVERYDAY 1974 BRICK'S FESTIVAL 20th Anniversary Tournament 1974 1994 More Bike Less Money ATX oversizealloy frame oversize alloy fork alloy rims with QR lifetime warranty incredibly durable $479.95 save $40 GIANT Sedona RICK'S BIKE SHOP Inc. 916 Massachusetts, (913)841-6642 $479.95 save $40 BIKE SHOP Inc. (913)841-6642 S BACK TO SCHOOL POSTER SALE Biggest & Best Selection ANSEL ADAMS ANSEL ADAMS COMPUTER FRACTAL COMPUTER FRACTALS COMPLEXITY Most Images Only $6, $7 and $8 LINTAPA OpArt STING English literature in Four STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA INTEGRITY UNIVERSITY OF BANSAE Date: Tues. Aug. 16 thru Fri. Aug. 26 Time: Mon. - Fri. 9 am - 5 pm Saturday 10 am - 4 pm Sunday 12 noon - 4 pm Place: Kansas Union Gallery 4th Floor --put 100,000 more police officers on the streets; $9.85 billion for prisons and $6.9 billion for crime prevention, including drug courts. The balance is nearly 45 percent for law enforcement, almost 33 percent for prisons and 23 percent for crime prevention and drug courts. Crime bill goes to Senate The Associated Press Legislation faces uncertain future WASHINGTON — Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Joseph Biden said yesterday that a $30.2 billion crime bill was just "one step away" from President Clinton's desk, but Republicans were trying to make that a huge leap. Sen. Phil Gramm, R-Texas, a staunch opponent of the bill's ban on assault-style firearms, said he planned to use a Senate procedure that would require the bill's supporters to muster 60 votes, the same number required to stop a filibuster. If successful, it probably would mean the end of the package that passed the House on Sunday, 235-195, with the help of 46 Republicans. Crime bill backers cannot count on the votes of all 56 Democratic senators because as many as three of them will support the effort to block it, said Sen. Larry Craig, R-Idaho, a board member of the National Rifle Association, which has campaigned for months to derail the legislation. Meanwhile, White House Chief of Staff Leon Panetta put pressure on the Senate with a round of appearances on the morning television shows, saying it would be "a disgrace to the country" if opponents blocked the bill. House feverishly, planned a similar effort for the Senate and scheduled meetings with several senators yesterday afternoon, said spokeswoman Dee Dee Myers. Sens. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., and Jay Rockefeller, D-W.Va., predicted the bill's supporters would gather the necessary 60 votes to overcome the Republican procedural effort to block the bill, known as a "point of order," and pass it intact. President Clinton, who lobbied the "We have such an epidemic of violent crime in this country that to make the perfect the enemy of the good here makes no sense," Dorgan said. Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., said he would support the bill even though it was not perfect legislation. "All factors considered," he said, "I believe it will be a significant step forward in our fight against violent crime." The pending crime bill would authorize $13.45 billion for law enforcement, including $8.8 billion to help The bill also would ban 19 types of assault-style firearms and scores of others with similar characteristics, allow life sentences for some third-time felons and expand the federal death penalty to more than 60 crimes, including fatal drive-by shootings, carjacking deaths and major drug trafficking, even when the defendant is not directly linked to any specific death. "We are one step away from getting a significant crime bill to the president's desk," Biden, D-Del., said as debate began on the Senate floor. The legislation "will not end crime, but thousands of Americans will live safer, more secure and happier lives if we take this money that we are getting from firing federal bureaucrats and hire cops," Biden said. A trust fund created with money saved by reducing the federal work force would pay for the bill's anticrime programs. U.S. officials try to nip exodus Associated Press GUANTANAMO NAVAL BASE, Cuba—The United States is prepared to hold up to 10,000 Cubans here "indefinitely," in a sign of the administration's resolve to prevent an exodus of refugees from reaching U.S. shores, Defense Secretary William Perry said yesterday. The get-tough policy has had little effect on its intended audience, however. More than 1,000 refugees a day are being intercepted. Those are the highest numbers since the 1980 Mariel boat lift, when some 125,000 Cubans fled to the United States. at least 20 tiny makeshift rafts. Perry flew here across those waters, gazing from the cockpit of his C-20 executive jet as it swooped over several ships plucking refugees from the sea. During the flight, Perry observed More than 50 Coast Guard and Navy vessels patrol the waters between Key West and Cuba, forming, in effect, a sea-borne sea wall. Thirty planes patrol overhead. "It's a stunning sight." Perry said. "There's a tidal wave of people forming out there." In Washington, the administration slammed the door on treating the fleeing Cubans as political refugees. Asked whether the Cubans taken to Guantanamo had any chance of being admitted as political refugees, INS Commissioner Doris Meissner said flatly: "No, they do not." The White House said it believed the number of refugees would drop off substantially within a week, as word of the change of policy filtered into Cuba. Perry noted the psychological strain of staying in an isolated encampment such as Guantanamo, where rows of tents on an abandoned airstrip will house the refugees. It "is tough for people," he said, which it is hoped will help curb the exodus from Cuba. The fate of the Cubans became clearer yesterday, when the Immigration and Naturalization Service described how they would be treated. Cubans who want to come to the United States can apply for legal immigration, not blanket political asylum, INS officials told reporters. Over the weekend, the administration announced moves targeted at further isolating Fidel Castro's communist government by cutting off transfers of funds from the United States to Cuba, restricting charter flights and increasing anti-Castro radio and television broadcasts. Deputy Transportation Secretary Mortimer Downey the Coast Guard had been involved in a "high-paced operation" that has focused on a search-and-rescue mission aimed at saving the lives of those who have departed Cuba aboard flimsy craft. "We can't be sure we are finding them all. We found some empty rafts." Downey said, attempting to emphasize yet again the perilousness of embarking on the high seas in homemade craft. 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We not only want your business, we also want your satisfaction." Ben Crosier, Sales Manager MICROTECH COMPUTERS 25TH AND IOWA IN THE TOWER PLAZA 842-COMP - Systems • Printers • Accessories • AddsOns & Upgrades • Training • Networking Solutions • UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N Tuesday. August 23,1994 718 DNA test shows Simpson's blood at crime scene The Associated Press LOS ANGELES — O.J. Simpson's blood has the same genetic makeup as blood found at the site where his ex-wife and her friend were slain, according to sophisticated prosecution test results made public today. "The DNA tests conducted so far implicate the defendant," prosecutors wrote. 19. The results of the DNA tests at a Maryland lab were contained in court papers filed today by prosecutors. Although the papers suggested blood matches, they did not include a breakdown of the statistical odds of such matches. The results of so-called DNA fingerprinting likely will be the most important evidence against Simpson, since there are no known witnesses to the killings. condominium where Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman were slain. Prosecutors have alleged Simpson left blood at the murder scene when he cut his finger during a struggle. The 47-year-old Simpson has pleaded innocent to murder charges in the June 12 deaths. Trial was set for Sept. Two samples from a blood trail leading away from the murder scene showed a match with Simpsoh's blood, according to results of a group of tests called PCR. In court documents, prosecutors say Simpson's blood has the same genetic makeup as blood found at the went a more sophisticated DNA test, called RFLP, and the results showed the banding pattern of that blood matched Simpson's, according to the court papers. RFLP, which stands for Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism testing, is sometimes called DNA fingerprinting. same makeup as Simpson's blood. The papers also say blood found on Goldman's shoe has the same genetic makeup as. Goldman's blood, Ms. Simpson's blood or both, and blood found in Simpson's foyer has the One of those samples also under- The test results were the second round of scientific evidence that prosecutors say link Simpson to the murders. THE HARBOUR LIGHTS 1031 Massachusetts Downstairs Police official Gregory Matheson testified at Simpson's preliminary hearing that Simpson's blood type matched blood found at the murder scene. Matheson said tests excluded the victims as the source of the blood drops, and only 0.43 percent of the population could have left the blood. CAMPUS REP WANTED The nation's leader in college marketing is seeking an energetic, entrepreneurial student, for the position of campus rep. no sales involved. 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Certain enclosures apply. AT&T AT&T RO COLLEGE A.R.T SUPPLIES FREE! DRAWING PENCIL WITH EVERY ART SUPPLIY PURCHASE BEROL TURQUOISE* LEAD POINTER Precision sharpening plus portable convenience $5.25 REF $3.95 100g NEWSPRINT NEWSPRINT 30 lb bass weight, size 18" x 24". 1 ream. 431-281 $830 REC$ 9.40 500 SHEETS 1 REAM VYCO BOARD COVER & TAPE $4.09$ Two sided sand cover gives a smooth surface to any surface. Matte white non-glare green Size 31" x 42". REG $2495 $18^95 VYCO TAPE, 1" x 25" $2.69 PORTFOLIOS All sizes and styles to choose from. KOH-I-NOOR RAPIDOGRAPH PENS Seven pen set in a hinged lid case with ink and mb STAEBILER MARSMAGNO 2 TECHNICAL PEN 0111 A refillable technical pen at an economical price. Sold in 4 and 7 pen sets. CHURCH School Specialty Supply Tower Plaza Retail Center 2540 Iowa St, Suite M Lawrence, KS Phone 865-5071 8B --- Tuesday, August 23, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WE CAN'T HELP YOU WIN THE RAT RACE, BUT WE CAN HELP YOU FINISH. It's a busy world and it's sometimes hard to know what activity to pursue.And when we need medical attention it can be frustrating trying to find the best place to go for help. At times like these,it's comforting to know that the profes- M Lawrence PromptCare is a full service urgent care center and a fast, economical way to seek medical attention. Staffed by experienced and and the most experienced therapists and specialists in Douglas County. Lawrence Occupational Health Services 865-0700 Lawrence PromptCare 865-3997 sonials at the new Mt. Oread Medical Arts Centre are there to lend a hand with expanded services. Lawrence Occupational Health Services offers a full range of industrial medicine options, including injury management, drug screening physical therapy occupational therapy and work hardening Prompt evaluations, courteous and timely service, flexible hours and plenty of convenient, accessible board certified emergency medical physicians. Open 9 am-11pm,M-F and 12 noon-11pm weekends,no appointment is neces sary—you'll be greeted by a nurse immediately and treated fast some visits can cost you as little as $45. Lawrence PromptCare is an excellent alternative to long waits in the emergency room or when you can't see your regular physician. Mt. Oread Rehabilitation Services 832-1900 Mt. Oread Rehabilitation Services offers comprehensive rehab services, including physical therapy and occupational therapy with specialization in sports medicine.Under the direction of Medical Director, Michael Geist,M.D.the program offers the broadest range of rehabilitation services ME OREAD MEDICAL KINS CENTRE parking make Mt. Oread Medical Arts Centre an agreeable health care alternative. 1 KASOLD & CLINTON PARKWAY 2 J NATION Top college guide rates KU as the only Big Eight school with four star academics. Page A3 FEATURES Internet spawns its own unique communication culture and style. Pago 4B. High 88° Low 63° Weather Page 3 CHANCE OF RAIN THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Weather: Page 3. Frog THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA, KS 66612 VOL.104.NO.3 ADVERTISING: 864-4358 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 24, 1994 (USPS 650-640) NEWS: 864-4810 Shanks takes stand in day two of trial Defendant cries as he recounts his side of story By Manny Lopez Kansan Staff Writer By the time Jeffrey Shanks took the witness stand yesterday afternoon, emotions in the courtroom had already run high. Three times during his 90 minute testimony, Shanks' voice quivered, and he had to take time to catch his breath. Tears welled in his eyes when he talked about his family, who were in town from California, again when he talked about having to resign his graduate assistant position with the KU football team and at the end of the day when a photographer started taking pictures of him on the witness stand. Shanks is being tried on two counts of rape from a probable cause complaint filed Mar. 16 in Douglas County District Court. Last week, Judge Ralph M. King had combined another complaint against Shanks, but on Monday that case was separated. a date for Sundav. Mar. 13. Earlier in the second day of testimony in the trial, the second woman who said she was raped by Shanks also had to take time to compose herself while she was on the stand. Dressed in a gray business suit, the 29-year-old woman from Kansas City, Kan., told the jury she met Shanks last November at Kelly's Bar in Westport. She said she spoke to him briefly that night. In March, Shanks called the woman, and they talked for about an hour, she said. At that time they set up After meeting at Carlos O'Kelleys on 23rd Street, they went to Clinton Lake, rollerbladed, washed his car and then went back to his apartment at Javawker Towers, she said. The stories of both victims and of Shanks were similar until the sexual acts occurred. "I don't even know you," she said after Shanks started massaging her back in his bedroom. "You're making me feel uncomfortable." Once in the apartment, Shanks invited her into his bedroom to look at family pictures, she testified everything was consensual. Shanks said during testimony he too was uncomfortable about the situation so he said he initially stopped the massage. He said he never used force or his size against either woman and She said Shanks never stopped the massage, even after she began to scream. During cross examination, the woman said Shanks was always very polite, and she said she did not find him unattractive. When Mike Warner, Shanks' lawyer, asked the woman if she had ever sat and played Scrabble with the other victim involved in this case, she said no. The statement brought murmurs from people in the audience, including her mother. A. E. A. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z. "She did play Scrabble with her," her mother whispered to one of the woman's roommates. After resigning his position with the football team last March, Shanks said he moved back to California and has been working as a coordinator for an emergency supply company in Irvine, Calif. Shanks will retake the stand at 9 a.m. today. Brian Vandervliet / KANSAN Jeffrey Shanks briefly cried while on the witness stand yesterday at the Douglas County District Courtroom. KU student speeds for NASCAR Father's encouragement strong desire lead to sport By Colleen McCain Kansan staff writer Jennifer Cobb's car caught on fire Saturday. For Cobb, a race car driver, it was just another day at the track. Jennifer Cobb's car caught on fire Saturday. "The engine blew up, and my car spun around, but it real- Cobb has been competing in NASCAR-sanctioned races since July 1991, and although she has seen the dangers of the sport first-hand, Cobb said the risks were worth taking. Cobb's affinity for racing dates back to her childhood. Cobb's father has competed as a race car driver for the past 18 years, and Cobb said it seemed only natural that she raced too. "I cracked a vertebra in my neck two months after I started racing, but I never considered quitting," she said. "I just love racing." "I've been going to the race track since I was three years old," she said. "I've been around racing my whole life, and I've always wanted to race." Cobb said that when she expressed a desire to race, her father helped to launch her racing career. "My father rebuilt the Mustang that I race," Cobb said. "He has taught me everything I know about racing." Cobb spends every weekend between May and September competing in races at Lakeside Speedway in Kansas City, Kan., and at I-70 Speedway in Odessa, Mo. Racers are divided into five classes, based on the types of cars they drive. Cobb competes in the pony stock class. "My father is going to build me a new car, and I will move up one or two classes by next year," she said. "The class I compete in will be determined by how much money I can invest. You easily can spend up to $50,000 on a car." Cobb said that a new car would help to advance her racing career. But Cobb's present car, a recent-model Mustang, has served her well. She has competed in 18 races since May, and she has garnered seven first-place finishes and six second-place finishes. "The way I look at it, 24 people compete in a race, and there is only one winner, but there are 23 losers," Cobb said. "I feel like I have the determination necessary to be the winner." Cobb said she was determined to make a mark, both for herself and for women in racing. Cobb is one of few women competing in a traditionally male-dominated sport. BELL Paul Kotz / KANSAN Jennifer Cobb poses with the essential gear for racecar driving. Cobb has been racing for several years and hopes to turn it into a possible profession. BRIEF See STUDENT,Page 8A. Jamie Plesser, live music coordinator for SUA, said that he thought Amos' performance would be appropriate for a KU audience. Singer and pianist Tori Amos will make the University of Kansas a stop on her world tour, the Student Union Activities office announced yesterday. Tori Amos schedules concert at the Lied Center Amos, who is known for being outspoken on feminist issues, will perform at 8 p.m. Sept. 23 in the Lied Center. "I think it will bring a different perspective to the KU campus," he said. "Tori is behind a lot of women's issues, and people who support womens' rights will have a lot of interest in what Tori has to say in her performance." Plesser said that Amos was expected to have an opening act at the performance, but SUA had not been told who it would be. Tickets will go on sale at 9:30 a.m. Saturday. They will be available at the SUA box office in the Kansas Union, the Lied Center box office and at all Ticketmaster ticket centers. By Carlos Tejada Kansan staff writer Lawrence may be spot for pimp and prostitutes The University of Kansas: home of top-notch academics, excellent basketball teams and prostitution. KU students and faculty are no doubt familiar with the first two, but. .. prostitution? KU and Lawrence police say they know of no recent prostitution activity in the community. However, the president of an outreach group in Westbrook, Conn., said otherwise this summer. Frank Barnaba, president of the Paul and Lisa Foundation, spoke in Wichita July 21 at a seminar on exploited children. During his address to the seminar he made his claim: big city pimps come to Lawrence to recruit KU students for prostitution. Barnaba's group works in New York City with prostitutes to try to get them off the streets. He said his group found 32 prostitutes from Kansas, more than any other state. Many of them come from the KU campus, he told the Kansan in a July 26 interview. Barnaba said the information came from a prostitute from Kansas who said her pimp recruited here. "There is a problem in the state of Kansas," he said. "I don't know why, but pumps have had success there in recruiting prostitutes. There's no panic at the University level, but everyone should be on the lookout." "She was a prostitute from the Lawrence area who said her 'man' – her pimp – and another man had been in Lawrence as late as this past spring trying to recruit prostitutes," he said. Pimps recruit prostitutes by fooling them, Barnaba said. He said they go to local restaurants and bars and pose as representatives of modeling agencies. "They will romanticize you, and you might not know for months they're in the sex business," he said. INSIDE The ticket man Bernie Kish, director of ticket operations and sales, is the man responsible for filling the stadium and field house on game days. These days his job is easier. Page 16. "We're not aware of it," said Sgt. Rick Nickell of the Lawrence police. "We have had no indication that that type of thing occurs." Last week, both KU and Lawrence police said they had not heard of any such activity, although they have been listening for it since the comments were made in July. INSIDE The ticket man CINEMA FILM CENTER Search committee drafts new job description By James Evans Kansan staff writer The chancellor search committee has clarified what qualifications KU's new chancellor must have. Steve Jordan, executive director of the Board of Regents and member of the search committee, said at Monday's Faculty Convocation that the committee no longer was divided about what kind of candidate they were looking to attract. "Let me say that every member of the search committee is committed to finding the most qualified individuals possible to be considered for the chancellor," he said. Jordan said that the committee members had previously been at odds over the specifics of the chancellor's job description. Because of the committee's conflicting viewpoints about the job description, Jordan composed a draft of new criteria for the position, said T.P. Srinivasan, head of University Council. Srinivasan helped Jordan define the job criteria. "Reasonable differences of opinion occurred concerning how prescriptive the advertisement should be on the credentials of the candidates for a faculty appointment to an academic unit of the University." Jordan said. The initial job description, which was drawn up by the Board of Regents, omitted reference to candidates having a commitment to education, Srinivasan said. He said that the Board of Regents didn't realize how the faculty felt about the importance of having academic-minded candidates apply for the position. At a meeting yesterday, Srinivasan told members of the Faculty Executive Committee about the revised job description. He said that many members of the faculty were in favor of the new job description. In the current draft of the job description, two academic qualifications are listed, Srinivasan said. They are "commitment to academic excellence" and "eligibility for and willingness to accept a concurrent faculty appointment in an academic unit of the University of Kansas." "The draft attempts to draw attention to the roles, knowledge, skills and traits desirable in a new chancellor, and in my view, places great emphasis on the academic mission of the institution and the chancellor's responsibilities to that mission," Jordan said. Daron Bennett / KANSAN --- T. P. Srinivasan, presiding officer of University Council, told the Faculty Executive Committee that he was pleased with the newly drafted job description for chancellor's. 24 . UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday.August 24,1994 2A STAR Horoscopes HAPPY BIRTHDAY! IN THE NEXT YEAR OF YOUR LIFE: Concentrate on strengthening valuable professional and personal relationships. If single, you have many romantic choices but need time to find the right mate. December will bring welcome financial news. Avoid splurging too heavily on gifts. Investment opportunities abound early in 1995. A change of lifestyle in the spring will mean greater happiness and security. You could be living in your dream home by this time next summer! CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DATE: actor Steve Guttenberg, actress Marlee Matlin, boxer Gerry Cooney, baseball superstar Cal Pinken, Jr. CELEBRITIES BOWN VOTES baseball superstar CAL Ripken, Jr. ♥ ARIES (March 21-April 19): An old friend or former associate could unknowingly jeopardize an important deal. Curb your temper. Confiding in your loved ones releases tension. Resist the urge to go on a shopping spree. T 15 TAURUS (April 20-May 20): A good day to socialize with newcomers. An interest in literature or the arts should be pursued. Experts can help you find a commercial outlet for your talents. Romantic vibrations fill the air tonight! ♀ m LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22). You may have something of a recluse recently. Getting out and about will improve both your outlook and your finances. confer with mate or partner before accepting or rejecting invitations. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Do not expect too much cooperation today. You will have to blaze a new trail on your own. Get a handle on insurance and tax regulations by consulting experts. A legal matter is quickly resolved. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) A burst of activity at work puts you under special pressure. Be sure to take a midday break. You meet someone who could one day be a valuable contact. ♂ 69 CANCER (June 21-July 22) Agreements signed today could get business back on track. Stay alert to avoid making careless mistakes. Questionable proposals deserve close scrutiny before you reach a decision. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Longtime friends can help you form an important new alliance. There may be strings attached. Pay more attention to community affairs. Loved ones need to know your intentions. V8 TP LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Balancing work with play is a real challenge today. Cooperative efforts pay off handsomely at work. A raise or promotion may be in the offing. Expect to receive good news about a personal matter. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22, Jan. 19): Your efficiency is at a peak today. Financial, legal and insurance matters are in the spotlight. An expert could come up with quick answers. Limit credit card use; there are some alternatives. X Q VIRGY (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Check out certain rumors before making a financial commitment. Consult the professionals. A pet could play a role in your meeting someone who has proved elusive in the past. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): A new romantic attachment could result from a chance meeting. Outline your plans for the future. Financial matters deserve top priority. Do some soul-searching before making a commitment you may not want to keep. Water PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20);A bond of affection draws you to someone who is feeling under the weather. A business deal that recently seemed impossible may now become reality. Confide in family members or longtime friends. TODAY'S CHILDREN are often gently charmers with wonderfully artistic tastes. Classical music, dance and good books are a few of their favorite things. A quiet, peaceful environment is essential if these youngsters are to flourish. They need to fell that their home is a refuge from storm and strife. When it comes to romance, these Virgos are serious-minded and sincere – disinclined to fling. The ideal partner will share their commitment to family life and spiritual growth. Hard-working and thrifty, these Virgos are unlikely to encounter financial problems. Student Political Awareness Task Force will sponsor a Voter Registration Drive from 9 a.m. until 3 p.m. today at the Kansas Union. For more information, call Mark Wilson at 865-0066. ON CAMPUS Ecumenical Christian Ministries will hold a University Forum, "Traditional Informalities in the Kansas State Legislature," at noon today at 1204 Oread Ave. For more information, call Thad Holcombe at 843-4933. St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will hold Mass at 12:30 p.m. today at Danforth Chapel. For more information, call 843-0357. St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will hold an Annual Fiesta at 5:30 p.m. today at 1631 Crescent Rd. For more information, call 843-0357. KU Kempo Karate Club will meet at 6 p.m. today at 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Mandana Hurt at 842- KU Tae Kwon Do Club will meet at 6 p.m. today at 207 Robinson Center. For more information, call Jason Anishanslin at 843-7973. 4713. KU Sailing Club will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Tom Connard at 832-9655. Icthus Christian Outreach will hold a barbecue at 6 p.m. Thursday at Holcomb Park, 27th and Lawrence Ave. For more information, call Mark Winton at 843-9529. Students Tutoring for Literacy will hold an informational meeting at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Centennial Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call 864-3660. Jayhawkner Campus Fellowship will meet at 8 p.m. Thursday at 158 Strong Hall. For more information, call John Dale III at 749-5666. ON THE RECORD Two 13-year-old girls were found drunk at about 8:30 Friday night at an apartment complex on the corner of 8th Terrace and Avalon Road, Lawrence police reported. Police said they responded to a call about children in trouble and found them outside the complex. Police said one was hiding behind a nearby bush. They were taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital for observation, police said. Equipment valued at $15,860 was stolen from McLouth Excavating in McLouth last weekend, Lawrence police reported. Police said unknown suspects broke into a trailer at a site and stole several types of equipment. The thefts occurred sometime between Saturday and Monday, police said. charges, Lawrence police reported. Police said they responded to a call of suspicious activity at the Kwik Shop on 6th Street and Kasold Drive. From there they saw a car driven by two Lawrence men. Police pulled them over, and when they consented to a search, police found marijuana and $415 in cash in a bag. They charged the two with possession with intent to sell and took them to Douglas County Jail where they were held without bond. Two Lawrence men were arrested early yesterday morning on drug A car was stripped late Sunday night while parked at Los Amigos Saloon, 508 Locust St., Lawrence police reported. The car, which belonged to a Topeka man, sustained damage to the hood, front window, back window, side window, hood and roof. The car stereo also was stolen, police said. The total cost was $2,500, police said. The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Straffort-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan., 60454, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 60444. Annual subscriptions by mail are $90. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045. Weather N A T I T O N A L E M P S Lawrance 89° * 61° Kansas City 84° * 61° Topeka 85° * 59° Wichita 84° * 63° Omaha 85° * 65° Tulsa 85° * 63° Des Moines 82° * 60° St. Louis 82° * 67° Chicago 81° * 67* Atlanta 82° * 66* New York 72° * 58* Los Angeles 84° * 69* Seattle 84° * 69* EXTENDED FORECAST WED. THUR. FRI. Chance of thunderstorms in the morning. Sunny! 90 65 Sunny! 90 66 88 63 8863 9066 9065 August 23.1994 $ Stock Report Dow Jones 24.6 3,775.83 Volumes Traded 307.22 shares ↑ Advances 1,339 Declines 763 Unchanged 763 ↓ O ) Unchanged 769 NYSE 4.17 255.27 Nasdaq 44 5.72 ASE 51 446.28 AIMHIGH HIP $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 rapididly approaching. For more information on this exciting opportunity talk to Captain Dean Wilson or captain Bob Wicks at 864-4676. AIR FORCE INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL PANHELLENIC ASSOCIATION UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS ROTC The men of the Interfraternity Council and the women of the Panhellenic Association would like to welcome back all KU students. We hope that everyone has a fun and successful Fall semester!!! UTC Blow-out August 29th - 30th at the Kansas Ballroom Two familiar faces on campus. The Jayhawk and the Macintosh LC 475 Both are highly recognizable but only one comes with an Apple 14" ColorPlus Monitor, Claris Works, StyleWriter II printer, a Mouse Pad and Standard Keyboard all $1512^{95}or $1757^{95} LC4754/80 POWER through it. LC 4758/160 Macintosh. The Power to be your Best at KI! union technology center Academic Computer Supplies, Service & Equipment Macintosh III 75 CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, August 24, 1994 3A Increased library fines await students Change in code prompted by more offenses By Shannon Newton Kansan staff writer Joe Lewis has been inconvenienced more than once during his years at the University of Kansas when he hasn't been able to find books he needed at campus libraries. "I wanted to check out a book that wasn't returned," said Lewis, Ottawa senior. "Then at the last minute I had to get another reference." But library officials say they hope new policies enacted Aug. 1 will help students such as Lewis get the materials they need. Under the new code, students who return library materials such as books and reserve items late or not at all will face steeper fines. "If we had a choice, we would not give anyone fines," said Kendall Simmons, head of circulation at Watson Library. "But we have to make sure that borrowers have some sort of incentive to return their materials." "They were not returning books on their own good will." she said. Simmons said the library changed the previous policy, which had been in effect since 1979, because borrowers were not responding to it. The process of establishing the new lending code policies began a few years ago when a committee consisting of staff from different KU libraries was formed. This committee looked at problems and concerns regarding the previous lending code. The committee made recommendations to the Senate Libraries Committee. The 15-member committee, which included students and faculty, reviewed the first committee's recommendations and made changes it felt necessary. People who have a history of returning library materials late may actually benefit from the change, Simmons said. The library normally allows students who rack up extensive library fines one chance in four years to have their fines reduced by half. "In the past, students could only get their fines reduced once in a four-year period," Simmons said "But on Aug. 1, the records of students who have had their fines reduced were wiped out." "Anyone can avoid fines as long as they bring their books back," Simmons said. This will give students who have already used their chances a clean slate, Simmons said. But she said she hoped habitual offenders would be affected by the new code. But some students said they didn't understand why people had such a hard time returning their library materials. "It is not that big of a deal," said Travis Buzzell, Manhattan sophomore. "I check books all of the time that I only use for a couple of days. Then I return them." Revised Library Policies - Overdue notices will be issued 10 days after the book is late. - Overdue long-term materials will have a $5 fine after 30 days, followed by a 50 cent charge per day, with a maximum charge of $15. - If the library is closed on the last day of the grace period and the book is returned, the borrower is not fined. The maximum fine for overdue long-term, short-term and recalled books will be $15. ■ Fines on reserve books borrowed less than a week will be $1 per hour, per item. Late returns of reserves on loan for a week or longer will be result in a $2-per-day fine. Borrowers can recall a book when the item has been on loan for one week Two women report rapes over weekend PROFILE By Carlos Tejada Kansan staff writer Two unrelated rapes - one of a KU student, the other of a Lawrence resident - were reported to Lawrence police over the weekend. The first rape occurred sometime late Saturday night in Burcham Park, police said. They said an 18-year-old Lawrence resident was walking alone in the park after spending the day with an acquaintance. As she was walking down a trail near the Kansas River to exit the park, an unknown male drove up to her in a van. The woman told police the male exited the van through the side door, grabbed her and pulled her inside. He drove her back to the park, where he dragged her out of the van and raped her. Police said she then ran home and called police. She was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital for treatment and released. Although the woman told police she did not know what park she was in, police assume from the woman's description of the park that she was in Burcham Park. Police estimated the time of the rape between 11 p.m. Saturday and 1 a.m. Sunday. Police have no suspects and still are investigating the case. Police said the student filed the report but didn't want to press charges. The second rape occurred sometime between 3:15 and 4:15 a.m. Sunday, police said. They said an 18-year-old KU student was out drinking with friends Saturday night. Afterwards, a male acquaintance drove her home to Olver Hall. But, police said, he then drove the student, who was intoxicated, to his residence on the 400 block of Graystone Drive. He took her to his apartment and raped her, police said. Neither rape is connected to the two July raps on the northwest side of Lawrence, said Sgt. Rick Nickell of the lawrence police. He also said a total of 18 rapes had been reported in Lawrence in 1994 so far. Nickell said students could take steps to avoid becoming a rape victim. "If you're going to go out and party, you need to go out with a group," he said. "And if you're going to drink, you need to be careful you're not going to drink in excess. It wouldn't hurt to have a person in the group make sure everybody gets home, either." 1980 Jennie Zeiner / KANSAN The new dean of the law school, Michael Hoeflich, began his job at KU on July 1. Law dean to promote positive aspects Editor's note: This is the third of five stories that will appear this week profiling KU's five new deans. By Colleen McCain Kansanstaffwriter Michael Hoeflich believes the University of Kansas law school is on the right track. Hoeflich says the tough times have passed, and the law school should only improve in the coming years. Hoehfilf became dean of the law school July 1 after former dean Robert Jerry became the Herbert Herrch Staff of Excellence in Law at the Cecil C. Humphreys School of Law at Memphis State University. "The school has been through hard times in recent years, but I think we have put them behind us," Hoefflich said. "I think my job is to make a good school even better." Hoeffle, who was offered the dean's position after a five-month selection process, previously New Leadership served as dean of the law school at Syracuse University for six years. Prior to that, the Yale law school graduate worked on Wall Street as an attorney. "He is the first dean to be hired from outside the University in more than 50 years," Meyer said. "I'm glad that he doesn't bring with him the baggage associated with the law school's past problems." Keith Meyer, associate dean for academic affairs, served as the chairman of the dean search committee. He said that Hoeflich brought a fresh perspective to the law school. Most notable among the law school's past problems was the firing of tenured professor Emil Tonkovich for sexual harassment and moral turpitude. However, Meyer said that problems such as those associated with Tonkovich were in the past. "We can't change the past, but we can focus on the future," Meyer said. "There's been more emphasis in the press on the problems that we've had, and it's time to change that," he said. Hoefflich said he would move beyond past problems by promoting the positive aspects of the school. Among Hoeflich's goals are increasing diversity in the student body and faculty and expanding programs in international trade law. "I don't see any major structural problems within the school," Hoefflich said. "I just want to see the school continue to improve." Likewise, Meyer said that he didn't expect Hoeflich to make any major changes. "I don't think that he comes here with an agenda." Meyer said. "I think his job requires more fine-tuning than revamping." Hoefflich said he planned to improve the law school's fund-raising process. "I want to bring more alumni back to the school and get them involved," Hoeflich said. "I also will work hard to make graduates feel happy with the school when they leave so that they will support us in the future." Hoefflich, who originally is from New York, said he planned to remain at KU to see the results of these changes. "This is my first time in Kansas, but I hope I'm here to stay," Hoeflich said. "I don't plan on moving again." Fiske Guide gives KU four stars yet again By David Wilson Kansan staffwriter For the 10th year in a row, KU has received a four-star rating for its aca demic programs from the 1995 Fisk Guide to Colleges. And KU's party crown remains just as polished: Below the four five-point stars next to to the word "academics" are four little telephones next to the word "social." Our priorities, it would seem, are exactly where they should be. "Kansas students know how to study and know how to have fun," editors of the guide say in their introduction to the section on KU. KU administrators say the rating was just what they had expected. But, Ambler said, the evaluation of KU in the Fiske guide was more important than the stars. "I'm not surprised that we retained that rating," said David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs. "The Fiske guide is used by lots of students looking for a college," he said. Rather than just glance at the stars, he said, "They're going to read the narrative. And I'm really pleased about what they said about KU." Chancellor Del Shankel said the four-star rating was a tribute to faculty, staff and students. "I was very pleased," he said. "It's nice to see that the University hasn't fallen apart since I took over." Not only has it not fallen apart, but it remains at the top of the Big Eight. No other school in the Big Eight received a four-star rating for academics. Missouri, Oklahoma, Nebraska and Colorado received three-star ratings. Editors of the guide say standout programs in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences are English, history, foreign languages, chemistry and philosophy. Lower-rated programs listed were economics, HPER (Health, Physical Education and Recreation), math and Western Civilization. The evaluation is peppered with quotes from students identified only by grade. One student said Lawrence was the "liberal intellectual hot-spot of the Midwest." Athletics at KU aren't bad either, the guide says. "In the 1992-93 season, Kansas became the only university in NCAA history to win a major college bowl game, play in the College World Series and appear in the NCAA Final Four basketball tournament." Five-year trend continues; fewer students choose life in residence halls Renovations to help attract upperclass students to halls The number of students living in the residence halls has decreased again this year. By Ashley Miller Kansan staff writer It's dropped by about 300 people, said,Fred McElhenie, assistant director of student housing. However, McElhenie said that the Jayhawker Towers and scholarship halls, also in the Department of Student Housing, were full. The towers have 792 residents, while the scholarship halls have about 450 residents. There is awaiting list for both hasaid. The final numbers for 1994 are not available yet because students are still signing housing contracts, he said. "The number of freshmen has increasingly declined even though enrollment in general has increased," he said. McElhenie said there were a number of reasons for the migration from the residence halls. McElheneil said this created a problem because the target market for the residence halls was the freshman class. Upperclassmen, transfer students and graduate students do not want to live in the residence halls because the system does not meet their needs, he said. "That's why the towers are popular," McEhlenie said. Mike White, Overland Park junior agreed that the residence halls were not adapted to upperclassmen life. "After a while, it gets to be a cramped space," White said. "In many cases, it's noisy from all of the different people living there. Sometimes the people that live there don't have respect for the property that everyone shares." McElhenie said the buildings themselves were another reason students did not want to live in the residence halls. Since most of the residence halls were built in the early 1950s, McElhre he said they were not modern enough for students. Brian Kruse, Rose Hill junior, said expenses kept him from living in the residence halls this year. Room and board costs were $3,384 for the 1994-1995 school year, up about 3.2 percent from last year. "By choosing an apartment over a dorm, I've found that I'm able to save money," Kruse said. Frances Pickett, St. Louis. Mo., freshman, said she liked residence Mel Sandfort, complex director of Lewis and Templin Halls, said the second floor of Lewis had been closed to accommodate the decrease in residents. She said the decrease gave the staff a chance to create a stronger, closer-knit community. hall life. "We will have to renovate to maintain our base." McElhene said. McEllenie said Lewis, Templein and McColm Halls were not full. McElhenie said no dates had been set to begin renovations because a bond issue had not been raised. He said the department was planning to renovate the residence halls in hopes of attracting students to the residence halls. Renovations would include turning the rooms into two or three bedroom suites with a private bath for each suite. "I like the people on the floor, meeting people from different parts of the country and meeting people with different majors," she said. More vacancy The following is a list of numbers of students living in the residence halls for the past five years: 1990—3,900 residents 1991-3,650 residents 1992-3.350 residents 1993-3,350 residents 1994 — 3,050 residents (approx.) Source: Department of Student Housing KANSAN 4A Wednesday, August 24.1994 OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN COLUMNIST CARSON ELROD Accept your neighbors, even the scary ones Neighbors can be one of life's greatest annoyances, but they are essential to the college experience. Neighbors are part of college life, just like dorms and people who say "Oh yeah, I really know what you mean." The neighbor is a phenomenon that can be a blessing or a curse depending on the neighbor. There are many different categories of neighbors to be on the lookout for. I try to be the "Supercool" neighbor. This means that I go out of my way to make things work. I try to introduce myself, communicate that I will be living next to them and usually take them a bag of Oreos. This sets up an environment conducive to comfortable co-existence. (It breaks the ice.) Commonly, in the dorms you will run into the "Hi, I'm a permanent attachment to your room" neighbor. These neighbors are some of the tamest, but can often become rather annoying. They will know you're home like a cat knows when a can of food is being opened. They will be at your place in less than a jiffy to make sure that any thought of homework you might have had is completely destroyed. You can rid yourself of these neighbors by becoming the "Mooch" neighbor and asking them for money every time they step into your room. "Hi, great to see you. Do have a ten spot for me?" "Mooch" neighbors transcend the dorms and find their way to everyone sooner or later. Beware of the "Mooches" because they will disguise themselves as the cute and innocent "Friendly borrower." "Could I borrow some more cookies? Can I borrow some detergent? Might I borrow your car? Do you think I could borrow your girlfriend?" But one day you will wake up naked on the cold floor, with a puddle of drolw as your only possession, and realize something isn't right. In any living space you can run into the "Scary neighbor." This is the neighbor that you see rarely and hear often. You might be sitting in your room and hear through the plywood wall a small explosion followed by a loud yelp of "It worked! It worked! Enough with these chimpanzees! Now for that nambay-pamby cookie-giving neighbor of mine." Should you encounter the "Scary neighbor," any of the pawn shop owners here in town would be pleased to show you a lovely line of firearms to maximize your Second-Amendment rights. Often you will have the "Party-time" neighbors. These neighbors rage until dawn daily. They may be fine during the day when theyhibernate,but at five in the morning,when you are lying in bed mouthing the words to the thirty-fifth playing of "Hey Ladies,"you wish that you could go upstairs,make your way through the barricade of empty kegs and tell them the Beastie Boys are asleep in L.A. Finally, there are my neighbors. Cindy Crawford, Elle McPherson and Niki Taylor really liked the Oreos. No, really. They want me to be in their next Sports Illustrated shoot. The truth is my neighbor introduced himself by telling me he was going to "kick my ass" if it didn't turn my music down. At least he's not an introvert. Needless to say, I fed his housewarming gift to a John Deere power mulcher. Neighbors should be recognized for what they are; neighbors. They have their lives to live just like you do yours. We can't always be thrilled with them. However, living together isn't that hard if you are patient and understand that they are trying to get through this whole thing just like you are. The potential for friendship is there. Neighbors can turn out to be an integral part of surviving college. However, if you don't watch your step, they may injure you. Carson Eldrod is a Topeka junior majoring in history and theater. VIEWPOINT NAACP's former director jeopardized group's integrity Executive director of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, Benjamin Chavis, Jr.. was dismissed by the board of the nation's oldest civil rights organization for what Chairman William Gibson termed "conduct Chavis himself has made that point in an attempt to defend himself. But the use of NAACP funds could only exacerbate its financial situation. Such BENJAMIN CHAVIS, JR. He claims he tried to save the NAACP by paying off his accuser. To truly save the group he should have inimical to the best interests of the association." resigned. The most controversial of Chavis' actions was the misappropriation of $332,400 of the organization's money in the out-of-court settlement of an impending sexual harassment suit, an action critics have charged was one of many costly decisions Chavis has made without consulting the board. Chavis contends that such a lawsuit would have severely damaged the reputation of the NAACP and that any court settlement would have far exceeded the amount of the out-of-court settlement to which he agreed. In the interests of the NAACP, he settled the dispute using the association's money, and such action was in no way inappropriate, he reasoned. However, the NAACP was said to be in the red prior to Chavis' tenure as its executive director. action would only serve to further harm the economic situation of the association. Indeed, had Chavis truly had the best interests of the NAACP in mind, he should have stepped down immediately after the sexual harassment charges were leveled against him. He should have declared that the charges had the potential to cause significant harm to the association's moral authority and its integrity and that he could not carry out his duties as executive director while fending off such accusations. Following his resignation, he could then have focused his attention on the sexual harassment case, while the moral and financial integrity of the NAACP was in no way jeopardized. Decisive and selfless action in the form of Chavis'resignation upon revelation of the sexual harassment charges would have been to the benefit not only of Chavis himself, but also of the NAACP and the whole civil rights movement. MICHEAL PAUL FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD KANSAN STAFF STEPHEN MARTINO Editor CHRISTOPH FUHRMANS Managing editor JEN CARR Business manager TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser CATHERINE ELLSWORTH Systems coordinator CAMERON DEATH Retail sales manager JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser News ... Sara Bennett Editorial ... Donella Heime Campus ... Mark Martin Sports ... Brian James Photo .. Daron Bennett Melissa Lacey Features ... Traci Carl Planning Editor ... Susan White Design ... Noah Mueller Assistant to the editor .. Robbie Johnson Business Staff Campus mgr ... Todd Winters Regional mgr ... Laura Guth National mgr ... Mark Mastro Coop mgr ... Emily Gibson Special Sections mgr ... Jen Perrier Production mgrs ... Holly Boren ... Regan Overy Marketing director ... Alan Stiglic Creative director ... John Carton Classified mgr ... Heather Niehaus 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 Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Karsan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. THE U.S. CONSIDERS BLOCKADING CUBA... SENATE REPUBLICANS HEOD UDK 94 CRIME BILL HEALTH CARE REFORM Matt Hood / KANSAN WE SHOULD CONSULT THE BLOCKADE EXPERTS Crime bill would put prisons in perspective So Bill Clinton and his congressional cronies want a crime bill. eh? You may be interested in reading some of the changes brought about by this bill. If you watch as much television as I do, you may have seen the world renowned crime expert, Charlton Heston, warning that the bill creates a loophole through which criminals can escape any mandatory sentence. What Heston does not tell you is that the only people eligible for such treatment are nonviolent felons, many of them incarcerated for possession or sales of certain drugs. But under Title V of the bill any person convicted of a "serious" violent crime who has two prior convictions of either "serious" drug offences or Several weeks ago after watching four men on a national news show bicker over the bill, I became curious. Surely, there was more to it than the assault weapons ban or expansion of capital crimes. Several hours later, after a few phone calls and a trip to the library, I hunched over a 77-page summary of the bill. Such a change in the law reverses a trend in U.S. drug war tactics which had previously sent peace-loving pot heads to the pen to the tune of one in six federal inmates. COLUMNIST COLUMNIST DAVE HULL "serious" violent offenses or any combination thereof will automatically quality for the grand prize of mandatory life imprisonment. What exactly constitutes a serious drug offense? I'm afraid the bill's summary does not say, perhaps possession of a firearm and an illegal narcotic, or maybe selling or possession with the intent to sell such a substance. In addition to tackling the problem of repeat offenders, the bill has an answer for those pesky judges who have been crying prison overcrowding with increasing frequency. The plan is really rather simple, although it probably won't win the approval of Amnesty International. Overcrowding would be a thing of the past under the new plan. Congress would investigate the feasibility of converting three recently closed military bases into prisons. And, as if that weren't enough, Congress would further eliminate the possibility of overcrowding by prohibiting federal courts from holding prison or jail overcrowding unconstitutional, except where an individual inmate proves that the crowding causes the infliction of cruel and unusual punishment. Another provision will eliminate ceilings for the number of inmates in many prisons. This part is retroactive. Without a doubt, it will lift a great burden for states with overcrowding problems. Another bold move in the crime bill is the provision authorizing the removal from federal correctional facilities of anything that increases strength or fighting ability of inmates. Congress should be commended for its efforts. Perhaps one day it will muster up the courage to strip violent offenders of a right that millions of law abiding Americans don't even have—health care. Dave Hull is a Wichita senior majoring in history and philosophy. COLUMNIST Figures and facts aren't everything For many of us, getting an education is a process of accumulating facts. We spend hours memorizing charts, equations and molecular structures in order to pass the class, get the hours and earn a piece of paper that says we have an education. Facts are important, but an education is made up of more than just information. The most important aspect of an education is beyond the simple data we absorb in class. It is in understanding the underlying reasons behind the information we hear If you were a student of physics, you would learn about Newton's three laws. You might take these laws and come to the conclusion that the universe is a system of orderly laws. To some, an education stops here. But this is only the start of an education. Someone fully educated would be able to answer the question, "Why is the universe like this?" Some might jump up at my examples and say, "There is no answer to those questions!" That may be true, but I think some hide behind that statement so they do not have to make the effort to look. That is the tragic flaw in most people's education. Many do not take the time to look for the answers to the big questions: Why is there pain and suffering in the world? Is there a God? Answers to these questions are important because they give our lives meaning. In fact, knowing the answers to these questions is more important than knowing the facts that generate them. This is because the answers affect us in more profound ways. You say the amount of energy and matter in the universe is constant — big deal! However, if the universe is governed by a loving God, the implications can change my life. One reason people do not search for the deeper answers is the way our educational system works today. We simply are not confronted with deep questions in our classes because the answers cross the line of separation of church and state. Too many people take refuge behind the First Amendment so they don't have to search. The First Amendment does not mean that we cannot search on our own. There are a lot of places to search for the answers to questions like these. You could take advantage of Spiritual Awareness Week (Sept. 19-22), or go to church with a friend. Take advantage of the resources at your disposal and search for the answers that are not on the final. HUBIE David Zimmerman is a Wichita senior majoring in communication studies. 3 BUCKS, BUDDY. OKIE DOKIE. NO PUISON ALLOWED. HAM... You MUST BE... ASPIRING POLYGAMIST! AND YOU MUST BE... ULTIMATE SIT-UP PATSY! JAMISON! HUBIE! HEY BUDDY, YOU STIFFED ME A DOLLAR. I HAVEN'T SEEN YOU SINCE HIGH SCHOOL! WOW! ICA GH By Greg Hardin JAMSON! HUBIE! HEY BUDDY, YOU STIFFED ME A DOLLAR. I HAVEN'T SEEN YOU SINCE HIGH SCHOOL! WOW I CAH GH CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 5A Students face another tuition increase Next fall, KU students may be shouldering yet another tuition increase. By David Wilson Kansan staff writer The Kansas Board of Regents in June approved a 7 percent tuition hike for both resident and non-resident students. Residents would pay $883, or $58 more than this spring's semester. Non-residents would pay $3,742, or $245 more. The tuition hike is subject to approval by the Kansas Legislature, which will vote on the matter in the spring session. Marvin Burris, associate budget director for the Regents, said the legislature would most likely approve the increase. ask the legislature to send 2 percent of the increase directly to the University of Kansas to buy instructional equipment, such as computers and laboratory equipment. The other 5 percent would be used to finance general operation of the University. Also in their June meeting, the Regents decided to The proposed hike comes on the heels of a Regents recommendation for a five-percent tuition increase for residents and a 13-percent increase for non-residents that went into effect this semester. There are two reasons for the tuition hikes that have plagued students almost every year since the mid-1980s, said Eakin. Lindy Eakin, KU's financial director, said returning money to the University may make students feel better about the tuition increase. The first reason: In the past, KU's tuition lagged far behind its five peer schools, which are universities with similar enrollments and demographics used for comparison studies. The tuition increases are meant to bring KU closer to its peers. Wednesday, August 24,1994 But the gap is closing. Students in that state are in the position of having to pay more for tuition at their own state schools than they would as non-residents at KU, he said. Unhappy legislators from the other states said the education paid for by Kansas taxpayers was being given away, Eakin said. The second reason for the tuition increases: Over the years, the Kansas Legislature has funded a smaller and smaller percentage of KU's budget. Eakin said, the legislature currently funded about 60 percent of the budget and that the other 40 percent was funded by tuition. In the past, the legislature had funded higher percentages of the budget. "We're not the bargain we used to be, but we're not absurdly below market level." Eakin said. New brochures will explain KU dating policy By Jennifer Freund Kansan staffwriter Students and faculty involved in a romantic relationship may want to read a new brochure to be distributed this fall concerning the University's new consensual relations policy. While the brochures are not available to students yet, the text is ready to go, said Jeannette Johnson, assistant to the executive vice chancellor and member of the consensual relations brochure consultation group. Johnson said that the committee designed the brochure to be user friendly and that it is in a question and answer format. The brochure will inform people what to do if they are in a prohibited relationship, and what to do if a person would like to report other people for being in a prohibited relationship. Students are not allowed to date professors or faculty who have grading power over them. Johnson said that a person who wished to report a suspicious relationship should either talk with the faculty member involved, or should report the situation to the dean or the chair of the department of that particular class. From there, the dean or chairman would reprimand the faculty member involved. If that did not resolve the issue, the chair or dean should report the relationship to the office of academic affairs. "The office of academic affairs may choose to discipline the person with anything form a verbal reprimand to the most serious discipline, dismissal," she said. While Johnson was supportive of the new policy, some students did not think it was necessary. But many faculty still insist that some at KU do need dating guidance. "We're old enough that we don't need a baby sitter," Chris Martin, Wichita senior said. "Unless the brochure has some really good points, I don't think that it would change my mind." "The consensual relationship task force raised the issue of regulating the behavior of people, but we said that employers can set conditions of employment," said, Sandra Wick, assistant director of the honors program. "People have other restrictions like a dress code or a time clock." James Taylor, professor of social welfare, agreed that a consensual relations policy, as well as a brochure explaining it, was not invading peoples' rights. "When people are in a power relationship, that situation may lead to harassment," he said. "Rules are needed like in any other government operation." $10.00 off (Reg.$18.00) or 20% off Perms & Color First time Haircut and Blow-dry only PLEASE CALL 749-0771 Standing Ovation, Inc. Hairstyling, Skin Care & Manicuring Offer good only with Mary 1109 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Work 913*749+0717 Home 913*833+4238 Bring in this coupon & SAVE. Skates Ravensid $12 per day Baseball Softball New Shipment 1994 skates just arrived Golf sets from $49.99 Used ball gloves from $4.99 PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS Just Look at ALL of These Ways YOU Can Save Some Cash Used clubs from $1.00 KU 1029 Massachusetts, phone 841-PLAY We pay CASH for USED sports equipment THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN C A R D Valid Through July 31, 1995 NCCS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 119 Stauffer-Flint Available at these locations: UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP M 1116 W 23rd Jayhawk Bookstore KU KU BOOKSTORES - Second level in the Kansas Union Bookstore - First Level in the Burge Union Bookstore Restaurants & Bars BLIMPIE'S SUBS AND SALADS BONANZA AMIGO'S W 23rd·842-1620 BUY 1 6" Cold Sub Sandwich, get 1 for 79c Get the daily special prices every day of the week DUNKIN 2329 S. Iowa St. *842-1200* $3.99 Freshstakes Food Bar DOMINO'S PIZZA 1420 Crescent Rd.-Lawrence, Ks. 66044 25% OFF Any Delivery Order(not valid with any other offer) DOS HOMBRES BUY1 Menu Item, and get the Second One at 1/2 Price 1006 Massachusetts*843-0561 10% off any purchase of $2.50 or more DRAKE'S SNACK SHOP ESPRESS O'HOUSE 10 F. 9th St. Q12 8203 $1.00 OFF Any Purchase Over $3.50(Includes food and coffee drinks) $1.00 OFF Sandwiches and Dinners Before 6 P.M., Tuesday 401 N 2nd:842-0377-BUY a cheeseburger with fries at reg. price, get second for $1.00 Mon thru Fri 4:9n 624 W 12h-84h-2310 FREE Cup of Our House Coffee (Certified Organically Grown) with Avn Meal Purchase FULL MOON CAFE GLASS ONION IMPERIAL GARDEN JOHNNY'S TAVERN PERKINS FAMILY RESTAURANT WED. MAY 28, 2019 8:30 AM 2907 W 6th·841-1688·FREE Soft Drink (with FREE refills) $1.00 OFF Any Entree, Anytime, 24 hours a day One Pizza with One Topping $2.60 plus tax Carry Out Only PIZZA SHOPPE 601 KonaId842.0600 PIZZA SHUTTLE Med Pizza $5.95, 2 for $9.95; Lg Pizza $7.95, 2 for $13.95 PYRAMID PIZZA 14th & Ohio>842-3232>$4.00 $m, add, tops 50; Md.$0.60, add, tos 75%; $8.00 $L, add, tops 1.10); Carry Out Only RUNZA 2700 Iowa·749-2615·FREE Medium Drink with Purchase of 1628 W3rd/824-8185-1101 W7th/843-0936-2930 Haskell Ave./842-5533-3Hardshell T's for/c9 (NO LIMIT) TACOJOHN'S WEST COAST SALOUN 2222 Iowa St. +841-2739 $1.50 Off Anv Sandwich Retail/Merchandise ATHLETE'S FOOT BARB'S VINTAGE ROSE ATHLETIC'S POOL 914 Massachusetts+841-6966 15% OFF Regularly Priced Shoes BOBBI'S BEDROOM 0400 Love 840 7279 20% OFF Entire Inventory (sale items excluded) CENTRAL DATA 731 Massachusetts-b43-4191*15% OFF All Apparel + FREE FREE T-SHIRT-T-Purchase Over $25.00 FRANCIS SPORTING GOODS GENERAL NUTRITION CENTER CLEOPATRA'S CLOSET 743 Massachusetts*749-4664 425 New Hampshire*843-3282*$2.50 Discount for Diagnostic, Upgrade Labor. System Cleaning on IBM Compatibles 20% OFF Any Purchase Over $20.00 Excluding Rentals JAYNAWK BOOKSTORE 15% Of Any item (excludes sale items) *743 Massachusetts*-749-4664 JAYNAWK BOOKSTORE 15%OFF Any Pro-Performance & 24-Hour Diet Item 10% OFF All Academically Priced Computer Software 1420 Crescent Rd*843-3826 10% OFF Any Reference or Study Aid JAYHAWK BOOKSTORE JAYHAWK TROPICAL FISH 10% OFF Any Typewriter, Printer Ribbon or Printer Ink Refill 846 Illinois, Suite D+842-5950=20% OFF Whisper Brand PowerFilters, and All Other Brand Undergravel Filters JOCKS NITCH 840 Massachussetts*842-2442 15% OFF All Footwear, Excluding Sale Items KANSAS SPORTS CLUB KANSAS SPORTS CLUB 837 Massachusetts+842-2992 20% OFF KU Sweatshirts KANAS AND BURGE UNIONS-864+4640 Ari Size Book Exam (Blue Book) 5g KU BOOKSTORE KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS-864-4640 $5.00 OFF Anv Jawhack Clothing or Hat Over $20.00 KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS+864-4640 10% Off Any Art, Engineering or Drafting Supply KIZER-CUMMINGS Josephuette:740 15% OFF Non-Sale Gold Chains LUFNINE ONE YOUR PHOTO 2340 S. Iowa*842-8564+30% OFF C41 Process (Not Valid LAWRENCE ONE HOUR PHOTO MERLE NORMAN 9th & New Hampshire-841-5324 10% OFF All Skin Care Products MIRACLE VIDEO 910 I N 2nd/841-8903-1910 Haskell Ave. Suite 1/841-7504 $1.00 OFF Movie Rental Limit one per visit) NATURAL WAY 820 Massachusetts*841-0100*20% OFF All Cotton T-Shirts Men and Women's (Organic Cotton, Green Cotton, and Received Cotton) 740 Massachusetts*843-3933 15% OFF Any Regular Priced Item PHILIPSON Lawrence, Ks*865-0692 10% OFF All Sales RECYCLED MUSIC CENTER 716 Massachusetts-b41-1762-%0F OFF (CD: Tapes, Video, Games) Tuesday & 15% More in Carton on Buy Backs RECYCLED SOUNDS 622 W 12th St. *841-9475*-$2.00 OFF Any One CD, Tape, or LP Length Value Greater than $5.00) RENTCO USA 1741 Massachusetts*749-1605 25% OFF All Monthly Rentals SHARK'S SURF SHOP 15% OFF Any Non-Sale Purchase (excluding Stussy) VIDEO BIZ SPRINGMAID/WAMSUTTA 1025 N. 3rd*832-1100 10% OFF Any Purchase 832 Iowa*749-3507+2 for 1 Video Rental Monday - Thursday (limit one per day) Services BRADY OPTICAL B.C. AUTO & CYCLE 510 N 6th-841 -6955 10% OFF All Parts 737 Massachussetts+842-0880 15% OFF Complete Eyeslure Purchase CHIROPRACTIC HEALTH CENTER Initial Consultation at No Charge (Usually $30-$70) CRANDON & CRANDON OPTOMETRIST 1019 Massachusetts>b43-3844+$25.00 OFF All Fashion Eyeglass Frame Valid with PRESCRIPTION Lenses Only EUROPEAN TAN 1601 W23rd-841-6232-F2.2 Tans with Purchase of 7 Tans for $20 and FREE Trial Formula One (1/customer) MANETAMERS $3.00 OFF Haircut or $5.00 OFF Chemical Service PLANNED PARENTHOOD 1001 E 47th St*832-0281*25%.OFF Initial or Annual R.C.'*STAUDIM BARBERY* 1033 Massachusetts* 749-5363 Any Haircut or Hairstyle $.5.00 SPECTRUM OPTICAL 4 E, 7th St •841-1113 $35.00 OFF Lenses and Frames w/ FREE Adjustment TWIN OAKS GOLF COURSE K-10 & County Rd. 1057*(913)542-1747 Buy One Small Bucket of Balls, Get One Small Bucket FREE ULTIMATE TAN 2449 Iowa St. *842-4949-1 FREE Session with the Purchase of a 9 Session Package (Save $5.50) UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 119 Stauffer-Flint-864-4358 20% OFF Any Private Classified Ad 6A Wednesday, August 24,1994 "Your Book Professionals" Jayhawk Bookstore "At the top of Naismith Hill" Hrs: 8-7 M-Th., 8-5 Fri. 9-5 Sat. 12-4 Sun. 843-3826 Rings Fixed Fast! Kizer Cummings jewelers 749-4333 833 Mass•Lawrence, KS PENGUIN BEDS DESKS BOOKCASES Everything But Ice 936 Mass. THE HARBOUR LIGHTS Now a full service bar after 57 years of downtown tradition 1051 Massachusetts Downtown The Etc. Shop TM 928 Mass. 843-0611 Ray-Ban A PRODUCT OF BANUSCH & LOMB DURANTE Hairport 50% off all services 842-1978 925 Iowa Hillcrest Shopping Center valid only with a student ID The Etc. Shop 928 Mass.Downtown Parking in the rear Why rent a TV? Buy a TV from us at the beginning of the semester and we will buy it back from you at the end of the semester. (or whenever you no longer need it) Come in and ask us for details. Lawrence Pawn & Shooter Supply 718 New Hampshire 843-4344 HEALTHY MALE? Receive upto $250 IMTCI, a pharmaceutical research company in Lenexa, KS is seeking men 18-40 years of age, to participate in a research study. You must be able to complete 2 overnight stays at our clinic. For more information on how to qualify CallUMTCI 1-800-669-4682 of 599-4100 NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN International Medical Technical Consultants, Inc. 16300 College Boulevard-Lenexa, KS 66219 Senators threaten roadblock to stop Clinton's crime bill The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Republican senators, threatening to thwart a $30 billion anti-crime bill on a procedural vote, demanded yesterday that Democrats accept changes in the House-passed measure. President Clinton appealed anew for bipartisan cooperation. Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole, R-Kansas, brushed aside Clinton's call to "continue the bipartisan spirit that was established in the House," accusing the president of an "11th hour" bid for GOP support. The bill cleared the House 235-195 Sunday, with 46 Republican votes. after 10 grueling days of behind-the-scenes negotiations. But Republican opponents stood by their promise to subject the measure to a budgetary "point of order"—that financing provisions technically violate the Congressional Budget Act. The threat to throw a procedural roadblock in the way of passage raised a specter of renewed political gridlock mirroring the battle in the House. Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, said Republicans want to "cut back on the fat" and get the "tough on crime provisions into the bill." The pending crime bill would authorize $13.45 billion for law enforcement, including an $8.8 billion contribution to a program with the goal of putting 100,000 more police on the streets; $9.85 billion for prisons and $6.9 billion for crime prevention, including drug courts. The bill also would ban 19 types of assault-style firearms and scores of others with similar characteristics, allow life sentences for some thirdtime felons and expand the federal death penalty to more than 60 crimes, including fatal drive-by shootings, carjacking deaths and major drug trafficking, even when the defendant is not directly linked to any specific death. 泳手 自行车 跑步 KANSASTRIATHLON AND SWIMCLUB UPCOMINGRACES Informational Meeting Thursday 25 August Jayhawk Room in Union 7:30-8:30 p.m. Swim Practice start 30 August 28 Aug Nemaha Ridge Triathlon; Edmond, OK 1.5K Swim 40 K Bike 10 K Run 10 Sept Wildcat Sprint Triathlon; Manhattan, KS 600 Yd. Swim 12 Mile Bike 5K Run 11 Sept N.E. Missouri Triathlon; Kirksville, MO 3/4 Mile Swim 18 Mile Bike 5 Mile Run 24 Sept ITU World Cup Duathlon; Dallas TX 5K Run 40 K Bike 5K Run For more information call Sean Rollin at 865-2731 VISA MasterCard DUI COVER Accepted Alvin's - Check Cashing ·Post Office ·Carry Outs - Deli •Bakery •Videos Cost Kutter IGA 843-2313 9th & Iowa PEPSI Dr Pepper Dr Pepper PEPSI PDr Pepper PDr Pepper YOU DESERVE KOEN 499 MOUDER KDEM Limit 1 w/$10 in other purchases HAZELTON LAKE PARK Ben & Jerry's Ice Cream 2/$300 pints 16 gal. Keg Beer 3999 Call 843-2313 Lowest Price in Town! BASICchanges SALE Quick-Change Artists. X --- $11.99 to $39.99 Gold Embosed Wood Frame. Reg. $14.99 to $49.99. EXTRA VALUE 40.0F $5.99 to $9.99 Black Gold or Clear Acrylic Poster Frames. Reg. $9.99 to $15.99 KING $11.99 to $47.99 Baroque Mud-Gold Wood Frame, Reg. 16.00 to $59.99 $7.99 to $35.99 Natural Wood Frame. Reg. $9.99 to $44.99. □ $7.99 to $31.99 White or Black Wood Frame. Reg. $9.99 to $39.99. + $1.99 to $47.99 Every frame, every size, every style from our incredible assortment, all 20% off regular price. Reg. $2.49 to $59.99. For a quick change in any room, hang up works by your favorite artists. All of our frames are on sale 20% off Regular prices, so you can showcase little Sarah's latest crayon masterpiece. Our entire selection of artistic prints, posters, portfolios, desk frames and framed graphics are also 20% off. But be quick. This sale will draw a crowd. Pier1 imports Pier1imports CO $15.99 Retro Framed Graphics are charming additions to your home. 5x7" prints in 10x12" wooden frames. Reg. $19.99 for a change $4.80 to $55.20 Our posters come in an extensive collection of styles and sizes, featuring a variety of artists. Reg. $6.00 to $69.00. Love is a beautiful thing A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z back to school hours(through August 28: M-F 9:30-8:30, Sat 9:30-5:30, Sun 12-5 VISA MARSHALWARE DISCOVER Quantities and selections may vary by store. Sale prices good through Saturday, September 3, 1894. $11.99 "Still Life" is a fresh example of our Portfolio Collections, published exclusively for Pier 1. Each portfolio contains six 11x14" prints. Reg. $14.99. VISA MasterCard DISCOVERY UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, August 24, 1994 7 Dillons FOOD STORES Dillons FOOD STORES Program Effective In Shawnee, Lawrence, Topeka And Olathe Areas. Program Effective In Shawnee, Lawrence, Topeka And Olathe Areas IS HELPING OUR SCHOOL EARN IMPORTANT EDUCATIONAL EQUIPMENT FREE! Watch for the GOLD Register Tapes and Start Saving Your Tapes Sept. 1st. Through April 30, 1995 FREE EQUIPMENT FOR SCHOOLS FROM REGISTER TAPES FOR EDUCATION FREE EQUIPMENT FOR SCHOOLS Register Tapes for Education is a trademark of PIE Inc. Copyright © 1991, 1992 PIE Inc. Your School Representative & PTO Will Be Receiving Information Packets. NEW FOR 94 SPALDING STARWARS Classic 1234567890 Incredible REGISTER TAPES FOR EDUCATION FREE EQUIPMENT FOR SCHOOLS Your School Representative & PTO Will Be Receiving Information Packets. Jayhawk Bookstore "Your Book Professionals" "At the top of Nalsmith Hill" Hrs: 7-8 M-Th., 5-8 Fri, 9-5 Sat, 12-4 Sun, 843-3820 ALL STUDENTS $2.00 off green fees with KUID at TPC Orchards Golf Course M-F 3000 W. 15th St. 843-7456 A big head with a hat. GEORGIA CARPET OUTLETS Endorsed by K.U. Association of University Residence Halls. STUDENT ROOM SIZE CARPETS STARTING AT $48 EACH. FREE DELIVERY TO CAMPUS! AUGUST ONLY GCC CARPET OUTLETS We're in LAWRENCE leucine leucine K-Met Leucine Leucine Phone: 841-3838 3000 Iowa Street, Lawrence, KS 1 Block North of K-Mart Mon-Thurs.9am-8pm, Fri.-Sat.9am-6pm,Sun.1-5pm MAJOR CREDIT CARDS 100s Announcements Announcements 108 Personal 112 Business 118 Entertainment 124 Amusement 130 Entertainment 140 Lost and Found Classified Directory Carlos O'Kelly's Tuesday Monday morning $.75 Killian's Red Draws $1.00 Small Chill Con Queso $1.00 Off All Dinner Picados Thursday Weekly Specials "We Care For KU" ATKII For 2 Pajitas Sunday CASH FOR COLLEGE 900,000 GRANTS AVAILABLE. NO REPAYMENTS. EVER. QUALIFY IMEDIATELY. 1-800-231-2435. COMMUTERS 'Self Service Car Pool Exchange' 1 Wednesday Friday and Saturday $15.95 For 2 Faitas 120 Announcements $2.00 Brewhawk Bud Light Tap $1.50 Desserts Tuesday $2.00 Coronas (Not Light) $5.95 Sancho Monterey $.99 Kidras's Meals COMMUTERS: Self Serve Car Pool Exchange Main Lobsey, Kansas Union $1.00 Small Chili Con Queso $2.00 Bloody Marvs 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 707 West 23rd 832-0550 Free dog to a good house 2 years, happy and happy to inhabitate and help Needs a call 748-9088 110 Bus. Personals $2.00 Margaritas on the Rocks $15.95 For 2 Fajitas $1.00 Off All Dinner Chimichangas 100s Announcements "Anonymous Testing" means you do not use your real name when tested. Your test results will be provided to you in person two weeks after your initial visit. Testing includes pre- and post-test counseling. Employment 205 Help wanted 225 Professional 235 Typing Services Anonymous HIV Antibody Testing 1907 105 Personals THE ETC. SILVER 928 Mass. STERLING SHOP JEWELRY Rings, Hoops, Bracelets & Pendants Backpacks, Belt, Jackets, & Purses Bausch & Lomb, Rayban, Killer Loops, 'i', Réco, Sereneget, and Vuarnet HUGE SAMPLE SALE! KU and other colleagues alignate apparel 08-27 15:30 & 08- 21 10:50 pm. ROOMMATES FROM HELI: Have you or a friend had a roommate problem so serious that one of you had to move out? If so, call our researcher collect: (212) -582-589-0, m.-3p. m.-M-F. What? the test for HIV - the AIDS virus Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students What? the test for HIV - the AIDS virus Where? Watkins Health Center When? Mondays Cost? $19 cash (paid at initial visit) How? By Appointment Only 864-9507 STUDENT HEALTH SERV 864-9500 300s Merchandise 305 For Sale 340 Auto Sales 360 Miscellaneous 370 Want to Buy 6 Real Estate 405 Real Estate 430 Roommate Wanted -Kansan Classified: 864-4358- 130 Entertainment FUNDRAISING Choose from 3 different fundraisers lasting either 1 year or 5 years. Enter an account name. Earn $$$ for your group plus personal cash bonuses for yourself. Check out www.fundraising.com NEED A RIDE/RIDER! Use the Self Serve Car Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union. Fregreat-considering adoption? loving families avail. You help select adoptive amity. Confidential/legal-Call A Dream Fulfilled Dlprcion Inc free toll 1-800-565-4593 Since Found: Face plate for car stereo at 9th & Main. Call and give proper identification by leaving a message on my machine. If you correctly ID the dog, take it to your local veterinary. Looking to give away one year old puppy one week ago in West Lawrence to good home. Potty trained. Call Kim or Stepheney. 749-7530 OUR ACADEMIC SUCCESS PART 3: Preparing for exams using your notes to review, predicting exam questions, preparing for different types of tests. FREE! Thursday, August 25, 7-9 pm 4034 Wescoe Presented by the Student Assistance Center TUTORS List your name with you. We refer student impressions to you. Student Assistance Center. WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 133 Strong. YOUR ACADEMIC SUCCESS, PART 31: PREPARING FOR EXAMS using your notes to review, predict exam content, preparing for different types of tests. FREE! Thurs, Aug 25, 7:9pm, 4604 Wescoe. Presented by the Student Assistance Center. 140 Lost & Found By donating your life saving blood plasma WALK-INS WELCOME! FREE POOL DAILY 3-8 pm Bottleneck 3 New Stirrup Maple NABI Biomedical Center 816 W 24th 749-5750 205 Help Wanted $15 Today $30 This week 女 男 NOW HIRING For Little Caesars Pizza locations at 23rd and Louisiana or 15th and KAARN. EARN UP TO $100 HOUR! Drive in person. Drives must have a valid driver's license and drivers license and be at least 18 years old. 2 Editorial Assistants Adams Alumni Center Need a. m. & p. m., dishwasher, cooks a. m. & p. m. Rextable hours, desserts person for Tues., Thurs. & Fri. Apply in person, 1266 Oread Ave. EARN CASH ON THE SPOT University Relations has 15-20 hr. weekly position open immediately to assist Edr editor. 2nd position open immediately to assist Edr editor. 13-15 hr. a week. Positions continue through May 18. Required knowledge of news technology, experience preferred. Salary starts at $5.00/hr. Deadline Aug. 31. For application information call 894-262-6760. Beautician/Barber Part-time Looking for two-part hair stylists who want to earn great money on weekends or evenings. JO.CO. locations: Contact Sally (913) 780-2016. Bucky's Drive in is now taking applications for part-time employment. Flexible hours. 1/2 price on meals. Apply in person between 10-5.5 Lawrence-based, technical publishing company has several part-time (15-20 hours per week) positions including manager of orders, staffing and mailing statements; copying computer disks for inventory; daily mail delivery to and pickup from the post office; inputting subscription orders into a computer; and sorting out returns. Staff must have high volume and working as a team required. Ability to maneuver up to 50 pounds and type 50 wpm preferred. These positions are part of a large workforce. The company helps other areas of the company as needed. Attention Work-Study students; the KU Libraries have several part-time work position positions available. Contact Julie Slusser, 902 Watson Library, 844-361, for more information. R&D Publications, Inc. is an equal opportunity employer concerned with creating a pleasant work atmosphere. If you are looking for an enjoyable work environment with a reliable company, please come by and fill out an application at 1601 West 23rd Street, Suite 200, Lawrence, KS. Back at school and need extra money? Also want flexibility? Avon is for you. Get a 40% discount. Sell to friends or just yourself. Call Chris for more information 832-0925. SHIPPING AND DATA ENTRY ASSISTANTS NEEDED KU Adams Alumni Center is now hiring for part-time banquet server and host positions. Looking for responsible, hard working applicants with 10 years of experience in Orest, caddy corner from the Kansas Union graduate Assistant Position The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center has a quarter-time graduate assistant position available. Qualifications 1. Bachelor's degree required, and enrollment in a course in women and gender studies Kansas, Fall 1942; 2. Experience in working with interests and concerns of women students; 3. Training or experience in facilitating small and large groups; 4. Training or experience in writing letters to teachers. Assistant evidence familiarity with operations and services of one or more of the units of Student Life. Job description available at the Women's Resource Center. Salary $323.00 Position Available. Students are invited to submit a letter application, resume*, and names of two (2) references by 5:00 p.m. Monday, August 29 to Dr. Barbara W. Ballard, Director. The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, 115 Strong Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 60045, (913) 8643552. EO/AA Jon's Notes of Lawrence is now hireing note takers and office assistants for the Fall semester. Pick up an application at Jon's Notes office at the Kansas Union by Friday. Care giver needed for disabled man, Hillcrest area. Mon., Wed. nights 10am-7pm. Minimal work involved, pays $125.50/night. Quite place to study. Must be reliable. 841-1981. CHILD CARE PROVIDER WANTED by faculty to care for warm, bright girl 11, boy 10, 3-6 p.m. (weekend) Weights We Buy, Sell Trade & Consign USED & New Sports Equipment R.D public卫士, Inc. PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS BALLS used weights—.25cents per lb. 1029 Massachusetts phone 841-PLAY The Only Thing Tougher Than Going to Law School Glass Starts Aug. 30 ...is not getting in. T f s Converse All Star Oxford... cool summer classic. KAPLAN TEST PREP 842-5442 NO ONEKNOWSTHE LSAT LIKE Wednesday, August 30,1994 CONVERSE Chuck Taylor ALL STAR 115 StrongHall Choose from this bunch of colors... optical white,off white,black, black monochrome,pine,red or navy. francis 2:00 p.m.- 4:00 p.m. The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center OPEN HOUSE sporting goods, inc. Lowest shoe prices in Lawrence! (Check our Converse™ One Stars, too.) 843-4191 731 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas 86044 CONVERSE --- Low tops $27.99, Hi tops $29.99 Locally owned since 1947. Sponsored by the Emily Taylor for Women's Resource Center For more information contact Reeves Speicher at 804-3692 The staff invites you to drop by for a visit and find out about the fall programs and the services offered by the Center Retreats provided CANOE TRIP LABOR DAY WEEKEND FRIDAY, SEPT. 2 THROUGH SUNDAY, SEPT.4 $50. GETS YOU: •2 DAYS CANOE RENTAL •2 NIGHTS CAMPING •5 MEALS Canoe STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL SUA AT 864-3477 SIDEWINDERS SALOON WEDNESDAY 25 CENT DRAWS ALL BEERS ON TAP FRIDAY $1.50 32 OZ DRAWS ALL BEERS ON TAP SATURDAY $1.50 ANYTHING $1.00 SHOTS COUNTRY AT ITS BEST? AT ITS BEST? 729 NEW HAMPSHIRE OPEN 7PM-2AM 7 DAYS A WEEK E and D Display Group is taking applications for full-time assembly positions on all shifts. Please apply in person Monday thru Friday between 9:00 and 4:00 m. p. 9:10. E 28th. Slavery-Lewrance Lab help/Party pic photographer needed. No experience necessary. Apply at Atr Colors Photo Center. Nanny/Babysitter position and/or job share for Monday, Wednesday, Friday in our home for one newborn. Be responsible; references. Call 843-2340 and leave a message. Loving Nanny required for 4 yr old boy in our home. Mon-Fri, occasional evening. Other off-licenses. NEED SPENDING CAMPAE B.P.I. Building Need Spending CamPAE for a variety of needs today for an appointment 842-6264 Nutritional Program Position Hours: 3-29pm to 8-29pm Duties: Assistance in meal preparation, trans- fusion of ingredients, meal service clean up duties, and minimal paper. Gneida Factory Store now hire MWF mid-day shift. Work 8hrs/day. Pick your own schedule Limited weeks. Apply in person 10-5 daily. Suite 103. Lawrence Riverfront Plaza, 749-6412. Will consider only applicants who are, Responsible, Reliable, Self-Directed and Compassionate. To Schedule an interview contact Rose Cox, R.N. 913-748-5032 or http://www.healthofKansas.org/748-5031. Packer Plastics, the largest plastics manufacturing plant in the U.S., has excellent entry-level opportunities for individuals to work as inspector/packers. These positions are full-time & offer a complete benefits package. Part-time inspection requires a Bachelor's degree in Comp Sci or m.p. of s. 30, m.p. of 11, m.p. apply in Person-Mon.-Fri. at Packer Plastics, Human Resources Dept., 2330 Packer Road. Lawrence, KEO/EMS. Part-time clerical position in medical office. 12-14 hours per week, flexible with class schedules. Send resume to: Lori Hamm, 304 Sharon Drive, Lawrence. KS 66049 Philips 62 ZARCO at 9th & Iowa needs immediate late night help. Inquire within. Preschool Sub Prefer 71, 11:30-18:30 or all day any weekday Jr. or Sr in child related field. Center experience. heptad Stuartine Airel School 142-228 Riverhead Montessori School located in Oakland, CA. Pamela wished to thank all of her panned Wilber is looking for 2 classroom assistants. Hours required: 5pm-7pm Monday-Friday. You will train. Transportation required, call 843-8000. SIRLOIN STOCKADE Nationwide Real Estate Group experience required Apply in person Mon-Fri- 1015 Iowa SPRING BREAK *95*- SELL TRIPS, EARN CASH & GO FREE!!"Student Travel Services is now hiring campus representatives. Lowest rates to tarnamas, Calgary Jasmina and Panama City Beach. Student Assistant Position Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, 115 Strong Hall, has a student position available for admission. Please contact the academic year 94-95 is required. $42.25 hr. Applications available at Women's Center or University Placement Center. Deadline for applications is 5 weeks prior to application. See description available at Women's Center. 864-352-8342 STUDENT CLERICAL ASSISTANT. Deadline: 09/24/99. Salary: $43.4$/hr. Duties include assisting in invoicing, billing & filing of Computer Center billings; maintaining Accounts Receivable records; managing accounting for making daily deposits, recording microcomputer workshop registrations; performing receptionist duties on a fill-in basis; and miscellaneous Business office duties. Must be enrolled in 8 hours at the University of Kansas. Apply to complete a job at OCCREC or 0022 of the Computer Center EO/AA EMPLOYER STUDENT DISTRIBUTION TECHNICIAN Date: 08/29, 10% Salary. $4.35 per hr. Durites include performing bursting and decoiling function; using the delivery can; paper shredding functions; on occasion will assist in receiving shipments, stocking and maintaining inventory figures; using the delivery can; paper shredding functions; on occasion will operate forklift and assist in maintenance; assists in Open Landscape Furniture maintenance; performs duties in common areas; uses personal computer or mainframe software as part of record keeping system. To apply, contact Center in room 202. EO/AA EMPLOYER United Child Development Center is taking applications for nap kits. Hours needed: 10:2-3:0 Apply at UCDC, 946 Vermont St., Lawrence, KS 66044 DUL/TRAFFIC TICKETS OVERLAND PARK-KANSAS CITY AREA CHARLES R. GREEN ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Carter of 3 tree consultation (816) 783-2657. United Child Development Center. 949 Vermont St. is enrolled application applications for children 2- years old and children care available. Call 842-5292 for information. Wanted: Part time teacher for day care 10-15 hrs./week. Exp.Ref. +841/758 COMPUTER SCIENCE INDUCTION Deadline: 09/24/98 5:40 p.m. Salary: $1,100/mo. full-time rate. Duties include programming software for interfacing data communications and networking, assist in development, documentation, and maintenance of existing software systems. Installing communication hardware. Implementing Required Qualifications. Demonstrated ability to bring a programming assignment to successful completion, assembly language programming skills. Preferably enrolled as a student at the University Kansas. Complete job description and application procedures are available. Contact Networking and Telecommunications Services 864-8900, Elswell Road, Lawrence, LA 65043, EOA/EAMLOYER Childcare need for a year old in home, Friday 4:30 noon. Car and references regard- able. 84.90/hour. 84-209-6751 COLLEGE STUDENTS 40.25-11.65 STARTING Local branch of not all "Filling" immediate entry level openings. Flex time schedules. 3-day, eyes. Weekends opt. all majors accepted. For inquiries contact: 0800-797-9958. Domino's Pizza is hiring 10 delivery positions available, two inside positions available. Apply after 4 pm at Domino's Pizza, 9th & IRA Benefits include: free meals, flexible schedule, driver takes cash home nightly, discounted menu. Be willing to work nights & weekends. Should be willing to work nights & weekends. DOORMEN NEEDED Must be friendly, but able to handle confrontation. Call 785-8099; 411-3242 Call 749-5039 - Ask for ZAC United Child Development Center is accepting applications for the position of lead teacher with a focus on early childhood. with an emphasis in Early Childhood or a degree in related field required. Salary based on education and experience. Transcript and 2 work-related references must accompany each application. Send to Director, UCDC, 949 Vermont St., Lawrence, KS 60044 EOE United Child Development Center has immediate openings for full or part time teaching assistants. Call 842-5329 or send to UCDC. EOE. 946 Vermont Lawrence. KS 60044. UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER seeking student bjournes (especially work-study eligible) immediately, who are motivated, familiar with computer technology, literate-able, good communicators, interested in helping others, have wide range of interests, and a sense of humor. Drop by KU info. 400 Kansas University, 216 W. 38th St., who can make KU info their primary work commitment. Deadline is 3 p. Friday, Aug 26. Volunteers needed! Caring people needed to learn basic counseling Information Meetings, 419 Massachusetts University of Maryland Workers needed for all phases of KU home football game concessions; venders, commissaries, warehouse, and supervision. Game day and part-time games are held on Tuesdays, 08/23-08/25, am-4m, pm-4m. gate 30 Memorial Stadium. ZAR CO 66 FOOD PLAZA SEES FULL AND ZAR CO 66 TIME CASHIERS TO WORK ALL SHIPS FOR STORE 1 M SQUARE OF LAWRENCE. MUST BE NEAT. CLEAN AND ENJOY WORKING WITH THE PUBLIC. IF INTERESTED APPLY IN PERSON. 225 Professional Services < Driver Education > offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749 Be heathlier and happier! Provide massage therapy! Student discounts available. Call Anna Lumaria and Laura Pace at 841-1587 cardtard reading. As featured in the U.D.K. and 109 The Lazer. Call Anna Lumaria at 841-1857. BRAXTON B. COPLEY Attorney at Law General Practice Traffic Tickets, Misdemeanors, Landlord/Tenant 719 Massachusetts 749-5333 - FUTONS & FRAMES - ONSALE - BLUE HERON 937 Mass. St. 841-9443 360 Miscellaneous J OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense For free consultation call Rick Frydman, Attorney 823 Missouri 843-4023 TRAFFIC-DUI'S Fake D.I.S & alcohol offences divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of DONALD G. STROLE Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelse 143 East 13th 842-1133 AIRLINE HOTLINE 841-7117 - Thanksgiving and Christmas Plans - ChristmasPlans - Spring Break - Packages - Bus Charters King size waterbed deluxe everything, 12-drawer headboard. Headboard 800-844-1479. - Job Interviews Student Discounts TRAVEL CENTER - Social Events 235 Typing Services Macintosh computer and printer $800.0 w/ program Holland keyboard synthesizer $200.0 Matt 1961-1964 $500.0 - LOWEST FARES Southern Hills Center 1601W. 23rd M-F 9:5-30 Sat. 9:20-3pm Located by Perkins X 300s Merchandise 305 For Sale Refrigerator for sale. Sanyo 3.5 cubic foot. Used for 2 semesters. Good condition. $100. Call 841-7657. SHARP-PC4-500 laptop top, 2 soft drives (no hard drive), new batten and carry case, $400, 842-7890. Quality typing/word processing/indexing. Free estimate. Call 842-7271 after 5pm. WANT YOUR WORK TO GO TO BEST? Put your essay to the test. For anything you need at all, MARK! ME, GRADE is the one to call. 863-2855 Beds, Desks, Bookcase Everything But Ice 906 Mass 10 speed bicycles: Ladies Schwinn, $56; Men's Ross, $98; Excellent condition. Call Steve at 844-373 days; 843-660 evenings. Free dog to a good home. 2 yrs, and 25. Very energetic and happy. Needs a yard. 786-9086. Large full size framing. Oak Shed Bed; non-folding frame. Excellent condition. I101 Call: 641-4642 FOR SALE-NEW Carpeting 11286-850-1324-condition 2, workin' good pool-500. Call 762-792-9500 STUDENTS! I rent a computer, software, and information to a 2 semester. Call 1-800-859-0498 Zenith Laptop (Z281) and Paassonic Printer combine both computer and printer in one, carrying both. Computer and printer are in the same box. Two Schwinn bikes 10 speed 27°. Boys:450, Girls: 783, Call 843 1780. Yamaha Razz motor scooter for sale. Excellent condition. Call Bryan 832-274-274 LAWRENCE BREWER'S SUPPLY 305 E.7TH LAWRENCE, KANSAS 6004 ph.(013)74-YEAST SUPPLY MIRACLE VIDEO FALL ADULT VIDEO CLEARANCE $7.88 910 N. 2nd • 841-8903 19th & Haskell • 841-7504 ****************************************************************************** THE CHAPMAN "QUALITY GOODS FOR HOME BREWING" Used & Curious Goods 731 New Hampshire 841-0550 Noon-6:00 Tues-Sat Buy·Sell·Trade 4221 EARN CASH $15 Today $30 This Week Plus a $3 Bonus By donating your blood plasma between Aug. 7 and Aug.31 and receive a $3 bond on your second donation of the month. Renta WASHER & DRYER For Only $45 a Month Hours: M-F9-6:30 Sat.10-4 Show your student ID car Walk-ins welcome $ Lawrence Donor Center 405 For Rent 400s Real Estate 816 W.24th Behind Laird Noller Ford 4BR house for lease at 15th & Inverness. Clean and new, Sunflower & South schools, $99/mo., no pets. 82-749. Call anytime. *No Deposit *Free Maintenance *GE quality Two Speed, Heavy Duty, Large Capacity 749-5750 September rent free on a 2 BR apartment Only left? Call today 843-2116 BERKELEY FLATS Renta BRAND N3 new 2 bath 2 Bath All Appliances WJD included. Two levels AC/AF FAG Heat Large closes. Great location for commuters. Lease through 65/98 or 09/95. Ask for John B323-216. Semester leases available 11th & Mississippi Delta Corporation 842-8428 3301 Clinton Parkway Ct. Suite #5 Lawrence, KS 66047 Looking for a place to live? ORCHARD CORNERS COMPLETELY FURNISHED A BEDROOM Check out these housing options... - Great campus location 4 BEDROOM Close to Campus Swimming Pool - Laundry Facilities - On KU Bus Route - Close to Campus - StopByToday! Equal Opportunity 749-4226 M-F-9.5 15th & Kasold Sat 10-4 - A few steps from Allen Fieldhouse Call Naismith Hall for More information at 843-8559 NAISMITH Hall Duplex Close to KU Stadium, large two bedroom, three bedrooms. $590 per month a $600 820-134-0148 or 864-312-8198 BEDROOM APARTMENT Great if you want PETS. AVAILABLE NOW. Call 784-2028. PETS WELCOME No Sublease Fee South Pointe ATLANTIC 2166 W. 26th St. 843-6446 - Swimming Pool - Close to KU Bus Route - Sand Volleyball Court - Ample Private Parking - Water & Trash Paid House For Rent: Four bedroom, central air, wash, dryer/locker space, fireplace, 2bath, all appliances, off street parking. Convenient to KU and down- room $975/mo plus deposit. Call 462-8684. Outstanding New Staff!!! Looking for a place to live? Check out these housing options... Looking for a place to live? Check out these housing options... - Computer room with - Apple Macintosh and IBM Computers - Fully furnished and carpeted and carpeted - Fitness room - Weekly maid service - Frontdoor bus service - Dine anytime meals - Free Utilities 1230 Tennessee. Unfurished 2bm, utilities paid, carped, no pets. $230 mmo. 823-2718 - Private parking - Quiet Study Areas Call Naismith Hall for More Information at 843-8559 Call naismith Hall for more information at 843-8559 NAISMITH Hall Semi-private room/apt., spacious and comfortable, in nice home in West JH neighborhood. KU bus route or walking distance to campus. Private bath. Microwave; laundry privileges; utilities and rent negotiable. Prefer mature responsible for $35/mo. for one, or $450/mo. for two. Possible in storage if unavailable. No pets. Refs. req. 843-7378 after 5 or leave message. NAISMITH Hall Walk to KU. One bedroom apartment in older house. $300/month, utilities paid, no pets, deposit Call 843-1835 at 9 p.m. 430 Roommate Wanted THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN How to schedule an ad: 1 N/S Female needed to share furn. 3 BR apt. W/D. on KU Bist Rd.-Olter Student preferred. $265 + 1/3 utilities. 941-914 Responsible & meet N/M, non-smoker for comfortable 2/1B, 11/2B bath apt. Cable, water, gAC /& heat pad. Nice pool. Clear Checkers, on bus route. $245 -1/2利业. Anne B3-9961. Female wanted to lease 1 bdmr of 5 bdmr dopper at Hawthorne. Call 842-4739 for information Hawthorne. Call 843-4799 for information. NEEDEI#2 two roommates (male or female) for a Orchard Corners 4-bdm apt. $201/mo. + uills. furnished and paid for Orchard Chris or Chris 2 roommates to share 4 BR house $200 + mo. deposit. Utilities paid. W/D, 1/2 blocks off KU bus. route. NS, no pets. leave message for Jim. H3-2003. Route from fam farm Guild. Share Attn: Female roommate, beautiful 3 bdm. con doon on bus. call: 749-3888 or (921) 681-0007 leave message 1 roommate needed to share 4 bedroom api. in 3 guest rooms; 2 $20 per month; 867-199 3 great rooms; $2.60 per month; 867-199 newer house w/many comforts. Fireplace, deck. please, 745-384-3 $200/mo /wu reef req. please, 745-384-3 One non-smoking roommate wants to share big, room. House $265/month+1/4伙食. Tail: B22-298 ROOMMATE WANTED! NEF !/ Pus.屋 w/o wn Dogs allowed. quiet need. call 841-842-3955 allowed. quiet need. call 841-842-3955 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. Ads phone number in may be called to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made. * In person: 150 Staffer Flint Classified Information and order form Yes 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 cascaded with 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 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 aage 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. Refined: The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansan office for a fee of $4.00. Rates per line per day 3 lines 4 lines 5-7 lines 8+ lines Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Cost per line per day IX 2-3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 30+X 2.10 1.60 1.10 .90 .75 .50 1.95 1.20 .80 .70 .65 .45 1.90 1.10 .75 .65 .60 .40 1.80 .95 .65 .60 .55 .35 Please print your ad one word per box Example: 3 lines for 5 days — 3 lines X 5 days X $1.10=$16.50 105 personal 110 business personalis 120 announcements 130 entertainment 140 list & fund 350 help wanted 360 auto sales 225 professional services 230 miscellaneous 225 yoyo service 1 2 3 4 5 ADS MUSTFOLLOW KANSAN POLICY Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print: 370 want to buy 405 for rent 430 resmaintate wanted Date ad begins:___ Total days in paper_ Classification: Address: Name: ___ Phone: ___. Method of Payment (Check one) Check enclosed MasterCard Visa (Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansas) Furnish the following if you are charging your ad: Account number:_ Expiration Date: MasterCard Print exact name appearing on credit cards; Signature: The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 6604 By THE FAR SIDE By GARY LARSON 2. 304 Volume 1, Page 52 of American Journal of Surgery Let's say, for example, you have just discovered how to reanimate dead tissue... Begin by keeping your diaphragm firm! The sound should originate deep and low--about here! in their final year, all research science students are required to take one semester of Maniacal Laughter. --- 10A Wednesday, August 24, 1994 CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN cos (5+1.8)_ The TI-85 builds on the functionality of the TI-68 and adds a wide range of graphing capabilities. So math students can handle calculus problems more easily. And technical students can see the functions for a better understanding of problems. The TI-85 also handles complex numbers, matrices, vectors, lists and strings. Plus it offers a powerful one-equation SOLVER. The T1-68 solves up to five simultaneous equations. Has complex number functions. Offers formula programming. Even has a last equation replay feature. All at a great price. HEAVY INSTRUMENTS ROBT 56712345678904 12345678904 LEAP MENU MENU CALCULATOR HOME EXPAND SAVE BACK RESET ENTER PRINT SCREEN DELIVERY DELIVERY DELIVERY DELIVERY DELIVERY RESET EXPAND SCREEN DELIVERY DELIVERY DELIVERY RESET EXPAND SCREEN DELIVERY DELIVERY RESET EXPAND SCREEN DELIVERY DELIVERY RESET Get Serious. Engineering, math or science major? Serious stuff. Get a TI-68 Advanced Scientific or TI-85 Graphing Calculator from Texas Instruments. They're designed for students and professionals and recommended by professors. Get the serious functionality you demand at a price you can afford. Try a TI-68 or T1-85 at your local TI retailer today, or for more information, call 1-800-TI-CARES. EXTENDING YOUR REACH INS TEXAS INSTRUMENTS e-mail: ti cares @ lobbyti com In Canada, call 1-800-661-2007. ©1944T1. H000182 10 dress campus --- sport CLOTHING WITH ATTITUDE EASTON'S E LIMITED 839 Mass. Downtown Lawrence 843-5755 BILL'S 32 WEST BEEBE 941-1202 Contributed Photo Jennifer Cobb stands in front of her rebuilt Mustang that she uses to race. She hopes to be able to build a new car soon. Student driver reaches high speeds Continued from Page 1. "For the most part, women get a lot of respect at the racetrack," she said. "But there are a few bad apples. The best strategy for me is just to blow right past them on the track." is Cobb's roommate and also works on Cobb's pit crew. LaKemper said Cobb's sex was not a major issue to Cobb or to the other racers. Cobb said women and men were equal on the racetrack because success was not based on physical ability. Lawrence resident Kelly LaKemper "There are a few men who don't want to be beaten by a woman, but it's not a problem," LaKemper said. LaKemper attends each of Cobb's races to time Cobb's laps and to help out in the pit. LaKemper said that Cobb actually used her gender to her advantage. "She uses her head when she's racing," LaKemper said. "Men let their tempers get in the way when they're racing." Cobb said she hoped the combination of her calm reserve and her talent would allow her to advance to national competition. "By 1997, I hope to be traveling and competing nationally," Cobb said. "I'm kind of a dreamer, but I think I'm aggressive enough to do it." Commission debates future of billboards By Carlos Tejada Kansan staff writer Billboards may soon be a sign of the past in Lawrence, a sign company warned. Last night, the Lawrence City Commission debated and put on next meeting's agenda an ordinance to restrict the number of billboards in the city. Currently, Lawrence has nine double-sided billboards, four on North Second Street and five on East 23rd Street. If the proposal passes, said David Corliss, assistant to the city manager, that's all Lawrence would ever have. But during the debate, representatives from Martin Outdoor Advertising, the owners of all nine billboards, objected to the ordinance. Jane Eldredge, Martin representative, said the language of the ordinance would prohibit Martin from erecting new billboards if the old ones were torn down for new development. In effect, she said, the ordinance would reduce the number of billboards in the city. She also said the measure would drive Martin out of town. "It would be a shame to essentially run them out of town and not do business with them anymore," Eldredge said. Eldredge said Martin and the commission met and agreed upon the current sign law in the mid-80s. She also said billboards advertised crucial downtown businesses and both the Lawrence Riverfront Plaza and the Tanger Outlet Mall. The issue will be discussed at the next city commission meeting Sept. 6. In other business: The commission decided to postpone consideration of a motion to turn the Lawrence Housing Authority, a government entity, into a nonprofit corporation. The group's leaders said it would be better able to handle the growing need for low-income housing if it were to apply for federal grants open to non-profit corporations. Consideration was postponed until a study group on affordable housing, appointed by Jo Andersen, Lawrence mayor, releases its report on Sept. 13. You Can Be A Star ROCK·CHALK R·E·V·U·E The All-University Musical Revue Benefitting the United Way Informational Meeting Thursday, Aug.25 7p.m. Alderson Auditorium Fourth Level, Kansas Union Apply Now For: Advisory Board Positions ·At-Large members • Production Manager ·In-Between Acts Coordinator •Secretary Committee Position: ·Sales ·Promotions Applications Available OAC,400 Kansas Union Applications Due: Monday Aug29, 5 p.m. Everyone Welcome to Apply Questions? Call Matt Friedrichs 864-4033 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 24.1994 Women's soccer team reorganizes leadership By Kent Hohlfeld Kansan sportswriter SECTION B The Kansas women's soccer team hopes to put its problems of the past behind it this season. In the last three years, the team has had problems obtaining equipment, field space and people to play. "In the past we had the club president doing all of the work," club co-president Karen Bibb said. "Sometimes things would get missed or just take us by surprise." During the latter part of last fall's season, the club began making moves to resolve those problems. Bibb and co-president Liana Hemphill split the club president's responsibilities. They also created the field coordinator position who is in charge of obtaining equipment and field space from Recreation Services. "We split the duties," Bibb said. "Now we have one person in charge of filling out the paper work for Recreation Services and another in charge of getting things like equipment and field space." The changes in the club's structure will make it run better. Hemhull said. "In the past, things got confused sometimes with what had and had not been done," Hemphill said. "Now people know what they're supposed to do." dends. Last spring the team hosted the Big Eight tournament, which helped the club financially. the newfound structure already has paid some divi- "It went off pretty well," club treasurer Megan Poplinger said. "We were able to make a bit of needed money." Previous money problems also has troubled the club. Each club member pays a $25 fee to participate, and the team also receives some money from Recreation Services. "We have very limited funds so we have to limit our trips," Poplinger said. "We can't afford to get a bus and travel to the big tournaments." However, the team hopes it can use money generated from the Big Eight tournament to travel more. The team wants to go to this year's Mardi Gras tournament in New Orleans. Another problem that the club hopes to address is its lack of a paid coach. Currently the team uses a player-coach. The lack of authority of a coach has hurt the team in practices. Bibb said that many of the 50 to 60 girls who originally show up for the first practices do not regularly attend the season's practices. "We have about 10 to 15 girls who are pretty stable," she said. "It's hard to get some of the rest to stick with it." She said that part of that problem may have been associated with members' frustration with the club's past problems. How many Student Season Tickets are sold every year? set at 7000 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 PROFILE 6300 6500 6800 7500 7000 Noah Musser / KANSAN No lottery needed for sports tickets By Jill Johansen Kansan sportswriter Students who purchased the sports combination ticket package will be glad to know that men's basketball tickets should be available to all student buyers. Bernie Kish, director of ticket operations and sales, said that more than 6,500 sports combo packages had been sold. With student athletes and band members receiving tickets, that number will nearly reach the maximum availability of 7,000 tickets. "Forty-five percent of the field house seating is reserved for students," Kish said. "It doesn't look like we'll need to have a lottery for men's basketball tickets this year." The sports combo can be purchased for $85. This allows students into all football games, men's basketball games and the Kansas Relays. Season tickets for only football games can be purchased for $35. Ironically, Kish said, the sports combo package began in 1981 because basketball attendance was low. In order to draw students to basketball games, basketball tickets were sold with football tickets. Tickets to football games for the general public are $19 each. The Kansas State game is the premium game this year, and individual tickets are $25. ALLEN FIELD VOLLEYBALL Brian Vanderylift / KANGAN Bernie Kish, foreground, has been the director of ticket operations and sales at Kansas since 1992. He said he appreciated the hard work of his staff, who include from left to right, Sherry Benda, Sandi Roberts, Diana Grover and Kathy Frederickson. Kish deals out best seats in house Perhaps Bernie Kish is not the first person fans think of when they see a packed field house. By Jill Johansen Kansan sportswriter Enthusiasm radiates from Bernie Kish when he talks about his job as director of ticket operations and sales. sports ticket office, the games "I love this job," Kish said. "Last week was just amazing. The phones were ringing off the hook. I love the atmosphere." Kish, originally from western Pennsylvania, became the director of ticket operations and sales at Kansas in 1992 after he retired from a 30-year military career. He was an active Kansas booster, and Kansas athletic director Bob Frederick asked him if he would like to work in the athletic offices. now the former military officer is very active in Kansas athletics, working hard to fill the stadium and Allen Field House. Kish said his staff has tried to emphasize ticket sales for all Kansas sports. "It talk to alumni and put an emphasis on the Olympic sports (at Kansas)," Kish said. "This year we're pushing women's basketball, volleyball and baseball. Our work is easier because we have a great group of coaches to work with and the best athletic director in the country." His interest in sports doesn't end when he leaves his office. He is an avid runner who enjoys road races. He also is an aspiring writer and had a chapter published about the Pittsburgh Steelers in a professional football book. Kish came to Kansas in 1971 where he met his wife, Judy. Her father was former Kansas assistant football coach George Bernhardt. They have two daughters: Keri, a KU senior in political science, and Katy, a junior at Lawrence High School. "That was very exciting for me because the other writers in the book were big-time," he said. "One was from The New York Times." in his childhood. Even as a high school student, he remembered getting phone calls from men in bars arguing about where a certain player went to college. Kish's sports interest started early "I was known as the kid who knew "everything about sports," he said. "My nickname in high school was 'Sports Page.' I played baseball, but I didn't play much else. I was always around sports though, as a manager." Kish said he was in Vietnam during the 1969 Orange Bowl. He remembered listening to the Penn State-Kansas game and rooting for Penn State. As Kansas fans remember, Kish's team won, and the Jayhawks suffered a heart-breaking 15-14 loss. Now, Kish cheers on the Jayhawks instead. Kish credited his staff for making the job easier. "They're very hard-working, and they're a great group of people," he said. Conference to challenge recruiting New Big 12 arrangement to increase competition By Matt Irwin Kansan sportswriter If the Kansas football team wants to contend for the national championship, it must beat Nebraska, Oklahoma and Colorado — this season. In two years, the Jayhawks also will have to deal with the tradition-rich programs of Texas and Texas A&M. Despite the number of nationally-known Kansas opponents, the emergence of the Big 12 in 1964 could improve the Jayhawks' chances to do well nationally. "I think it will benefit KU," said freshman placekicker Jeff McCord, who is from Mesquite, Texas. "KU doesn't have too many players from Texas. Football is pretty big in Texas." Not only is Texas considered a sizable state geographically, but it also is known as a state which produces many college football players. High school football tradition is strong as well. "There's a lot of great athletes down there," Kansas quarterbacks coach Dave Warner said. Warner recruits the Wichita area as well as Texas. "I think we've got a little bit of success recruiting players out of Texas. We've increased our efforts in the Dallas/Fort Worth area, and we've gotten some players out of there." Warner said that this recruiting success is prior to the addition of the Texas teams, and that adding these teams might not make it easier to recruit. He said teams like Oklahoma, who recruit heavily from Texas, have four or five recruiters in that state. Kansas has only one. "The exposure down in that area is going to help broaden our name in Texas," Warner said, but added, "It is going to attract other schools to come down there and recruit Texas. All the Big Eight schools will be going down there to recruit." The Western Athletic Conference also will add three Southwest Conference teams to its conference. Warner said this would bring even more recruiters to Texas, making it harder to recruit players. Kansas sophomore cornerback Tony Blevins was recruited by several nationally known programs, but chose a school close to home. "Everybody likes to play in front of people that have been there all along." Blevins said. "You like to go to better conferences because if you play against better competition you become better yourself. People watch better conferences." With the addition of Texas and Texas A&M, several teams will compete for the high profile players in Texas. "It's going to be nice because my parents can't travel up here," McCord said. "I'm excited I get to go back." Freshmen to contribute to solid lineup By Chesley Dohl Kansan sportswriter Upperclassmen aid in team unity Pressure enhances performance "There's definitely pressure on us, but it's not a bad pressure," freshman middle blocker Kendra Kahler said. "It's a good pressure. It's a pressure that makes everyone come together, and it made everyone improve their play." The Jayhawks return only five upperclassmen, but they have six strong freshmen coming into the program, and two freshmen who were redshirted last year. At least that seems to be the case with the six newcomers to the Kansas volleyball team. "The girls are really coming through and playing strong," she said. "They're working hard in practice — but it's something they know they have to do for the team." And a lot of how the team will do this season lies in their hands. It is pressure, but Kansas volleyball coach Karen Schonewise said she was pleased with the newcomers. "Just the fact that there are so many freshmen means there is more competition among us. That's what makes us work harder," Kahler said. "There's still a lot of competition in practices right now." Coming into the Kansas volleyball program, the freshmen said they were unaware Kansas was returning only a handful of upper classman. But they said that did not bother them. The volleyball players spend three hours practicing each day during the school year as they vie for a starting position. Before classes began though, the team practiced for three hours twice-a-day. "Right now we're just trying to work hard and give it our best shot," freshman middle blocker Maggie Mohrfield said. "It's the preseason that determines how well the teams are going to do. Now is when we work hard. During the season we work on strategy and the little things." Along with the pressure felt about contributing positively to the team, the six freshmen also have to deal with the transition from high school to college. The transition includes more intense practices both physically and mentally, a new coach and new surroundings. But Mohfeld said there wasn't much time to think about the pressure. "We're always moving quick, and Karen (Schonewise) always keeps things going," she said. "It's intense, but intensity does come up when you have everyone working for the same goal." As the players entered the program, they said it was the upperclassmen and the coaches that made them feel comfortable with their roles on the team. "The upperclassman made us feel a lot better about everything," Mohrfield said. "They make us feel like we can go in there and do something to help this season." The pressure should be on the newcomers' shoulders, but it seems to be building confidence in the players. "We were excited coming into the program because we realized we're all in the same shoes," freshman middle blocker Leslie Purkeyple said. ) Jay Thomton / KANSAN 4 Junior Jenny Larson returns the ball during practice. The first home volleyball game will be Sept. 6 at 7:30 p.m. in Allen Fieldhouse against UMKC. 4. 2B Wednesday, August 24, 1994 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Football poll results In a poll of the Kansas players taken on Aug. 9, senior defensive back Gerald McBurrows came out as the big winner. A co-captain from Detroit, McBurrows was voted as the team's hardest hitter as well as its hardest worker. Following is a breakdown of the results of the inquiry. Hardest Worker Hardest Worker 1. Gerald McBurrows... 12.5 2. Derek Fairchild... 6 3. John Jones... 4 4. Van Davis ... 3 Ryan Foy ... 3 6. Chris Banks ... 2 Joe Hornback ... 2 Derrick Irvin ... Hardest Hitter 1. Gerald McBurrows ... 23 2. Kwamie Lassiter ... 9 3. Don Davis ... 8 4. Keith Rodgers ... 3 Ronnie Ward ... 3 6. Steve Harvey ... 2 Sylvester Wright ... 2 8. Maurice Gaddie ... 1 Chris Powell ... Best Alete 1. Don Davis ... 19.5 2. Kwamie Lassiter ... 10 3. Rodney Harris ... 5 4. Dorian Brew ... 3 5. Gerald McBurrows ... 1.5 6. Hosea Friday ... 1 Costello Good ... 1 John Jones ... 1 Manolito Jones ... 1 Eric Mathes ... 1 Biggest Surprise of 1994 1. Mark Sanders ... 8.5 2. Avery Randle ... 5 3. Chris Banks ... 2 Andre Carter ... 2 Troy Chandler ... 2 Derek Fairchild ... 2 Manolito Jones ... 2 Kwamie Lassister ... 2 Robert Reed ... 2 Doug Weaver ... 2 Brent Willeford ... 2 Who is the Athlete You most Admiire? Avery Randle...Deion Sanders Hessley Hempstead...Magic Johnson Keith Rodgers...Tony Dorsett Joe Hornback...John Kruk Derrick Irvin...Michael Irvin George White...Eric Metcalf Gerald McBurrows...Joe Dumars Doug Weaver...Reggie White Darrin Simmons...Vinnie Testaverde Marlin Blakeney...Ronnie Lott What Would You Like To Do When Your Football Career Is Over? Don Davis...Teacher L.T. Levine...Commercial Artist Harold Harris...Engineer Jason Harris...Restaurateur Tony Zell...Naval Biochemist Dewey Houston...Accountant Eric Galbreath...Doctor Isaac Byrd...Broadcaster Luke Richesson...Strength Coach Eric Mathies...Lawyer What Team Would You Like To See Added To The Kansas 1. Notre Dame ... 15.5 2. Florida State ... 7.5 Southern Cal ... 7.5 4. Michigan ... 6.5 5. Miami ... 5.5 6. Hawaii ... 3 7. Ohio State ... 2.5 Compiled by Kansan sports staff Experience with tournaments will benefit program Golfers tee off for the top spots The Kansas women's golf team is facing two pressures this year. One will build the squad, but the other may tear it down. By Jenni Carlson Kansan sportswriter Kansas women's golf coach Jerry Waugh said that the pressure of competing for spots on the traveling team could benefit the Jayhawks. "We've got good depth this year," he said. But the team will be without the play of Pam Wineinger and Holly Reynolds, who completed their collegiate careers last spring. The impact of Reynolds' absence will be felt the most. "Holly has been one of, if not the best, collegiate golfers we've had since Marilyn Smith." Waugh said. Smith played golf at Kansas in the early 1950s. She went on to be one of the founders of the women's professional golf circuit, the LPGA. Reynolds is attempting to earn a place on the LPGA. Earlier this year, she played in the Futures Tour, which is a springboard for women aspiring to play professionally. She made the cut in four of the six events in which she competed, but she missed the cut in one event by signing an incorrect scorecard. Reynolds was leading the tournament at the time. Jumping in to fill the large void left by Reynolds' departure will be a host of players. At the forefront are seniors Tracy Belleis, Ann Holbrook, and Michelle Uher. "I think we've got the ingredients for good senior leadership." Waugh said Added into the mix are juniors Lynn Williamson and Tara Donnelly. "Lynn has seen a lot of competition and play," Waugh said. "Tara's an experienced player." Two sophomores that may break onto the traveling team are Kelly Marney and Anne Clark. Both sat out last season as redshirts and were originally walk-ons to the program. "Their games have come along." Waugh said. The squad welcomes three new faces this year. Waugh said the three comprise the best recruiting class he has had in his Kansas coaching career. Beth Reuter and Jennifer Hays are freshmen, while sophomore Kimberly Clevenger transferred to Kansas from North Carolina. In her senior year of high school, Clevenger was a state high school champion in Kansas from Shawnee Mission East. "All three of these girls have a great work ethic," Waugh said. "All three have tournament success. Those are the two real important ingredients that you look for in good recruits." Hays said she hoped that her work ethic would earn her a top spot on the team. "I'd like to play and travel with the team," she said. The experience she gained from junior tournaments on the Ping Tour and in the Amateur Junior Golf Association should help Hays' chances to play. "That level of play is the same as college, if not higher," she said. The obstacle that may sidetrack the Jayhawks is the pressure players put on themselves to score well. "Golf in itself is a great pressure game," Waugh said. "Each stroke of the club is a new pressure situation." The most significant part of the game for college players is not physical, but mental. "The swings are there," Ted Ballmer, graduate assistant coach, said. "They've got to be good enough already to get here." Waugh said the squad should be more successful if the Jayhawks focused on how each player performed instead of the low scores they posted. "I hope we have a more positive attitude toward our play, and that we manage our game better," he said. GOLF Junior Lynn Williamson puts the ball during the Hawkers and Hackers Golf Tournament, a fundraiser for the women's and men's golf teams. Jay Thornton / KANSAN SUNFLOWER OUTDOOR & BIKE SHOP fifi's 925 IOWA 841-7226 Lunch & Dinner Great Food 804 Mass • 843-5000 fifi's 929 Mass. 843-4170 FREE DELIVERY STONEBACK'S APPLIANCE DORM SIZE REFRIEGRATORS FOR RENT 2 cu. ft. $45 4 cu. ft. $45 school year 929 Mass. 843-4170 VILLAGE HOME The Largest and Oldest "green" store in the U.S.as nominated in Business Magazine 820-822 Mass. 841-0100 NATURALWAY JUSTICE IS THE ORIGINAL FOOTBALL JUDGE. HAP-KI-DO • SUN-DO • KUM-DO (Technique for Body (Meditation) (Sword Art Restraint) LAWRENCE TAE-KWON-DOSCHOOL MASTER KI-JUNE PARK, Ph.D. Special Student Rates 10th & Massachusetts • 843-2121 asics KSWISS Learn Martial Arts from an Original Master KSWISS Reebok © and future standard Ltd adidas Saucony. newbalance B NIKE ★ Morr-Sat. 9-5:30 Thurs. 9-8:30 Sun. 12-5:30 914MASS. 841-6966 BEST OF LUCK JAYHAWKS! NOBODYKNOWS THE ATHLETE'S FOOT LIKE... Erin Anwander Athlete's The Foot. Rooms: Mon-Sat. 9:5-30 Thurs. 9-8:30 Sun. 12-5:30 914 MASS 84 Martha Alldritt Welcome Sigma Kappa Pledges! Amanda Arbuckle Lou Benedict Heather Bright Joy Benedict Maureen Krink Meghan Brown Cassandra Curry Amy Dermann Kristen Duck Megan Edwards Rachel Fisher Fraci Evison Tracu Foster Ashley Hackman Feresa Henke Emily Korn Brandi Houk Brandi Houk Ann Ingram Alicia Janesko Lynn Katsouros Alice McGalliard Julie Lucito Kathryn Patton Claudia Prieto Claudia Prieto Carla Saichompoo Amy Ried Jennifer Renk Stephanie Scherer Andreea Schlicht Megan Norris Fisha Sheets Elyzabeth Simpson Jeanette S. Peter Elizabeth Simpson Julie Surface Rachel Vondriska Annie Pommittag Wendy Wachtland Ann Weishaar Emily Nyeer Jennifer Yeoman THE حل HARBOUR LIGHTS 1031 MASSACHUSETTES STREET, LAWRENCE, KS Monday $1.00 Draws and $1.25 Premium Draws Tuesday NOW OFFERING 9 BEERS ON TAP Wednesday $1.50 Wells 11/27/17 841-1960 Thursday $1.50 Jam Jars Julie Surface 21 LIVEJAZZ $5.2 $ Pitchers of premium Beer $1.50 Miller Highlife Bottles Tuesday $2.50 Premium Jam Jars $2.95 Big Import Bottles $1.50 Jam Jars Wednesday's "Just For The Buck Of It" $1.00 Well Drinks / Drafts $1.00 Burgers/Wings/& More Starting Tonight KU Karaoke Kontest-WIN $250! towards fall tuition Prize money paid at the end Duffy's Thursday's D "It's Back & Rising" Duffy's Disco Fever Plus 2 BUCKS EVERYTHING (drinks & food) NO COVER Simply Ahead of It's Time in the Karnada Inn oth & Iowa 812.7030 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, August 24.1994 3 Cardinals coach confident The Associated Press PHOENIX, Ariz. — When Buddy Ryan took over the Philadelphia Eagles in 1986, he stood with the NFC East's four other coaches who were asked to pick the division winner. After the other four all picked the New York Giants, Ryan pronounced: "I pick the Eagles. I'm never about to say we're going to lose." For the record, Ryan's Eagles finished fourth at 5-10-1, saved from last place by the division's perennial doormat, the St. Louis Cardinals. Now he gets to coach those Cardinals, transplanted to Phoenix in 1988 and this year bearing the new moniker of "Arizona Cardinals." Let's hear it again, Buddy. "We plan on winning the Eastern Division," he says. "It's the toughest division in football and it has the Dallas Cowboys. But I have an excellent football team." The funny thing is, he may be right The funny thing is, he may be right. It's one of the strangest marriages in football — coach Buddy Ryan and owner William V. Bidwell. Ryan was supposed to be out of the loop for a head coaching job after his nationally televised roundhouse right at Kevin Gilbride last year while defensive coordinator of the Ollers. Bidwil was out of the loop with Arizona fans, who tired quickly of his bad team and high ticket prices shortly after he moved there six years ago. The images are reversed: Bidwill is getting points for hiring Ryan as coach and general manager, and Ryan is praised for bringing to an improving team such free agents as Seth Joyner, Clyde Simmons and Wilber Marshall, all defensive stars who grew up in his "46" defense. This time, though, Ryan himself has been the draw. Soon after he was selected in January to coach the Cardinals in place of Joe Bugel, the promotion department began erecting billboards with his likeness and "BuddyBall" written above it. Season ticket sales have doubled to nearly 50,000. This came although Bugel had won four of his last five games and improved the Cardinals to 7-9, their best record since they did the same their first year after moving from St. Louis. What Ryan brings is both coaching ability and a frankness that endeared him to fans in Philadelphia as he built the Eagles into a playoff team. What he doesn't bring is tact. He was fired in Philadelphia after three straight playoff years for his blunt denunciations of owner Norman Braman. And he got the defensive coordinator's job in Houston only after the Oiler defense collapsed in Buffalo in the 1992 playoffs. But he did. "Iguess it was perseverance. I never knew I'd be making shots to win championships." Mulligan's Paxson, who appeared in 7/2 regular-season games and 119 playoff games during his career with the Bulls and Spurs, is best remembered for hitting a 3-point shot with 3.9 seconds left in Game 6 of the 1993 finals. SUNFLOWER OUTDOOR & BIKE SHOP 804Mass • 843-5000 Mulligan's featuring PUPS DINE-IN OR CARRY 11am-3am Wednesday $1.50 Pints of Boulevard • Acoustic Open Mic Thursday The Bindlestiffs • $1 Samual Adams draws Frid- Paxson also had the advantage of playing alongside the greatest player "I was fortunate enough to see the transition from a team that wasn't very good to one that won. The special thing for me in all three of those (championships) was that I was on the floor at the end of each game." Chicago Bulls player retires featuring PUPS "For me the greatest moments were those championship years. Those are the things I will remember forever," said Paxson, who joined the Bulls in 1985. featuring PUPS DINE-IN OR CARRY 11am-3am DEEERFIELD, Ill. — John Paxson can recall those early days of his career when he didn't know how long he'd last, when championships seemed so far away for a 6-foot-2 guard just trying to make his way in the NBA. "After my first year in San Antonio, I thought I was done." Paxson said Monday, announcing his retirement after 11 years, the last nine with the Chicago Bulls. The Associated Press By Rick Gano The basket gave the Bulls the lead over Phoenix and they held on for their third straight NBA title. Paxson could always hit big shots. He scored 10 points in the fourth quarter of Game 5 of the 1991 finals against the Los Angeles Lakers, sending the Bulls to their first title. ever. Michael Jordan. His retirement, hinted at all last season, came as no surprise. It came less than a year after Jordan announced his. Crown Cinema "If I had not been playing with Michael and been a part of three championship teams, I probably would have been just another player going through the league," Paxson said. "I just was in the right place at the right time." 1016 Massachusetts Downtown Lawrence 913-865-4055 Paxson, 34 next month, will remain with the Bulls as a radio commentator, work with the team's guards, attend coaching meetings and learn the nuances of the front office. "I knew this year would be my last," said Paxson, who was bothered by injuries and appeared in only 27 games last season. "When Michael retired, it sent a signal to me that it was probably my time to go, too." SPRING AIR Authorized Factory Outlet for SPRING AIR Mattress Co. 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Freshman and sophomores welcome. REWARD Gain real world experience and learn first hand how a newspaper operates. Find out what it takes to work on the Daily Kansan. Meet the Kansan editors and learn all about the Kansan Correspondents program at 4:30 p.m. Wednesday in room 100 of Stauffer-Flint. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 4 Wednesday, August 24, 1994 State Radiator Student Friendly We repair • Brass • Aluminum • Plastic Radiators Heaters, water pumps, and A/C service tool 842-3333 NATURALWAY 820-822 Mass.841-0100 METROCHIP OACCOVER VISA 928 The Etc. Shop THE LOOK OF LAWRENCE •GIFTS• Something special for everyone •SUNGLASSES• Rayban, Bausch & Lomb, Vuarnet, Serengeti, Revö •LEATHER• Averix Flight Jackets, Belts, Wallets, Ladies' Purses •JEWELRY• Sterling Silver - Huge Unique Selection •ACCESSORIES• Formal Wear - Sales & Rental •COSTUMES• Costumes & Accessories 2nd Floor THIS IS A FUN STORE! The Etc. 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(Words can't describe) SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN AFRICAN ADORNED Store Hours 10:00 - 5:30 Mon. - Sat. 5 East 7th 5 East 7th Lawrence, KS 66044 (913) 842-1376 Fitness for Women Only ACE Certified Instructors Hourly Classes Combo, Low Impact, Reebok Step & Slide, Conditioning Seniorise Since 1980 (From the back) Treadmills, Stairmasters, Bicyles Nordic Track Weight Equipment Sauna & Shower Tanning Child care 20% Discount at Athlete's Foot to members FIRST WEEK FREE WITH COUPON Photo by David Turner BodyShape BodyShapes Fitness Club 3320 Mesa Way 843-4040 Margaritas-$1.50 each 14oz. Drafts-$1 each ALL DAY - EVERY DAY FREE POOL ON WEDNESDAY - Best Dart Pit in Town JAY'S Sports Bar - Big Screen TV+5 TV monitors - Great food at the Bar 200 McDonald Dr. 841-7077 West Virginia, NU set for Classic MORGANTOWN, W.Va. — The last time West Virginia opened its season against a Big Eight opponent was 1982, when the Mountaineers surprised heavily favored Oklahoma 41-27. The Associated Press West Virginia once again is starting against a Big Eight foe: Nebraska in the kickoff Classic on Sunday in East Rutherford, N.J. Once more, theMountaineers are big underdogs (16-1/2 points). But West Virginia coach Don Nehlen doesn't anticipate his 24th-ranked team will have the element of surprise on its side this time. "Oklahoma was mad we were on their schedule." Nehlen said. "They had just beaten us by 42 points (in 1979) and they didn't feel like they ought to be playing us. "When I first got here we were everybody's homecoming opponent." "So we made a few changes and 'went out and beat' (Oklahoma)," said Nehlen, in his 15th season at West Virginia. "Nebraska is playing a team that was (11-1) last year. We haven't snuck up on anyone for eight or nine years." Nehlen said. "And you know when somebody schedules you for homecoming, you've got problems. The Mountaineers used the Oklahoma win to build their program. Just two years later, they would beat Penn State for the first time since 1954. Since then, they've been 11-1 twice and had two legitimate chances at the national title. But as their ranking at the bottom of most preseason polls indicates, the Mountaineers are still one step away from joining football's elite. Nehlen believes the Nebraska game could be a big step toward that goal. Nehlen's game plan usually is to establish a running game, then throw when defenders aren't expecting it. It works unless the Mountainers get too far behind. this on TV. And a lot of high school football players are going to be watching this game, from New Jersey to North Carolina and all over. "If we win this game, that's got to be a tremendous plus for our program," he said. "My friends are going to be watching this on TV," Nehlen said. "All my players' friends are going to be watching In last season's Sugar Bowl, they fell behind Florida 21-7 at halftime and then totally unraveled. Since West Virginia should be strongest on defense this season, Nehlen doesn't plan on gambling. "If Nebraska can beat us, so be it." Nehlen said. "But we don't want to beat ourselves. We have a guy who I think can punt the football well. Don't think when it's fourth-down and 6 inches to go that I'm not sending him in." Minor league benefits from strike Fans find new teams to take strikers' place The Associated Press Ever since the Bowie Baysox moved into their new ballpark in Maryland in mid-June, the crowds have been getting bigger and bigger. Lately, though, Prince George's Memorial Stadium is jammed. And plenty of other places are filling up, too. Boosted by nice weekend weather and bolstered by some extra advertising, minor league attendance has increased 14 percent since the start of the baseball strike. "It looks like what the strike has done is to take our acceleration and nudge it up a bit," said Dave Collins of the Baysox, the Double-A affiliate of the Baltimore Orioles. "But it's difficult to pin down exactly how many more people are coming because of the strike." Through Monday, 11 of the 15 minor leagues that keep attendance figures reported increases. The big gainers were the Eastern League, up 53 percent, and the Midwest League, up almost 46 percent. "I think a lot of it has to do with all of our parks being within an hour or two of major league cities," Eastern League president John Leventa said. "Places like Bowie, Trenton and Reading are close by for fans who are missing baseball." The Southern, Northwest and Pioneer leagues each had decreases of less than 1 percent. The Texas League had fallen off 2.7 percent since the major league players' strike started Aug. 12. Because the strike began on a Friday, the minor leagues have had the benefit of two full weekends, when attendance is usually at its best. In many places, there's been nice weather, and that has helped. "I think a big factor is that everyone is talking about the minor leagues since the strike," Midwest League president George Spelius said. "And every time you turn on ESPN or CNN to watch sports, they're showing the minors." While the Kane County Cougars and West Michigan Whitecaps have been drawing big crowds all year in the Midwest League, the Beloit Brewers have done especially well since the strike. When the strike started, the Beloit Brewers placed ads in Milwaukee's two major newspapers, suggesting that fans drive down to see the Class A affiliate of the big league Brewers. Beloit is located about 75 miles from Milwaukee. Others loops that have done well since the strike include the Triple A International League and American Association and the Class A Appalachian and South Atlantic leagues, all up at least 20 percent. In Bowie, about 25 miles south of Baltimore, the crowds last weekend averaged 9,748 to see the Albany-Colonie Yankees. Before the strike, the Baysox were drawing 6,636. Pancho's MEXICAN RESTAURANT Come in and enjoy... Welcome Back Students! VISA - home style Mexican food - 11 Mexican beers! - Margaritas 23rd and Louisiana 843-4044 in the Mells Shopping Center in the Malls Shopping Center MasterCard When you need to shift your course load... Earn University of Kansas Credit through Independent Study by correspondence - nine months of study time beginning the day you enroll - earn credit without restrictions on class time and place Enroll any week day of the year 8am to 4pm. Stop by Independent Study Student Services, Continuing Education Building, Annex A, just north of the Student Union for a catalog or call 864-4440 for information. Kansas Learning Network Independent Study Continuing Education Under the Tree --- SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, August 24, 1994 5 Salary cap,free agents raise questions in NFC By Dave Goldberg The Associated Press The NFC supermacy may be cracking under the strain of free agency, the salary cap and the internal problems of the Dallas Cowboys, which seeks to become the first team to win three consecutive Super Bowls. The NFC shows two teams seemingly capable of going all the way: Dallas and San Francisco. Even more strike- NFL Quarterback Changes Jimmy Johnson, who pushed all the right buttons for two seasons, is in a TV studio after his breach with Jerry Jones. His replacement, Barry Switzer, has been out of football for five years and has never coached in the NFL. FROM Houston ing is that each is one injury away from sinking into mediocrisy. Dallas, meanwhile, has the core that won two straight titles but a thinner supporting cast. SanFrancisco Kansas City Dallas Minnesota Indianapolis Detroit LA Rams Atlanta Chicago Warren Moon Steve Bono Acme MOVING Washington Minnesota Dave Krleg Scott Mitchell NY Jets Pittsburgh Indianapolis Bernie Kosar San Diego Detroit Arizona Detroit Buffalo Jim Everett TO Jim McMahon Jeff George Erik Kramer Jim Everett Chris Miller Detroit New Orleans Jim Harbaugh Minnesota Kansas City mark κυριen Rick Strom Detroit Sean Salisbury Detroit Miami Jack Trudeau John Friesz Arizona Gale Gilbert Chicago Atlanta New Orleans LA Rams Steve Walsh Rodney Peete Chris Chandler Indianapolis Andre Ware Cleveland Houston Indianapolis Buffalo NY Jets Washington San Diego Chicago Dallas The salary cap has stripped everyone of depth: high-priced veterans are no longer acceptable if they don't start, and almost everyone's backups are untested $162.50 voongsters. Minnesota Still, it starts with Dallas quarterback Troy Aikman, running back Emmitt Smith and wide receiver Michael Irvin. The Giants have lost $11 million worth of players from their 11-5 team, including linebacker Lawrence Taylor and quarterback Phil Simms. If anyone can challenge, it may be Phoenix. The cornerstones of Buddy Ryan's rebuilding are two of his exEagles: Seth Joyner and Clyde Simmons. Philadelphia, 4-10 until Randall Cunningham got hurt and went 8-8 for the season, could surprise people if Cunningham rebounds. The loss of leaders like Joyner and Simmons may hurt a defense led by Eric Allen. Washington, 4-12 last year, rebuilds under Norv Turner, Johnson's offensive coordinator in Dallas. Heath Shuler, the No.3 pick in the draft, may be thrown in at quarterback. Minnesota and Green Bay, both 9-7 last year, should top the Central, although Detroit has one quarterback instead of three after signing free agent Scott Mitchell. The Lions will depend on Barry Sanders to run the ball and Mitchell to throw it. Chicago has transformed its offense by signing quarterback Erik Kramer and Lewis Tillman to run the ball after going 7-9 with the NFL's worst offense. San Francisco's problem last year was defense, the culprit in a dismal 10-6 season. But Steve Young is now the only experienced quarterback and must stay healthy to keep Jerry Rice, John Taylor, Ricky Watters and the rest of the skill players at full efficiency. New Orleans started 5-0 and finished 8-8, coincidental with a decline in Wade Wilson's performance at quarterback. KANSAS SPORTS CLUB PAN SHOP Live it. Wear it! Love it! KU! COED NAKED We have Coed Naked, Big Johnson & Game Bar Hats. Everything But Ice Come in and see our great selection of NBA, NCAA, NFL, NHL, & MLB merchandise. SPORTSWEAR 842-2992 Penguin 837 Massachusetts BEDS DESKS BOOKCASES Everything But Ice 936 Mass. DON'S AUTO CENTER "For All Your Repair Needs" *Imports & Domestica* *Machine Shop Service* *Parts Departments* 841-4833 920 E. 11th Street PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS "NO COUPON SPECIALS" EVERYDAY TWO-FERS 2-PIZZAS 2-TOPPINGS 2-COKES 1601 W.23rd Southern Hills Center 842-1212 PRIMETIME 3-PIZZAS 1-TOPPING 4-COKES PARTY "10" 10-PIZZAS 1-TOPPING $11.50 $30.00 DELIVERY HOURS SUNDAY-THURSDAY 11am-2am FRIDAY-SATURDAY 11am-3am 1-800-COLLECT SPORTS UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS RECREATIONAL SERVICES SAND VOLLEYBALL MANAGERS MEETING PHONE 864-3546 August 29 - 7:00 pm SIGN-UPS August 30 & 31 LOCATION 115 Robinson VOLLEYBALL MANAGERS MEETING SIGN-UPS October 4 & 5 October 3 - 7:00 pm PHONE 864-3546 LOCATION 115 Robinson PRE-HOLIDAY BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT SIGN-UPS August 23 - November 22 LOCATION 115 Robinson PHONE 864-3546 1-800-COLLECT Save The People You Call Up To 44%.* Sign-up Today! FOR INTRAMURAL SPORTS "Versus AT&T operator-dialed three minute interstate calls lifestyles Graphic by Noah Musser Surfing the Internet Forget cable. This stuff talks back. Bv Nathan Olson Kansan staff writer The mission, should you choose to accept it, is scanning thousands of news groups on Usenet News. You can't talk simultaneously, but you can pose questions that will be returned. Use at your own risk. Click. Click. Click. Like magic, the familiar sounds of a telephone being dialed are heard. A few more keys, and suddenly I'm sucked into the world of Usenet News, one of the more popular places to visit on the Internet. The first stop is alt tennis, where I lament the retirement (possibly temporary, the optimists say) of Jim Courier. One person compares Courier and Michael Jordan, writing, "Jordan was a huge success, leading the Bulls to three NBA championships in a row. Courier has had terrible results this year, after having had good success in the past two years." Another person counters by writing that Courier's four Grand Slam victories makes for a fine career. Many of the articles in the news group are about the U.S. Open, which starts Monday. The responses in this news group grow noticeably just before a Grand Slam tournament. Some predict a Stephan Edberg-Andre Agassi match in the first round. Others simply state their boredom with the game, rehashing arguments made in Sports Illustrated earlier this summer. The news group is becoming a bit boring, so I head to 'alt.rush-lim-baugh', always a great place for some lively discussion. Interestingly, the group is sandwiched between 'alt.romance.unhappy' and 'alt.satisman'. One of the first articles, under the title, 'Re: Aventhe the Pensacola Murders', someone writes, "Nietzsche, 'God is Dead' / Göd, 'Nietzsche is dead' Other post of the same title discuss whether the alleged killer of a doctor who performs abortions was justified. One person posts allegations Limbaugh made about the Clinton administration's attempt to buy a representative's vote on a bill. The The wonderful thing about News is that it's like having multiple conversations whenever you want, because, with an estimated population of 15 million, there will always be someone who has a recipe for Borscht or wants to rap about the latest Seinfeld episode. ensuing discussion leads to battle lines being drawn concerning Limbaugh's accuracy. Because the news group has over 1,400 postings, and most of them seem to repeat earlier postings, I scan to the bottom for new threads. One person reprints a news article about a Democratic representative from Illinois who was charged with having sex with a minor. Another chears Garry Trudeau's decision to use a waffe to signify President Clinton. Just a few weeks ago, many decried Trudeau's cartoons criticizing Limbaugh. But again I'm getting bored. No one is raring and raving about "feminazis" or "flaming liberals"; most discussions have some semblance of respectability. have been censored or altered, and occasional questions about a Beavis and Butthead Sega game and a Beavis and Butthead movie. So I head to the next best place: alt.tv.beavis-n.buthead. I started a great thread about a year ago when I asked which was smarter (my own feeling was that Beavis was an idiot savant). Now there are very specific questions about songs in episodes ('In 'Army' they headbanged to 'Rooster' by Alice in Chains'), many questions about whether episodes A frightening amount of space is given to speculation on the pair's hometown. One person, the lucky originator of the thread, guesses Houston, while another thinks it's fictional. A third person writes that the show's creator, Mike Judge, is from Albuquerque. "Some of the things they've said were practically lifted from Albuquerque television." Approximately two dozen posts later, the consensus is a suburb of Houston or Dallas. Time for more politics. One of my favorite groups is alt.censorship, which gives me updates of all the interesting ways people are trying to censor other people. A long post talks about the disturbing trend of liberals getting into the censorship business, including pornography and hate-speech codes. This eventually, predictably, leads into a discussion of what the word "liberal" means, a discussion that can be found periodically on many news groups, from alt.rush.limbaugh to alt.acivism to alt.sports.basketball.pro. A post about the founder of a neo-Nazi group in Canada leads me to alt.revisionism, a rather crazy news group that features the ranting of one anti-Semitite followed by the responses from dozens of people. The anti-Semite, Dann Gannon, makes absurd statements about Hitler's motives without any proof, then cries censorship when people tell him to get off News. One person, correcting another's German, gets called "a maggot from Brown U." The first person writes, "You are seriously misinformed. Brown's football team is called the Bruins, not the Maggots." I log off, knowing that when I begin reading arguments about college mascots, it's time to quit. | Phone related to the spot | Phone | Workday | Hours | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | **EPM coverage of Booster vs Stich** | aitrch@bosse.usm | 12 | 2-h/day | | **EPM coverage of Booster vs Stich** | work@workusd.com | 16 | 2-h/day | | **Booster rattlestick (Spieler)** | bryan.boostech.com | 9 | 1-h/day | | **Booster rattlestick (Spieler)** | work@workusd.com | 14 | 2-h/day | | **Ne up the Litterter?** | agwatf8@ucla.edu | 11 | 2-h/day | | **Ne up the Litterter?** | work@workusd.com | 15 | 2-h/day | | **Booster rattlestick (Spieler)** | work@workusd.com | 7 | 1-h/day | | **Booster rattlestick (Spieler)** | work@workusd.com | 10 | 2-h/day | | **NP RT Tour Heistler** | clifford.eng and akc | 7 | 2-h/day | | **Ne up the Litterter?** | clifford.eng and akc | 13 | 2-h/day | | **Ne up the Litterter?** | work@workusd.com | 10 | 2-h/day | | **BPM coverage of Booster vs Stich** | bruyn.boostech.br | 30 | 2-h/day | | **BPM coverage of Booster vs Stich** | work@workusd.com | 10 | 2-h/day | | **Booster rattlestick (Spieler)** | bruyn.boostech.br | 30 | 2-h/day | | **EPM coverage of Booster vs Stich** | bruyn.boostech.br | 14 | 2-h/day | | **NP RT Tour Heistler** | aliforstick.co.uk | 14 | 2-h/day | | **NP RT Tour Heistler** | work@workusd.com | 14 | 2-h/day | | **Heist week on the NPT Tour** | aliforstick.co.uk | 14 | 2-h/day | FILM STUDIO EDITION OF THE TAPE COMPOSER | Film ID | Title | Date | Location | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 1975200 | Mr. Wright Leads Clinton | 32 | 12-Jug | | 1975201 | REVIVE THE PENN CURRUM FUNDERS | 32 | 12-Jug | | 1975202 | REVIVE THE PENN CURRUM FUNDERS TIME OF BILL GROSS | 32 | 12-Jug | | 1975203 | REVIVE THE PENN CURRUM FUNDERS | 32 | brasswind punk co. | | 1975204 | Reach the moon guns are good for self body paint excercise | 32 | 18-Jug | | 1975205 | Nota na nota na n How to get on News: 1. Obtain a computer account (either "kuhub," "falcon," or "stat1" will work) through the Computer Center. 2. Log in to your account, using the user name and password you established when obtaining the account. 3. On kuhub, type "news." On falcon and stat1, type "tin." 4. If you have any problems, type "help." kutahu.cuden.edu Group, all to be born in-kuhan-hudson, M. Nebraska - 76679, Borned 325 Pre-employment training. Office of Human Resources, M. Nebraska, N.ebraska Procurement for HR positions. Office of Human Resources, M. Nebraska HTTPS actually played clicked. Bread thought. They played burger burger when they played bread. They played bread. They were interested in bread. They were interested in bread. So it was long been hoped that HTTPS would be a better browser for browsing, but it wasn't. NEWS LIVE ONLINE A Partial 'Net Glossary Posting: A message on News Thread: A particular discussion within a news group. Newsgroup: A set of postings about a specific subject, such as the Dallas Cowboys or cooking. Flame: A harshly negative reply to a posting. Moderated newsgroup: A newsgroup in which a person or persons decide which postings can be included in the group. Unmoderated newgroup: A chaotic mess where anyone who wants to post to a group can. kubbu.bc.ukans.edu 10.10.10.10. No back box is left on the hook. First name Date 25-Pug Re Question: Who stole the money in tbl7798.1teaml and fire 25-Pug What the hall is corroded? 25-Pug Re do they line it! 25-Pug Re w kuhub Group A12 participants (7000) 8,500+ (-1,600) Record (983) Group all reinstallations. Use IBMOS (*Group = 92922 - 19854, Versed 2008*) Group all reinstallations. Use IBMOS (*Group = 92922 - 19854, Versed 2008*) Group all reinstallations. Use IBMOS (*Group = 92922 - 19854, Versed 2008*) Group all reinstallations. Use IBMOS (*Group = 92922 - 19854, Versed 2008*) So, a naggit from Brown U. According to my dictionary, *adjecturing* means *determination* and *adjective* means *adverbate*. From bottom: Pat Grassy, bass; Charles Sharpe, drums; Scott Born, guitar, vocals; and Ron Hayes, guitar. Braun, not the flogger, if you cannot even get this straight foot, how can you expect us to believe you have your feet straight? wants to take me on Kill Greek way After six years of playing local bars, Kill Creek hits the big time. By David Wilson "Stretch" is intended to spark interest in the band before the release of a 14-song album called "St. Valentine's Garage" in October, said guitarist Ron Hayes. Lawrence band Kill Creek is taking their guitar-thick sound nationwide this month with the release of "Stretch", a five-song compact disk released Aug. 8 on Mammoth Records, an independent label based in North Carolina. Kansan staff writer Both "Stretch" and the upcoming "St. Valentine's Garage" were recorded at Red House Recording Studio in Lawrence. "We're working it pretty hard right now. We're introducing the band to the rest of the country," he said. Hayes credits recording engineer Ed Rose with the polished sound of both releases. Rose has worked with Kill Creek since 1900. Kill Creek has been throwing out their wall of noise for six years. Before that, Hayes and vocalist Scott Born bung out at the new-defunct Outhouse when they were still in high school. "He's a wizard. He's got a great ear," Hays said. Hayes said Rose favors unadorned drum and guitar tracks, which complements Kill Creek's guitar-oriented sound. Recording in Lawrence had its advantages, Hayes said. "We saved a bundle. We could have gone somewhere else, but didn't," he said. Before signing with Mammoth Records, the band had released a cassette, "Chonic" (pronounced "thonic.") The cassette featured one song, "Cowhead," that got plenty of air play on KJHK, Hayes said. Right now Hayes, Born and Bassist Pat Grassy live only a few doors away from each other on Tennessee Street. Recently married drummer Charles Sharpe also lives in Lawrence. Regular commuters on Kansas Highway 10 may recognize the words "Kill Creek" from a green-and-white highway sign halfway between Lawrence and Olathe. It's not just a coincidence. That's where the band got its name. Historical details of the battle will be included with the artwork on "St. Valentine's Garage." Haves said. The creek was named "Kill Creek" in remembrance of a battle between Native Americans and white settlers in Osborne County, Hayes said. Another nearby creek was given a similarly morbid name: Blood Creek. Kill Creek will be at the Manhattan Parks Festival in Manhattan on Aug. 28 and at the SpiritFest in Kansas City, Mo. on Sept. 3. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN August 24,1994 PAGE 6 B KULife People and places at the University of Kansas. calendar People and Places at the University of Kansas. EXHIBITIONS AND LECTURES the Spencer Museum of Art. Exhibition- Latter Days of the Law: Images of Chinese Buddhism, 850-1850, opens Saturday at Exhibition-Basic Studies Scholarship Show, sponsored by the Department of Design and the School of Fine Arts. August 21 September 2 at the Art and Design Gallery. PERFORMANCES Staged Reading-English Alternative Theatre presents "Don Juan in Hell" by George Bernard Shaw, 8 p.m. Monday, September 5 at 100 Smith Hall, Free. East Side Comedy Shop XVIII, 8 p.m. Friday and 8 and 10 p.m. Saturday at the Renegade Theatre, 518 E. 8th St. $6 public. Lighten Up Improvisation Company presents "Play It By Ear," 7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday and "Outside the Lines," 10 p.m. Saturday at the Lighten Up Improvisation Co., 323 W.8th St. in Lucas Place, Kansas City, MO. $4-6 public. MOVIES "Angel at My Table." 7 p.m. today and 2 p.m. Saturday at the Kansas Union. "The Killing," 9:30 p.m. today, 7 p.m. tomorrow at the Kansas Union. "The War Room," 9:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Kansas Union. "Four Weddings and a Funeral," 7 and 9:30 p.m. Friday, 7 and 9:30 p.m. Saturday and 2 p.m. Sunday at the Kansas Union. "Repo Man," midnight Friday and Saturday at the Kansas Union. COMING IN SEPTEMBER The Naked Truth with Dr. Jean Kilbourne on Sept. 1. Lecture on the portrayal of women in advertising. Jurassic Park, Sept. 17 at the Lied Center. 41 NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday,August 24,1994 7B Rebel leader turns attention to Rwanda's uncertain future The Associated Press KIGALI, Rwanda — He fled the country as a toddler to escape ethnic killings. Thirty-three years later, Paul Kagame returned at the head of a victorious rebel army, determined to end his country's cycles of ethnic terror. The thin, ascetic Kagame — nicknamed Commander Pilate for his harsh treatment of wrongdoers — led what military analysts say was a brilliant campaign to outst the Hutu government, which had ignited the slaughter of up to 500,000 of his fellow Tutsis. Since winning the war in early July, Kagame has stressed the prevention of reprisals and the rebuilding of a shattered Rwanda. Above all, he is calling on the Hutus and Tutsis to be one. "Whatever we do, we try to make sure it works in the direction of preventing the cycles of violence," he said. "We have to be broad-minded in looking at problems we all face as Rwandese, rather than looking at ourselves as Tutsis or Hutus." The 37-year-old Kagame, bespectacled and intense, admitted the tasks before him were monumental. He and the new government must attract large amounts of international aid and convince fearful Hutus — who make up some 90 percent of the population — that they will be equal partners. Kagame must curb revenge-thirsty Tutsis who, he admits, are committing some atrocities, while at the same time bring those Hutus responsible for the carnage to justice. Analysts say he must avoid the temptation to hold on to power, a pattern that has brought bloodshed and economic ruin to one African country after another. If Kagame keeps to his stated course, he would be an exception rather than the rule on the continent. "He knows what he wants for this country. I believe he means what he says," said Abdul Kabia, deputy head of the U.N. mission in Rwanda, who has known Kagame for years and is impressed with his dedication and enlightened platform. Loyal Serbs organize against rebel leader The Associated Press SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina — Bosnian Serbs who have remained quietly loyal to the government during two years of war spearheaded by their ethnic brethren are becoming more active in trying to undercut rebel leader Radovan Karadzic. The effort to provide an alternative to the self-proclaimed Bosnian Serb state and Karadiz stands no chance of immediate success. But it increases the pressure on the increasingly isolated Karadzic. Karadzic's pariah status worsened this month when his patron, Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic, severed all political and economic ties with the Bosman Serbs. Mirko Pejanovic, a Serbian member of Bosnia's presidency, is among the leaders of anti-Karadzic Bosnian Serbs as head of the pro-government Serb Civic Council. "It is not true that we can't live together with Muslims and Croats," Peianovic said in an interview. Hundreds of thousands remain in the 70 percent of Bosnia held by the Serb rebels. They will vote in a referendum Aug. 27-28 on whether to accept an international peace plan that would leave Serbs only 49 per cent of Bosnia and give the rest to a federation of Muslims and Croats. Milosevic's cutting of ties with the Bosnian Serbs is an effort to press them into accepting the plan. Milosevic, widely regarded as the instigator of the war, hopes that approval of the plan will end the international community's severe economic sanctions against Yugoslavia, of which Serbia is the dominant republic. But Bosnian Serb leaders remain defiant. They have turned to the referendum to shift responsibility to a population already bombarded with nationalist propaganda. Parking in the rear M The Etc. Shop 928 Mass.Downtown Treat Time! We'll Be Here With A... --cups or cones!* 50% 5 On small, medium or large Discount I Can't Believe It's Yogurt! THE TASTE THAT'S WON THE WORLD OVER MILKY CREAM I Can't Believe It's Yogurt!® THE TASTE THAT'S WON THE WORLD OVER (Waffle Cones and toppings Regular Price) Limit two with coupon Not valid with any other offer. offer expires September 15,1994 Orchards Corners Louisiana Purchase 15th & Kasold Louisiana Purchas 23rd & Louisiana 843-5500 749-0440 RC, DIET RC OR KICK 98¢ 6 PACK, 12 OZ. CANS DAILY SPECIAL BANANAS 19¢ ANHEUSER BUSCH NATURAL LIGHT BEER 698 24 PACK CANS LIMIT 1 ADDITIONAL PURCHASES NATURAL LIGHT BEER 14 PR 100Z CAN$750 BONE-IN RIB ROAST OR STEAK LARGE END 268 LB. ECONOMY PACK ROCKY FORD CANTALOUPE 22¢ LB. BONELESS CHUCK ROAST 98¢ LB. ECONOMY PACK FRESH CRISP GREEN CABBAGE 18¢ LB. FRESH BOSTON BUTT PORK ROAST 98¢ LB. ECONOMY PACK FRESH Sliced 1/4 PORK LOIN 148 LB. 9-11 ASST. PORK CHOPS THOMPSON OR RED SEEDLESS GRAPES 68¢ LB. TV BACON 99¢ 1 LB. PKG. ALL PURPOSE RED OR RUSSET POTATOES 198 20 LB. BAG EACH SPLIT FRYER BREASTS 108 LB. ECONOMY PACK FROM THE BAKERY. SUGAR FREE PIES 2¢ $5 ASST. VARIETIES BLUE BUNNY ICE CREAM 298 1 CT. PAN ASST. FLAVORS FROM THE DELI SLICED VIRGINA SMOKED HAM 298 LB. ECONOMY PACK IMPORTED FROM HONKNY JANLSBERG SWISS CHEESE $4 99 LB. FRESH CRISP CARROTS 88¢ LB. BAG. MILD MEDIUM YELLOW ONIONS 18¢ LB. BANQUET FROZEN DINNERS 88¢ EA. 911 OZ. PKG. WELCH'S ORCHARDS FROZEN JUICE 88¢ 12 OZ. CAN BLUE BUNNY LITE "85" YOGURT 35¢ EA. 6 OZ. CUP FROM THE BAKERY. FRESH BAKED CROISSANTS 98¢ 6 CT. PKG. ALL NATIONAL BRAND DOG & CAT FOOD 1 BLB. + 14 LB. OVER INVOICE COST! OPEN 4 HOURS Checkers LOW FOOD PRICES 23RD & LOUISIANA LAWRENCE GRADES "AA" EGGS 1/21 PER LEGGER CHECKERS' ENGINE CENTER DIAPHERS 1 LEP PER DIAPHER CAVALRY THE MARRIAGE LOFT FRESH KANSAS RAISED BUFFALO DAILY Jayhawk Bookstore "Your Book Promendence" At the top of Nintendo IIHF Ice-1 Wr-2 Th-. 4-Bat. 1-24-Man. NX-350. Camera America ONE HOUR PHOTO Lawrence's Largest Supplier of Darkroom Materials 1610 West 23rd Street 841-7205 Bottleneck 737 New Hampshire Lawrence, KS • (915) 841-LIVE Wed. Aug. 24 Spankin' Rufus Skin Thurs. Aug. 25 Tina & the B-Side Movement Fri. Aug. 26 MU 330 Pacers Dancehall Crashers. Sat. Aug. 27 L.A. Ramblers Limbo Cafe Coming Events Back Doors, Shudder To Think, Mori Saunders, Billy Goat, Toastors, Sobadoh TOP BRAND NAMES IN COLLEGE SUPPLIES Mead NIKE WIREBOUND NOTEBOOKS AMPAD KANSAS MEAD FIVE STAR° FIRST GEAR™ DAY PLANNER Get organized with the First Goal™ student day planner. Easy to use using planning system has class schedules, tab dividers, notepad, zipper security pocket, security strap closure. Durable nylon case. Available in black, blue and teal. $1999 Feature assorted colors, patterns & sizes. 19-030 (Marble) 1 subject $139 19-031 (Plaid) 1 subject EACH 19-032 (Marble) 1 subject $288 19-033 (Plaid) 3 subject EACH 19-034 (Marble) 5 subject $419 19-035 (Plaid) 5 subject EACH NIKE 46 TUESDAY MANAGEMENTS DW PLANNER TWO POCKET PORTFOLIOS ▶ 11-1/2" x 9-1/2". 19-038 (Marble) $110 EACH 19-039 (Plaid) KANSAS $119 EACH KANSAS FREE! FR 50260 $1199 EACH 5 X 8 JUNIOR LEGAL RULED PAD WITH ANY $5.00 PURCHASE • LIMIT ONE PER CUSTOMER OFFER EXPIRES AUGUST 26, 1994 NIKE ZIPPERED BINDER Durable, quality, light weight construction in contemporary colors. 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(for dinner only, minimum $10.00 order) 6th Street Knoxdell 15th Street Dine In or Carry Out Hours: Mon-Sat: 11:00am-10:00pm Sun: 5:00pm-9:30pm (feel free to call after hours ) 1410Kasold WANTED All students who are interested in working for the #1 college newspaper in the country The Daily Kansan is looking for students with an interest in reporting, photography and graphics. No experience necessary but enthusiasm and dedication are a must. Freshman and sophomores welcome. REWARD Gain real world experience and learn first hand how a newspaper operates. Find out what it takes to work on the Daily Kansan. Meet the Kansan editors and learn all about the Kansan Correspondents program at 4:30 p.m. Wednesday in room 100 of Stauffer-Flint. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Teacher suspended for ignoring silence The Associated Press SNELLVILLE, Ga. — On the first day of school, Brian Bown's American government class listened to his lecture on the Protestant Reformation while the rest of the school observed a state-ordered moment of silence. He was suspended yesterday for refusing to comply with the law, which he says is unconstitutional. Legislators pushed the bill as a first step toward getting prayer back in schools. to say, and they're not taking a minute from me," said Bown, a teacher at South Gwinnett High School in suburban Atlanta. Classes started Monday at many schools in Georgia, and that was the first time many teachers had to order their students to sit quietly for up to one minute at the beginning of the day. The law went into effect July 1, and it was enforced during summer school in some districts. "What I have to say is very important. Similar measures are on the books in other states, although Georgia appears to be alone in strictly enforcing a mandatory moment of silence. Massachusetts, Tennessee and South Carolina require a moment of silence, but they don't enforce it. Other states allow optional moments of silence. "I'm sure very few teachers do it," said Alan Safran, a representative for the Massachusetts Department of Education. "We don't monitor it and we're not going to." Supporters of the Georgia law said it would help students reflect on their activities. Opponents said it was an attempt to circumvent the Supreme Court's ruling against organized prayer in public schools. The moment of silence is announced over the public address system. Most of Bown's students paid attention to him during the moment of silence on Monday. One student, sophomore Kelly Stock, bowed her head in prayer. Berney Kirkland, representative for the school district, said Bown was suspended with pay. A hearing on Thompson's recommendation to fire him will be held within 10 days. Democrats continue fight for health reform WASHINGTON — Democrats are refusing to give up a health-care reform fight that some Republicans say is already lost. "If I have to change my Christmas Eve plans, so be it," said Sen. John Glenn, D-Ohio. The Associated Press Despite caution signs, some Democrats predicted Monday that a new bipartisan reform plan would lead to progress by week's end. "This time last week people didn't give the crime bill a chance," said Sen. David Pryor, D-Akr. "No one is willing to give up and quit. There's too much at stake." A series of meetings on Monday culminated with Sens. John Chafee, R-R.I., and John Brewax, D-La., leaders of a self-styled bipartisan "mainstream" group, presenting their proposal in detail to Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell. Their relatively narrow blueprint aims to raise the level of insured Americans from 85 percent to 92 percent by 2002 through subsidies to low-income families. It also would try to reduce the deficit through Medicare savings and a cigarette-tax increase, and contain rising health costs with tax incentives. Sen. Tom Daschle, D-S.D., said Democrats were generally receptive to the moderate plan despite its limitations. He said sweeping reform "isn't going to happen. So the question is, what is realistic?" He said he had hoped the new plan "would lead to amendments and perhaps some movement in the process this week." The mainstream group took blasts from the right as well as the left. Conservative Republicans said its plan did little to discourage health-care spending, and they tried to depict the whole reform drive as futile. The bill is far from the 100 percent coverage envisioned by Clinton and contains no fallback mechanisms to expand coverage or contain costs if provisions fail. In addition, the bill lacks prescription drug coverage and a strong long-term-care program, features of other Democratic bills. 'Friendly fire' shootout injures three on subway The Associated Press NEW YORK — Police officers from two different agencies responded to a report of a man with a shotgun on a jam-packed subway platform — and opened fire on each other as panicked passengers tried to hide. An off-duty city policeman, an undercover transit officer and a bystander were wounded Monday during the rush-hour pandemonium in midtown Manhattan. "It was chaos," commuter Kelly Ramchandani said. "Everyone went down on the floor, in the station and inside the last car." Police Commissioner William Bratton called it "a friendly fire situation." "It's going to take us a while to see what transpired," he said. The trouble began shortly after 7 p.m., when several passengers told a pair of uniformed transit officers there was a man with a gun on the platform below. Four undercover transit officers working pickpocket detail on a different platform responded, as did an offduty city police officer who was taking the subway home. Police were handcuffing a suspect when a loud bang rang out, apparently from the shotgun, Bratton said. A 19-year-old woman was also wounded, apparently by the man with the shotgun. She was treated at a hospital and released. "In all likelihood," Transit Police spokesman Albert O'Leary told New York Newsday, "it appears that DelDebbio fired and hit Transit Police Officer Robinson." Undercover transit officer Desmond Robinson, 31, was shot four times in the torso. He was in critical condition at Bellevue Hospital. Off-duty city officer Peter DelDebio, 31, was hit once in the arm and was in stable condition. "We believe the subsequent shots were between the off-duty New York officer in plain clothes and at least one of the six transit police officers on the platform," Bratton said. Damal Parham, 16, was charged in Monday's shooting with criminal possession of a .22-caliber handgun, police said. Officers recovered a sawed-off shotgun at the scene and later arrested Shea Kisine Davis, 17, on charges of assault, reckless endangerment and criminal possession of a weapon. MONDAY RIVER VALLEY MUSIC CAFE 1601 West 23rd Suite 210 841-9111 MONDAY $3 Domestic pitchers $4 Boulevard and Sam Adams Pitchers $5 Watney's Pitchers TUESDAY WEDNESDAY $2.50 IMPORTS 2-4-1 ANYTHING THURSDAY LONGNECKS $1.25 $1.25 SATURDAY 2-4-1 WELLS $1.50 VODKA WELLS WELLS *ALL DRINK SPECIALS ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE 8/25 Sally Iguanas with Reevers (from Boulder) 8/26 Lee McBee and the Passions DON'T MISS 9/16 Dixie Dregs UPCOMING EVENTS JOCK'S NITCH SPORTING GOODS The Sports Look of Today! Boots! Boots! Boots! NIKE - Water Proof HI-TEC - Casual - Technical - Women's Reebok - Mens adidas K-SWISS 840 Massachusetts 842-2442 ATHLETIC MIDNIGHT MADNESS! Save 20% All Week After 11:00pm Total Fitness Athletic Center WHY WE ARE THE BEST! • Treadmills • Stair Machines • Bikes • Nordic Tracks • Complete Selecterized Machine and Free Weight Area • Aerobic Classes • Boxing • Day Care • Self Defense Classes • Tanning Beds • Jacuzzi • Saunas • Complete Locker Facilities • Personal Training and Program Development • Towel Service Health/ Beverage Bar 832-0818 2108 West 27th Suite C 832-0818 JOHN HUNT --- UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, August 24, 1994 9B THE NEWS in brief GLOBE BALTIMORE Fired NAACP chair seeks injunction to stop his removal by group board The Rev. Benjamin Chavis is suing the NAACP to get his job back, saying the board of directors violated its own bylaws when it fired him. The lawsuit filed Monday contends that the board of the civil rights group didn't grant him a proper hearing or record its vote to oust him. "What I want the NAACP to do is practice the principles it preaches. "Chavis told ABC News. A hearing on the lawsuit was held yesterday in Superior Court in Washington, D.C. Chavis is seeking a preliminary injunction that would prohibit the organization from removing him. Chavis argued that his removal was done in violation of the NAACP's rules and could damage his reputation. NAACP attorneys argued that Chavis had abandoned his responsibilities by agreeing to settle a sex-discrimination complaint without telling the board of directors. RELJING China accused of holding activists The Chinese government has adopted a new tactic for punishing many political and labor activists, detaining them without trial and making them disappear in the justice system. A U.S.-based human rights group has charged In an address Monday before a U.N. human rights conference in Geneva, Xiao Qiang, chairman of Human Rights in China, said at least 17 Chinese dissidents had been arrested since March. The families of 16 have received no information on their whereabouts, Xiao said, in spite of a law requiring notification of kin. One who disappeared this year is China's most famous political prisoner, Wei Jiansheng. He was released last fall just months short of completing a 15-year sentence for advocating democracy. But police detained Weil in March for alleged violations of his parole, and police have not released his legal status. WASHINGTON ACT scores up, freshmen behind National ACT college entrance exam scores improved slightly for the second year in a row, but most freshmen still aren't ready for calculus or chemistry. Scores rose in 1994 because high school students, especially growing numbers of women, are taking more of the courses needed to prepare for college, test officials said yesterday. This year's average score on the American College Testing assessment was 20.8, up from 20.7 in 1993. WENATCHEE, Washington Boys commit 'coldblooded murder' A transient was killed with numerous shots to the head and chest after he threw rocks at boys who disturbed him by firing guns. Two 12-year-olds were held Monday for investigation of murder. The boys were shooting at logs along the Columbia River on Saturday and had been yelled at by another transient for firing too close, police Detective John Matney said. The youths moved and were shooting again when the victim killed at them. Matney said. When they ignored him and kept shooting, the transient threw rocks at them, Matney said. "At that point, they planned between themselves to hunt him down and kill him." Matney said. Both boys shot the man, reloaded and shot again, he said. Exxon Valdez captain sued for $1 Claimants seeking $15 billion from Exxon Corp. as punishment for the 1989 oil spill said Monday they want just $1 from tanker captain Joseph Hazelwood. "He lost his job, he is no longer financially secured," plaintiffs lawyer Brian O'Neill said as the trial's third phase opened in federal court. "With respect to Capt. Hazelwood, enough is enough." Hazelwood was skipper of the Exxon Valdez when it hit a charted reef in Prince William Sound on March 24, 1989, spilling nearly 11 million gallons of crude in the nation's worst oil spill. The jury already ruled that Exxon and Hazelwood were reckless in causing the tanker wreck. BLUE RIVER, WISCONSIN Man has 240-mile lawnmower ride BLUE RIVER. Wisconsin No driver's license? No problem for Alvin Straight, 73. Straight recently completed a 240-mile trek on his lawn mower from his home in Lauren's northwestern Iowa to visit his brother in southwestern Wisconsin. Neither brother can see well enough to get a driver's license, but neither wants to let someone else drive. When Straight learned that his 80-year-old brother, Henry, suffered a stroke, he knew he had to visit. He bought a 1966 John Deere lawn mower, got a 10-foot trailer to haul gasoline, clothes, food and camping equipment and took off on July 5. Straight made it to within two miles of his brother's house near Blue River on Aug. 15, when his mower broke down again. A farmer stopped and helped him push it. NEW!NEW!NEW Zenith Data Systems Z-SELECT ES 486DX $1,389.00 i486DX/33MHz, or future PENTIUM processor 4mb RAM (expandable to 64mb) 210mb IDE Hard Drive 3.5" 1.44mb FD 14" SVGA Color Monitor VL Local Bus SVGA 1024 x 768 @ 16 colors EPA Energy Compliant One year On-Site Warranty Zero Insertion Force Pentium OverDrive Upgrade socket, 3 open ISA slots, 2-button mouse, 101-key keyboard, MS-DOS, MS Windows 3.1 your campus computer alternative... 福 Jayhawk Bookstore only at the top of Naismith Hill! 1420 Crescent Road Lawrence, KS 66044 843-3826 WELCOME BACK WE'RE ANXIOUS TO GET YOU BACK "ON WHEEELS!" Student semester pass gives you unlimited rides for $50.00 Non-student rate is $60.00 Cash fares are $1.00/ride. Passes can be purchased in the Kansas Union Banking window and at the Burge Union Candy Counter after Aug. 22, 1994. K Fall bus passes ordered through Options can be picked up in the Kansas Union 6th Floor,Aug.18,19 22-9 a.m.-4 p.m. K STUDENT SENATE HAVE A GREAT SEMESTER! Dragon 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 5th Year Anniversary Exclusively for Women $19 PER MONTH Call for Details Buy 10 Tans get 5 FREE Value $15 non-members welcome BODY OUTIQUE The Women's Fitness Facility 749-2424 925 Iowa (offer ends 9/5/94) 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 Exclusively for Women $19 PER MONTH Call for Details Buy 10 Tans THREE MONTHS FREE FOR FIRST 50 MEMBERS INTERFRATERNITY CONGRESS UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS PANHELLENIC ASSOCIATION Interested in fraternity life? The Interfraternity Council is now forming an interest list for men interested in fraternities. For more information, call the IFC office at 864-3559 or come by our office 424 Kansas Union Total trail GIANT Iguana oversize cromoly fram oversize alloy fork alloy rims with QR lifetime warranty free 30 day tuneup FREE lock & cable FREE water bottle & cage FREE T-shirt any bike purchase ends 8/31/94 $419.95 save $50 KGUANA RICK'S BIKE SHOP Inc. 916 Massachusetts, (913)841-6642 The 125 Subject Notebook OLYMPUS Pearlfinder S924 MICROSOFT PHOTO RECORDER Becoming a Great Dictator Marine Biology 234 Observing Human Anatomy Pondering Your Future The Poet in You If You Rushed The World History 10 Intense French The Inner Voice Quoting Karenou Cafeteria Catharis Gut Health Obsessions Psychology 203 Capturing Your Coach Getting Psyched Political Science 215 Coffee Talk Bugging Your Roommate The Meaning of Life Phone Number Hot Phone Number Phone Numbers To Die For Reminiciating with Yourself Speech Communications Outlining a Screenplay Commissioning 101 Talking While Mascoring Business for the Arts Arts and Ideal 201 Recordeting Secretary Shopping List Reminder Ennunciation 301 Top 10 Answering Machine Greetings Chilling 405 Things You Should Tell Your Parents Confessions to Faster Mock Interviewing Massaging Shakespeare and the Muses Theories of Knowledge and Reality Recalling Morten, Larson and McCarthy Soap Open Analysis More Electives ... OLYMPUS MICROCASSETTE'SYSTEM Never miss another @pqrstuvwxyzabcdefghijklmn. If you can't find the Olympus Micro cassette Recorder you want (the S924 is pictured here) please call 1-800-221-3000 for more information. 10B Wednesday, August 24, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WE CAN'T HELP YOU WIN THE RAT RACE, BUT WE CAN HELP YOU FINISH. It's a busy world and it's sometimes hard to know what activity to pursue.And when we need medical attention it can be frustrating trying to find the best place to go for help. POLICY BALANCE At times like these,it's comforting to know that the profes- and the most experienced therapists and specialists in Douglas County. Lawrence Occupational Health Services 865-0700 Lawrence PromptCare is a full service urgent care center and a fast, economical way to seek medical attention. Staffed by experienced and Lawrence PromptCare. 865-3997 Lawrence Occupational Health Services offers a full range of industrial medicine options, including injury management, drug screening, physical therapy, occupational therapy and work hardening Prompt evaluations, courteous and timely service, flexible hours and plenty of convenient, accessible sionals at the new Mt. Oread Medical Arts Centre are there to lend a hand with expanded services. board certified emergency medical physicians. Open 9 am-11pm, M-F and 12 noon-11pm weekends, no appointment is neces sary-you'll be greeted by a nurse immediately and treated fast some visits can cost you as little as $45. Lawrence PromptCare is an excellent alternative to long waits in the emergency room or when you can't see your regular physician. Mt. Oread Rehabilitation Services 832-1900 Mt. Oread Rehabilitation Services offers comprehensive rehab services, including physical therapy and occupational therapy with specialization in sports medicine. Under the direction of Medical Director, Michael Geist, M.D. the program offers the broadest range of rehabilitation services M.T. OREAD MEDICAL ARTS CENTRE MOTORCYCLE parking make Mt. Oread Medical Arts Centre an agreeable health care alternative. KASOLD CLINTON PARKWAY CAMPUS A new book offers Black students tips for surviving a predominately-white university. Page 5A CAMPUS University officials accept a construction bid for the rebuilding of Hoch Auditorium. Page 5A High 95° Low 72° Weather: Page 2. KRU THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY VOL.104,NO.4 TOPEKA, KS 66612 THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, 1994 ADVERTISING: 864-4358 (USPS 650-640) Deliberating jury considers fate of Shanks NEWS:864-4810 Attorneys discuss the thoroughness of police credibility of witnesses By Manny Lopez Kansan staff writer The jury is out on the rape trial of former graduate assistant football coach Jeffrey Shanks. After almost five hours of deliberation, a verdict had not been reached. After three days of testimony, Douglas County District Court Judge Ralph M. King dismissed the jury of nine men and three women at 11:30 a.m.yesterday. During closing arguments, Assistant District Attorney Frank Diehl appealed to the jury to use common sense and common knowledge about date race. "Use your experience as human beings," he said. "What possible reason do (the victims) have to say they were raped?" Speaking in a slow deliberate tone, Diehl asked the jury to find Shanks guilty because the victims were not the people on trial and had more to lose than anyone. "Only one person is on trial," he said. "That person is Jeffrey Shanks." Mike Warner, Shanks lawyer, agreed Shanks was the only person on trial, but he questioned the credibility of the women and the investigation procedures of the KU police department. "Shouldn't the police investigate in a more organized and complete fashion?" he asked the jury. "People deserve that." Warner said that he thought the KU police did not do enough to prove Shanks was guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. Despite the fact that the investigation ended in March, the KU police department never interviewed any of the victim's roommates, mothers or witnesses at the bars. Warner said. "No one questioned (victim No. 1) for her anger after the incident," Warner said. "The people she talked to would lend sympathetic ears." Warner also said the victims might have been ashamed of what they had done or felt guilty after the incident and then decided to pursue charges. "Both women appeared credible in their minds," he said. "Testimony may have been convincing or compelling, but you don't know." Holes in the women's' stories were too large for them to be credible witnesses, Warner said. He said the second woman had denied in testimony that she had played Scrabble with the first woman while waiting for the preliminary hearing. He also said stories by Shanks former roommate, Dean Walendzak, and the second woman were different. Walendzak said in court that she had not spoken to him upon leaving the apartment in Jayhawker Towers after the alleged rape took place. However, she testified that she sarcastically said goodbye to him, trying to express her disgust that he did not help her. After Warner's 25-minute closing argument time limit ended, Diehl gave one final statement. "(The victims) are credible because they have nothing to gain or lose, especially with these people watching and the media present," he said. Kansas alumni handling Lawrence emergencies The jury will reconvene today at 9 a.m. C Brian Vandervliet / KANSAN Emergency room physician Scott Robinson tightens a suture on the injured finger of J.D. Riddle, Waverly, at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. Robinson, who graduated from the University of Kansas Medical Center in 1983, is one of four physicians who operate in the emergency room. Hospital looks to community for physicians By David Wilson Kansan staff writer J. D. Riddle sat upright on a bed in the emergency room of Lawrence Memorial Hospital yesterday afternoon, his torn and bloody thumb soaking in a bowl of saline and soapy water. It had been a rough afternoon for Riddle, who had been doing construction work on a home near 23rd and Wakarausa streets when he sliced his thumb with an electric saw. But help was on the wav. Scott Robinson is one of four emergency room physicians hired in July after the hospital canceled its contract with Coastal Emergency Services, a company that provides hospitals across the nation with emergency room physicians. Three of the four physicians, including Robinson, are graduates of the University of Kansas Medical Center. Although two of the physicians who worked for Coastal did live in Lawrence, other rotating-shift physicians lived in Topeka and Olathe, said Janice Early-Weas, spokesperson for Lawrence Memorial Hospital. The purpose of the switch was to have emergency room physicians with closer ties to Lawrence, Early. Weas said. "The hospital wanted to have community-based physicians in the emergency room," she said. Early-Weas said three of the new physicians lived in Lawrence and one lived in Baldwin. Also, checking credentials is easier when a hospital directly employs physicians, she said. "With a local group, we have a lot more control over that," she said. Robinson said the response from patients so far had been positive. Ken Martinez, chairman of the board of trustees for Lawrence Memorial Hospital, said the Coastal physicians were not as highly qualified as the new local physicians. "We have made a difference in the way people respond," he said. That could be seen yesterday as Robinson worked his way over to Riddle after having checked on an older woman who had been vomiting blood earlier that day. "We're going to have to put a tube in your stomach," he gently told the woman, who was still surrounded by a crew of emergency medical technicians in blue shirts. After a quick change of surgical gloves, Robinson was ready to begin stitching Riddle's thumb back together. It wasn't Riddle's first visit to the emergency room. He said he had been shot in the elbow three years ago. A beaver dam on the north end of the Baker Wetlands has created quite a legal tangle for Douglas County. Supporters for beaver dam fight trafficway By Carlos Tejada Kansan staff writer Last night, the Douglas County Commission held an open meeting to discuss a motion by Baker University in Baldwin to separate itself from a little-known elected legal authority, the Wakarusa-Haskell-Eudora Drainage District. The reason: the district wants to remove a beaver dam that stretches across a waterway running along the north end of the wetlands. Baker officials estimate 15 to 20 beavers live there. The motion also would clear Baker in a lawsuit filed by the district earlier this month after Baker declined to allow the removal. After yesterday's meeting, the county has 10 days to decide whether to exempt the Baker Wetlands from that authority, thus keeping the beaver dam intact. But the district said removing the wetlands from its jurisdiction would reduce its ability to control flooding in the Wakarusa River area. At the hearing last night, Vince Monslow, Baker's lawyer, said the wetlands could be damaged by the district's actions. The possibility of the dam's removal completely draining the wetlands should be enough for the county to release it from the district. he said. "I don't know how the wetlands could be damaged more than if the wetlands were drained." Monslow said. But John Bennett, lawyer for the district, said the wetlands wouldn't be effected by removing the dam. Instead of heavy equipment, workers would be sent in with chain saws and hacksaws. Plus, the motion would deprive the district of vital control of the Wakarusa River, he said. "We are not trying to drain the wetlands," Bennett said. "The wetlands are a benefit to the district because they retain water and don't allow too much water to drain through the district." Chuck Haines, professor of biology at Haskell Indian Nations University, said the wetlands were important to Haskell for educational purposes. Marie Gray, Lawrence resident, said removing the beaver dam and draining the wetlands was a way for the county to make building the South Lawrence Trafficway easier. Haskell students and environmental groups have said the trafficway, which may run through the wetlands, would destroy them. During the public portion of the hearing. But Louie McEhanay, county commissioner, said the beaver dam issue was separate and not under the jurisdiction of county government. Bye bye beavers? The Baker Wetlands are owned by Baker University in Baldawn. Baker petitioned the Douglas County Commission to be removed from the Wakarua-Haskell-Eudora Drainage district, which wants to remove beaver dams it says are obstructing the natural flow of water from the wetland. Louisiana St. Naismith drainage area Natural watercourse Beaver dams are located along the watercourse, restricting the flow of water. Wateruse River Heskett Rd. Source: Kansan staff research Dave Campbell / KANSAI INSIDE Two seniors and three talented underclassmen make up the Kansas football team's secondary, the backbone of the Jayhawk defense. Backfield in Motion Page1B 8 No class hits sour note for music history students Instructor never assigned to course By Colleen McCain Kansan staff writer Predmore, a Lawrence junior, had no reason to believe her Music History 138 class was different than any of her other classes. But when she arrived at 11:30 a.m. Monday for Masterworks of Music, Predmore and the other students were told that a major administrative blunder had occurred. Tish Predmore had no reason to doubt the timetable of classes. Although the class had appeared in the timetable, graduate teaching assistant Beth Fleming told class members that no instructor was available to teach the course. "We were told that the staff member in charge of scheduling had gone on sabbatical," Predmore said. "The new person was told to drop the class from the timetable, but somehow it slipped through the cracks." The Fall 1994 timetable of classes listed "staff" as the instructor for the class, but an instructor never materialized. Fleming told students Monday that the department of music history would try to find an instructor for the class, but students who returned to the class yesterday were greeted with more bad news. Daniel Politoske, head of the music history department, told students that they would have to drop the class. "The worst scenario has developed," Politoska told the class. "We have had a really big administrative goof-up, and I cannot find anyone to teach the course. I'm very, very sorry, though." Politksos told students they would have to go through the formal drop process, even though the class no longer existed. He declined to comment on the blunder outside of class yesterday. Three other sections of Music History 136 are offered this semester, but assistant registrar Brenda Selman said that each of these sections was full. "This is a very rare occurrence," Selman said. "I haven't heard of a situation like this one before." Cornelius, a Kansas City, Kan. senior, said the goo-up was typical of KU. Peggy Cornelius, a student in the class, said that almost every one of the 101 desks in 4051 Wescoe had been full on Monday. Selman said it was the department's responsibility to notify the students in the class when such a problem arose. Because the class was canceled, Selman said that she did not know how many students initially enrolled in the class. "I've come to expect problems like this, but I really think that the students should be guaranteed spots in the class next semester," Cornelius said. Erin Welty, Westwood Hills senior, said "It should be their responsibility to help us, but they're not doing anything," Welty said. Welty, an art education major, said the class was required for her degree. the music history department's response to the problem had been insufficient. "This is a college nightmare, and it's truly not fair." Wely said. "It's a hassle that never should have happened, and 'sorry' just doesn't cut it." This was not the first time Tom McCall, Lenexa senior, has had difficulties enrolling in the class. McCall said he enrolled in the class last fall, only to find out on the first day of class that his section had been cancelled. "Maybe you could see that happening once," he said. "But the fact that they messed up twice is ridiculous." w McCall said he would try and take the class again next semester, but would keep a back-up class in mind. 2A Thursday, August 25, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Weather NATIONAL Lawrence 88 ° C 63 ° Kansas City 93 ° C 72 ° Topeka 96 ° C 72 ° Wichita 91 ° C 73 ° Omaha 90 ° C 68 ° Tulsa 93 ° C 73 ° Des Moines 90 ° C 70 ° St. Louis 91 ° C 74 ° Chicago 87 ° C 67 ° Atlanta 88 ° C 69 ° New York 82 ° C 67 ° Los Angeles 89 ° C 68 ° Seattle 74 ° C 53 ° EXTENDED FORECAST FRI. SAT. SUN. Chance for rain in the morning, then muggy in the afternoon 88 63 Sunny! 90 69 Sunny! 90 66 EXTENDED FORECAST FRI. Chance for rain in the morning; then muggy in the afternoon SAT. Sunny! SUN. Sunny! 8863 9069 9066 8863 9069 9066 9069 No August 25,1994 $ Stock market report Dow Jones .32 3,755.11 Shares Traded Shares Traded 309.78 million ↑ Advances Declines 下载 1,374 - Unchanged 814 703 MYSE 2.1 258.61 Nasdaq 3.5 741.55 ASE 1.70 447.98 ON CAMPUS 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. KU Crew will hold an informational meeting at 4:30 p.m. today at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Brian Tylander at 832-9055. Lutheran Student Fellowship will sponsor a cookout and fall semester kick-off at 5:30 p.m. today at Immanuel Lutheran Church, 15th and Iowa. For more information, or if you need a ride, call Ken Kueker at 843-0620. Ithus Christian Outreach will sponsor a barbecue at 6 p.m. today at Holcomb Park, 27th and Lawrence Ave. For more information, call Mark Winton at 843-9529. KU Champions Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at the Kansas Union Parors. For more information, call Erik Lindsay at 841-4585. Students Tutoring for Literacy will sponsor an informational meeting at 7:30 tonight at the Centennial Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call 864-3660. Jayhawker Campus Fellowship will meet at 8 tonight at 158 Strong Hall. For more information, call John Dale III at 749-5666. St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Daily Mass at 12:30 p.m. tomorrow at Danforth Chapel. For more information, call 843-0357. KU Kempo Karate Club will meet at 6 p.m. tomorrow at 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Mandana Hurt at 842-4713. Department of Communication Studies has set the Oral Communications Exemption Exam for Thursday, Sept. 7. Interested students must register in 3090 Wescoe by Sept. 2. A $10 nonrefundable deposit is required to register. For more information, call Heather Enterkin at 864-3633. Lutheran Student Fellowship, will sponsor a welcome dinner for students at noon Sunday at Immanuel Lutheran Church, 15th and Iowa. For more information, call Kueker at 843-0620. KU Kempo will sponsor Koubudo, a weapons clinic, at 2 p.m. Sunday at Robinson Gym. For more information, call Mandana Hurt at 842-4713. ON THE RECORD A fight broke out in a house on the 1300 block of Kentucky Street late Saturday night, Lawrence police reported. Police said a dispute with a neighbor at about 11:30 p.m. led to an all-night fight in the house, causing $765 in damage. Most of the damage resulted from objects thrown back and forth at each other, including a coffee table, a fan and coasters, police said. No one was injured, and neither the resident nor the neighbor were arrested police said. A bicycle valued $200 was stolen from the front of the Sigma Nu fraternity, 1501 Sigma Nu Place, sometime last weekend, Lawrence police reported. at $300 were stolen from the residence of a KU student on the 1200 block of Rhode Island Street sometime Tuesday night, Lawrence police reported. Two bicycles valued together at $863.99 was stolen Monday afternoon from a bicycle rack in front of Templin Hall, KU police reported. Two bicycles valued together A barbecue grill valued at $39.96 was stolen early Saturday morning from Grace Pearson Scholarship Hall, KU police reported. Textbooks valued at $61.40 were stolen Monday afternoon from the sidewalk of Jayhawk Boulevard next to the Kansas Union, KU police reported. BEDS DESKS BOOKCASES Everything But Ice 936 Mass. Golfer fifi's 925 IOWA 841-7226 Lunch & Dinner Great Food fifi's THE HARBOUR LIGHTS have full service bar after 57 years of downtown tradition Camera America 1631 Massachusetts Downtown ONE HOUR PHOTO Lawrence's Largest Supplier of Darkroom Materials 1610 West 23rd Street 841-7205 E Rings Fixed Fast! Kurt Cummings jewellers DROP IT! 749-4333 833 Mass*Lawrence, KS Your payments for JUNFLOWER CABLEVISION can be made at the drop box in the Kansas Union, Information Counter, Level 4 Save time,save a stamp Drop it at the Kansas Union Is your student organization LOST...CONFUSED...WITHOUT FUNDS??? presented by STUDENT SENATE THE UNIVERSITY COMPTROLLER'S OFFICE Treasurer's Workshop ORGANIZATIONS AND ACTIVITIES CENTER Tuesday, September 6th 8:00-9:30 p.m. OR Saturday,August 27th Pine Room, Kansas Union Pine Room, Kansas Union STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE TOPICS WILL INCLUDE *How to spend state funds* *How to receive Student Senate Funding* *Howtokeepaccuraterecords* *Creating University Accounts* Horoscopes ♈ HAPPY BIRTHDAY! IN THE NEXT YEAR OF YOUR LIFE: Your talents will put you in great demand. Do not let a hectic social schedule eat up all of your leisure hours. Romance offers the promise of an enduring relationship. Look forward, not backward. The future holds something that could be much better than anything you have known in the past. Career and business success will depend in part on what your associates do. Financial progress is slow but sure. Watch out for possessive people next spring. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Be non-communital about a new career opportunity until you can talk it over with loved ones. Romance needs encouragement; take the initiative. Cultivate the power of positive thinking. CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DATE: movie great Sean Connery, actress Anne Archer, rocker Elvis Costello, all-star relief pitcher Rollie Fingers T ♂ ARIES (March 21-April 19): someone who is feeling under the weather needs your support. Business negotiations go more smoothly than in the recent past. A family member makes an interesting suggestion. ♂ 15 TAURUS (April 21-May 20) Career and financial matters dominate your thoughts today. Keep long-range goals in mind while launching a travel or educational project. A friendship brings important new benefits. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): You could find yourself in a difficult situation caused by an associate's dishonesty. Deal with this problem in a prompt and forthright manner and you will emerge a winner. Be gentle with loved ones. m ↗ SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Despite a rocky start, this should turn out to be a highly satisfactory day. Settle any differences with a loved one at the earliest opportunity. 69 CANCER (June 21-July 22) A personal project gets the green light. Your ideas are right on target! Take a leaf from an old friend's book. Approach those who have the authority to make important decisions. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Be very security-conscious if traveling or visiting another city for the first time. An attitude of overconfidence could get you into hot water with your romantic partner. Guard your valuables. III VS **LEO** (July 23-Aug. 22): Starting a new business or making a major career change requires careful planning. Consult experts. Creating a positive work atmosphere will be easy if you hire people who share your optimism. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Creative efforts can be highly profitable if you are flexible. Adopt a less independent stance when dealing with stubborn colleagues. A shard spiritual experience will strengthen a friendship. Do not let your imagination run wild. X 8 VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) A good period for vacations and travel. You are sometimes too critical or suspicious for your own good. Review insurance matters with an agent you trust. Family members deserve the best coverage you can afford. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Financial affairs look promising. A friend covers for you in an embarrassing situation. Do not shortchange your loved ones. Call friends and colleagues if you want to expand your social calendar. Keep their confidence. Water TODAY'S CHILDREN have a lot more strength and confidence than their quiet, gentle manner suggests. Unusually adaptable, they make great travelers and guests. Friends tend to cling to these Virgos because of their genuine concern and true-blue loyalty. They take their work and family responsibilities very seriously and go to great lengths not to let anyone down. Employers will quickly come to rely on these diligent workers. A steady climb up the career lad- Exclusively for Women PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Stay alert! Careless mistakes can be costly. What was previously established could be changed by today's events. Stand up for your rights. A mood of nostalgia may prevail this evening. Romance sends your spirits soaring! $19 PER MONTH ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ 5th Year Anniversary ✩ B BODY BOUTIQUE The Women's Fitness Facility ☆ ☆ Call for Details Buy 10 Tans get 5 FREE Value $15 non-members welcome The Women's Fitness Facilit 749-2424 ☆ 925 Iowa (offer ends 9/5/94) THREE MONTHS FREE FOR FIRST 50 MEMBERS THE 10-OUNCE AEROBIC SHOE. Reebok THE PUMP $ ^{\mathrm{T}} $ Aerobic Lite Mid weighs in at just 10 ounces for a woman's size 7. But it gives you the custom fit and arch support of THE PUMP $ ^{\mathrm{T}} $ sockliner chamber by Reebok. A lightweight for heavy aerobic exercise. VISA MasterCard 2023年12月14日 DAICONVIP Athlete's The Foot. LIFE IS SHORT. PLAY HARD. Reebok Hours: Mon-Sat. 9-5:30 Sun: noon-5:30 Thurs. 9-8:30 841-6966 --- CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Thursday, August 25, 1994 3A Census reports higher income results from more education Study shows discrepancy between men and women with the same degrees By Shannon Newton Kansan staff writer Marc Nordberg said his desire to earn more money in the future was one of his main motivations in going to college. "It felt like it was the right thing to do," said Nordberg, Minneapolis, Kan., graduate student. "And I did want a higher salary." According to a Census Bureau report issued in May, people who earn degrees do have a better chance to earn more money. According to the report, a person with a bachelor's degree earned an average of $32,629 per year in 1993, and people with a doctoral degree earned $54,904 per year. High school graduates earned an average of $18,737 per year. "Persons with more education can expect even higher lifetime earnings," said the report's author, Robert Kominski, in a press release. Maggie Kostner, Prairie Village freshman, said she was pleased with the bureau's report, since she also was earning a degree in hopes of making more money in the future. "Though I do want to find a job that I enjoy, I do not want to end up poverty-strike." she said. The report also said that the number of people finishing high school and going on to college was at an all-time high. In 1933, four-fifths of all adults age 25 and over had completed high school and more than one-fifth had completed bachelor's degrees or further education. "Our country is more educated than ever," Koninski said. "The educational level of the adult population continued to rise in 1993." But the report also showed that salary discrepancies still existed between men and women who held the same degree. The average yearly salary for men who received a bachelor's degree was $40,039, while women with the same degree earned an average of $25,991. Men who had a doctorate earned an average of $60,369 per year, while women with the same degree earned an average yearly salary of $29,799. 10 UNIVERSITY RELATIONS John Gaunt, dean of the School of Architecture, came to the University from Ellerbe Becket, a Minneapolis architecture firm for which he served as chief executive officer. New dean planning to build experience Editor's note. This is the fourth of five stories that will appear this week profiling KU's five new deans. By Ashley Miller Kansan staff writer John Gaunt is not your average dean. He believes in real world experience, looking toward the future and forgiving sins. Gaunt, the new dean of the School of Architecture, said he thought of the position as another professional phase in his life. "I found it a very appealing position for me personally," Gaunt said. "I want to make my practice useful." Gaunt received a bachelor's degree from the University of Minnesota and attended graduate school at the University of Pennsylvania. After that, he spent five years in New York teaching part time at Columbia University. He spent the past 18 years working for Ellerbe Becket, an architectural firm in Minneapolis. He became CEO five years ago. Gaunt heard about the open deposition through Ellerbe Becket's Kansas City branch. He said he also lectured at the University of Kansas last September and was very impressed with the university, "It's a wonderful combination of academic concerns and a pleasant environment." Gaunt said. Gaunt said his goal this year was to create a personal imprint on the school that reflected his practical, real world experience. Creating strong ties with local architecture firm was another goal he had set for the upcoming year. Gaunt said any other changes he made would be subtle because he planned to build on the good aspects of the school. "I'd like to see this school become an exemplary model for others," he said. right now, the school has student exchange programs with Germany, Scotland, Japan, Italy and France. Gaunt said he would like to strengthen ties with those countries and perhaps expand to other countries in the future. "The more we can connect, the better," he said. Dennis Domer, associate dean of the school, said Gaunt brought a sense of hope and renewal. "There's a tremendous excitement in the school." Domer said. "We're very lucky." Domer said he was looking forward to Guant's open and honest communication. When Gaunt began his new job at the school on July 1, he told faculty members he was giving them amnesty from their past behavior because he wanted to start the year fresh. "You can see that I'm happy," Domer said. Former dean Max Lucas will teach in Genoa, Italy, this semester as part of the graduate program in architecture at Clemson University. He will return to KU for the spring semester as a professor in the architectural engineering program. "I was dean for over 13 years," Lucas said. "I thought that was long enough." New student senators learn valuable lessons during mock session By James Evans Kansan staff writer Chad Browning, Student Senate treasurer, and Ami Hizer, student senator, approached the lecturn at last night's Senate meeting and presented an odd bill. "Lyndon LaRouche is somewhat of a political prisoner," Browning said, smiling at his reference to the perennial radical presidential candidate. "We believe that he has been wrongly jailed, and we're asking for money to support our organization." Although old and new senators laughed and chuckled quietly at the mock legislation, they were learning how to do their jobs. The mock session, conducted last night at the Big Eight Room in the Kansas Union, was intended to acquaint new senators with the procedures that Senate uses when passing legislation. New student senators questioned the mock bill after Browning asked them to approve $6,920 to pay for a demonstration outside of the jail where LaRouche was being held. After taking a detailed look at the pseudo-legislation, the new senators killed the bill. After the session was over, Browning said that the exercise was beneficial for the new senators. "They're all asking questions and learning procedures of how things go during legislation," he said. Two other pseudo-bills also were addressed by the Senate. The second bill was to fund a lecture by Khalil Abdul Muhammed, a controversial member of the Nation of Islam. The third was a resolution to broaden search committee criteria. Dan Hubbard, St. Louis senior and new senator, said that the mock bills helped him to understand the unfamiliar proceedings. to understand the unfamiliar proceedings. "I think going through pseudo bills right now will expose us to the procedures that we'll need to be familiar with" he said. Derek King, Kansas City, Mo., senior and new senator, agreed that the mock legislation would be invaluable in the future. "If we wouldn't have had this meeting, I wouldn't have been aware of some of the rules and regulations," he said. Sherman Reeves, student body president, said that familiarizing new senators with fake legislation would help expedite real legislation for future meetings. AIMHIGH AM HIGH $2000.00 SCHOLARSHIP SHIP 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 Dean Wilson or captain Bob Wicks at 864-4676. AIRFORCE ROTC - ACE Certified Instructors * Hourly Classes * Combo, Low Impact, Reebok Step & Slide, Conditioning * Seniorise Fitness for Women Only Since 1980 A 1980's DANCE TEAM AT THE GYM. 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The Power to be your Best at KU. union technology center Academic Computer Supplies, Service & Equipment KU Apple 4 Thursday, August 25.1994 OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KAN6AN COLUMNIST Health care reform is making America sick COLUMNIST MATT GOWEN Individual responsibility and aid for those who can't afford insurance is the cure for health-care woes. Health-care reform debate. Now hold on! That was not even a complete sentence, and you are ready to flip the page? I realize that people would rather read about the latest testimony from Nicole Simpson's tree pruner or Robert Shapiro's ice-cream expert than listen to another word about health care. So would I, in fact. Maybe it is because we have a bunch of stuffy legislators haggling about Bill Clinton's stuffy health-care plan. Maybe it is because many Americans are at once cynical about government and apathetic about spinach political issues. When Clinton's original 1,300 page program was introduced last Septem- ter Do not panic. Let's try to cut this beast down to size. ber, it was trumpeted by the White House as nothing short of "100% universal coverage," with Clinton claiming to veto anything that fell short of that. Getting down to the details, however, quickly became a confusing murk of hidden taxes, subsidies, "cost-shifting," and bureaucracy that the lawmakers couldn't even see through. Scalpel. The health-care reform debate is really nothing more than pizza and soda, pork and a waffle. PepsiCo and Pizza Hut, which is owned by PepsiCo, recently attempted to thwart a TV ad campaign that claimed the corporations were not providing adequate health insurance for employees. The companies denied this, saying their employees were well covered. Should there be employer mandates requiring they provide health insurance for all employees? Probably not, since the resulting taxes may involuntarily drive smaller businesses out of the marketplace, which is not terribly fair in the spirit of free competition. And the larger corporations such as Pizza Hut and PepsiCo would suffer globally as well as nationally. Should the government provide universal coverage? Considering that health care吃 up 1/7 of the present national budget, the resulting bureaucracies needed to implement and maintain such a system would cause costs to rise even higher. Not good. The other option? Individual responsibility. Those who do not already have insurance from work could buy it, with government assistance. The Clinton camp never considered this seemingly obvious and simple path because it did not fit with the banter. This brings us to our next food group. With certain members of Congress vying for re-election, and Clinton clinging to his image, the idea at first was this: stuff tons of pork under the cellophane to appease intense lobbying, label it "universal coverage" to satisfy constituents and ship the sucker. It's quick, it's easy. Then Clinton proved Gary Trudeau's illustration of him correct. In short, the waffle began waffling when confronted with the plan's shortcomings. A bipartisan committee in the Senate may reach a compromise before the August recess, but a recent Newsweek poll indicates 65 percent of Americans believe Congress should wait until all this is sorted out. It seems we are just not hungry enough to settle for junk food. VIEWPOINT Cuban immigrants merit right to American dream The Statue of Liberty stands as a beacon of hope for the "poor huddled masses" of the world. Her torch, however, is fading. The abrupt ending of the decades-long open door immigration policy towards Cuba provides one exam- sent them off to Florida with the other refugees. Most immigrants to the United States are hardworking, law-abiding people who are happy to IMMIGRANT POLICY Matt Gowen is a Lawrence fifth-year senior majoring in Journalism. Locking out refugees puts the American way of life in danger and breaks the promise of the "American dream." ple of the inconsistent U.S. policy towards immigrants. The movement against the traditional open door policy claims that new waves of immigrants equates to a deterioration of the American way of life. We must remind ourselves that America is a nation of immigrants, and with the exception of the Native American culture, every facet of the American way came from immigrants. Many fear that a new influx of immigrants will increase the unemployment and crime rates. That simply is not the case. Many immigrants do menial labor that citizens choose not to do. Others would point with concern to the mass Cuban exodus in 1980 and the reciprocal increase in crime. One should remember that the 1980 wave of immigrants is an anomaly because Castro opened the prisons and mental institutions and be in United States after a lifetime of living under a tyrannical government. America has a moral duty to keep the doors open to immigrants and has no reason to fear them. Immigration has been an essential part of the American experience for two centuries. The familiar story of people getting off the boat with nothing but a dream and becoming successful through hard work and sacrifice is deeply ingrained in the American culture. We call this story the "American Dream." It is when the government starts to suppress the American dream, that the American way of life is truly at stake. In a more concrete way, the United States has a moral obligation to allow immigrants to enter the country. Through radio and television, the United States has set itself up as a haven for those who could escape the clutches of repressive governments. Now that the Cubans are answering our call, the United States is pulling back. LOU MULLIGAN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD KANSAN STAFF STEPHEN MARTINO Editor CHRISTOPH FUIRMANS Managing editor JEN CARR Business manager TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser CATHERINE ELLSWORTH Systems coordinator CAMERON DEATH Retail sales manager JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser Editors News ... Sara Bennett Editorial ... Donella Heane Campus ... Mark Martin Sports ... Brian James Photo ... Daron Bennett Melissa Lacey Features ... Traci Carl Planning Editor ... Susan White Design ... Noah Mueller Assistant to the editor ... Robbie Johnson Editors Business Staff Campus mgr Todd Winters Regional mgr Laura Guth National mgr Mark Mastro Coop mgr Emily Gibson Special Sections mgr Jen Perrier Production mgrs Holly Boren Regim Overy Marketing director Alan Stiglic Creative director John Carlton Classified mgr Heather Niehaus Letters should be typed, double-spaced and超过200 words. They must include the University telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kaisaniemi should class include home and school phone numbers. Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed. The Kansas reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be nailed or brought to the Kansas newsroom. 111 Stauffer-Fint Hall. GO BACK HOME! CLOSED BORDERS GO BACK HOME! "GIVE ME YOUR TIRED, YOUR POOR, YOUR HUDDLED MASSES, YEARNING TO BREATHE FREE, THE WRETCHED REFUSE OF YOUR TEAMING SHORE. SEND THESE, THE HOMELESS, TEMPEST-TOST TO ME, I LIFT MY SIGN BESIDE THE GOLDEN DOOR!" Michael Paul/ KANSAN IMMIGRANTS John Lennon and Barney birds of the same feather "I Love you, you love me/We're best friends as friends should be." Whether or not we admit it, most of us are familiar with this tone or the off-color variants of it. To some ears it is a soothing little lullaby, to others it is the aurual equivalent of metal scraping a chalkboard. It's the Barney Song! To some he is the spawn of Satan; to others he is a kid's best friend. Whatever your opinion is of him, it is undeniable that Barney is an enormous cultural icon. And yet like many other sages who come preaching the message of love and peace — the dalal lama for instance — Barney is surrounded by an aura of mystery. There are many unanswered questions about Barney. What kind of dinosaur is he? Why is he purple and green? Is he anatomically correct? Is he a carnivore, herbivore or omnivore? If you were reincarnated and came back as Barney, would that be good or bad karma? However, the most important question to ask is why this humpy dinosaur drives people to such Dionysian extremes of adulation and loathing? In short, why is Barney perhaps the most significant cleavage plaguing our society today? COLUMNIST --- NICOLAS SHUMP You may scoff at such an analysis. but Barney is a near-perfect indicator of the various segments of our society. Children under 5 LOVE Barney Children between the ages of 5 and 12 are in that awkward stage when they begin to outgrow childhood heroes like Barney and the Easter Bunny. For teenagers, Barney is the perfect target on which to unleash their unbridled anger caused by adolescent angst and hormonal disturbances. By the time college approaches, most of us are able to restrain from physical violence. Instead, Barney is subjected to a stream of vituperative scorn normally reserved for enrollment officials and the parking patrols. When parenthood rolls around, Barney is grudgingly accepted as a part of the family. Once he gains access to the inner sanctum of your family domicile, Barney's presence is pervasive and utterly complete. It begins with daily viewings of Barney and Friends, but soon there is the Barney in Concert video, Barney sheets and comforters, shoes, socks and stuffed animals. But what is Barney? Is Barney really the Beast of the Apocalypse? Not likely. No, Barney's true origins are not to be found among the legions of Hell. In fact, Barney is a legacy of the Woodstock Generation. He's a warm fuzzy, a progeny from the Summer of Love. Compare these lyrics from Barney's song and a piece written by John Lennon: "With a great big hug and a kiss from me to you" and "All we are saying is give peace a chance." Face it, Barney would be right at home on the Yellow Submarine. Barney is the Apostle of Woodstock who spreads the "All we need is Love" gospel to the next generation. Is that so bad? Sure Barney is dorky and fat, but he is harmless and ever so friendly. Come on everybody now, "Won't you say you love me, too?" Nicolas Shump is a Lawrence senior majoring in comparative literature. INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVE Cubans would not risk the shark-infested water if there were a life worthwhile at home. Is it any wonder that ever increasing number of Cubans are prepared to risk their lives for the land of milk and honey to the north? The situation, however, looks like (it) is becoming a stalemate. Havana will not stop the exodus. President Clinton, on the other hand, cannot afford to be seen pushing anti-conunists into detention camps in America. This is turning into a game of brinkmanship. The question is who cracks first, Clinton or Castro? Washington, mindful that it was the East German exodus in 1989 that brought down not just the country's communist regime but the whole communist edifice in East Europe is pinning its hopes on an imminent denise of the Castro regime. Certainly, that would be the best result for both the Cuban people and America. However, despite the economic chaos, Castro shows no sign of planning an early departure. He has not yet lost the will to survive. The struggle between him and Washington looks, therefore, set to continue for some considerable time to come. Arab News Jiddah, Saudi Arabia It is very ill-boding that the military collusion between Japan and the United States is getting closer these days in different military spheres, from the "security" policy to the joint development and production of weapons and joint maneuvers. The Japanese authorities on every occasion argue that the Japan-U.S. "security" system is a "key to the preservation of peace and security in the Asia-Pacific region," committing themselves to favor the continued U.S. military presence in this region and strengthen Japan's support to the U.S. troops present in Japan. Japan has recently signed a series of agreements with the United States and is going to make joint military action with the United States. This crafty move is aimed at justifying its overseas aggression under the pretext of "implementing the agreements" with the United States. The sharp edge of the Japan-U.S. military collusion is directed against (North Korea). Japan must discard the bad habit of invading other countries with the backing of a big power and refrain from going against the trend toward detente and peace. The first seven months of this year witnessed days of Japan-U.S. joint military exercises of 13 rounds designed to threaten (North Korea.) This clearly shows the aggressive, provocative nature of the military tie up between Japan and the United States. Rodong Shinman Pyongyang, North Korea HUBIE WELL, MOW THAT YOU'VE FINALLY MADE IT UP HERE, LET ME TEACH YOU SOME OF THE FINE RULES OF HEDONISM! al bundy is GOD WELL, NOW THAT YOU'VE FINALLY MADE IT UP HERE, LET ME TEACH YOU SOME OF THE FINE RULES OF HEDONISM! BATHROOM RALPH HACK HURL NEVER, EVER, BUY "NATURAL LIGHT." BATHROOM RALPH HACK HURL NEVER KISS A GIRL WHO LOOKS LIKE THAT. NEVER PASS OUT. AND ALWAYS STICK WITH ME; CUD I GETS ALL THE CHICKS, JUST WATCH THE MASTER. SAY BABY, HOWD YOU LIKE TO BE MY LITTLE PIN CUSHION TONIGHT? OW. THUF. ah bundy IS GOD NEVER,EVER,BUY *NATURAL LIGHT* BATHROOM RALPH HACK HURL NEVER PASS OUT. GN KEC NEVER KISS A GIRL WHO LOOKS LIKE THAT. NEVER PASS OUT. By Greg Hardin 图 SAY BABY, HOW'D YOU LIKE TO BE MY LITTLE PIN CUSHION TONIGHT? SAY BABY, HOW'D YOU LIKE TO BE MY LITTLE PIN CUSHION TONIGHT? OW. THUD BAK ow. THUD BAH U N I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N Thursday, August 25, 1994 5A Book offers tips for Black students By Nathan Olson Kansan staff writer When Lorenda Morris walked into her biology lecture, she realized that she was the only Black student. "There were 600 white people in that class," said Morris, Kansas City, Kan., junior. "It was quite a shock." Stories such as Morris inspired Eugene Williams, Jr., a 1991 graduate of Emory University in Atlanta to write a book of tips for Black students attending predominantly white schools. The book, "The Raisin-in-Milk Syndrome: Ten Survival Tips for Black Students at Predominately White Colleges and Universities," was published in July. "I remembered that a number of Black students who entered as freshmen dropped out in four years," Williams said in a recent phone interview. Williams said he wrote the book after seeing a high rate of attrition of Black students in predominately white universities. Williams felt he was in a unique position because of his background. "A lot of the problems other Blacks were having, I wasn't having because I've always been around white students," he said. "In the book, I used my own experiences." Included in the book are tips for all students, such as "study hard" and "don't spread yourself too thinly." The book focuses on tips specifically for Black students such as: Get to know your teachers. Williams said that one advantage to attending an all-Black institution was the presence of Black role models often missing in predominately white universities. "At Black schools, there is a nurturing aspect about your education." he said. Get involved with campus-wide organizations. "This gives you a chance to get a taste of what America looks like," he said. "It gives you a chance to see everyone." "This gives Blacks a chance to discuss issues without Black enrollment Black student enrollment has risen in relation to campus population. Year Black enrollment Total enrollment Percent 1989 642 26,320 2.4 1990 644 26,486 2.4 1991 678 26,661 2.5 1992 686 26,465 2.6 1993 692 26,127 2.6 Source: Kansan staff research Dave Campbell / KANSAN fear of alienating members of other groups," he said. fear of alienating members of other groups," he said. Jonathan Allen, a 1994 University of Kansas graduate in public administration, said at Black schools students could find attention that was more difficult to find at predominately white schools "At a Black school you're known on a first-name basis," said Allen, who completed an undergraduate degree at Florida A & M University, a Black school. "Teachers take more of a role in your education at Black schools," he said. Allen recommended taking advantage of services such as the Office of Minority Affairs. "The best thing I can recommend is to identify yourself with role models," he said. "It's much easier to succeed when you see someone succeed before you." "The Raisin-in-Milk Syndrome" be purchased for $12 from Compex Associates Inc. at (202) 986-4680. By Carlos Tejada Kansan staff writer By summer of 1996, Hoch Auditorium should no longer be a shell. Yesterday, the state purchaser's office in Topeka accepted the contract bid of DiCarlo Construction Co. of Kansas City, Mo., to rebuild Hoch for $17,494,000. DiCarlo his bid was the lowest bid offered, said Alan Wiechert, University Architect. Wiechert said construction would begin in about two weeks after University and state officials have a chance to review the bid. The expected completion time is summer of 1996, and the new facility will be open for classes the following semester, he said. "There will be some difficulties," he said. "There's a lot of excavation that has to be done first." Wiechert said the next highest bid was $360,000 more than DiCarlo's bid. The new Hoch will include a 1,000-seat lecture hall, two 500-seat lecture halls, four 50-seat classrooms and a testing area. The new Hoch, which will be connected to Anschutz Science Library, will retain the facade facing Strong and Snow halls. The new building also will have an entrance on the east side. According to University Relations, from the front of the building, the new roof will look similar to the old red roof. will be left open for space for the Government Documents and Map Library, now located on the sixth floor of Malot Hall. Wiechert said the library would not be completed as part of the contract but would be handled separately. The state accepted bids in December 1993, Wiechert said, but all were above the $21.8 million budgeted by the state. The new Hoch then was redesigned and new bids were accepted Tuesday, he said. In addition, two unfinished floors Hoch, which was built in 1927, was struck by lightning and partially destroyed in June 1991. Before that, it had provided classroom space and a concert stage. BE LATE TO CLASS IN STYLE! SUNFLOWER OUTDOOR & BIKE SHOP 804Mass • 843-5000 O TREK.USA SPECIALIZED. cannondale KLEIN GIANT Rollerblade SAVE BIG BUCKS! On closeout bikes and Rollerblades! Even YOU can find us! 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Sat. 10-8 Your payments for KANSAS PUBLIC SERVICE can be made at the drop box in the Kansas Union, Information Counter, Level 4 - GAS SERVICE Hours: M-F 9-6 Sat 10-3 Save time,save a stamp Drop it at the Kansas Union WELCOME BACK EARN CASH $15 Today $30 This Week Plus a $3 Bonus By donating your blood plasma NABI The Quality Source Show your current student ID card between August 17 and August 31 and receive an extra $3 bonus on your second visit of the month. Lawrence Donor Center Walk-ins welcome $ 816 W.24th Behind Laird Noller Ford 749-5750 See our ad in the classified section STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE Is now accepting applications for Student Senate Committees and Boards All students are invited to join Applications are available in the Student Senate Office-410 Kansan Union Deadline: Friday August 26th at 5 p.m. call 864-3710 for questions 6A Thursday, August 25, 1994 U N I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N NATURALWAY ALQUILER PLAZA 820-822 Mass 841-0100 BRAXTON COPLEY ATTORNEY - Traffic · Misdemeanors · O.U.I.-M.I.P. · Fake I.D.'s Jayhawk Bookstore "Your Book Professionals" At the lap of Natalie Milli Bryce, I-V-M Th.-H. Saturday, 12-4-Dm. 843-9230 719 Mass. 749-5333 DON'S AUTO CENTER "For All Your Repair Needs" *Imports & Domestics* *Machine Shop Service* *Parts Departments* 841-4833 920 E. 11th Street STREET TAPROOM STREET TAPROOM 801 New Hampshire Come Visit our NEW BAR upstairs in the Taproom Be one of the first 25 people in the door and get a free T-SHIRT!! SPRING AIR SPRING AIR Authorized Factory Outlet for SPRING AIR Mattress Co. Bobbis Bedroom 2429 Iowa 842-7378 Monday-Thursday-10 a.m.-8 p.m. Friday-Saturday-10 a.m.-5 p.m. O WELCOME BACK! (Look what LPS can do for you!) Fast Turn-Around Graphic Design Multiple Colors Client Oriented Quality Service Brochures Newsletters Stationery & Env. Posters & Maps Manuals & Books LAWRENCE PRINTING SERVICE Call: 843-4600 512 E. 9th Lawrence, KS 66044 C KU WATER SKI Informational meeting Quality Lithography Design Informational meeting Monday29,7:30 at Kansas Union in the Kansas Room Any questions contact Lisa Dolejs at 832-0537 Baptist Student Union 1629 W.19th 841-8001 "Christian worship,fellowship and service" Dinner, Thursday August 25 5:30 p.m. WE'LL GET IT ON! POSTNET. PORTALS & OUR SERVICES KEY C Postal and Business Services 2540 Iowa Suite J. Lawrence Ks. 66046 (913) 865-3636 • (913) 843 5995 PRODUCTS - Mail Box Rentals •United Parcel Service •Airborne Express •Business Cards •Office Supplies •Facsimile •Rubber Stamps •Photocopies •Money Orders •Bulk Mailing •Shipping Supplies •Packaging Service •Passport Photos •Greeting Cards ATTENTION STUDENTS! 10% Discount on shipping with student ID. JOCK'S NITCH SPORTING GOODS The Sports Look of Today! EASTPAK MADE IN USA LIFETIMEGAURANTEE! Book Bags Flip Tops Waist Packs Brief Cases Leather Packs Satchels JOCK'S NITCH SPORTING GOODS The Sports Book of Today! ATHLETIC 800 Massachusetts 842-2442 MIDNIGHT MADNESS! Save 20% All Week After 11:00pm Total Fitness Athletic Center WHY WE ARE THE BEST! • Treadmills • Stair Machines • Bikes • Nordic Tracks • Complete Selecterized Machine and Free Weight Area • Aerobic Classes • Boxing • Day Care • Self Defense Classes • Tanning Beds • Jacuzzi • Saunas • Complete Locker Facilities • Personal Training and Program Development • Towel Service 2108 West 27th Suite C 832-0818 THE DREAMS OF THE MOVIE Personal 120 Announcements 130 Entertainment 140 Lost and Found Classified Directory Announcements 108 Personal 110 Business Personal 2005 Employment 2008 Hire Wanted 2028 Professional Services 200s 100s Announcements 235 Typing Services The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates based on race, sex, age, color, creed or nationality, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or Classified Policy All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 and/or any other jurisdiction, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, 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 subject to the above conditions. I 100s Announcements 105 Personals ROOMMATES FROM HELL: Have you or a friend had a roommate problem so serious that one of you had to move out? If so, call your researcher collect : 121-582-3092, 8a.m. 3p. M-F. STERLING JEWELRY Rings, Hoops, Bracelets, & Pendants LEATHER Backpacks, Bells, Jackets, & Purses GUARDIES Busch & Lomb, Rayban, Killer Loops, I's Fo, Sereneget, and Vuarnet 12th & Oread 841-9475 Recycled Sounde Live Music and Free Cookies! Scott Klamm Jams Come on Do Downt SAT 2:00 pm Pay Cash for CD's TRADE BUY SELL Cd's Lp's & Tapes M 110 Bus. Personals HUGE SAMPLE SALE! HUGE SAMPLE SALE! KU and LSU at 8:25 p.m & 9:28 10:20 p.m. New Hampshire St 120 Announcements Preparing For Exams Your Academic Success, Part 3: Preparing For Exams Using your notes to review, predict exam questions, prepare for different tests of tests FREE! Monday, Aug 25, 7-9 pm 4034 Wescoe Presented by the Student Assistance Center Learning a Foreign Language Workshop Improve reading, writing, listening comprehension and conversation skills. FREE! Monday, Aug 29, 7-9 pm 4034 Wescoe Sponsored by the Student Assistance Center CASH FOR COLLEGE 900,000 GRANTS AVAILABLE. NO REPAYMENTS. EQUAL QUALITY MEMBERSHIP LIMO 1-800-243-2435. CONTACT: BRIAN W. Carson Car Pool Exchange Main Library, Kansas City Recycled Soundsc 12th & Gread 841-9475 Recycled Sound More than 800 posters in this week!! Pay Cash for CD's TRADE BUY SELL Cd's Lp's & Tapes 1615 Free dog to a good home. 2 years 25 lb. Very energetic, affectionate and male dog. Must be a well-behaved pet. happy, leaves a yard. Call 765-948-101 LEARNING A FOREIGN LANGUAGE Workshop. Help for students of any language. FREE! Learn Spanish and conversation skills. Mon, Aug 29, 7-9 p.m. 4034 Wescoe. Sponsored by the Student Assistance Center. NEED A RIDE/RIDER? Use the Self Serve Cane Pool Exchange. Main Lobby, Kansas Union. TUTORS: List your name with us. We refer students to you. Student Assistance Center, 133 Strong WANT TO IHIRE A TUTOR? You list of all available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 133 Strong. PREPARED FOR EXAMS CESSION, PART 3: PREPAIRING FOR EXAMS CESSION, PART 3: reviewing, predicting exam questions, preparing for different types of tests. FREE! Thurs. Aug 25, 7:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m., Presented by the Student Assistance Center. FRIDAY,AUGUST26 130 Entertainment THE HELLCATTRIO RICKYDEAN THEVICTROS THE SPAMSKINNERS THE EUDORAS LIBERTYHALL 644 Mass., 749-1972 $4 in advance, $5 at the door *18 and over 300s Merchandise FREE POOL DAILY 3-8 pm Bottleneck 737 New Hampshire St A 308 For Sale 340 Auto Sales 360 Miscellaneous 370 Want to Buy 400s Real Estate 408 Real Estate 430 Roommate Wanted -Kansan Classified: 864-4358 140 Lost & Found Found: Face plate for car stereo at 9th & Main. Call and give proper identification by leaving a message on my machine. If you correctly ID the dog, please come in to see it. Looking to give away one year old puppy found one week ago in West Lawrence to good home Potty trained. Call Kmil or Stepheney 749-7530. 200s Employment 205 Help Wanted NOW HIRING PIZZA DELIVERY DRIVERS NOW HIRING 2 Editorial Assistants 1000 hr possible mailing our circulars for info $1000 hr For Little Caesars Pizza locations at 23rd and Louisiana or 15th & Kearn, EARN UP TO their own reliable transportation, proof of insurance and driver license and be at least 18 years old. Need a. m. & p.m. dishwasher, cooks a. m. & p.m. flexible hours, desserts person for Tues., Thurs. & Sat. from 3:1 p.m. Positions available immediately. Apply in person. 1266 Oread Ave. University Relations has 15-20 hr. weekly position open immediately to assist Oreed editor. 2nd position begins after Oct. 10 to assist townnews editor, 12-15 hr. weeks. Positions continue through May 18. Required: knowledge of news writing, AP Style and MS-Word. Newspaper experience preferred. Salary starts at $85.00 hr. Deadline 31. For application information call 842-3256. Adams Alumni Center Attention Work Study students; the KU Libraries have several part-time work position positions available. Contact Julie Sluizer, 502 Watson Library, 804-3601, for more information. Back at school and need extra money? Also want flexibility? Avon is for you. Get a 40% discount. Sell to friends or just yourself. Call Chris for more information 832-0025. Beautician/Barber Part-time Looking for two part hair-layers who want to earn great money on weekends or evenings. 10-20%. Please call 547-689-1730. Bucky's Drive-in, 9th & Iowa Bucky's Drive-in is now taking applications for part-time employment in 1/2 price package apply in person between 10 a.m. and 7 p.m. National Marketing firm seeks mature student to manage on campus promotions. For top companies this school year. Flexible hours with excellent earning potential. Must be organized, hard working, and money motivated. Involvement in student organization is a plus. Call Dan at 1-800-929-5212 ext. 308 CHILD CARE PROVIDER wanted by faculty couple for warm, bright girl 11, boy 10.3-6:30 p.m daily. Also Tuesday evenings and one night each weekend. Some light housekeeping. Car needed. Job-sharing possible. $400/month. Reply to Kansan Box 401. 191 Staffer-Flint Hall. Kansan Classifieds Call 864-4358 Mon-Fri 8am-5pm THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN McJobs Interviews and information on Saturday, 8/27/94, 10:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m. at the 23rd St. location. Work as few as 4 hours or as many as 40 hours! Hiring for all shifts at all Lawrence locations. JOIN OUR TEAM! M McDonald's SHIPPING AND DATA ENTRY ASSISTANTS NEEDED Lawrence-based, technical publishing company has several part-time (15-20 hours per week) positions available. Duties include shipping orders; staffing and mailing statements; copying documents; handling mail; providing access to delivery from the post office; inputting subscription pickups into a computer; and sorting and opening the mail. Previous experience working with high volume and working as a team required. Employees should have 30 wpm preferred. These positions are part of our internal critical support team (ASSIST) which helps other areas of the company as needed. R&D PUBLICations. Inc. is an equal opportunity employer concerned with creating a pleasant work atmosphere. If you are looking for an enjoyable work environment and will fit into this company, please visit 23rd Street, Suite 202, Lawrence, KS. R.D publikation, inc. COMPUTER SCIENCE INTERN. Deadline: 09/24/92, 5:0 p.m. Salary: $1,100/mo. (full-time rate) Duties include programming minimally interactive software to support data communications and networking in development, documentation, and maintenance of existing software systems. Installing communica- tions to the system is needed. Required Qualifications: Demonstrate knowledge bring a programming assignment to successful completion, assembly language programming courses or equivalent. English, currently enrolled as a student at the University of Kansas. Complete job description and application procedures are available. Contact Networking and Information Services at 843-8500, Ellsworth Annex, 1736 Engel Road, Lawrence, KS 60046. EOA/AA EMPLOYER UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Thursday, August 25, 1994 7A COLLEGE STUDENTS $18.25-11.45 STARTING Local branch all in 1a. Fill course. Immediate entry level openings. Flex time schedules. 3-5 days, eyes only. Please apply. All majors accepted. For info 941-8065 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 *Bottonwood Inc., a service provider for adults with developmental disabilities is currently accepting applications for part-time employment in their residential division. All positions are evening and weekend hours, some may require sleep overs. College course work and related experience help but may not be required. A GOOD DRIVING license is required. 861/39/417 at Bottonwood Inc. but 880 W. W31, EOE. CRUISER Ships NOW HIRING - Earn up to $2,500 +/- month working on Cruise Ships or Lakes. Time employment available. No experience necessary. For more information call 1-800-634-8988. Domino's Pizza is hiring. 10 delivery positions available, two inside positions available. Apply by 4 per day at Domino's Pizza, 9th & Ila. Benefits include: free meals, flexible schedule, discounted menu items, pay based on hours available. Should be willing to work nights & weekends. DOORMEN NEEDED Must be friendly, but able to handle confrontation. Call 749-5039 - Ask for ZAC E or E Display Group is taking applications for full-time assemier position on all shifts. Please apply in person on Thursday friday between 8:00 and 4:00 p.m. 910 E. 32th Street-Lawrence EOE Godfather's Pizza is in now hiring day and kitchen and evening drivers. Apply in person at 711-382-4010. Graduate Assistant Position The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center has a quarter-time student position in the University of Kansas. Fall 1994.2: Experience in working with interests and concerns of women students, 3. Work with large groups, 4: Training or experience in writing Assistant evidence, preferred that the Graduate Assistant evidence be submitted to university services one or more of the units of Student Life. Job description available at the Women's Resource Center, September 6, 1994 Deadline. Eligible persons are invited to submit a letter application, resume* and names of two (2) references by 5:00 p.m., on Monday, September 8, 1994, Laird, Director. The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, 115 Strong Hall, University of Lawrence, KS 60445, (913) 843358 EOA/EA Graduate student with a reliable car to pick me at the airport and drive我me once a week to the airport. UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER seeks student bourses (especially work-study eligible) for students in the School of KU and community resources, organized, compiler-literate, good communicators, interested in helping others, have diverse ranges of interests, and a wide background. Students can join Union for application. Need sophomores/junions who can make KU their primary work commitment. Deadline is 5 pm Friday, August 26. Waiters needed for sorority house Please call 865-0649 or 865-3798 **Volunteers needed!** Headquarters Counseling Center Caring people need to learn basic counseling Information Meeting locations Wed. Aug. 24th 1:00, 8:30, 9:00AM Worked needs for all phases of KU home football game concessions; vendors, commissions, warehouses; game day at KU; part-time jobs available. *Hours: 20/68, 20/62, a.m. m.-p. m.; gate. Applies to M纪念 Stadium. Nanny/Babysitter position and/or job share for Monday, Wednesday, Friday in our home for one newborn. Be responsible; references. Call 843-2540 and leave a message. ZAR CO 66 FOE PLAZA SEKES-FULL AND PART-TIME CASHIERS TO WORK ALL SHIFTS FOR STORE M 1 SIOUTH OF LAWRENCE. MUST BE NEAT, CLEAN AND ENJOY WRITHING WITH THE PUBLIC IF INTERESTED APPLY IN PERSON NEEDS SPENDING CASH* B.P.I. Building needs now receiving applications to a variety of facilities. Nutritional Program Position Hours: 3:30pm to 8:30pm 842-6264 Ask for Jeannie Needed: after school care for 2 children. 3:15-3:40. Mon - Fr. Must be dependable, enjoy children and teens. Daisies Assistance in meal preparation, trans- fusion, and food preparation. Service clean up duties, and minimal paperwork Will consider only applicants who are: Responsible, Reliable, Self-Directed and Compassionate. She will schedule an interview contact Rox Cox, R.N. Proficient in Computer Science and Health of Innovation at KA94 7619 Oneida Factory Store now hiring MWF mid-day shift. Work 8-14hrs/hday. Pick your own schedule Limited weekends: Apply in person 10-5 daily Suite 103, Lawrence Riverfront Pizza. 749-6421 INTERNATIONAL EMPLOYMENT Make up to $2,000.00/m +/mo teach basic conversational English in Japan, Taiwan, or S. Korea. No teaching background or Asian languages required. For more information visit www.international-employment.com. KU ACDs Alumni Center is now hiring for part-time banquet server and host positions. Looking for responsible, hard working applicants with experience in hospitality (1266 Ered Eddyson course from the Kansas University) KU GAME PARKING 40 people needed for parking attendants at the KU home football & basketball games. Must be able to work consistently throughout both seasons. If interested, contact QBO 213-695-7800. Manpower Temporary Services Laving Nancy required for 4 yr old boy in our school at school all day. Near KU 682 0919. Packer Plastics, the largest plastics manufacturing plant in the U.S., has excellent entry-level opportunities for individuals to work as inspector/packers. These positions are full-time & offer a complete benefits package. Part-time inspector/packers are also needed to work 9 m - 3.30 a.m. Monday through Friday, Mon - Fri. at Packer Plastics, Human Resources Dept. 2000 Parker Lawrence, KEOS/EMR. Part-time clerical position in medical office, 12.14 hours per week, flexible with class schedules. Send resume to: Lori Hamm, 304 Sharon Drive, Lawrence, KS, 66049 Phillips 62 ZARCO at 9th & Iowa needs immediate night help. Inquire within. Preschool Sub Season 7-11: 11:30-5:20 all days Prefer 7.1; 11.10-30, or all day any weekday, Jr or Sr in child-related field. Center experience. nepal, Sunshine Acres Center Raintree Montessori School located on thirteen acres with horses and a pot-bellied pig named Mamie. Classes 1-3, 4-5, 6-8, 10-11, 1-30 and 1-3-5-3-5. Must love children. Will train. Transportation required; call 843-6800. Secretary, 1-4 p.m. weekdays. General office duties include accurate record keeping, computer proficiency, ability to work well with public and private schools. Perfect for Nine Plus. Required. Apply at Children Center, 205 N Michigan EOE. SPRING BREAK "65 SELL TRIPS, EARN CASH & GO FREEBIE!" !!! Student Travel Services in now hire campus representatives. Lowest rates to San Diego. Visit www.pamaca.com. Pamaca Beach. Call 1-800-484-4849 Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, 115 Strong Hall, has a student position available. Enrollment as student at University of Kansas or University of Oklahoma is available at Women's Center or University Placement Center. Deadline for applications is 12/31. Complete job description available at Women's Center. SIRLOIN STOCKADE New hire stockade Now hiring all required No experience required Apply in person www.airlinereservations.com STUDENT CLERICAL ASSISTANT. Deadline: 09/28/94. Salary: $45/35 per hour. Duties include assisting in invoicing, mailing & filing of Computer Center balances, maintaining Accounts Receivable records, preparing accounts for making daily deposits; recording microcomputer workshop registrations; performing receptionist duties on a fill-in basis, and miscellaneous Business office duties. Must be enrolled in 6 hours at a time and must complete a job application available in Room 02 of the Computer Center. EO/A EMPLOYER **STUDENT DISTRIBUTION TECHNIQUE.** Date: 08/29 / 2014 Salary: $43.35 per hr Durates include performing bursting and decluttering services; delivery of computer output and interface devices; on occasion will assist in receiving shipments, stocking and maintaining inventory figures; on occasion will assist in functions; on occasion will operate forklift and assist in maintenance; assists in Open Landscape Furniture maintenance; performs duties in conjunction with other customers; uses personal computer or mainframe software as part of keeping recordkeeping. To apply, contact Center in room 202 EO/AA EMPLOYER Advertising Production Artist Macintosh Proficient $6-8/hour depending on ability to produce. Flexible hours. Must be capable of designing ads in a deadline-sensitive newspaper setting using Quark XPress for the Macintosh. Experience with Adobe Photoshop helpful, though will consider a quick study. You'll be using cutting-edge computer technology to produce advertisements according to the layouts developed by our clients and account executives. The Kansan is an award-winning newspaper that has been nationally recognized repeatedly for leader ship through innovation and has captured several advertising design awards. You'll become skilled with a wide range of Macintosh-compatible hardware and software that's common in professional advertising, publications, promotional and design agency environments. Call Catherine Ellsworth at 864-4810 between 1 and 6 p.m. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN United Child Development Center has immediate openings for full or part time teaching assistants. Call 842-5392 or send to UCDC. EOE. 946 Vermont Lawrence, KS 60044. molly mcgees grill & bar Now Hiring! Cooks and Dishwashers A.M. and P.M., Full and Part Time Apply between 2 and 4 p.m. 2429 IOWA United Child Development Center is taking applications for nap sites. Hours needed1. 30:2-3:0. Apply at UCDC, 949 Verm St., Lawrence, KS 66044 United Child Development Center is accepting applications for the position of lead teacher with children age 3-5 years old. A degree in education with an emphasis in Early Childhood or a degree in Education, Health and Social Science and experience. Transcript and 2 work-related references must accompany each application. Send to Director, UCDC, 946 Vermont St., Lawrence, KS 60044 EOE THE HARBOUR LIGHTS Now a full service bar after 57 years of downtown tradition 1031 Massachusetts Downtown Previous McDonald's Crew? Join our team. We'll work around your schedule. What you want is what you get. *Hiring for all Lawrence locations on Saturday, 8/27/94, at the 23rd St. location. 10:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m. See you there! Advertising Pagination Macintosh Proficient $6-8/hour depending on ability to produce Mornings-approx. 4 hours Mon-Fri Must be capable of working on Quark XPress in a fast-paced, progressive newspaper setting. You'll use a Macintosh computer to build pages for the Daily Kansan by placing ads on pre-formatted templates. Accuracy and dependability are crucial qualifications. We're looking for a capable problem-solver who can take responsibility while gaining expertise on cutting-edge technology The Kansan is an awardwinning newspaper that has been nationally recognized repeatedly for leadership through innovation. You'll become familiar with a wide range of Macintosh-compatible hardware and software that's common in professional advertising, publications, promotional and design agency environments. Call Catherine Ellsworth at 864-4810 between 1 and 6 p.m. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 225 Professional Services Driver Education - offered thru Midwest Driv- er Education - offered thru Midwest Driv- er License obtainable, transportation providec Relieve pain and stress with massage therapy! Student discounts available. Be healthier and happier! Call Anna Lunaria and Laura Pace at 841-1587 cardtard reading tests As featured in the U.D.K. and 105.9 The Lazer. Call Anna Lunaria at 414-1817. 235 Typing Services ENGLISH TUTOR English courses, writing and reading in English. Experience and experienced. Course 843-3135. DUOTRAFFICIERAT, OVERLAND PARK-KANSAS CITY AREA CHARLES R. GREEN ATTORNEY-AT-LAW ATTORNEY-A-LAW Call for a free consultation (816) 361-0964. SUNFLOWER BIKE SHOP Tune-ups, overhalls, up grades, free air 304 Massachusetts 843-5000 We carry Biancany, Specialized and Trek. Plus accessories & a full service bike shop. Layaway offers free shipping on all purchases. SUNFLOWER OUTDOOR SALBORN CLOSE-OFF MUTTERS O' Brien. Get one优惠 804.858.7362.8710. SUNFLOWER BIKE SHOP **der Women Word Processing.** Former editor transforms scribbles into accurate pages of letter format. OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense X 300s Merchandise Rick Frydman, Attorney 701 Tennessee 843-4023 TRAFFIC-DUI'S Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters the law of offices DON'T G. DUI'S Donald G. Strobe Sally G. Kelsey 16 East 13th 842-1133 For free consultation call Unicild Child Development Center, 646 Vermont St. is accepting enrollment applications for children 2-8 years old. Full and part-time child care avail- able. 841-5292 for information. Wanted: Part time teacher for home day care 10-15 hrs./week. Exp #: 841-7881 Work Study! The School of Business has many work study positions available now. Please come to the business placement center in 125 Summer-field to apply. YOUR WORK TO LOOK ITS BEST? Paint a masterpiece. For anything you need at art. MAKIN' THE GRATE is the one to call, and do it. 305 For Sale 10 speed bicycles. Ladies Schwinn, 896; Men's bicycles. Ladies Bike Club. Call Steve at 684-325- 8215. Beds, Desks, Bookcases Everything But Ice 206 Mass For Sale 1800 Chevrolet Malibu 4-door, air conditioning, 100,000 miles. 79% F.C. Car match at Mace 1800. 486435a notebook. 4mg RAM, 120MB HD Monehoree. Built-in tracker. 2 PCMAIC Slots. Dos. Windows. Leather case. 3 months old. $1375. RAL-340 Free dog to a good home 2 yrs, and 25 las. Very energetic and happy. Need a yard. 749-9868 ing frame. Excellent condition $150 Call 841-4642 game size watered deluxe everything, 12-drawer pedestal. Headboard $300宜-7479 Traffic Tickets, Misdemeanors, FOR SALE New Carpeting 11-128X50-123X42- condition 1, works well up to $300. Call 797-7529. works well up to $300. Call 797-7529. BRAXTON B. COPLEY Attorney at Law General Practice Nikon F 1.8 Eoke Eye point, in box. Cost $290 Nikon S85 or best offer. N137-973-451. Tuck snuff box. Landlord/Tenant Refrigerator for sale $59.3 5 cible 100L Use for 2 remotesters Good condition $100 叫号 841-7657 48-PC 450 lap top, 2 hoppy drives no hard drive, PC battery and carry case, 842-730 evenings FOR SALE: Apple II GS 3.5 and 5.25 drives, monitor price, $500; Call 842-3411 Sony Discman with carrying case $60.00 841-1684 FUTON SOFA SLEEPERS • ON SALE • 719 Massachusetts 749-5333 BLUE HERON 937 Mass. St. π 841-9443 STUDENTS! Rent a computer, software, and prices for $10 a semester. Call 1-800-909-4040 for information. Two Schwinn bikes 10-speed 27" Boys-$50, Girls $7 Call 843-1780 Yamaha Razor motor scooter for sale. Excellent condition. Call Bryan 832-2274 Zenith Laptop T218i (and Panasonic Printer) (KX10F) dual drives (not hard) incl. carrying power cables (USB cable, power adapter). 360 Miscellaneous MIRACLE VIDEO FALL ADULT VIDEO CLEARANCE $7.88 910 N. 2nd * 841-8903 19th & Hankel * 841-7504 ★★★★★☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆ 400s Real Estate 4221 405 For Rent 1 Rm. avail. rent $250 + 1/3 utilities. Fully furnished. On bus route. 842-0935 September rent free on a 2 BR apartment Only 2 left Call today 843 2116 Available now in Lawrence: 1 to 4 BDRM Home 842-238-9657 BERKELEY FLATS Walk to RU One bedroom apartment in older building 643-1832 Use 9 p.m. 643-1832 Use 9 p.m. Semester leases available 11th & Mississippi 4 BR house for lease at 15th and Iveness. Clean and clean, furnished schools, $950, no mo. Call 822-6439; Call us today! Check out these housing options... Looking for a place to live? ORCHARD CORNERS COMPLETELY FURNISHED A BEDROOM - Front door bus service 4 BEDROOM - On KUBus Route * Close to Campus * SwimmingPool * Stop By Today! Signal 749-4226 M-F 9-5 Learning Opportunity 15th & Kasold Sat 10 4 Duplex Court to KU Stadium, plus two bedrooms off street parking, DWL/A/C, no pet容量: 800 sqft. - Fitness room FOUR BEDROOM APARTMENT Great floor plan, 2 bath, on KU bus route, NO PETS. Available NOW. Call 769-8236 Four bedroom. Four bedroom, central air, washer/dryer/bathroom. Appliances, appliances, off street parking. Convenience to KU hotel. $775/mo plus deposit. Call #842-8084. Looking for a place to live? Check out these housing options... - Dine anytime meals - Weekly maid service - Private parking - Laundry Facilities - Great campus location - A few steps from Allen Fieldhouse NAISMITH Hall Call naismith Hall for more information at 843-8559 Looking for a place to live? Call Naismith Hall for More information at 843-8559 NAISMITH Hall Check out these housing options... Apple Macintosh and IBM Computers - Computer room with - Fully furnished - and carpeted - Free Utilities - Quiet Study Areas NAISMITH Hall Call Naismith Hall for More Information at 843-8559 Renta WASHER & DRYER For Only $45 a Month CABINET *No Deposit Delta Corporation 842-8428 *Free Maintenance *GE quality Two Speed, Heavy Duty, Large Capacity 3301 Clinton Parkway Ct. Suite #5 Lawrence, KS 66047 THE FAR SIDE L. 2B DMR apft of campus, avail. immed. Lower level gardenoverlooking Lg living room. Full carpet, working fireplace, wash/dry, A/C. Very Clean! $490 + utilities. 841-1389 No Sublease Fee PETS WELCOME Quiet, comfortable, furnished rooms and apartments. Two short blocks from campus. Some utilities paid. Off-street parking. Nepets Call 841-5500. Roomette in the rear. Lower level garden, new kitchen overlooking lg. room. Full carpet. working fireplace, wash/ dry, A/C. Very clean! $490 + utilities. $414 2166 W. 26th St. 843-6446 South Point AWAY FROM HERE - Swimming Pool - Close to KU Bus Route - Ample Private Parking - Sand Volleyball Court - Water & Trash Paid Outstanding New Staff!!! 1230 Tennessee Unfurished 230, utilities paid carpeted, no pets. $230 mo. B2-2718 430 Roommate Wanted Semi-primate room/apt, spacious and comfort- able. Ensuite bathroom or walkway distance to campus. Private bath. Microwave; laundry privileges; utilities available. Childcare: adult/student @ $30/mo for one or $45/mo for two. Possible work in exchange for partial rent. No pets. Refs req, 8437 after 7 oz of leave moses. 1 roommate needed to 4 bedroom apt. in old house, 1 block to campus. Fun neighborbodg 3 great roommates. $2.60 per/month. 843-1079 I/ N/P female needed to share furn. B3R wpt. A/ on KU BaR -Older student preferred. $264 + I/ on KU BaR -Older student preferred. deposit. Utilities paid, W/D/ 1/2 blocks off KU bus route, NS. ns, leave message, for dim. Jm32. Avail to mature fem Grad. Studs. Share Atr. newer home w/many comforts. Fireplace, deck, patio, hot tub, W/D $300/w u/util. Req. req. please. 749-3834 Female roommate, beautiful 3 bdm. condo on line. $250 + mnd. + noi. pet call. $749-2886 or phone: (312) 288-2886. Female wanted to lease 1 bdmr of 3dbm duplex at Haworthine 844-7294 for information - student teaching roommate for 2-barm - great location, on bus route; jacuzzi; $230/mo - easy parking; free WiFi; free water NEEDED? Two commutes (small or female) for a Orchard Corners 4-bed apt. $20/mo + utilities, furnished and KU bus route. Call Derek or Chris 843-6160. One non-smoking roommate wanted to share the one bed. 2 bathroom rooms. $300/month (70% of rent) $150/month (50% of rent) Responsible & neat M/F, non-smoker for comfortable B 1/2, bath 11/2 bath a/c. Water, gas, A/C & heat pad. Nice pool. Near Checkers, on bus route. $245 = 1/2 units. Anne B. 936-981 ROOMMATE WANTED! FE #N / Rouse / w/ bedroom bedroom Dogs quiet quiet. Please call 845-321-6700 By GARY LARSON Jason 9.5 © 1984 FERRONS INC., JONES DY, WESTMARK PRESS ENGINEER "We're not going to the mountains, so shut up and let's go! ... Most kids would count their lucky stars that every vacation their folks took 'em to the beach!" 8A Thursday, August 25, 1994 110 The Etc. Shop 928 Mass.Downtown Weights Parking in the rear We Buy, Sell Trade & Consign USED & New Sports Equipment B used weights----25cents per lb. PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 1029 Massachusetts phone 841-PLAY PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 1029 Massachusetts NATION/WORLD Bucky's Bucky's 9th & IOWA • 842-2930 SPECIAL OFFER Double Cheeseburgers $1.29 only Limited Time Only Milk Shakes (Choc...Van..Straw) only 99¢ OFFER GOOD THRU TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8TH PENGUIN Film Processing Available at both Union locations. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN BEDS DESKS BOOKCASES KU KU BOOKSTORES Everything But Ice 936 Mass. Quick & Inexpensive KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store that offers rebates to KU students Miss The Bus SUNFLOWER BIKE SHOP 804 MASSACHUSETTS 843-5000 Through the end of August, all of our 1994 bikes are on sale and then some! So come on in and arrange your own ride! The sign says "buses every fifteen minutes." Your class starts in ten. No sweat, while everyone else was buying carpet remnants, you were playing it smart and got down to The Sunflower Bike Shop's Annual Back to School Blowout Sale. Class Starts August 30th LSAT Test-Prep For The Oct.1st Exam 842-5442 Hopes dim for Cuban refugees WASHINGTON (AP) — Frustrated by a relentless flood of boat people from Cuba, the United States rushed to expand detention camps at Guantanamo naval base for 40,000 or more refugees. The administration warned refugees yesterday they have no hope of being allowed in the United States. "They will absolutely, in no way, have any way of coming to the United States," White House press secretary Dee Dee Myers said as the administration mounted an intense campaign to persuade Cubans to stay home. Officials said Cubans who flee their country would be held indefinitely at Guantanamo, a U.S.-leased base on Cuba's southeastern tip, or in safe havens in third countries. Senior administration officials staged a midday news conference at the White House to drive home the message that Cubans should not risk the perilous, 90-mile flight for freedom across the choppy Straits of Florida. Defense Secretary William Perry said the administration had failed to convince Cubans so far. Since the United States halted automatic asylum for Cubans on Friday, 9,000 people have been picked up from rickety boats and rafts and are on their way to Guantanamo or are already there, Perry said. The Guantanamo base, sprawled over 45 square miles, has the capacity for 23,000 refugees now and will be expanded to handle 30,000 by week's end. Perry said. By the end of next week, Guantanamo will be able to accommodate 40,000, Perry said. "We have significant capacity beyond that and will expand beyond that, if necessary," he said. The camp already houses 14,000 Haitians who fled their country. Perry said the Pentagon was withdrawing some Americans at Guantanamo to put less strain on the water desalination and electrical plants. There are 2,000 family members and 600 Pentagon civilians at the base, as well as 2,500 military personnel. The extent of the drawdown is unclear, officials said, because of uncertainty about the number of Cubans who will be housed there. State Department officials said they had received unsubstantiated reports that Cuba was expanding the exodus by giving prisoners two-day passes. The presumption is that the authorities would not object if the prisoners escaped on boats during their leave. The United States rejected Cuba's assertion that the only way to stop the refugee exodus was for Washington to hold direct talks with the Castro government on lifting the economic embargo against Havana. Perry acknowledged fears that Castro might encourage thousands of Cubans to flood through the gates of Guantanamo, risking their lives across a mine-filled no man's land. He said there are no signs of that happening now, but said, "We would regard this as being an unfriendly act toward the United States and would take appropriate actions." Asked if the United States would maintain a Cuban colony at Guantanamo for months or years, Perry said, "We are preparing to maintain that base indefinitely, if necessary, until such time as the people can be repatriated to Cuba." Cuban, U.S. talks reach a standstill UNITED NATIONS — Cuba's ambassador to the United Nations said yesterday the only way to stop the refugee exodus was for Havana and Washington to hold direct talks on lifting the U.S. economic embargo against Cuba. Cuban Ambassador Fernando Remirez de Estenoz Barcelia also warned that strengthening the sanctions could lead to civil war in Cuba and "millions of illegal immigrants will come to this country." A U.S. official rejected the offer of talks. "We see nothing to be gained from the kind of talks" proposed, said Undersecretary of State Peter Tarnoff in Washington. "It should be clear after 35 years to Fidel Castro and his government that the way he has been managing the affairs of the island is a failure." FREE PARKING •Fun Exercise •Easy Access •Low Cost WELCOME BACK STUDENTS... CYCLE TO CLASS AND FORGET ABOUT: *Auto Insurance *Oil Changes *Parking Stickers HOURS: Mon-Sat:9:30-6 Thurs'til 8 Sun:Noon-4 - Meter Maids - Air Pollution - Climbing Steps - Schwinn - Mongoose - Univega C *Klein *Paramount *Kestrel *Santana *Yakota *Oakley YCLE WORKS Where EVERYDAY you get more for your bucks 1601 West 23rd Lawrence,KS 842-6363 ©1994 Samsonite Corp. stronger than this man's aftershave. Call 1-800-262-8282 and find out where to buy one. BAGS SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, 1994 Future uncertain for two clubs By Kent Hohlfeld Kansan sportswriter Kansan sportswriter SECTION B While the women's crew and soccer teams prepare for the upcoming season, members are uncertain about the future of their clubs. Both clubs have been chosen to become the University's newest addition to its collection of varsity-level teams. The move was made in order to help bring the University into compliance with Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972. All federally funded universities must comply with the title in order to keep their funding. "The law says we need a participation ratio in athletics that is equal to that in the general student population," said Betsy Stephenson, associate director of the Kansas Athletic Association. Stephenson said the ratio of men to women is 51 percent to 49 percent in the general student population. The ratio of men to women in university athletics is 68 percent to 32 percent. The athletic department hopes that the addition of the two sports will bring the school closer to compliance with the law. petitive at the varsity level. The projected cost of elevating the two sports will be $600,000 over the five-year period. Part of that cost will be covered by a $6 student fee passed by the Student Senate last year. When deciding which clubs to elevate, the department took into account which sports could be com- "We want to have the sports fully funded by the year 2000," Stephenson said. "We're using this year to do research and locate coaches and equipment." That consideration helped the crew team, which has competed in national regattas for many years. The women's soccer club benefited from the large number of participants from high schools in the surrounding area. "It's not a forgone conclusion that just because we are adding the sports to the varsity teams that the clubs won't continue." Stephenson said. Women's soccer co-president Liana Hemphill said she thought there was a place for both a club-level soccer team and a varsity squad. Questions remain about what the move will mean to the continued existence of the clubs. "We also looked at participation reports for colleges and high schools in about an 80 mile radius," Stephenson said. "There are a lot of people who enjoy playing but can't spend the time that a varsity team requires," Hemphill said. "There are also people who can't compete at that level." She said that she thought the varsity team would bring a lot of people into the sport and to the University. The women's crew team faces similar questions about its future, but Laura Poyas, women's crew captain, said she did not think that the move would affect this season. Stephenson said the athletic department was working slowly in order to avoid hurting the eligibility of any club members who might want to try out for the varsity team. "In some cases NCAA rules take club experience into account when figuring an athlete's eligibility," Stephenson said. Jayhawk secondary strong Togetherness translates to success on the field By Matt Irwin Kansan sportswriter In the past, the Kansas football team's defense looked to its defensive line to lead with its talent and experience. Now it is the defensive backfield's turn. The Jayhawks return four players with nine years of experience. This includes seniors Gerald McBurrows and Kwamie Lassiter, junior Dorian Brew and sophomore Tony Blevins, who was the Big Eight Conference defensive freshman of the year. Also competing with Brew and Blevins for one of two spots at cornerback is Avery Randle, a red-shirt freshman. Out of the four, the seniors have the most experience. McBurrows has started 24 consecutive games and Lassiter was named to the all Big Eight team after his junior season in 1992. Despite the experience and the confidence that this secondary has in each other, McBurrows still believes leadership should come from the seniors and not from a certain part of the defense. Yumi Chikamori / KANSAN McBurrows said the backbone of the defense is still the defensive line. "They contributed the most time," he said of the seniors. "They have a lot to lose. We've put forth a lot of effort. Don't get me wrong. There are talented underclassmen that will step up and play." Although he believes senior leadership is the key for the entire team, McBurrows agrees this year's defensive backfield has a significant factor within it — cohesiveness. The group has clicked during off-season workouts and preseason practices. "This is the closest-knit secondary that I've been a part of as far as togetherness, working together and work habits are concerned," McBurrows said. "We've worked out together the past two years, maybe more than that with guys like Dorian and Kwamie." A void at strong safety needed to be filled after Robert Vaughn ended his career last year. McBurrows was moved to that position during the spring. In that time, the free safety position was open because the Jayhawks thought Lassiter's college career was over. Blevins began the spring in that spot. After a long appeal process to get a medical hardship, Lassiter received an extra year of eligibility. He missed most of last year when he broke his collarbone in the season's second game. KANSAS FOOTBALL Lassiter is an added bonus to an already strong defensive backfield. Brew said that addition will make the Jayhawks tough to defeat in the secondary. "I feel we have one of the best secondaries in the country," Brew said. "It takes pressure off me when I know that when we come up to press, I don't have to worry about the other guy." Kansas senior free safety Kwamie Lassiter works through defensive drills. National magazines have rated Lassiter and his teammates in the secondary as some of the Big Eight Conference's best. The secondary Gerald McBurrows Strong safety, Senior Tony Blevins Cornerback Sophomore Dorian Brew Cornerback Junior Kwamie Lassiter Free safety Senior KANSAS VOLLEYBALL Jay Thornton / KANSAN Kansas junior outside hitter Tracie Walt, left, prepares to block a spike being set by a fellow teammate. All this week, the Jayhawks are preparing for their first tournament Volleyball faces tough schedule By Chesley Dohl Kansan sportswriter Karen Schonewise believes that a team builds strength and character through adversity. This season's non-conference schedule should prove to be a formidable test of the Kansas volleyball coach's philosophy. "Our schedule is much stronger than in the past," Schonewise said. "We knew we needed to upgrade our schedule to get the team up to the next level of competition." This season the volleyball team will be playing more top 20 regionally and nationally ranked teams than ever before. These scheduled teams include Santa Clara State, Northern Arizona, Southwestern Missouri State, New Mexico and Pittsburgh State. Schonewise said the Kansas volleyball team has always been consistently viewed as a team ranked 60 or 70. But in the next couple of years, she said she hoped to get her team in the top 20 range. "Early on in the season it's going to take some work to get up to that next level, but the team realizes what has to be done," Chonewise said. The season may be tougher and the record may suffer at the start of the season, but the players know the experience gained from the early season tournaments will carry over into the Big-Eight conference games. "Each year the competition keeps getting better," junior outside hitter Tracy Walt said. "Even if we aren't at the levels of some of the other teams, it still helps us improve our game. This will definitely get us ready for the rest of the season." One drawback of the harder schedule is that the tournaments will be away games. Normally Kansas plays host to one home tournament early in the season. But this year home games will be rare, and Kansas will be seeing new courts and new teams. "It will prepare us for the Big Eight schedule where we have teams with higher levels of play," senior middle blocker Jenny Larson said. "Anytime you can raise your level of play it's better for the team all around." Three weekends this fall the Kansas volleyball team will have out of town road trips to compete in tournaments. The team will leave on Thursday and return to Lawrence on Sunday three consecutive weekends in a row, Larson said. That can put a strain on student-athletes in the classroom. "It just makes the academic part that much harder missive three full Fridays of classes," she said. "It's not bad though. We've done it in the past and it's good for us to travel." The Kansas volleyball team is looking to make the most of the adversity the tough early season tournament competition will provide. "We're excited about the schedule," she said. "We have lots of new aspects to look forward to this season — new players and coaches." Talk is cheap in baseball negotiations. issues aren't No progress made on strike's 14th day The Associated Press NEW YORK — Talking isn't changing anything for baseball players and owners. "Maybe one of these days, we'll be able to report some progress," union head Donald Fehr said yesterday after talks resumed for the first time since the strike began Aug. 12. "That day is not today." With the strike in its 14th day, it still seems there's little chance of an agreement any time soon. Twelve management representatives and 21 players faced each other across a bargaining table in a room that, including all the lawyers, contained 55 people. The pair of two-hour sessions consisted of speeches, not give and take. itch continuing to argue for a salary cap. Talks were to resum today, with management negotiator Richard Rav- As the number of canceled games reached 169, players released a report by Stanford economics professor Roger Noll, who examined baseball finances for the union and concluded "the claim of widespread disaster in the sport is pure fiction." "We did not really get to the issue of cost certainty." Ravitch said, adding: "I don't think you can expect any instant change in this." According to the report, Noll said teams underestimated revenue by as much as $140 million in 1994. However, his statement that revenue is increasing faster than salaries is true only for 1992-93. From 1989-93, player salaries doubled while revenue increased 50 percent. John Harrington, chief executive officer of the Boston Red Sox, called it a "very biased report" that was a "sideshow and a distraction." players and 12 management representatives joined their lawyers around a large, U-shaped table, with four officials from the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service at one end. There was plenty of that in yesterday's session. Inside the room, 21 Many fans have said these negotiations are a joke, and Mason proved them right. "I think these people have no place else to go in the morning," he said of the lawyers. "It keeps them busy." Players had been insisting for months that owners come to the table. Owners refused until federal mediators entered the talks the day after the strike began. "It's always better to have it rougher and blunter than have it covered up with a lot of polish," Fehr said. In the morning session, three owners and nine team representatives gave speeches from two to 12 minutes in length, all insisting a salary cap is necessary to save the game from financial ruin. In the afternoon, players and their lawyers gave speeches "It reminded me of what you might expect in a preliminary bargaining meeting prior to a strike deadline," Fehr said. Owners then caucused among themselves, and about two hours later mediators said the talks will resume today. Ravitch and Harrington agreed the atmosphere improved with owners at the table. Harrington said it could not have happened earlier. insisting that baseball is a booming business. "The receptiveness prior to this would not have been there," he said. "It's like any other touchy-feely situation." Fehr, as usual, was more gloomy in his assessment. "I don't think that anybody is optimistic about progress," he said. "But the dynamic changes a little bit when you talk to the people who matter." Protester on roof draws attention The Associated Press He readily admits the vigil is a publicity stunt dreamed up by his boss at Pickles Pub. Two tents, a mattress, cable television, a phone, lawn furniture, compact discs and room, or rather, roof service have eased the ordeal for Cotton. Pickles Pub is directly across the street from Oriole Park at Camden Yards, which is normally packed with "We're trying to draw some attention to how bad this is hurting the small people, the non-millionaires," Cotton said. BALTIMORE — For 13 days, Eric Cotton, a 23-year-old bartender and graduate student, has braved wind, rain, searing sun and dark of night on a bar roof, protesting baseball's ongoing strike. "I've paid for the fall semester, but not the spring. Right now, I'll probably have to take the spring off and work to make more money. "We make 70 to 80 percent of our money during baseball season. This is paying for my graduate studies," Cotton said yesterday. He said he is not being paid during his vigil, but he is getting free food. One customer even sent Cotton $10 and a note of support. "The note said I' worked my way through college at Dodger Stadium, stick with it.' He said the strike in '81 hurt him. Ten dollars all he could afford, but he said he knew what I was going through." Cotton said. Other than trips to a bathroom, Cotton has not left the roof. He showers and washes clothes when it rains. It's also given him a new perspective on humanity. "There's a lot more bad people in the world than I thought," he said. } --- 2B Thursday, August 25, 1994 STONEBACK'S APPLIANCE DORM SIZE REFRIGERATORS FOR RENT 2 cu. ft. $45 4 cu. ft. $65 school year 929 Mass. 843-4170 FREE DELIVERY LSAT Test-Prep For The Oct.1st Exam Class Starts August 30th 842-5442 Buffet Specials Everyday Now that you're back in Lawrence you can get really good Chinese food Daily Specials Everyday Monday-Saturday 11:30-2:30 $4.95 Sunday 11:30-3:00 $5.95 Daily Dinner Buffet 7 Days a week 5:30-9:00 $6.95 囱 IMPERIAL GARDEN 25 items including... Soups,Salads, Appetizers,Fruits,Entries,and Dessert! Take outs available by the touch of the phone 841-1688 Mulligan's featuring DINE IN or CARRY OUT 11am-3am PUPS Downtown Delivery Available 2907 W. 6th Street (across from Dillions) Great Food-Great Music Thur The Bindlestiffs $1® Sam Adams draws 聚豊圉 Fri Lonesome Hounddogs $1 50 Wells Sat SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Ricky Dean Sinatra $1^{50} Wells All shows Acoustic/or Unplugged 1016 Massachusetts Downtown Lawrence 865-4055 CANOE TRIP LABOR DAY WEEKEND FRIDAY, SEPT. 2 THROUGH SUNDAY, SEPT. 4 $50. GETS YOU: ·2 DAYS CANOE RENTAL ·2 NIGHTS CAMPING ·5 MEALS COASTAL Canoe Association FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL SUA AT 864-3477 STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAB Kansas kings of court come home Robinson Center is haven for famous Jayhawk alumni Chesley Dohl Kansan sportswriter Glorified games of streetball are going on in Robinson Center this week. And they aren't open to just anyone. A couple years of professional basketball and a flourishing college basketball career are prerequisites. Kansas men's basketball alumni are back to scrimmage with the Jayhawks, preparing for their NBA and professional overseas training camps which begin Oct. 6. Each professional athlete said the only way he knew how to prepare for his season was to come back to the place where his basketball career skyrocketed — the University of Kansas. "The best way to get back in the swing of things is to play the game — and this is where the best players I know are," Rex Walters, a 1992 first-round draft pick of the New Jersey Nets, said. "I'm here to work on my game and get in shape." Nick Cunningham The scrimmages are completely voluntary. The Kansas men's basketball players and alumni get together, decide on a practice time and meet at the court. "I still feel like I'm a part of the team and I always will feel like a part of this," Steve Woodberry said. Woodberry was not drafted by the NBA but he said he thought it was best that way. "I didn't even watch the draft," he said. "I think it's better for me to be a free agent than picked up by a team. This way I might have more of a chance to choose where I want to go." Woodberry recently finished playing in veteran, rookie and free agent summer camps for the Portland Trailblazers and the Indiana Pacers. He too is conditioning for NBA camps in October. Jav Thornton / KANSAN "It doesn't matter to me where I end up going as long as I start making some money," Woodberry said. As for his teammate, Richard Scott, Woodberry said Scott was leaving in a week for Spain to play professionally. Kevin Pritchard, who was graduated from Kansas in 1990, has spent the last two years playing professional basketball overseas. Former Kansas basketball player Eric Pauley shoots over Kansas sophomore guard Jacque Vaughn. "This isn't something I have to do, it's something I want to do," Pritchard said. "That's what's fun for me — coming out here and helping some of these guys like Jerod and Jacque." Pritchard said he made an effort to keep in touch with Kansas players and the program "These guys have been around — not just at KU but they have pro careers," Kansas sophomore guard Jerrod Haase said. "They're out there playing and it's good for us to learn from them. Just being here they raise the whole level of the game another notch or two. Your payments for DROP IT! KPL ELECTRIC can be made at the drop box in the Kansas Union, Information Counter, Level 4 Save time,save a stamp Drop it at the Kansas Union We've just developed a way to make Power Macintosh even more powerful. (Buy one now,and we'll throw in all this software to help you power through college.) ClarisWorks and the Apple Student Resource Set included when you buy the Power Macintosh computers to the right. 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It all comes with Power Macintosh - the computer that grows with you from college to the professional world.And now,with an Apple Computer Loan,it's easier than ever to own one. It's the power every student needs.The power to be your best." Apple Apple POWER through it. Offer expires October 17, 1994; available only while supplies last. © 1994 Apple Computer, Inc. All rights reserved. Apple, the Apple logo, Macintosh and "The power to be your best" are registered trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc. AppleDesign, Power Mac and Power Macintosh are trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc. ClarityWorks is a registered trademark of Clark Corporation. --- SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN --- Thursday, August 25, 1994 3B Argentinian star soccer captain banned The Associated Press ZURICH, Switzerland — World soccer's governing body banned Argentinian star Diego Maradona from playing nationally or internationally for 15 months because he took a banned stimulant during the World Cup, his lawyer said yesterday. The FIFA disciplinary panel decided on the further punishment for Maradona's failure of a routine drug test after Argentina's second match of the World Cup against Nigeria on June 25. - Maradona, 33, captain of the Argentine team, was 'banned June 30 from the World Cup. A FIFA official confirmed the penalty, to run through Sept. 29, 1995, and said Maradona was also fined $15,400. "I'm very angry and disappointed," said Maradona's lawyer, Daniel Balotincoff, after the 2 hour, 45 minute closed-door hearing. "He cannot play any football for 15 months." The panel, whose decision is final, could have banned Maradona for life. The hearing was called to establish whether Maradona intentionally took the stimulant ephedrine, traces of which were found in Maradona's urine. "There is no standard penalty," said FIFA spokesman Andreas Herren before the decision was announced. "He could get a fine, a suspension, a ban ... anything is possible." Herren said there is no doubt about the test itself, and the medical issue is no longer in question. Two analyses undertaken at UCLA confirmed the presence of five ephedrine derivatives in the urine sample. Maradona was represented at the hearing by Julio Grondona, president of the Argentine Football Association. His manager, Marcos Franchi, waited outside but wasn't allowed in for the beginning of the meeting, Herren said. Maradona's case is almost unprecedented in international soccer, which has had few reported cases of doping and has refused to go along with other sports in establishing an automatic two-year suspension for serious first violations. Grundona and Franchi claim Maradona innocently took the ephedrine cocktail because it was a replacement for a prescribed diet drug he was taking. Maradona is currently on $40,000 bail pending a judgment on charges he shot at journalists with an air rifle in February. In 1991, he was suspended from international competition for 15 months after a drug test indicated he had taken cocaine. By Dave Goldberg The Associated Press Changes in NFL to have little effect NEW YORK — The two-point conversion is the NFL rule change that is now getting the most attention. But it's likely to have less effect on the sport's attempt to increase touchdowns than several more subtle moves made in the off-season Despite the fact that two-point conversions were tried after more than a quarter of the touchdowns in the first few weeks of the exhibition season, that percentage is unlikely to hold in the regular season. More significant will be the change requiring that after a missed field goal, the ball is placed at the spot of the kick rather than the line of scrimmage. "Strategically, the new rule forced us to go for it," San Diego coach Bobby Ross said after passing up a 46-yard field goal attempt and going for a first down during the an exhibition game with the New York Giants. The gamble resulted in a touchdown three plays later for the Chargers, who last year had 31 field goals and just 33 touchdowns. "We'll do that more during the course of the season," Ross says. "I'm not going to back away from that. I think it's a legitimate gamble." In addition to the new rules on field-goal placement and two-point conversions, other rules are designed to upgrade offenses. The most arcane rule gives offensive tackles an extra half-step back to line up, giving them a slight break against pass rushers. One moves kickoffs back, from the 35 to the 30, and lowers the kicking tee from two or three inches to one. That's resulted in field position improving markedly in exhibitions from the 20 or inside to out around the 30 or 35 yard lines. But the sexiest change involves the two-point conversion, although it probably will be used only when absolutely necessary — when a team behind by eight or 15 points scores late in a game or gets behind early by a large margin. In the first two weeks of exhibitions, 35 two-pointers were tried — after 26 percent of the 133 touchdowns. Eleven of the 35 attempts were successful. That percentage is liable to change when the regular season starts — exhibitions are perfect for practicing two-point plays. "Without question, it will open the door for second-guessing," says Jimmy Johnson, the former Dallas coach taking a hiatus in television. "It will depend on the mind set of the coach, but when somebody scores a touchdown late, if they're in the race, they're going to take the one point and take their chances in overtime." In an informal survey of coaches taken immediately after the rule was changed, only Tanpa Bay's Sam Wyche said he would consider going for two to win a game in the final minutes, rather than take the game into overtime. NFL NOTEBOOK: The All-Time NFL Offense Tight ends — Mike Ditka, Kellen Winslow. Quarterback back — Sammy Baugh, Otto Graham, Joe Montana, Johnny Unitas. Running backs — Jim Brown, Marion Motley, Bronko Nagurski, Walter Payton, O.J. Simpson, Steve Van Buren. Tackles — Roosevelt Brown, Forrest Gregg, Anthony Munoz. Guards — John Hannah Jim Parker, Gene Upshaw. Receivers — Lance Alworth, Raymond Berry, Don Hutson, Jerry Rice. Centers — Mel Hein, Mike Webster. The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. 3 Retail Locations This Complete Futon & Frame $269 Twin Futon & Frame $99 Abdiiana FUTON Exclusively Hardwood Frames 1023 Mass. St. Lawrence, KS 843-8222 K. C. Based Manufactuer with 6 Retail Locations GEORGIA CARPET OUTLETS Endorsed by K.U. Association of University Residence Halls. STUDENT ROOM SIZE CARPETS STARTING AT $48 EACH. FREE DELIVERY TO CAMPUS! AUGUST ONLY G C O CARPET OUTLETS We're in LAWRENCE Phone: 841-3838 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 110 120 130 140 150 160 170 180 190 200 210 220 230 240 250 260 270 280 290 300 310 320 330 340 350 360 370 380 390 400 410 420 430 440 450 460 470 480 490 500 510 520 530 540 550 560 570 580 590 600 610 620 630 640 650 660 670 680 690 700 710 720 730 740 750 760 770 780 790 800 810 820 830 840 850 860 870 880 890 900 910 920 930 940 950 960 970 980 990 1000 Phone: 841-3838 3000 Iowa Street, Lawrence, KS 1 Block North of K-Mart Mon-Thurs. 9am-8pm, Fri.-Sat. 9am-6pm, Sun. 1-5pm MAJOR CREDIT CARDS MEDIUM PIZZA Single Topping $5.95 2 for $9.95 (extra toppings 85+ each) DINE-IN OR FREE DELIVERY Expires 10-31-94 UDK Bob's Pizza Shoppe Westridge Shopping Center 601 KASOLD 842-0600 "MEATY ONE" Canadian Bacon, Sausage, Pepperoni& Hamburger or "ROUNDTABLE" Canadian Bacon, Sausage, Pepperoni, Hamburger, Green Pepper, Mushrooms, Onion, Black Olives & Extra Cheese. Med. $8.95 2 for $14.95 Large $10.95 2 for 17.95 Expires 10-31-94 UDK LARGE PIZZA SINGLE TOPPING $7.95 2 FOR $12.95 (extra toppings $1 each) DINE-IN OR FREE DELIVERY Expires 10-31-94 UDK VISA AMERICAN EXPRESS EARCOVER FREE DELIVERY Lasagna or Manicotti or 1 lb. Spaghetti + Garlic Toast + 32 oz. Coke $5.25 +tax (With Meatballs -add $1) Expires 10-31-94 UDK LAWRENCE TAE-KWON-DO SCHOOL HAP-KI-DO • SUN-DO • KUM-DO (Technique for Body (Meditation) (Sword Art) Restraint) Learn Martial Arts from an Original Master MASTER KI-JUNE PARK, Ph.D. Special Student Rates 10th & Massachusett Bob's PIZZA Shoppe VISA MASTERCARD EUCOVER VISA MARSHALL CARE DISCOVER FREE DELIVERY Lowest athletic shoe prices in Lawrence Pharmacy Hours Monday-Thursday 8 a.m.-9 p.m. Friday 8 a.m.-6 p.m. Saturday 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Sunday 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Score big on savings... including the newest models f Busy days? Watkins Pharmacy Is open Monday-Thursday nights. Suggested Retail FSG Air Max² running. . . . . . . . . . 135.00 121.99 Air Strong basketball. . . . . . . 110.00 99.99 Air Edge cross training. . . . . . 70.00 64.99 Air Sculpt aerobics. . . . . . . 75.00 67.99 Air Boss Shark football. . . . . . 66.00 59.99 Air Tumalo hiking. . . . . . . . 75.00 67.99 Air Deschutz sandal. . . . . . . 60.00 54.99 NIKE PRESIDENT HEALTH SERV 864-9500 A I R francis sporting goods, inc. 843-1101 751 Massachusetts Lawnroe, Kansas 60044 "We Care For KU" Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students That's only a sample... from more than 200 bargain models. Locally owned...since 1947! 1907 842-5442 The answer to the test questions KAPLAN Learn test-taking strategies and much more from the company that knows the test makers best. Want to maximize your performance on the KANSAS SPORTS CLUB FAN SHOP Live it! Wear it! Love it! KU! GRE classStarts August 29th SPORTSWEAR COED NAKED 837 Massachusetts We have Coed Naked & Big Johnson. Come in and see our great selection of NBA, NCAA, NFL, NHL, & MLB merchandise. 842-2992 1601 West23rd Suite 210 841-9111 RIVER VALLEY MUSIC CAFE MONDAY MONDAY $3 Boulevard and Sam Adams Pitchers $5 Watney's Pitchers TUESDAY $2.50 IMPORTS THURSDAY WEDNESDAY $1.25 FRIDAY LONGNECKS 2-4-1 ANYTHING SATURDAY $1.25 2-4-1 WELLS WELLS SUNDAY $1.50 VODKA WELLS - ALL DRINK SPECIALS ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE UPCOMING EVENTS 8/25 Salty tguanas with Reejers (from Boulder) 8/26 Lee McBee and the Passions DON'T MISS 9/16 Dixie Dregs lifestyles Typewriter Tim A KU senior makes music with a keyboard aFF Top: Timothy "The Type- writer" Jordan plays his typewriters. Far Right: The crowd watches Jordan and Friends. Bottom: Jordan makes noises into the mike. Photos by Paul Kotz. By Casey Barnes Kansan staff writer Wearing only a robe and the smell of incense, Timothy "The Typewriter" Jordan sat on stage behind three manual typewriters. His eyes closed, his head back, he began to give mild orders to a silent audience. "I want you all to relax, take a deep breath and think. Think about all the energy you are projecting, not just the heat, but spiritually. Raise the energy in the room because I need a little more." Jordan said. The energy that Jordan, St. Louis senior, was eliciting Tuesday night at the Bottleneck was for the first headlining, major performance of Timothy Typewriter and Friends. The debut performance drew a crowd of about 200. Although Jordan has played his typewriter tunes on open mike at Hockenbury's Tavern and The Bottleneck, the entire entourage, including percussion, guitar, saxophone. turn tables, singers and rappers was playing together for only the third time. "We had no idea what was going to happen three hours ago," Jordan announced from the stage. What happened was Jordan's idea of interesting but different entertainment. Surrounded by typewriters and his band members, he put on a show with everything from percussion solos to rap songs, with short stories in between. Jordan uses his typewriter like a set of drums. As he pounds random keys, he amplifies the machines' taps and dings with microphones. He uses crumpled up paper or just about anything else in order to make the sound unique. Though his show may be extra strange, he hopes it proves a point. "I don't want people to feel weird about being different or having weird thoughts because it's something that is normal," Jordan said. "Everybody has weird thoughts, I just divulge mine." Jordan divulged his own at the climax of the show when he he off his robe revealing a plastic, brain-shaped athletic supporter. In 1972, when she was a teenager, she decided to become a musician. She started playing the piano and later moved on to guitar and keyboards. She has been an influential figure in the world of rock music since her birth. She is known for her unique blend of rock and pop music, as well as her ability to convey complex emotions through her lyrics. She is also known for her distinctive voice and style, which has been admired by many fans around the world. This isn't just a passing phase, Jordan said. He wants to perform for a living. Jordan began to express himself musically through the typewriter about seven months ago. He was interested in percussion, but couldn't afford a drum set. His mom gave him a typewriter, and he got the idea to play it as an instrument from Stewart Copeland, the drummer for The Police. Copeland performed the soundtrack for the movie "Rumblefish" with a typewriter. "It's a music show with drums and a performance art, more than a band playing." Jordan said. "I wanted to make a three dimensional show, something different than I've seen around." But his performance is not just musical. It is a work of art he has mastered with the help of a performance art class he took from KU art professor, Roger Shimomura. Shimomura said he had heard more unusual tools of performance art. "For someone involved in performance art, the typewriter is not a terribly exotic idea. What one needs to focus on is how it is played. That's what is important," Shimomura said. Shimomura said he had not seen enough of Jordan's act to comment, on the quality of it. But Jordan, who studies painting and performance art, said that the Lawrence crowd is receptive and curious. "Lawrence is the best town to do something like this in," Jordan said. "It has a killer music scene, but it's all basically the same. I just want to so something different." Renegade Theatre TOMMY SMITH Paul Kotz / KANSAN East Side Comedy Shop gets the last laugh this weekend at their final season performance Keith Scott, left, and Doug Deleny perform the skit, "Meat P. S.A." By Casey Barnes Kansan staff writer The show, which is a combination of the their best skits since last August, is being performed August 26 and 27 at the Renegade Theatre, 518 E. 8th St. This weekend will be the last chance for comedy lovers to see the final performance of the East Side Comedy Shop's show, Greatest Hits Volume II. The troop performs skits on everything from male douches to a parody of the song "Wind Beneath My Wings." The scripts are written by the performers. They will perform two shows at 8 p.m. and 10 p.m. each night. Admission is $6, except at the 10 p.m. Saturday show, which is $4. Martin Martin, director of East Side Comedy Shop, said the show is open to anyone, but parental discretion is advised. The skits deal with adult humor. from 8-years-old to 80." "There is a wide variety of people at every show," Martin said. "There have been people The shows are known for their audience participation. At one performance, the crowd rose to their feet and sang along, said Doug Delaney, founder and head maniac. The cast of Greatest Hits Volume II is made up of only 12 members, but the year-round group can have as many as 25 to 30 actors. Although the East Side Comedy Shop requires a large time-commitment, it is all done in the spare time of the members. "We all have other jobs or school to deal with, and this is our creative outlet," said Hannah Brazee, Comedy Shop member. "This is how we keep our sanity." The group has been performing since August of '93 and is beginning to expand. Some of their material is being performed in Florida and will soon be performed in New York, said Frank Doden, head writer of the show and KU instructor in English. For more information or to make reservations, call 842-8808. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN People and places at the University of Kansas. August 25,1994 PAGE 4 B KU Life calendar NIGHTLIFE The Bottleneck 737 New Hampshire St. Tina and the Bee-Side Movement, 10 tonight. $4 MU330, The Pasters, Gangster Fun and Dance Hall Crushers, 10 p.m. tomorrow, $6. $9 L.A. Ramblers, 10 p.m. Saturday,$4 The Vandals and R.K.L., 7 p.m. Sunday, free Open mike Night, 9:30 p.m. Monday, free Overkill and Pro-Pane, 10 p.m. Thursday, $11 advanced tickets Catherine, Shiner and Shallow, 10 p.m. Tuesday. $5 advanced tickets Just Friends Jazz Duo, 7 tonight, free The Cellmates, 7 p.m. tomorrow,free Trout 66, 7 p.m. Saturday, free New Riddim, 9 tonight, $4 (21 and over) $5 701 Massachusetts St. Granada Theater 1020 Massachusetts St. Mondo Disco, 9 p.m. tomorrow, $4, $5 Caribe, 9 p.m. Saturday, $4, $5 Full Moon Cafe Big 6 Sports Club (under the Eldridge Hotel) 803 Massachusetts St. Bill Garrison Blues, 8:30 tonight, free The Lonesome Hobos, 9 p.m. tomorrow.free Darrell Lea and Megan Hurt, 9 p.m. Saturday, free Tom's Tuesday Thing with Rick Frydman, Mike Adams and John Swift, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, free River Valley Music Cafe 1601 West 23rd St. Wakeland 9:30 tonight cover charge Wakeland, 9:30 tonight, cover charge Salty Iguanas with the Reejers, 9:30 p.m. tomorrow, cover charge Lee McBee and the Passions, 9:30 p.m. Saturday, cover charge Mulligan's 1016 Massachusetts St. The Bindlestiffs, 10 tonight, $2, $3 V The Lonesome Houndgoss, 10 p.m. tomorrow, $2, $3 Ricky Dean Sinatra, 10 p.m. Saturday, $2, $3 Acoustic Open Mike Night, 9:30 p.m. Wednesday, free 图 NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Thursday, August 25, 1994 5B NAACP looks for settlement Fired leader agrees to talk things over The Associated Press WASHINGTON — The NAACP and its fired executive director, Benjamin Chavis Jr., said yesterday they would discuss an amicable settlement after a judge refused to force the civil rights group to reinstate him. Judge Herbert Dixon of District of Columbia Superior Court declined Chavis' request for a temporary restraining order, saying he could no more order the NAACP to take Chavis back than he could force Chavis to continue to work against his wishes. Chavis said he hoped to avoid a full-blown court fight with the NAACP, but he would fight settlement offers that did not satisfy him. Dixon ruled only on Chavis' request for a temporary order and set a Sept. 2 hearing before Superior Court Judge Richard Saltzman to address the rest of Chavis' claims. "I want fair treatment by the NAACP," he said. "If we have to go to the full-court situation, we will be vindicated." Chavis sued the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People on Monday, arguing the group's board of directors failed to follow its own procedures when it fired him Saturday. Chavis said the incident besmirched his reputation and left him unemployed when his wife, Martha, is pregnant with twins. NAACP general counsel Dennis Hayes said yesterday that Chavis' health benefits and paycheck had not been terminated. Hayes said Chavis had had an Opportunity to discuss a settlement Friday, the day before the board of directors voted 53-5 to fire him. Still, he said, NAACP officials would try to offer Chavis a fair settlement, adding that there were no hard feelings toward Chavis for suing. "We certainly don't fault him for doing it," Hayes said. "We stand for what Dr. Chavis has chosen to do. We teach people to stand up." In firing Chavis, board members cited his failure to disclose that he used NAACP money to settle a $332,400 sex discrimination claim by former employee Mary E. Stansel. According to an affidavit by board Vice President Larry Carter, other aspects of Chavis' leadership also were a factor in his firing, including the group's nearly $3 million budget deficit and the alliance he struck between the NAACP and Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan. Minorities exposed more to waste The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Seven years after the complaint of "environmental racism" was first raised, a report said Blacks, Hispanics, Asians and American Indians are even more likely to find themselves neighbors of commercial hazardous waste facilities. Instead, it suggests, the situation results from shifts in population or from an attempt to stop the dumping of toxic wastes, with their potential health hazards, in community landfills, leading to the creation of new and potentially dangerous facilities. But the report, citing "the intractable nature of environmental injustice", does not charge that such facilities are being deliberately located near places where minorities cluster. The report was issued by three organizations: the Center for Policy Alternatives, which works with community activists and policy makers in the states; the Commission for Racial Justice, an arm of the United Church of Christ, which first called attention to the situation in a 1987 report; and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, whose recently ousted director, the Rev. Benjamin Chavis Jr., campaigned against "environmental racism." In 1980, 25 percent of the people living in a ZIP code that contained one or more hazardous sites were nonwhite, and by 1993 that proportion had risen to 31 percent, the report said. The study focused on the location of 530 commercial toxic waste sites. Put another way, a member of a racial minority has a 47 percent better chance than a white person to be living near such facilities, the report said. "It is important to note that this situation has not been caused solely by lack of government regulation," Chavis and Charles Lee of the Commission for Racial Justice wrote in the report. "These sites were created because the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act identified toxic chemicals that needed better disposal facilities than traditional municipal solid waste sites. While the act's intent was to isolate these wastes and reduce illegal dumping, certain segments of our society are bearing a disproportionate burden of this regulation." The report recommended that the government concentrate its spending on education and training, infrastructure improvement and development of small business in communities that house waste sites. Otherwise, it said, "communities with the least wherewithal will inevitably be forced by necessity to trade off environmental health for economic subsistence." The report also recommended that states address the problem by requiring waste-producing facilities to devise plans for changing their methods to reduce the amount of toxins they generate. Drugs create new hazards on highways The Associated Press BOSTON — Reckless drivers who don't seem drunk may be high on cocaine or marijuana, according to roadside tests that indicate drugs may rival alcohol as a hazard on the highway. Police in Memphis, Tenn., gave urine tests to reckless drivers who appeared not to be drunk. They found that more than half were on cocaine or pot. "It was a surprise that so many were under the influence of drugs, although we suspected there would be a significant number," said police Inspector Charles S. Cook. Police routinely give breath tests to bad drivers whom they suspect to be drunk. However, on-the-spot testing for other drugs is rare, since it requires taking a urine specimen, something that is not practical on the highway. For an experiment in roadside drug testing, Memphis police put together a "drugvan,"a former ambulance fitted out with toilet, interview area and videotaping equipment. In the summer of 1993, they gave drug tests on the spot to any reckless drivers who were not obviously drunk. Police took urine samples from 150 drivers, and 89 of them, or 59 percent, tested positive for cocaine or marijuana. The standard for a positive test was the same as that used by the federal government to measure recent drug use in the workplace, which can give results in 10 minutes. Unemployed trained to combat wildfires The Associated Press "We don't normally enlist civilian firefighters. It's very definitely an indication of how bad things are out West," said Bill Terry, the agency's northeast rural fire defense coordinator, from his office in Radnor, Pa. BARTOW. W.Va. — With firefighters exhausted after weeks of combat against wildfires in five western states, the Forest Service has begun a pilot program to train unemployed people to join the battle. The 140 trainees, many of them laborers idled by West Virginia's sluggish economy, were to begin lessons today in the Monongahela National Forest on how to build fire lines and use firefighting tools. They were scheduled to leave for the West on Saturday. This is the first time the Forest Service has trained civilians for out-of-state firefighting, Terry said. If it works out, the service will consider expanding the program. The trainees, all men because no women applied, will earn $12 an hour. The application process consisted of a physical fitness test. Celestial theory challenged The Associated Press NEW YORK — A study of small galaxies challenges a popular idea for what constitutes most of the matter in the universe. Scientists know the universe contains more matter than they cart see. In fact, so-called missing or dark matter may make up 90 percent or so of the matter in the universe. Nobody knows what this stuff is, but one popular candidate is "cold, dark matter," a class of exotic, hypothesized particles that have never been seen. That theory is challenged in the study by Ben Moore, a research associate in the astronomy department at the University of Washington in Seattle. Moore took advantage of the theoretical prediction that cold, dark matter would surround galaxies in huge, invisible haloes and affect the galaxies' rotation in a predictable way. Using observations by other scientists of four small "dwarf" galaxies, he found that the inner parts of the galaxies were rotating much more slowly than one would expect if their haloes were made of cold, dark matter. "This challenges the basis of the whole cold, dark matter theory," Moore said in a telephone interview. Moore presented his study in the Aug. 18 issue of Nature. He did most of the work while at It's not clear what the missing matter really is, he said. Ray Carlberg, an astronomy professor at the University of Toronto, said Moore's paper highlights an issue that really needed to be straightened out. More observations of galaxies should be done specifically to study the question, he said. the University of California at Berkelev. Other scientists cautioned the result may mean that scientists do not understand how cold matter behaves in dwarf galaxies or that dwarf galaxy haloes are mostly ordinary matter while the universe's dark matter might still be mostly cold or a mix of cold and some other kind. Moore said the cold, dark matter theory predicts that haloes would also be cold, dark matter. Sports Combination Ticket Distribution Read this before picking up your tickets. YOUR ASSIGNED PICK-UP DATE IS AS FOLLOWS: Where: Memorial Stadium, South End, Underneath the scoreboard. Time: 8:30 am-4:00 pm 1me: 8:30am-4:00pm Dates: (see schedule below) (see schedule below) A-E Monday,August29 F-K Tuesday,August30 L-R Wednesday,August31 S-Z Thursday,September1 (Make-Up) Friday, September 2 - If you miss your assigned pick-up date you may pick-up your tickets at the Athletic Ticket Office in the East lobby of Allen Fieldhouse. - You may pick up only your own ticket. - You must bring your KUID with a current FALL 1994 fee sticker to receive your tickets. - You will receive your football tickets only at this time. You will receive the Men's Basketball and Kansas Relays portion of your sports combo at a later date. More detailed information will be available at pick-up. Home Opener, Saturday Night, September 10, 7:00 pm- Jayhawks vs. Michigan State Home Opener, Saturday Night, September 10, 7:00 pm - Jayhawks vs. Michigan State Sports Ticket NATURALWAY 820-822 Mass.841-0100 Juicers Showgirls Savannah WELCOMES BACK THE STUDENTS OF KANSAS Featuring Juicers Showgirls WELCOMES BACK THE STUDENTS OF KANSAS Featuring Totally N*de Dancers 18 + Admitted With Valid ID 913 N. Second (Next to Riverfront Square) 841-4122 Brooke Watch Out For Student Specials and New Afternoon Specials Brooke TORI AMOS LAYZER STUDENT PROGRAM ACTIVITIES SUN INFORMATION DEPARTMENT UNDER THE PINK TOUR FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23 8:00PM LIED CENTER OF KANSAS (LAWRENCE,KS) TICKETS ON SALE SATURDAY! - 9:30AM 8:30-9:30 a.m. w/ KUID ONLY at SUA Box Office Tickets available at all TICKETMASTER locations, the SUA Box Office at the Kansas Union (9:30 a.m.-2 p.m. on Sat, 8 a.m.-5 p.m. M-F), or Charge By Phone: *No service charge at SUA Box Office TICKETMASTER (816)931-3330 PRODUCED BY CONTEMPORARY AND SUA I Can't Believe It's Yogurt! THE TASTE THAT'S WON THE WORLD OV Milkshake Treat Time! We'll Be Here With A... 5 50% Discount On small, medium or large cups or cones!* (Waffle Cones and toppings Regular Price) Limit two with coupon Not valid with any other offer Not valid with any other offer. Not valid with any other offer. * expiresSept 15 1994 *offer expiresSept. 15 1994 Louisiana Purchase 23rd & Louisiana Orchards Corners 843-5500 15th & Kasold 749-0440 --- 6B Thursday, August 25, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SUNFLOWER 804 Massachusetts 843-5000 928 The Etc. Shop THE LOOK OF LAWRENCE *GIFTS* Something special for everyone *SUNGLASSES* Rayban, Bausch & Lomb, Vuartnet, Serengeti, Revo *LEATHER* Averix Flight Jackets, Belts, Wallets, Ladies' Purses *JEWELRY* Sterling Silver - Huge Unique Selection *ACCESSORIES* Formal Wear - Sales & Rental *COSTUMES* Costumes & Accessories 2nd Floor THIS IS A FUN STORE! The Etc. Shop 928 MASS 843-0611 Crown Cinema BEFORE 6 PM ADULTS $3.00 ( LIMITED TO SEATING ) SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00 VARSITY THE MASK PG-13 $8.00 7:15, 8:30 The Mask PG-13 $8.00 7:15, 8:30 HILLGREST 925 IOWA $8.00 8:15 Blankman PG $15. 7:15, 8:45 Lion King G $8.00 7:15, 8:15 In The Army Now PG $8.00 7:15, 8:30 The Client PG-13 $8.00 7:15, 8:30 Clear & Present Danger PG-13 $8.00, 8:45 CINEMA TWIN AT 11:00 AM THE IOWA B42 STREET $1.25 The Flintstones PG $4.00 The Shadow PG-13 7:20, 8:45 Wolf R $4.00 7:20, 8:45 ROLLERBLADE® Rentals Sales PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS SUA FILMS REPO MAN ROLLERBLADE® Rentals Sales PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 1029 Massachusetts 841-PLAY(7529) STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA FILMS August 26-August 28 FOUR WEDDINGS AND A FUNERAL Friday 7:00 and 9:30 pm Saturday 7:00 and 9:30 pm Sunday 2:00 pm REPO MAN REPO MAN Friday Midnight Saturday Midnight ALL SHOWS IN KANSAS UNION. TICKETS $2.50, MIDNIGHTS $3.00 FREE WITH SUA MOVIE CARD. CALL 864-SHOW FOR MORE INFO. JOHN MURRAY AND CATHERINE WILSON TOP BRAND NAMES IN COLLEGE SUPPLIES Mead NIKE AMPAD WIREBOUND NOTEBOOKS 46 TUESDAY MON BANKMENTS DAY PLANNER MEAD FIVE STAR $ ^{\circ} $ FIRST GEAR $ ^{ \mathrm{TM}} $ DAY PLANNER KANSAS Get organized with the First Gear™ student day planner. Easy to use planning system has class schedules, tab dividers, notepad, zipper security pocket, security strap closure. Durable nylon case. Available in black, blue and teal. NIKE 50260 $1199 EACH TWO POCKET PORTFOLIOS ▶ 11 1/2" x 9 1/2" 19 038 (Marble) 19 039 (Plaid) KANSAS $110 EACH $19 EACH Feature assorted colors, patterns & sizes. 19-030 (Marble) 1 subject $139 19-031 (Plaid) 1 subject $EACH 19-032 (Marble) 3 subject $288 19-033 (Plaid) 3 subject $EACH 19-034 (Marble) 5 subject $419 19-034 (Plaid) 5 subject $EACH 29046 $2199 EACH KANSAS COILESS $ ^{\textcircled{1}} $ NOTEBOOKS NIKE ZIPPERED BINDER Durable, quality, light weight construction in contemporary colors. Feature sewn nylon graphics with security tab closures. 5 X 8 JUNIOR LEGAL RULED PAD FREE! WITH ANY $5.00 PURCHASE • LIMIT ONE PER CUSTOMER OFFER EXPIRES AUGUST 26, 1994 --- FREE! 19.036 (Marble) 19.037 (Plaid) $ 154 EACH Now full service bar after 67 years of downtown tradition 1991 Massachusetts, Downtown www.downtownmassachusetts.com CHURCH School Specialty Supply Tower Plaza Retail Center 2540 1a世 St., Suite M Lawrence, KS 913-865-5071 MARBOURLIGHTS DELTAGAMMA PROUDLY WELCOMES ABOARD THEIR NEW CREW 1 Courtney Allan Nicci Bachand Stephanie Baker Jennifer Burker Rebecca Balich Ashley Bonner Kiley Conrad Lindsay Cooper- smith Christina Cortopassi Angela Ebben Jenifer Epstein Betsy Graves Jennifer Green Janae Hanna ( Becky Helm Kristen Ingle Charity Jeffries Michelle Kaplan Jennifer Kaufman Kerri Kay Katherine Kopp Lori Lewis Megan Maciejowski Jennifer Martin Shelly McDaniel Kristin McDowell Amy Miltko Brandi Montague Angela Mueller Sophia Nassif Mollie Nelson Megan Rachow Lara Ratican Kristin Reid Moelle Sadduddin Alison Sherrill Shannon Sprinkel Brandee Spurgeon Pacia Thomas Jill Twogood Dana Webring Jennifer White 5K KANSAS TRIATHLON AND SWIM CLUB UPCOMING RACES Informational Meeting Thursday 25 August Jayhawk Room in Union 7:30-8:30 p.m. Swim Practice start 30 August 28 Aug Nemaha Ridge Triathlon; Edmond, OK 1.5K Swim 40 K Bike 10 K Run 10 Sept Wildcat Sprint Triathlon; Manhattan, KS 600 Yd. Swim 12 Mile Bike 5 K Run 11 Sept N.E. Missouri Triathlon; Kirksville, MO 3/4 Mile Swim 18 Mile Bike 5 Mile Run 24 Sept ITU World Cup Duathlon; Dallas TX 5K Run 40 K Bike 5 K Run For more information call Sean Rollin at 865-2731 Call Carol for college cash. Mary Jane If you need money for college, Carol Wirthman at Mercantile Bank has the answer. In fact, several answers, depending on your financial needs and college plans. Mercantile is the right choice for student loans, offering: - More than 30 years of student loan experience. MERCANTILE BANK Member FDIC Equal Opportunity Lender - A personal commitment to you. - Professional Student Loan Specialists who will help you every step of the way. - In-house processing and servicing of all student loans until repayment. Put Mercantile to work for you. Call Carol at 865-0278. LEGEND --- UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Thursday, August 25, 1994 Cartoons serve up Clinton 7B Waffles for breakfast will never be the same The Associated Press WASHINGTON — President Clinton is a favorite target of political cartoonists, often depicted with an elongated chin and a vacant stare. But as a waffle? Of all the caricatures of Clinton, Garry Trudeau may have come up with the one that slashes the deepest. In his "Doonesbury" strip this week, the Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist has been depicting Clinton as a floating waffle. To A White House already hypersensitive to criticism, the depiction must have seemed like the cruelest cut of all, coming from the pen of Trudeau — whom many White House insiders had viewed as, if not a supporter, at least sympathetic. After all, George Bush was the one who bore a long grudge against Trudeau for depicting him as invisible. And former Vice President Dan Qauley was drawn by the cartoonist as a drifting feather. Clinton made Trudeau one of his early White House dinner guests. It seems unlikely he'll be invited back. The Clinton waffle appears at a time when White House aides are trying to depict Clinton as decisive and engaged, pouring his energies into crime and health care legislation before a fractions Congress. Drawing Clinton as a waffle is "more significant" than Trudeau's lampooning Quayle as a lightweight, suggested Bill Kristol, Quayle's former chief of staff. "In politics, you expect your opponents to attack you. When those who should be on your side turn on you and ridicule you, you've got real problems," he said. In Monday's "Doonesbury," the strip ushering in the new "presidential icon," Trudeau declares his readers had "spoken with a roar" in choosing the waffle over what he called the other finalist for a Clinton symbol—a flipping coin. In the strip, three quotes emanate from the levitating waffle that poke fun at Clinton's health care utterances. "Universal coverage or nothing," the waffle says in one quote balloon. "OK, 90 percent," says the second. "I can live with 70 percent," says the third. Cartoonists have not been kind to Clinton in recent months. A recent cartoon by New York Newsday's Doug Marlette shows a bloated rumpled Clinton. "I'm sick of all this criticism! My administration has put millions of people to work," Clinton says in the first panel. In the second he adds: "Granted, most of them are special prosecutors." The Atlanta Constitution's Mike Luckovich portrayed Clinton in a recent cartoon with a big nose and chin and a bandage on his cheek, stuck in a ditch. A large collie labeled "Congress" is lifting its leg on him. "Lassie, help," an oblivious Clinton calls out to the dog. Political cartoonists can be devastating by reinforcing popular notions, in this case Clinton's supposed indecisionism, said Tom Mann of the Brookings Institution. Bush was openly hostile to Trudeau. The late Richard Nixon would launch into tirades at the drawings of Herblock in *The Washington Post*. "Presumably the waffle means this is a president who is so in need of approval that he will say anything and agree to anything — a man without any convictions." Mann said. Tuesday's Doonesbury shows a young aide named "Josh," no doubt meant to be Treasury official and diary-keeper Josh Steiner, being asked for an update on the Whitewater hearings. "It's pretty clear we've been involved in a massive cover-up," the Josh character says. "In that regard, the staff has pressed me to ask you something, sir. ... What exactly are we covering up?" The waffle responds: "Depends. What are the options." France remembers liberation The Associated Press PARIS—To the French, it's at least as important as D-Day and more celebrated than the day Germany surrendered. It was the fight to rid themselves of four years of humiliating Nazi occupation. The liberation of Paris, nine months before Germany raised the white flag, "was the major symbol. It was the end of the Third Reich," said history professor Rene Raymond, a former Resistance fighter now at the prestigious Institute of Political Studies. "There was relief and affirmation to erase the defeat of 1940." Raymond said. "There was a risk. It was possible the insurrection could have been crushed." Raymond, who was 25 when he reconnoitered German positions to the advancing French military, said the battle for Paris was one of fear and celebration. On the heels of an uprising led by the The French may not consider the liberation of Paris on Aug. 25, 1944, a bigger event than D-Day on June 6, but it is "more important than the end of the war," Raymond said. "It is striking to see that what is more celebrated is not the victory but the liberation in each town." Never mind that the Germans were invited to the Bastille Day parade on July 14, the first time German soldiers marched down the Champs-Elysees since 1944. No German officials are on the guest list for the liberation celebration. Resistance, U.S. forces and the French 2nd Armored Division battled their way into Paris to force the German surrender. "It's one of the great dates of history," said Julien Girardin, a 60-year-old antique dealer. "It was to rediscover freedom. It was a rebirth. We weren't hiding anymore." For a kid, Girardin said, the first American tanks meant having chocolate and chewing gum. He learned about D-Davalater. Colette Gerard-Burns, 71, was outside her apartment in the fashionable 16th district when she saw her first liberator — an American soldier. "My father and I were looking for snipers. The American was aiming at one, but he got hit instead," she said. "But we took care of him." On Aug. 26, Charles de Gaulle instructed everyone to go to the Hotel de Ville, or city hall, she said. It was de Gaulle who beamed his message of a Free France over the BBC from London as she and her family listened in their basement during the war's darkest days. "Everybody was crying and screaming and laughing. It was like a surprise," she said. "You know you wait for something for so long, and when it finally happens, you're in shock. You couldn't believe it." DROP IT! 1974 RICK'S BIKE SHOP 20th Anniversary A big deal A GIANT Bike alloy frame alloy fork alloy rims with QR lifetime warranty free 30 day tuneup $289.95 save $30 FREE lock & cable FREE water bottle & cage FREE T-shirt any bike purchase ends 8/31/94 RINCON™ RICK'S BIKE SHOP Inc. 6 Massachusetts, phone 841-6642 Pancho's MEXICAN RESTAURANT Welcome Back Students! Come in and enjoy... • home style Mexican food • 11 Mexican beers! • Margaritas 23rd and Louisiana 843-4044 in the Malls Shopping Center 1974 RICK S. MILLER JR. 20th ANNIVERSARY TOLLETT CAMPBELL CENTER EXPRESS Pancho's O ON GRAB THE POWER OF THE CARD ! (MINIMUM DEPOSIT REQUIRED TO SET UP ACCOUNT) Your payments for CITY OF LAWRENCE-WATER can be made at the drop box in the Kansas Union, Information Counter, Level 4 Save time, save a stamp Drop it at the Kansas Union UNION $289.95 save $30 1420 Crescent Road Lawrence, KS 66044 MICROSOFT▪BORLAND▪AUTODESK▪CLARIS WORDPERFECT▪ALDUS▪COREL▪LOTUS MICROSTATION▪MULTIMEDIA and more... AT UP TO 80% OFF RETAIL VALID I.D. REQUIRED Jayhawk Bookstore only at the top of Naismith Hill! 843-3826 Bicycle Turn your KUID into your own personal union account to use at KU Bookstores and Union Food Services...and get FREE money for doing so! Sign up at the Banking window, Kansas Union, Level 4. SOFTWARE SOFTWARE SOFTWARE Show Your Team Spirit And Save On Quality Jayhawk Blankets. JAYHAWK BLANKETS KU KU KU KU KU KU JAYHAWK UNIVERSITY BLANKETS... BLANKETS...$9.99 $9.99 Root for the K.U. Jayhawks with a first quality University Blanket. These versatile blankets are perfect for games, picnics, or any activity. Available in twin/full size with the colorful Kansas University Jayhawk. Made of an easy-care poly/nylon blend. JAYHAWK TAILCATER BLANKETS Only $5.99 DON'T WAIT Fieldcrest Cannon offers factory direct savings on a wide variety of quality towels, sheets, blankets, comforters, bath accessories and more. Fieldcrest CANNON BED AND BATH FACTORY STORES LAWRENCE RIVERFRONT PLAZA Lawrence Riverfront Plaza Lawrence 10AM-9PM Mon.-Sat. 10AM-6PM Sun. 8B Thursday, August 25, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WE CAN'T HELP YOU WIN THE RAT RACE, BUT WE CAN HELP YOU FINISH. 【4】 It's a busy world and it's sometimes hard to know what activity to pursue.And when we need medical attention it can be frustrating trying to find the best place to go for help. Bicycle At times like these,it's comforting to know that the profes- and the most experienced therapists and specialists in Douglas County. Lawrence Occupational Health Services 865-0700 Lawrence Occupational Health Services offers a full range of industrial medicine options, including injury management, drug screening, physical therapy, occupational therapy and work hardening. Prompt evaluations, courteous and timely service, flexible hours and plenty of convenient, accessible Lawrence PromptCare is a full service urgent care center and a fast, economical way to seek medical attention. Staffed by experienced and Lawrence PromptCare. 865-3997 sionals at the new Mt.Oread Medical Arts Centre are there to lend a hand with expanded services. board certified emergency medical physicians.Open 9 am-11pm, M-F and 12 noon-11pm weekends, no appointment is neces sary-you'll be greeted by a nurse immediately and treated fast some visits can cost you as little as $45. Lawrence PromptCare is an excellent alternative to long waits in the emergency room or when you can't see your regular physician. Mt. Oread Rehabilitation Services 832-1900 Mt. Oread Rehabilitation Services offers comprehensive rehab services, including physical therapy and occupational therapy with specialization in sports medicine. Under the direction of Medical Director, Michael Geist, M.D.the program offers the broadest range of rehabilitation services MT OREAD MEDICAL ARTS CENTRE 1975 parking make Mt. Oread Medical Arts Centre an agreeable health care alternative. KASOLD & CLINTON PARKWAY NATION The U.S. Senate passes President Clinton's crime bill.Page 4B HEAT WAVE High 95° Low 62° Page 2 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN KU THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS VOL.104, NO.5 KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA, KS 66612 FRIDAY, AUGUST 26, 1994 ADVERTISING:864-4358 Cowlings to have day in court (USPS 650-640) NEWS:864-4810 Grand jury seeks new information not indictment The Associated Press LOS ANGELES — The district attorney said Wednesday he was using a grand jury to investigate O.J. Simpson's friend Al "A.C." Cowlings but is not seeking an indictment, suggesting he may be searching for more evidence against Simpson. "Any information we obtain there can be used in any other criminal proceeding as long as it's relevant," Gil Garcetti told reporters at his monthly news conference. He said that means any information the jury turned up about the June 12 killings of Simpson's ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ronald Goldman could be used in prosecution Simpson, who is charged with the murders. Garcetti also said that although he wasn't seeking a grand jury indictment of Cowlings, his office could use any information the panel turns up to charge him. "If the evidence establishes that Mr. Cowl- ings or anyone else was involved in assisting criminal conduct we're going to prosecute that," Garcetti said. Cowlings drove the white Ford Bronco seen on national television as he and Simpson led police on a freeway pursuit before Simpson surrendered on June 17. In other developments: Normally, prosecutors do not comment on secret grand jury proceedings and the investigative powers of the panel are rarely invoked in criminal cases where an indictment will not be sought. Garcetti said his office's "death penalty committee" met yesterday to consider whether to seek death or life imprisonment against Simpson if he is convicted. Simpson attorney Robert Shapiro tom The Associated Press the defense would continue to hammer away at the fact police sent a trainee to sop up blood evidence. The handling of blood,he said,is the foundation for subsequent laboratory analysis and is critical in determining whether DNA tests conducted later are reliable. ABC News said it was told by reliable sources that the sealed envelope contains the 15-inch stiletto knife and sales receipt from the cutlery shop where Simpson bought it. Source: Kansan staff research Dave Campbell / KANSAN E-mail accounts are catching on By Nathan Olson Kansan staff writer Lisa Sheldon has found an inexpensive way to talk to her sister at Indiana University. "More people are finding out about e-mail," she said. "It's the up-and-coming thing." The Omaha junior now can sit down at a computer at Academic Computing Services and write her sister a letter. No stamps are necessary. Sheldon is one of many KU students who have obtained e-mail accounts this year. E-mail, short for electronic mail, lets people around the world communicate simply, quickly and without stamps. KU students and faculty can get e-mail accounts free through Academic Computing Services. Students who have these accounts can send and receive e-mail and read Usenet News, a collection of more than 3,000 news groups with different themes. Joane Peterson, data control technician for Academic Computing Services, handles new computer accounts. She said that more students had been requesting new accounts this year than in previous years. Peterson estimated that 200 new accounts had been processed each day for the past week. Usually, Peterson said, approximately 30 accounts are processed each day. "I would be happy." "I could be here until midnight every night," she said. Peterson said that she soon would be getting a second computer, which would allow her to process twice the number of accounts each day. She attributed the increase in e-mail's popularity to increased exposure. "It's got to be all the advertising," she said Laura Green, documentation and training specialist at Academic Computing Services, said seminars and lectures were available for students interested in learning more about e-mail. Accounts can be obtained from 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. and from 1 to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday at the Computer Center. INSIDE Heavenly help Kansas freshman placekicker Jeff McCord relies on the Lord's guidance in all aspects of his life—including his kicking effort. Page 3B INSIDE Heavenly help Kansas freshman placekicker Jeff McCord relies on the Lord's guidance in all aspects of his life—including his kicking effort. Page 18 Brian Vandervliet / KANSAN Facilities operations employee Mark Haskell climbs to a small chamber in Danforth Chapel where the air-conditioning unit is stationed. Haskell and two other employees changed the filters on the unit after a maintenance check. --dents forged advisers' signatures." Paul Kotz / KANSAN (2) Heidi Brueckner, San Francisco graduate student, works on a portrait in her studio in Joseph R. Pearson Residence Hall. The vacant dormitory has seen new life with offices and art studios being moved there in recent months. JRP contains mix of offices By Ashley Miller The building, once retained by the Department of Student Housing as a men's residence hall, is being used by various departments, programs and schools at the University, including the School of Fine Arts and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. The center is a five-year, $5 million grant project being conducted by the School of Education. Economically and educationally disadvantaged high school students are recruited to study early childhood education at KU. Kansan staff writer Right now, only the basement and the first three floors of JRP are being used. The remaining three floors are empty. The University Space Committee began placing people and offices there about a year ago, said Linda Mullens, committee member and assistant vice cchancellor for student affairs. Although students no longer are living in Joseph K. Pearson Residence Hall, the building is far from empty. The first floor is occupied by both the child clinical psychology program — a master's and doctorate program affiliated with the departments of human development and family life and psychology — and the Gateway Center. "What we do is attempt to assist in finding space for individual areas that are having difficulty with their current space," Mullens said. The building's second floor houses studios for fine arts undergraduate students and offices for graduate teaching assistants in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. The space committee is still making assignments for the third floor. Bob Bearse, chairman of the space committee and associate vice chancellor, said the floor would probably house part of the KU Police, the School of Education and radio station KANU. "It's not terribly convenient, but there's just not enough space to take on all the needs," he said. Bearse said the committee did not want to use the remaining three floors if other space was available. "We don't have the money to run the building," he said. "It's $1,000 a day or so just for air conditioning." Bearse said there were plans to renovate JRP, but a date to begin renovations had not been set. However, Bearse said, the School of Education is planning to move to JRP because of a space crunch in their building, Bailey Hall. Bailey Hall then would be used to support CLAS and undergraduate education classes, he said. Ken Stoner, director of the Department of Student Housing, said JRP was vacated in May 1992 because of the low number of students applying for campus housing. Stamp requirement eliminated By Colleen McCain Kansan staff writer Pam Houston, director of the college's undergraduate center, said that students in the college no longer had to obtain dean's stamps before enrolling. The change went into effect this summer, she said. Students in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences have one less hoop to jump through during enrollment. Previously, a student in the college could not enroll without a dean's stamp. But the stamp was no longer serving its purpose. Houston said. "The dean's stamp was to check that students had seen an adviser," she said. "But it was impossible to know who was signing the forms, and students forged advisers' signatures." The repercussions of the change would be minimal, Houston said. The change was approved by the Committee on Undergraduate Studies and Advising and then passed by the College Assembly, the college's governing body. Kathy Hall, director of the college's advising support center, said that those who opposed the change were clinging to the hope that the stamp served its original purpose. "When the school was smaller and there was more central control of students, there was time to give a stamp and verify it," Hall said. "But now we have more than 13,000 students." While freshmen and sophomores are required to see an adviser, eliminating the dean's stamp also eliminates any enforcement of this requirement. Mikko Crouch, Tulsa, Okla, sophomore, said he and other students could enroll without the help of an adviser. James Carothers, associate dean of the college, said advising was unnecessary for many students. "When I did get a dean's stamp, I never actually saw an adviser," Crouch said. "I thought it was crazy that I had to get a stamp because it was so useless." A blueberry delays Shanks'trial verdict "A juror aspirated a blueberry last night." said Douglas County District Court Judge Ralph M. King. "He's at the hospital and will be going through a procedure to By Manny Lopez Kansan staff writer Of all the things that possibly could postpone a verdict, few would think the culprit would be a piece of fruit. But a blueberry was responsible for halting jury deliberations in the rape trial of Jeffrey Shanks yesterday. About 9:15 a.m., only 11 members of the jury filed into the Douglas County Division 1 Courtroom. The final member of the jury was at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. have it dislodged from his lung." "I talked to him on the phone this morning, and he said he was going to be back this afternoon," King said. "I told him, 'Some people would do anything to get out of injury duty.'" King said the juror was eating last night and choked on a blueberry. He was taken to the hospital and stayed there overnight for observation, King said. On Wednesday, the jury deliberated for almost five hours without reaching a verdict. Shanks is being tried on two separate counts of rape he was charged with in February and March. The jury will begin deliberating again at 9 a.m. today. 2 --- 2A Friday, August 26, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Weather NATIONAL Lawrence 95 °C 62 °C Kansas City 88 °C 70 °C Topeka 91 °C 67 °C Wichita 91 °C 70 °C Omaha 90 °C 64 °C Tulsa 88 °C 70 °C Des Moines 89 °C 63 °C St. Louis 81 °C 69 °C Chicago 81 °C 69 °C Atlanta 87 °C 69 °C New York 74 °C 60 °C Los Angeles 87 °C 67 °C Seattle 75 °C 54 °C EXTENDED FORECAST FRI. SAT. SUN. Chance for rain in the morning, then partly sunny, hot and humid Hot and sunny Hot with chance of evening showers 95 62 97 69 96 65 EXTENDED FORECAST FRI. Chance for rain in the morning, their partly sunny, hot and humid 9562 SAT. Hot and sunny 9769 SUN. Hot with chance of evening showers 9665 9562 9769 9562 9769 contact Press August 26,1994 $ Stock market report D Dow Jones 16.84 3.829.89 Shares Traded 284. 12 million ↑ Advances ▼ 1,057 Declines 1,122 Unchanged 694 NYSE 43 258.18 Nasdaq 24.08 754.80 ASE 86 44 7.12 ON CAMPUS St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate daily mass at 12:30 p.m. today at Danforth Chapel. KU Kempo Karate Club will meet at 6 p.m. today in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Mandana Hurt at 842-4713. ■ Department of Communication Studies' Oral Communication Exemption Exam is set for Sept. 8. Interested students must register in 3000 Wescoe Hall by Friday. A $10 non-refundable deposit is required to register. Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity Inc. will hold a Phi Beta Sigma Jam at 11 p.m. tomorrow in the Frontier Room at the Burge Union. For more information, call Dan Leong at 864-6214. mation, call Ken Kueker at 843-0620. Lutheran Student Fellowship will sponsor a welcome dinner for students at noon Sunday at Immanuel Lutheran Church, 15th and Iowa streets. For more infor- KU Ballroom Dance Club will meet at 2 p.m. Sunday in the Kansas Room at the Kansas Union. KU Kempo Karate Club will sponsor Kouboud, a weapons clinic, at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Robinson Center. For more information, call Mandana Hurt at 842-4713. KU Kempo Karate Club will meet at 6 p.m. Monday in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Mandana Hurt at 842-4713. KU Tae Kwon Do Club will meet at 6 p.m. Monday in 207 Robinson Center. For more information, call Jason Anishanslin at 843-7973. Yoga Club will meet at 7 p.m. Monday in 310 Burge Union. For more information, call Michele Risdal at 841-8818. CORRECTIONS Students who enrolled in the section of Music History 136 that was canceled will not have to go through the formal drop process to drop the class from their schedules. Daniel Politoske, head of the music history department, told students in the class Wednesday that they would have to go to the enrollment center to drop the class. But Brenda Selman, assistant registrar, said that the University had canceled students' enrollment in the class automatically. A headline on the front page of yesterday's Kansan contained incorrect information. Wednesday night's meeting of the Douglas County Commission concerned beaver dams and legal authority over the Baker Wetlands, not the South Lawrence Trafficway. "If students in the class were to come and get copies of their schedules now, that class wouldn't even appear on their schedules," she said. A story on page 4B of yesterday's Kansan mistakenly reported that the Renegade Theatre would have two performances today. There will be only one performance at 8 p.m. This weekend also is not the final performance of the season, but it is the final performance of Greatest Hits Volume II. Don "Bucky" Himpel was mistakenly identified as Doug Delaney. The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stairwater-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 $90. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045. + HAPPY BIRTHDAY! IN THE NEXT YEAR OF YOUR LIFE: Although loved ones' problems will sometimes infringe on your work hours, you will make considerable headway in business and finance. Guard against the high-pressure tactics used and advocated by others. Romance is lively! Do what you can to strengthen a marital relationship. An opportunity to travel arises early in 1995. Combine business with pleasure. New investments are favored next May and June. Horoscopes CLEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DATE: actor Macaulay Culkin, singer Valerie Simpson, bandleader Bradford Marsalis, actress Jan Clavton. ♂ ARIES (March 21-April 19): Employment problems may disrupt your schedule today. Be patient, but stand your ground on matters of principle. Coworkers may be in a difficult mood. 5 T LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Take a short break from work and go shopping. The change of scenery will give you a fresh outlook. Do your best to adjust to a confusing family situation. You cannot change it by yourself. m TAURUS (April 20-May 20): There is greater emphasis on independence and mobility now. A younger person could have the last word when an important decision is made. Ride with the tide. Family life holds special appeal this weekend. II GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You could get in over your head if you oversell and idea this afternoon. Emphasize practical aspects. Using up too many of your resources would be a mistake. Romance has its ups and downs. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Handle a restless mood in a mature way. Much can be gained if you avoid acting on impulse. Work associates are cooperative but not energetic. Point out that teamwork will improve the bottom line. ♥ CANCER (June 21-July 22): A confidential tip could prove very lucrative. Keep it to yourself! A new fashion trend gives you a clever business idea. Give a key partnership extra attention. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Self-improvement courses enjoy favorable influences. Devote more time and attention to intellectual pursuits. A professional offers you valuable advice. Strive to stay within your budget. Harnessing your vivid imagination to practical endeavors produces spectacular results. 69 VS CAPRICORN (Dec. 22, Jan. 19): Your common sense comes to the fore today. A more selective approach to romance will brighten your social life. A cooperative effort begins paying off handsomely at work. TP LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Avoid any open conflicts, even if it means giving up a project. Current aspects stress the importance of complete financial cooperation. You can expect to make real headway with a long-term business venture. X al VIRGY (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You are susceptible to pressure from your friends today. Be prudent if asked to lend money. You need to broaden your social horizons. Work at it! AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Negotiating a real estate deal will be easier if you wait until conditions are more favorable. You could encounter both dishonest people and deceptive documents if you push ahead right now. Cut certain ties. Water PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): A combination of hard work and outside influences will give your career or business interests a welcome boost. Adopt a more practical approach to money matters. Home ownership becomes a top priority for a married couple. TODAY'S CHILDREN: Jokingly accused of having "filing cabinet minds," these intellectual and well-read Virgos will always have plenty of facts and figures at their disposal. Count on them to be formidable opponents in debates or arguments. Although these Virgos sometimes have trouble showing affection, they are marshmallows at heart — especially where children are concerned. Reluctant to confide their innermost thoughts, they usually have only a few close pals. Their natural reticence makes them ideal employees for "top secret" work. WEA ON SALE TODAY AT KIEF'S! Kief's Savings... EVERYDAY- Check Our New Low Prices. SEAL FEATURING: PRAYER FOR THE DYING • DON'T CRY • KISS FROM A ROSE • NEWBORN FRIEND Kief's Savings... ANYDAY- Buy 5/Get 25 25% Savings Anyday. CD Sale $1197 Keith Sweat get up on it! CD Sale $1197 Kief's Savings... Tuesday-Lowest Street Date Prices in Town on Major New Releases. CD Sale $1249 Sale Prices Good Thru 9-1-94 KIEF'S CDS/TAPES 24th & Iowa St. P.O. Box 2, Lawrence, KS. 66044 CDS & TAPES ~ AUDIOVIDEO ~ CAR STEREO 913•842•1544 913•842•1811 913•842•1438 SEAL FEATURING: PRAYER FOR THE DYING • DON'T CRY • KISS FROM A ROSE • NEWBORN FRIEND Keith Sweat get up on it! e Ektra CD Sale $11 97 KIEF'S CDS/TAPES 24th & Iowa St. P.O. Box 2, Lawrence, KS. 66044 CDS & TAPES ~ AUDIO/VIDEO ~ CAR STEREO 913•842•1544 913•842•1811 913•842•1438 STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE Is now accepting applications for Student Senate Committees and Boards All students are invited to join Applications are available in the Student Senate Office- 410 Kansan Union Deadline: Friday August 26th at 5 p.m. call 864-3710 for questions CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Friday, August 26, 1994 3A New education dean has open style Goals include creating better communication By James Evans Kansan staff writer It's all academic to her. She has lived in six states during the past 23 years. Each of the six states had a purpose in the academic endeavors of Karen Symms Gallagher, the new dean of education at the University of Kansas. From teaching middle school in western Washington to taking her new position as dean of education July 1, Gallagher said that each experience had helped her gain knowledge about administrating different types of educational institutions. Prior to taking the position at KU, Gallagher was the associate dean of academic affairs at the University of Cincinnati. During the nine years at Cincinnati, she served as a professor of educational administration at the graduate level. Gallagher, one of two female deans at KU, said she found the KU position attractive because the school of education is a Holmes Group member. Institutions in the group emphasize a broad liberal arts background that prepares teachers for the classroom. Students in the school of education have to take two years of classes in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences before applying to the school their junior year. "I think it's important that our students do go to the college first," Gallagher said. "It emphasizes broad-based learning in liberal arts and an understanding that teaching is more than just the love of kids. New Leadership "Secondly, I came to the school because of the involvement of the faculty in different professions," Gallagher said. She said she was impressed by how many faculty members work in the professional world. Faculty members also were impressed by Gallagher and her 23 years in education, said Sherry Ann Borgers, professor of counseling psychology and member of the search committee that selected Gallagher from among 50 applicants. "We were looking for a leader who could listen and communicate and help us achieve the goals we already had," Borgers said. She said that during the interview process, students and faculty members said they liked Gallagher. With almost two months of experience at Bailey Hall, Gallagher said she has had time to set some goals for the school and review ongoing projects. "We're looking for ways to share and create a relationship where it is OK to disagree." she said. One of Gallagher's main goals is to improve communication between the six programs in the school of education. She said effective communication created a better educational environment. To initiate the plan, Gallagher said she has started a "lunch with the dean" program, in which seven or eight faculty members are invited to lunch "to help break down artificial ” "We were looking for a leader who could listen and communicate." Sherry Ann Borgers Professor of counseling psychology barriers between them and me." Gallagher said she also would have two hours during the week when students or faculty could come into her office and talk about any problems they may be having. She said she hopes this would create a greater openness between students and faculty. BAILEY MACHINE SERVICE Jay Thornton / KANSAN Karen Symms Gallagher became the new dean of education on July 1. HOLLYWOOD MUSEUM Daron Bennett / KANSAN Two days into classes and Ruth Haffield, secretary in the department of Education Policy and Leadership, says this week's pace has been "kinda hard for me to take" and hits the steps east of Bailey Hall for a cigarette and a little solitude. She has been with the department for about a year and said she was used to a slower pace. During the hectic first week, she has had to escape to the steps for a little peace and quiet, as well as a place to smoke. Careless riding may cost students serious cash By Manny Lopez Kansan staff writer Get caught running a stop sign with your bicycle on campus and pay the price. Thirty-five dollars to be exact. Always dollar to be exact. Yesterday afternoon, some KU students who cruised through the stop sign at the corner of Jayhawk Boulevard and Sunflower Road were met by KU bike patrol police officers Chad Carr and Bob Williams. "We have had a lot of accidents on campus so we are trying to make people aware," Carr said. "Today we are giving people warnings unless they give us a hard time." After stopping people for running the stop sign, the officers checked for identification to see if anyone had any outstanding warrants or if the bicycles they were riding were stolen. "Another thing is we have had a lot of thefts recently," Williams said. "So we are checking all the bikes we stopped." "I assumed I could get a ticket for not stopping," Megan Joyce, Lawrence junior said. "I just didn't think it would cost so much." Everyone the officers stopped were let off with a warning, Carr said. Joyce, who was on her way to check on a job opportunity, said she would now be more careful. Along with being aware of the traffic laws, Carr said students should have their bikes registered. He said getting a bicycle registered costed 25 cents and was good for six years. Carr said students could register their bike at the SUA office, KU police department or Lawrence police department. "Actually, the fine for not having a bike license is $21.50." he said. The bike patrol has been around for three years. Williams and Carr started their one-year term on the bike patrol in January. After riding away from his post near a tree on Jayhawk Boulevard, Williams said his next assignment would be at night stopping students who did not have the required headlight. He said he would be mostly handing out warnings this week, but would be giving tickets next week. "Today hasn't been too bad because not too many people have heckled us," Carr said. "Hey, we are getting paid to do our exercise." "We are also recommending people have flashing lights on the back of their bikes," Carr said. "Most of all people should just use caution, especially when riding on the sidewalks." Speaker believes aliens are among us UFO enthusiast to speak tonight at Holidome By Carlos Tejada Kansan staff writer Bill Caulfield believes in UFOs. And that's not all. The Kansas City, Mo., resident said he believed in alien abduction, transmitter implants and government cover-ups. But before you pass judgment, think about this. Caulfield said he had more than 45 years of experience investigating UFOs and extraterrestrial phenomenon. He said he had irrefutable evidence to back up his claims. He also said he was willing to show this evidence at a presentation at 7 tonight at the Holiday Inn Holidome, 200 McDonald Dr. "I don't ask people to believe me," Caulfield said. "I just ask them to find the truth." Caulfield, a retired airline executive, said in a telephone interview yesterday that he became interested in UFOs while living near Roswell, N.M., in the late 1940s. In 1949, UFO enthusiasts claim, an alien spacecraft crashed in the desert near Roswell and was hidden by the government. The subsequent rumors and stories piqued his interest, he said. "I didn't think much of it at the time," Caulfield said. "But over the years I kept getting into it and started doing research." Over the years, Cauffelt said, he has acquired a wide body of research and worked with scientists and professors. But the results of the research aren't pleasant, he said. Caulfield said his research showed that aliens who abducted humans might mean humans harm. He said the current wave of abduction tales, including the bestselling non-fiction book "Communion" by author Whitley Strieber, portrayed alien abduction in an inaccurately positive light. "Do you think being taken from the dark, poked and prodded and having your memory erased is a good thing?" Caulfield said. "I don'tthinkit'sright." People who experience extraterrestrial visits should challenge it until the UFOsinLawrence UFOsinLawrence Speaker: Bill Caulfield, a UFO investigator. What: A lecture and slide show on UFOS, alien abductions and government cover-ups. ■ When: 7to 10. tonight. ■ Where: Brazilian Room A in the Holiday Inn Holidome, 200 McDonald Dr. Admission: Tickets are $5 at Hummingbird Song Bookstore, 10 E.9th St., and $6 at the door. Tickets also will be given away today on radio station KJKH 90.7. "I don't ask people to believe me.I just ask them to find the truth." Bill Caulfield UFOinvestigator aliens' motives are discovered, he said. Caulfield's views aren't necessarily representative of all UFO enthusiasts, said Gil Bavel, president of Third Eye Productions, the Lawrence UFO group sponsoring the presentation. He said because little concrete evidence was available, different theories were welcome in the UFO community. Bavel also said UFO research should not be confused with UFO claims in tabloid newspapers. "If you do your homework, you'll find a lot more than three-foot green men from Mars riding saucers with Elvis and Bigfoot," he said. Interested members of the public should come with an open mind, Bavel said. "If you're uninterested in being lied to and you have some interest in seeking the truth, this is something you need to come to," he said. NEW!NEW!NEW! Zenith Data Systems Z-SELECT ES 486DX $1,389.00 - i486DX/33MHz, or future PENTIUM processor - 4mb RAM (expandable to 64mb) - 210mb IDE Hard Drive 3.5" 1.44mb FD - 14" SVGA Color Monitor - VL Local Bus SVGA 1024 x 768 @ 16 colors - EPA Energy Compliant One year On-Site Warranty - Zero Insertion Force Pentium OverDrive Upgrade socket, 3 open ISA slots, 2-button mouse, 101-key keyboard, MS-DOS, MS Windows 3.1 your campus computer alternative... 图 Jayhawk Bookstore only at the top of Naismith Hill II 1420 Crescent Road Lawrence, KS 66044 843-3826 WELCOME BACK STUDENTS DISCOVER the power BEHIND BEAUTIFUL HAIR STEP by STEP HAIR PROFESSIONALS 925 Iowa, Lawrence, KS 842-7895 offer expires 9-14-94 $5.00 Off Any Service REDKEN STONEBACK'S APPLIANCE DORM SIZE REFRIGERATORS FOR RENT 2 cu. ft. $45 2 cu. ft. $65 school year 929 Mass. FREE DELIVERY 433-4170 928 928 COFFEE SHOP The Etc. Shop THE LOOK OF LAWRENCE GIFTS* Something special for everyone SUNGLASSES* Rayban, Bausch & Lomb, Vuarnet, Rengett, Rev6 LEATHER* Averix Flight Jackets, Belts, Wallets, Ladies 'Purses JEWELRY* Sterling Silver - Huge Unique Selection ACCESSORIES* Formal Wear - Sales & Rental COSTUMES* Costumes & Accessories 2nd Floor THIS IS A FUN STORE! The Etc. Shop 843-0611 928 MASS --- 4A Friday, August 26, 1994 OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN EDITOR Hey Norman, come stormin' on Mount Oread STEPHEN MARTINO STEPHEN MARTINO The University of Kansas needs a chancellor not of grace but a person who can get what they want. All this banter around campus about finding a new chancellor has got me thinking, which I know for the professors who have had me in class is a dangerous thing for me to do. I think we've got all these questions about what we want from a new chancellor wrong. We should not care if the person can teach a course or how much money they can raise. We should not care about how he or she networks with alumni or how they relate with students. We need a chancellor who will scare people — professors, instructors, legislators, alumni and students. What KU needs is Norman Schwarzkoff. Personally, I think that Schwarzkopf would make a perfect The one thing I have gathered from every conversation I have had with administrators is that KU needs money. Who could be more successful than Stormi' 'Norman? match for the University, not to mention meet all the needs of the everyone in the University community. Could you really see State Sen. Gus Bogina, R-Shawnee and chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, which controls the purse strings of the state, telling a Chancellor Schwarzkopf no—to anything? Heck, Schwarzkopf go and testify in front of Bogina and his committee and convince the senator that he was moving minds, moving fat professors and moving tanks on campus. (After listening to a Schwarzkopf soliloquy, Bogina would probably believe that KU does have tanks.) The former general could convince Bogina and his committee to give him exactly what he wanted — more money, no argument, no discussion. Bogina would be so intimidated by Chancellor Schwarzkopf, he would probably start writing bills on the back of manila envelopes to appease the chancellor. And tell me what alumnus would not give money to Chancellor Schwarzkopf. He would not even have to travel across the country to raise money. The Endowment Association could start fund raising by direct mail with a big picture of Chancellor Schwarzkopf pointing his finger like Uncle Sam and saying, "I want you to support this university." Money would start coming in faster than surrendering Iraqis during the Persian Gulf War. Chancellor Schwarzkopf would make Chancellor Gene Budig's "Campaign Kansas" look like a fraternity liquor fund. And then there is the question of Chancellor Schwarzkopf teaching at the University. No problem. Much has been made of his intelligence, and I am sure he would be qualified to teach ROTC classes. In fact, I think it would be a little refreshing to know that Glen Mason is not the only one to teach students about Hail Marys. Schwarzkopf said after he retired that becoming a university president would be an ideal job for him. I agree. OK, so he might not be chancellor for long once he finds out that the fields of higher education aren't as green as he once thought. And he is often mentioned as a possible political candidate. But if the University of Kansas has to lose another high quality chancellor to a presidency of some kind, it would be nice to know that it is something more prestigious than a game of selfishness and greed. VIEWPOINT Cooperation is the only way to combat stigma of rape Stephen Martino is an Olathe senior major in journalism and political science. Two women reported to police that they were raped last weekend. They should be commended for their courage in reporting crimes against them. Reporting rape in our society is an act of bravery because of the way victims are often treated. The stigma forced on rape victims needs to be eliminated. Everyone RAPE VICTIMS hatred by those ignorant enough to think "they asked for it." Rape is not something to be ashamed of but rather something to be faced and addressed by the victim, the authorities and the public. Because of needs to remember that the victim has gone through an ordeal both emotionally and physically. the seriousness of the crime, accusers are often subjected to brutal interrogation. They also may be treated with scorn or Cooperation between police, victims, media and the public in portraying rape as a crime is the only way society can begin to address the problem. DONELLA HEARNE FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD. Victims shouldn't take rap but could have been careful No victim is responsible for the crime against them. Guilt should rest only on the shoulders of the criminal. No rape victim ever asked to be raped. Going to a strange place matic victim. But it is an invitation to a rapist. An easy target is more tempting to someone with bad intentions. But just as people lock their doors at night, men and women also should take precautions against rape. RAPE PREVENTION RAPE PREVENTION No one asks to be a victim, but personal behavior and common sense must guide the actions of people to ensure they keep out of danger. Anytime a person does not take steps Seeing a person walking alone at night does not turn anyone into a auto- to prevent a crime, he or she is in danger of becoming a victim. DONELLA HEARNE FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD. KANSAN STAFF STEPHEN MARTINO Editor JEN CARR Business manager CHRISTOPH FUHRMANS Managing editor TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser TOMEBLEN CAMERON DEATH Retail sales manager CATHERINE ELLSWORTH Systems coordinator JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser News ... Sara Bennett Editorial ... Donella Heame Campus ... Mark Martin Sports ... Brian James Photo ... Daron Bennett Melissa Lacey Features ... Traci Carl Planning Editor ... Susan White Design ... Noah Musser Assistant to the editor .. Robbie Johnson Editors Business Staff Campus mgr . Todd Winters Regional mgr . Laura Guth National mgr . Mark Masto Coop mgr . Emily Gibson Special Sections mgr . Jen Pierer Production mgrs . Holly Boren Regan Overy Marketing director . Alan Stiglic Creative director . John Carton Classified mgr. Heather Niohaus 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 are required to use the 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. THOSE POOR REFUGEES! TOUGHER ECONOMIC SANCTIONS HURT THE CUBAN PEOPLE,BUT IS CASTRO REALLY FEELING THEM? F. OFFHAND, I'D SAY SO, SIR. MIAMI OR BUST Sean Finn / KANSAN It was years before I could tell anyone else. I didn't tell anyone because of the way rape victims are treated in our When I was 15 years old, I was raped. Inner strength found in memories of rape I went to an unfamiliar place with a man I did not know. When he realized I could not get out, he took advantage of my vulnerability. After the first minute, I stopped fighting. My 100 pounds could not resist the weight of the muscular man on top of me. "If I don't fight, he won't hurt me," I thought. So I stared at the ceiling and thought about illic bushes and my grandmother's house. I remember later telling my best friend I had "done it." I don't remember if it was because I thought I had or because I couldn't accept that I hadn't been able to stop him. I always had considered myself a strong person. "If anyone tries that on me, I'll kick him in the nuts," I had said. But when I realized that someone had taken that strength, that bravado, away from me. I lost my self-respect. I felt guilty. I couldn't have felt more responsible if I had gotten down on my knees and begged him to take my virginity. EDITORIAL EDITOR --- society. I didn't want anyone accusing me of "asking for it. I didn't want my family to be let down. I didn't want people to call me a slut. Those words seem overly brave to me as I write this column. Even now I am afraid of what might come of making my story public. Will people treat me differently? I now believe the only way to erase the stigma forced on rape victims is for victims to speak out. They need to show the world they are not ashamed or guilty. They are victims, not criminals. Not if they respect me. Will the old feelings of shame and guilt be resurrected if someone approaches me about my experience? I hope not. I now believe that I am the strong person I wanted to be. I am stronger now because I realize that I am not strong enough. I know I cannot put myself at risk by trusting strangers to treat me with respect. It has taken me seven years and many long summer nights to gain perspective on those feelings. I used to try to deny my fears and prove my strength.I put myself in danger. One night I found myself walking a long way to my car alone. It was late, and by the time I got there I was sobbing, and my chest was on fire. I realized I was making it easier for someone to rage me. It's not fair, and it's not right that I cannot walk alone free of fear. But it’s the truth, and I can’t deny it. Donella Hearne is a Wichita senior in journalism. So I will do whatever I can to make sure no one will have the opportunity to rape me again. It has been difficult enough surviving one rape, and I don't know if I would make it through another. I hope you will keep yourselves safe, too. COLUMNIST ROBBIE JOHNSON Intolerance can be cured like cooties Mixed Media Remember life in grade school, when boys or girls had cooties, and we "couldn'l" play with them? Well, someone managed to find a cure for cooties. But some of us still couldn't stand the idea of talking to the kids who were "different." By the fifth or sixth grade, we began to realize that girls and boys weren't that bad. Now, we are in our late teens, our 20s, and some of us are even older, but some of us still don't want to live with "different" people. Eight percent of us are from another country, and another 15 percent are minorities. That's nearly half. Yes, KU does have a diverse campus. One-fourth of the students are nontraditional, older than the mid- 20s, have a family or not living in Lawrence. They're not so different anyway, are they? The prejudice that exists is simply ignorance. Anyone with half a brain can realize that people who aren't Black or Hispanic are also in gangs or on welfare. Homosexuals aren't trying to convert you from heterosexuality. And foreigners aren't desperately trying to steal jobs away from our American children. All it takes is a little common sense — and some education. Try something different. Take a class on another culture or attend a minority group's activity. Talk to somebody from another group. Or, simply read. And here at the Kansan, we'll try to help you out. We're trying to increase national and international coverage, as well as reporting on issues important to groups on campus, which don't have much representation. But we can't do this effectively without your help. If we're not covering important issues, let me know. If we're doing something right, let me know. And if you're interested in representing your group on the Kansan advisory board, call me at 864-4810. Your feedback is essential in expanding our coverage Maybe it won't be the cure for prejudice. But then, cooties didn't disappear overnight, either. Robbie Johnson is a Wichita junior in journalism. By Jack Ohman ...DISNEY MUST BE STOPPED... FOUR SEVEN OUR A NE CHINO DEDI ALL FOR 8-29 © 1994 Tribute Media Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 5A Signs to point way to discounts By Jennifer Freund Kansan staff writer Parking in the rear Starting in the spring semester, Lawrence stores will post signs informing students that they offer student discounts. The University Affairs Committee of Student Senate will be in charge of recruiting businesses and distributing the signs. The Etc. Shop 928 Mass.Downtown "KU students are a substantial part of the Lawrence economy," said Sherman Reeves, student body president. "To understand how important students are to businesses, just look at how many bars close down in the summer when the students are gone." Reeves said that Senate released a pamphlet last April that included 31 Lawrence businesses offering discounts. The committee will work on the promotion and have it enacted by the spring,he said. Paden said that she hoped the promotion would help bring more student business to her restaurant. VV FiFI's offers a 25 percent discount to students Sunday evenings. FIFi's Restaurant, 925 Iowa St., was listed in the brochure last year and planned to participate in Senate's discount program in the spring. Bobbi's Bedroom, 2429 Iowa St. also was listed in last year's brochure "I'd like to get more student business because we enjoy the students, and we hire mostly students," said FIEF1 Padan, co-owner of FIFE's. and planned to participate in the promotion. "We offer various discounts to students on different merchandise," said Julie Buchanan, manager of Bobbi's Bedroom. "But, we can't offer discounts on our outlet merchandise." "We will not offer a student discount because it's discriminatory," said Tom Patel, owner of University Audio, 2319 Louisiana St. "If we offer a discount, we can offer it to anyone. I believe in giving discounts to people who work for a living." But some businesses that participated last year will not participate this year. Some students said that the program would encourage them to patronize participating stores more often. "If I saw the sign advertising the discount, I would probably go in just to see what they had," said Renee Tetuan, Topeka sophomore. "I might be a little more interested." Natalie Garcia, Wichita senior, said that she also would be interested in knowing which companies offered discounts. "I would be more likely to go into a store that had a sign up offering discounts to students," she said. "Since students bring so much business into Lawrence, I think that it's a good idea to give them some kind of discount." A copy of the brochure listing businesses that participated last semester may be picked up at the Senate office in the Kansas Union. FUTONS K.C. Based Manufacturer with 6 Retail Locations This Complete Futon & Frame $269 Twin Futon & Frame $99 Abdiana FUTON Exclusively Hardwood Frames 1023 Mass. St. Lawrence, KS 843-8222 ATHLETIC MIDNIGHT MADNESS! Save 20% All Week After 11:00pm Total Fitness Athletic Center WHY WE ARE THE BEST! Treadmills Stair Machines Bikes Nordic Tracks Complete Selecterized Machine and Free Weight Area Aerobic Classes Boxing Day Care Self Defense Classes Tanning Beds Jacuzzi Saunas Complete Locker Facilities Personal Training and Program Development Towel Service Health/ Beverage Bar 832.0818 AUGUST 1974 2108 West 27th Suite C 832-0818 Bucky's 9th & IOWA·842-2930 SPECIAL OFFER Double Cheeseburgers only $1 29 Bucky's 9th & IOWA • 842-2930 SPECIAL OFFER Double Cheeseburgers only $1.29 Milk Shakes (Choc., Van., Straw.) only 99¢ Limited Time Only CAMELBURN CAMELBURN CLOTHING MEN'S - LADIES' JEANS LEE - LEVI'S - FADED GLORY $ 799-$ 999-$ 1299 IMPERFECTS 1 DAY ONLY! MEN'S TENNIS SHOES NIKE, CONVERSE, REEBOK, ASICS $ 19 99 FROM IMPERFECTS / STORE RETURNS RECOGNIZE THESE SWEATSHIRTS? These are the same ones sold in bookstores for $60.00 OUR PRICE $1699 LADIES' MENS' DENIM SHORTS $1299 by Levi's & Lea STARTER HATS STARTER $5.99 LADIES' PANTIES, BRAS SOCKS $2.99 HOSE 99 RECOGNIZE THESE JEANS? REG. $6500 OUR PRICE $2999 1 DAY ONLY! FRIDAY AUGUST 26TH 10:00-6:00 P.M. "RECOGNIZE THESE LADIES' TOPS?" SORRY WE CAN'T MENTION THE BRAND $599 FROM "RECOGNIZE THESE MENS' TOPS?" SORRY WE CAN'T MENTION THE BRAND $599 FROM "RECOGNIZE THESE MENS' TOPS?" UMBRO SHORTS $799 UMBRO SHORTS $7 99 From $7 99 $2 99 From $799 BOW TIE EARRINGS LIGHTWEIGHT SUPER SOFT MEDIUM WEIGHT HEAVYWEIGHT $2.99 EARRINGS MasterCams Holiday Inn Main Ballroom (Enter Convention Center) 200 MacDonald Dr. (Turnpike Access) Lawrence CANOE TRIP LABOR DAY WEEKEND FRIDAY, SEPT.2 THROUGH SUNDAY, SEPT.4 $50. GETS YOU: ·2 DAYS CANOE RENTAL ·2 NIGHTS CAMPING ·5 MEALS KAYAKING STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL SUA AT 864-3477 1. francis sporting goods, inc. 843-4191 731 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas 80044 Converse- All Star- Oxford... cool summer classic. Low tops $27.99, Hi tops $29.99 Choose from this bunch of colors... optical white, off white, black, black monochrome, pine, red or navy. Lowest shoe prices in Lawrence! (Check our Converse™ One Stars,™ too.) converse Locally owned since 1947. CONVERSE Chuck Taylor ALL STAR --- 6A Friday, August 26, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NATURALWAY 820-822 Mass 841-0100 CHINA VUARNET FRANCE The 928 Mass. Etc. Downtown Shop Park in the rear The Etc. Shop fifi's 925 IOWA 841-7226 Lunch & Dinner Great Food Lawrence's Largest Supplier of Darkroom Materials 1610 West 23rd Street 841-7205 Camera America ONE HOUR PHOTO Earrings Chains Antique wrist watches Charms Precious stones Diamonds Unique items Bracelets Boyd's Antiques Sterling Silver Silver bands Flasks Pipes Cigarette Cases Antique Mall 830 MASS. 842-8773 HARBOURLIGHTS 1031 Massachusetts Downtown SUBWAY'S GRAND OPENING SALE! BEDS DESKS BOOKCASES Everything But Ice 936 Mass. FREE 6"SUB* MEN'S FOODS *with purchase of medium sized drink during hours listed below Good atthe Subway has opened new doors & we're celebrating with a deal you can really sink your teeth into! WESTRIDGE SHOPPING CENTER 6th and KASOLD LOCATION ONLY This special offer available: FRIDAY, AUGUST 26th from 5 P.M.-8 P.M. SATURDAY, AUGUST 27th from 11A.M.-3P.M. SUBWAY Cupcake I Can't Believe It's Yogurt! THE TASTE THAT'S WON THE WORLD OVER Treat Time! We'll Be Here With A... 50% Discount On small, medium or large cups or cones!* (Waffle Cones and toppings Regular Price) Limit two with coupon Not valid with any other offer. *offer expiresSept.15 1994 Louisiana Purchase Orchards Corners 23rd & Louisiana 749-0440 15th & Kasold 843-5500 ALEXANDRA AND RICO LAWRENCETAE-KWON-DOSCHOO HAP-KI-DO • SUN-DO • KUM-DO (Technique for Body (Meditation) (Sword Art) (Restraint) 10th & Massachusetts • 843-2121 Learn Martial Arts from an Original Master MASTER KI-JUNE PARK, Ph.D. Special Student Rates 19th & Massachusetts 843-2121 Largest Beauty Supply Selection in the Midwest! Professional advice from professionals. OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK. VISIT OUR SALON FOR A NEW LOOK! KMS IMAGE A. BEAUTY WAREHOUSE & HAIRZONE of Lawrence OPI ABRA REDKEN Brocatto S PAUL MITCHELL JOICO SORBIE Nuclear M BODY DRENCH CRUPIES HAIR ZONE AT & BEAUTY & WAREHOUSE 100s Announcements 105 Personal 110 Business Personal 120 Announcements 130 Entertainment 140 Lost and Found Classified Directory SEBASTIAN NEXUS ranza Rusk TIGI 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 $200 OFF (S15 purchase minimum, excludes sale items) BEAUTY WAREHOUSE Hours: M-F 9-8, Sat. 9-6, Sun. Noon-6 520 West 23rd exp. 9/30/94 841-5885 UDK 200s Employment 205 Help Wanted 225 Professional Services 235 Support Services Klu Professor will pay for ride from Lawrence to 127th and Quivera in O.P. on occasional thursday or Friday afternoons. Call Dr. Hawkins 864-3436 or 842-1731. 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 Kansan regulation or Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing issued in this newspaper are 105 Personals ROOMMATS FROM HELL. Have you or a friend had a roommate problem so serious that one of you had to move out? If so, call our researcher学院 (212)-582-509-8, m-3b. m-M-F. Classified Policy All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 and requires discrimination on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or dis- 1 Bausch & Lomb, Rayban, Killer Loops, i's, Révo, Serengeti, and Vuarnet 100s Announcements LEATHER Backpacks, Beltacks, & Purses - Kansan Classified: 864-4358 Backpacks, Belts, Jackets, & Purses SUNGLASSES 400s Real Estate 405 Real Estate 430 Roommate Wanted THE ETC. SHOP 828 Mass. STERLING HOOPS JEWELRY Rings, Hoops, Bracelets, & Pendents 110 Bus, Personals KU and other colleague apparel. 08-27 5:25pm & @98 28:10 5:00, New Hampshire. 2019 300s New Bromine 305 For Sale 304 Auto Sales 306 Automobile 307 Ware Buy HUGE SAMPLE SALE! 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 NEED A RIDE/RIDER? Use the Use Serve Car Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union. Pregnant-considering adoption$^9$ Loving families avail. You help select adoptive family. Confidential/legal/Call A Dream Fulfilled Adoption Inc toll free 1-800-565-4529 Pharmacy Hours Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm Friday 8am-6pm Saturday 8:30am-12:30pm Sunday 11am-3pm 120 Announcements B CASH FOR COLLEGE 900,000 GRANTS AVAILABLE. NO REPAYMENTS, EQUALITY INMEDIATELY. 1-800-243-2435. COMMUTERS: Self Service Car Pool Exchange. happy. Needs a yard. CAN LEARNING A FOREIGN LANGUAGE Workshop. Help for students of any language. FREE! Improve reading, comprehension skills. Mon, Aug 29, 7-9 pm. 4034 Wescoe. Sponsored by the Student Assistance Center We're coming to you next week. Look for us in the Student Union Monday, Feb. 17. 12th & Oread 841-9475 COMMUTERS Self Serve Car Pool Exchange Main Lobby, Kansas Union. Recycled Sources Free dog to a good home. 2 years, 25 lbs. Very energetic, affectionate and tenderness. TRADE BUY $ELL Cd's Lp's & Tapes TUTORS! List your name with us. We refer students inquiries to you. Student Assistance Center Pay Cash for CD's Monday, Aug 29, 7-9 pm 4034 Wescoe Sponsored by the Student Assistance Center Learning a Foreign Language Workshop Improve reading, writing, listening comprehension and conversation skills. Headquarters Counseling Center Carmel, California Careers and Information Meetings. 1419 Massachusetts Information Meetings. 1419 Massachusetts FREE! FREE POOL DAILY 3-8 mpt Bottleneck 737 New Hampshire St WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of available students. Student Assistance Center, 133 Sturgeon 130 Entertainment Volunteers Needed! FRIDAY,AUGUST 26 GREASERS BALL A THEHELLCATTRIO RICKYDEAN THEVICTROS THESPAMSKINNERS THEEUDORAS LIBERTYHALL 644 Mass., 749-1972 $4 in advance, $5 at the door *18 and over Locking to give away one old puppy found one baby dog. Calm Kit or Kim, 598-7400. Potty trained. Call Kim or 598-7400. 140 Lost & Found Found: Face plate for car stereo at 8th & Main. Call and give proper identification by leaving a message on my machine. If you correctly ID the plate I will return your call after 10p.m. 82-9748 205 Help Wanted WORK STUDY! The School of Business has many work study positions available now. Please come to the Business Placement Center in 125 Summer field to apply. NOW HIRING BIZZI WORKERS For Little Caesars Pizza locations at 23rd and 46th floors, drivers must have 10 I/O HOUR! Apply in person. Drivers must have their own reliable transportation, proof of insurance and drivers license and be at least 18 years old. $100/nr. possible mailing our circulars for info $100/nr. possible mailing our circulars for info University Relations has 15-20 hrs. weekly position open immediately to assist Oreed edit. 2nd position begins after Oct. 10 to attend home town news editor, 12-15 hrs. a week. Positions continue through May 18. Required: knowledge of news writing, AP Style and MS Word. Newspaper expected. Salary start at $80.00 per hour. 31. For information information call B44-3256. Goddfather's Pizza is now hiring day and night nights and evening drives. I am present in at 711 N Need a.m. & p.m. dishwasher, cooks a.m. & p.m. flexible hours, desserts perser for Tues., Thurs. & Sat. from 3:11 p.m. Positions available immediately. Applied in person 1268 Oread Ave. Attention Work-Study students; the KU Libraries have several part-time work position positions available. Contact Julie Slusser, 502 Watson Library, 864-301, for more information. ATTENTION O.T. and P.P. Students. Female attendant needed for disabled woman. Mon. through Sat. mornings and 2 evenings per week. School Social Work in Kansas Career Work Stud. Worthington, B4; 812-794-1724 Back at school and need extra money? Also want flexibility? Avon is for you. Get a 40% discount Sell to friends or just yourself. Call Chris for more information 832-9025 Babysitters need two delightful toddler girls in nice home on West side of Lawrence. Flexible and mobile, they will work with re-freq or re-required. Short drive from KU. Please respond to Box 720, University Dailly Kansas 1391 Looking for two part-time hairstylists who want to earn great money on weekends or even 10am? (They must have a bachelor's degree in hair care.) SHIPPING AND DATA ENTRY ASSISTANTS NEEDED RAD Publications, Inc. is an equal opportunity employer in the United States. If you are looking for an enjoyable work environment with a reliable company, please contact and fill out an application at 1601 West Airfield Drive, Suite 1495, San Francisco, CA 94128. Lawrence-based, technical publishing company has several part-time (15-20 hours per week) positions in the book and order orders; staffing and mailing statements; copying computer disks for inventory; daily mail delivery to and pickup from the post office; inputting subscription orders into a computer; and sorting customer orders. Experience with high volume and working as a team required. Ability to maneuver up to 50 pounds and type 50 wpm preferred. These positions are part of a group of sales professionals which helps other areas of the company as needed. RD JANUARY Bucky's drive-in is now taking applications for part-time work. The average rate is 1/2 price andApply in person between 10:55. Campus Manager; A faculty firm seeks mature student to manage on campus promotions. For top companies this school year. Flexible hours with excellent earning potential. Must be organized, hard working, and money motivated. Involvement in student organization is a call. Call Dan at 1-800-952-1211 CHILD CARE PROVIDER wanted by faculty couple for warm, bright room, boy to bed 10 pm pen to desk 6 am to night weekend. Some light housekeeping. Car needed. Reply to Kanasu 119 Staffer Fint Hall. Childcare needed for a 4 year old in home. Friday morning 2 m.-mon. Car and references regard- less. COLLEGE STUDENTS $10.25-11.65 STARTING Local branch of nat'l ca. Finlay! Enterprise immediate entry levels openings Flex time schedules. 35 days, evenings. Opt out all majors. Accepted for info 841-8696. COMPUTER SCIENCE INTERN Deadline: 09/02/94, 5:00 p.m. Salary: $1,100/mo. (full-time rate) Duties include programming internet data communications and networking, assist in development, documentation, and maintenance of existing software systems. Installing communication and networking equipment as needed; install software systems; bring a programming assignment to successful completion, assembly language programming experience, knowledge of the "C" language, curricular requirements. Complete job description and application procedures are available. Contact Networking and Telecommunications Services, 804-9300, Elsworth Amherst Law, Lawrence, KS 60454, KAOS AWP LOVER CRUISE SHIPS NOW HIRING - Earn up to $14,000 Tours companies. World travel. Seasonal & Full-Time employment available. No experience necessary. For more information call 1-263-658-4349. Domino's Pizza is hiring. 10 delivery positions available, two inside positions available. Apply after 4 ppm any day at Domino's Pizza. 9th & 11th. Benefits include: free meals, flexible schedule, driver takes care home cash might, discounted menu choices, work from home. Should be willing to work nights & weekends. Cottonwood木, a service provider for adults with developmental disabilities is currently accepting applications for parttime employment in their residential division. All positions are evening and weekend hours, some may require sleep overs. A GOOD DRIVING RECORD IS A MUST. Please apply 08/31/94 at Cottonwood Inc. 2801 W. 31 EOE. DORMEN NEEDED Must be friendly, but able to handle confrontation. Call 749-5039 - Ask for ZAC E and E Display Group is taking applications for full-time assembler positions on all shifts. Please apply in person Monday thru Friday between 8:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. 910 E. Street-Lawrence. Godfather's Pizza is now hiring day and night cooks and evening drivers. Apply in person at 711 W.23th Graduate Assistant Position The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center has a quarter-time graduate assistant position available. Qualifications 1. Bachelor's degree required, and enrollment as a graduate student at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill or concerns of women students; 3. Training or experience in facilitating small and large groups; 4. Training or experience in writing research papers; 5. Assistance in evidence familiarity with operations and services of one or more of the units of Student Life. Job description available at the Women's Resource Center. Salary $235.00 Position Available in two areas: Research assistants are invited to submit a letter application, resume', and names of two (2) references by 5:00 p.m. Monday, August 29 to Dr. Barbara W. Ballard, Director, The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, 115 High Street, University of North Carolina, Lawrence, KS 60045, (919) 8643526, EOA/AA KU GAME PARKING Attendants Graduate student with a reliable car to pick me at the airport and be met once a week to meet you. INTERNATIONAL EMPLOYMENT. Make up to $2,000/$4,000 + teach basic conversational English in Japan, Taiwan, or S. Korea. No teaching background or Asian languages required. For more information, visit www.intenational.edu. KU Adams Alumni Center is now hiring for part-time banque server and host positions. Looking for skills in applying applications to some daytime availability, including 1288 Iread, caddy corner from the Kansas University. 40 people needed for parking attendants at the KU home football and basketball games. Must be able to handle a heavy load. If interested, please apply immediately. EOE. Manpower Temporary Services 211 E 8th 749-2800 NEED SPENDING CASH# B.P.I. Building Services now accepting applications for a variety of permanent part-time custodial positions. Nanny/Babysitter position and/or job share for Monday, Wednesday, Friday in our home for one newborn. Be responsible; references. Call 845-2340 and leave a message. 842-6264 Ask for Jeannie Needed: after school care for 2 children. 3.15-6.30. Mon - Fri. Must be dependable, enjoy children and have own transportation. 843-7042 Interviews and information on Saturday, 8/27/94,10:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m.at the 23rd St. location. Work as few as 4 hours or as many as 40 hours! Hiring for all shifts at all Lawrence locations. JOIN OUR TEAM! McJobs JOIN OUR TEAM! M McDonald's Nutritional Program Position Hour 9:20am to 8:20pm Duties: Assistance in meal preparation, trans- fusion, and preparation of service clean up duites, and minimal paperwork. Oueida Factory Store now hire MWF mid-wift shift. Work 8 hrs/day. Pick your own schedule Limited weekends. Apply in person 10-5 daily Suite 103, Lawrence Riverfront Plaza, 749-6012. Vill consider only applicants who are: Responsive, Reliable, Self-Directed and Compassionate to Schedule an interview contact Rose Cox R.N. (708) 341-6419 for health of Kansas at 749-4619 Packer Plastics, the largest plastics manufacturing plant in the U.S., has excellent entry-level opportunities for individuals to work as inspector/packers. These positions are full-time & offer a complete benefits package Part time inspec- tion, training, and retirement benefits pric e 39.50 mpr. 11 p.m. Apply in person Mon-Fri to Packer Plastics, Human Resources Dept. 2330 Packer Road, Lawrence, KE/OEM/S McDonald's What you want is what you get. Previous McDonald's Crew? Join our team. We'll work around your schedule. *Hiring for all Lawrence locations on Saturday, 8/27/94, at the 23rd St. location. 10:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m. See you there! Part-time clerical position in medical office, 12-14 hours per week, flexible with class schedules. Resume to: Lori Hamm, 304 Sharon Drive, Lawrence, KS. 60049 Phillips 66 ZANCO at 9th & Iowa needs immediate late help. Inquire within. PUBLICATIONS COORDINATOR (Student Hourly Position); Research and Training Center on Independent Living, Life Span Institute, University of Kansas, $4.25 to $4.50 depending on hours, 20 hours per week, must be enrolled at the University of Kansas. Complete application in Room 408 Dole Bldg., University of Kansas. For additional information, contact the department deadline: August 30, 1994. The University of Kansas is an equal opportunity/affirmative action employer. Prefer 7-1, 11: 35-30; or all day any week. Jr or Sr in child-related field. Center experience. molly mcgees grill & bar Now Hiring! Cooks and Dishwashers A.M. and P.M., Full and Part Time Apply between 2 and 4 p.m. 2429 IOWA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Advertising Pagination Macintosh Proficient $6-8/hour depending on availability. ability to produce. Mornings- approx. 4 hours Mon-Fri Must be capable of working on Quark XPress in a fastpaced, progressive newspaper setting. You'll use a Macintosh computer to build pages for the Daily Kansan by placing ads on pre-formatted templates. Accuracy and dependability are crucial qualifications. We're looking for a capable problem-solver who can take responsibility while gaining expertise on cutting-edge technology. The Kansan is an award-winning newspaper that has been nationally recognized repeatedly for leadership through innovation. You'll become familiar with a wide range of Macintosh-compatible hardware and software that's common in professional advertising, publications, promotional and design agency environments. Call Catherine Ellsworth at 864-4810 between 1 and 6 p.m. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Raintee Montessori School located on thirteen acres with horses and a pot-bellied pig named Wilbur is looking for 2 classroom assistants. Hours are required. Contact Wilbur at train. Transportation required; call 843-6800. Reception wanted for Sizzler 80 Kentucky. After noms and some Saturday's, Approximately 30 pounds. Retired college professor need local college studi dent (male) to stay overnight. Can sleep on the job and earn $25. Must be available during vacations R S Raymond 215 Arkansas 841-8354 Secretary, 1-6 p.m. weekdays General office Professional, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. proficiency, ability to work well with public and young children Word Perfect for Windows required Apply at Children's Learning Center, 280 West 43rd Street, New York, NY 10017 SIRLOIN STOCKADE NOW Hiring INT'L HRStanard position to apply in person experience needed. Apply to person M-F, Fridays 10-5am SPRING BREAK 95- SELL TRIPS. EARN CASH & GO FREELIRE ! Travel Student Services in now hiring campus representatives. Lowest rates to Pinnacle, Panama City and Panama City Beach. Call 800-648-4494 $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 Advertising Production Artist Macintosh Proficient $6-8/hour depending on ability to produce Flexible hours. Must be capable of designing ads in a deadline-sensitive newspaper setting using Quark XPress for the Macintosh. Experience with Adobe Photoshop helpful, though will consider a quick study. You'll be using cutting-edge computer technology to produce advertisements according to the layouts developed by our clients and account executives. The Kansan is an award-winning newspaper that has been nationally recognized repeatedly for leadership through innovation and has captured several advertising design awards. You'll become skilled with a wide range of Macintosh-compatible hardware and software that's common in professional advertising, publications, promotional and design agency environments. Call Catherine Ellsworth at 864-4810 between 1 and 6 p.m. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN STUDENT Clerical ASSISTANT Deadline: 02/19, $94.00, Salary: 44.35, Duties: Dates including assisting in invoicing, mailing & filing of Computer Center billings; maintaining Accounts Receivable ledgers; assists Accounts Payable Accountant; works with accounting staff for workshop registrations; performing receptionist duties on a fill-in basis; and miscellaneous Business office duties. Must be enrolled in 8 hours at the University of Kansas. To apply, complete a job application form and submit it to the Computer Center FOIA EMAIL EMPLOYER STUDENT DISTRIBUTION TECHNIQUE. Deadline: 09/29. Salary: $43.35 per hr. Durates include performing bursting and decolling functions; delivery of computer output and interoffice mail using the delivery can; paper shredding functions; installation of a network of storage, stocksing and maintaining inventory figures, tape library duties, and other warehousing functions; on occasion will operate forklift and assist in maintenance, assists in Open Landscape integration with the campus wide recycle program; uses personal computer or mainframe software as part of record keeping function. To apply, contact Student Development Center in room 202. EO/AA EMPLOYER. United Child Development Center is taking application. United Child Development Center is taking applications for nap aides. Hours needed: 30-2, 30-2, 50 Attached at UCDC, 494 Verm St., Lawrence, KS 60044 United Child Development Center has immediate instructions for full or part time teaching assistants. Call 842-5329 or send to UCDC EOE. 946 Vermont Lawrence. KS 60044. United Child Development Center is accepting applications for the position of lead teacher with children age 3-5 years old. A degree in education with an emphasis in Early Childhood or a degree in related field required. Salary based on education. Must have Bachelor's degree and reference documents must accompany each application. Send to Director, UCDC, 946 Vermont St., Lawrence, KS 66044 EOE. UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER seeking student houries (especially work-study eligible) immediately, who are motivated, familiar with the job requirements, literate, good communicators, interested in helping others, have wide range of interests, and a desire to contribute to the Union for application. Need sophomores/junior who can make KU into their primary work commitment. Deadline is 5 p.m. Friday, August 26. Waiters needed for sorority house Please call 865-0649 or 865-3798 Wanted! Paintter. Maintenance assistant part time position. Req's Bachelors degree and recruits and references to Normal School 9714. Term. Work in Perry. If you have transportation, can drive 15 minutes to work, and need a flexible time to meet with your supervisor for light assembly production. You will accept people 40 to 6 hours a night at 11:50 dawn a week. If your schedule permits and you are needing extra $, please contact our office immediately. Mampow Inc. ZAR CO 60 **FOOD** PLAZA SEKES FULL AND ADJUSTED FOR STORE 71 MIOUTH OF LAWRENCE. MUST BE NEAT, CLEAN AND ENJOY WORK. AND BIG LIBRARY **IF INTERESTED** APPLY IN PERSON. 225 Professional Services <*Driver Education* > served thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided 841-7749. DUI/TRAFFIC TICKETS OVERLAND PARK KANSAS CTY AREA CHARLES R. GREEN ATRONEE PALEW Call for a free consultation (816) 361.0964 STATUE DE LA JUSTICIA X OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense For free consultation call Rick Frydman, Attorney 701 Tennessee 843-4023 ENGLISH TUTOR English courses, writing, proofreading, literature, high- school coursework WANT YOUR WORK TO LOOK ITS BEST Put my service to the test. For your benefit, I will use, MAKIN' THE GRADE is the one to call, see 365. Tune-ups, overhallms, upgrades, free air 304 Massachusetts 843-5000 $$\textcircled{1}$$ $$\textcircled{2}$$ $$\textcircled{3}$$ TRAFFIC-DUIT'S Fake ID* and & alcoholoffenses divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of SUNFLOWER BIKE SHOP D G S. Strojev Donald G. Strojev Sally G. Kelsey 16 East 13th 842-1133 we Earry Bianchi, Specialized and Trek. Plus accessories & a full service bike shop. Layaway services only. 911-562-8000. www.earrybianchi.com SUNFLOWER OUTDOOR SAILBOARD CLOSE- OUTSMITTLE, IH FLY, O'Brien. One cheat one bread. BRAXTON B. COPLEY Attorney at Law General Practice 300s Merchandise 235 Typing Services Traffic Tickets, Misdemeanors, Landlord/Tenant 719 Massachusetts 749-5333 305 For Sale United Child Development Center, 946 Vermont St is accepting enrollment applications for children 2-3 years old. Full and part-time child care available. Call 842-5292 for information. Work Study! The School of Business has many work study positions available now. Please come to the business placement center in 125 Summerfield to apply. Wanted: Part time teacher for home day care 10-15 //week. /exep. reff. +841/784 BLUE HERON 937 Mass.St.841-9443 Quality Word Processing Dissertations, Theses. form-papers, Business, letters, etc. - ON SALE - FUTONS & FRAMES 10 speed bicycles. Ladies Schwinn, 95; Men's Bicycles, 86; Excelceleer call. Call Steve at 847-352-4560. 1.der Women Word Processing. Former editor transforms scribbles into accurate pages of letter quality type. Also transcriptions .845-2063. 2.der Women Word Processing/indexing. Free eBook. Call 845-2063. quality type. Also transcriptions. 843-2063 Quality typing/word processing/indexing. Free estimate. Call 843-7271 after 5pm 486251 notebook. 4mm RAM 120MB HD Monochrome. Built-in trackball. 2 PCMCIA Slots. Dos. Windows. Lease case. 3 months old. $175,845-3479 Amerec 610 rowing machine $100 842-1731 Amerec 610 rowing machine 101894-823-173 Beds, Desks, Bookcases Everything But Ice Row Mach 2 and 3 walkers for sale. Will also custom build. Blown woofers? Torn grills? Will repair. FOR SALE: Apple II GS 3.5 and 2.5 drives, monitor power, $500, Call 942-4141 Composing 180 Chevy Malibu 4x4, autobody repairing 800 miles, 7900 km. Call Me at 694- 8053. Free dog to a good home. 2 yrs. and 23 lbs. Heal- er energetic and happy. Needs a yard. 749-5986. full size futon and frame • Oak Sied Bed non- folding frame. Excellent condition *150. Calm 641-4642* King Waterbed mirrored, headboard $150, 17050TU AC$200 Nintendo and jindo鞋 $50, Wood Hutch $40, Antique Coffee Table $150. Call 855-6989. After 6.00 p.m. King size waterdeed宝贵 everything, 12 drawer pedestal. Headboard $800 841-749. Macintosh Plus with metro 201D and Image write touch in top condition $650 or best offer. 841-1964 Firen F3 I High Eagle Point. new in, box. Cost $1290 Sell 850 or best offer. 913-725-9151 Tuituc suites Refrigerator for sale. Sanyo 3.5 cubic foot. Used for 2 semesters. Good condition. $100. Call 841-7557. SHARP PC-450 plow top, 2 floppy drives no hard drive and battery carry and $400, $422 or 700 evening. 945 Vermont 50¢ SUMMER SALE August 25 to September 6 Two Schwinn bikes 10-speed 27". Boys $50. Girls $75. Call 843-1780. STUDENTS! Rent a computer, software, and printer for $125 per semester. Call 1-800-956-6900. Sony Discman with carrying case $80.00 0911 1801 Yamaha Hazz motor scooter for sale. Excellent condition. Call Bryan 832-2724. Zenith Laptop (Z181) and Panasonic Printer Device (Z201). Both computers are case. Both computer and printer $400, 864- megapixels. 340 Auto Sales 1977 Dodge Aspen station wagon run well. Make offer B1:444-400 360 Miscellaneous EARNCASH $15 Today $30 This Week Plus a $3 Bonus By donating your blood plasma Show your student ID car between Aug.7 and Aug.31 and between AIGs and AIGs, you receive a $3 bonus on your second donation of the month. Walk-ins welcome Lawrence Donor Center Hours: M-F 9-6:30 Sat.10-4 between Aug.7 and Aug.31 and receive a $3bonus on your $ NABI The Quality Source 一 816 W.24th Behind Laird Noller Ford 400s Real Estate 816W.24th For Rent: MORNING STAR for rooms and apartments and well located. 105 For Reat 749-5750 1. Rm avail. Rent $250 + 1. utilities. Fully parled on Bus route. 842-938 ORCHARD CORNERS COMPLETELY FURNISHED A BEDROOM Looking for a place to live? 4 BR house for lease at 11th & Inverness. Clean and dusted. 867-7490. Call invites. 866-7490. Call invites. - On KU Bus Route * Close to Campus * Swimming Pool * Stop By Today! Regular 749-4226 M-F 9-5 Opportunity 15th & Kasold Sat 10-4 Semester leases available 11th & Mississippi 1230 Tennessee. Unfurnished 2 bdmr,仗顾paid, carped, no pets. $320 mo. $832-2718 BERKELEY FLATS September rent free on a 2 BR apartment Only 2 left! Call today 834-2116 PETRON BEDROOM APARTMENT Treat 1010 road route, NO POTS. Available Now! Call 749-842-8630 Duplex close to KU Stadium, large two bedroom, two bathrooms. no pets. $50 a month. 852-344-1622 or 852-344-7299. House For Rent: Four bedroom, central air, wash- er/dryroom/kirepower, fireplace, 2 bath, all appliances, off street parking. Convenient to KU and down-road. 80%/mo, plus bus line? Call '441.692.984 **g 2 BDRM otp. off Campus, avail immed. Lower garden_everlooking Lg. living room. Full_carpace, working fireplace, wash/dry, A/C. Very clean! *490* + utilities 841-1389 - Computer room with - Fully furnished Apple Macintosh and Check out these housing options... - Free Utilities - and carpeted - Quiet Study Areas NAISMITH Call Naismith Hall for More Information at 843-8559 Lg 2 BDRM apt. off campus. Avail. immel lower level garden. new kitchen overlooking lg living room. Full carpet, fireplace, wash/dry, A/C very clean! $400 + utilities $81- Looking for a place to live? Check out these housing options... - Front door bus service - Fitness room - Dine anytime meals - Weekly maid service - Private parking NAISMITH Hall Call naismith Hall for more information at 843-8559 Semi-private room/apt, spacious and comfortable, in nice home in West JI neighborhood. KU bus route or walking distance to campus. Private bath. Microwave; laundry privileges; utilities and rent negotiable. Prefer mature responsible student @ $350/mo for one or $450/mo for two. Possible work hours for partial rent. No pets. Refs. eq. 843-7738 after 5 or leave message. Looking for a place to live? Check out these housing options... - Great campus location Quiet, comfortable, furnished rooms and apartments. Two short blocks from campus. Some utilities paid. Off-street parking. No pets. Cali-841-5500. No Sublease Fee PETS WELCOME - Laundry Facilities South Point AVAILABLE - Afew steps from Allen Fieldhouse 2166 W. 26th St. 843-6446 - Swimming Pool - Close to KU Bus Route - Sand Volleyball Court - Ample Private Parking - Water & Trash Paid NAISMITH Outstanding New Staff!! Call Naismith Hall for More information at 843-8559 Friday, August 26, 1994 Walk to KU. One bedroom apartment in older building, $887/month, utilities paid no pets, deposit. 1 N / S/Female needed to furn. 3BR apt, W/D= 2 W/Br. Older Student preferred. $245/month. **PLEASE READ FORM** 430 Roommate Wanted THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN I roommate needed to 3 bedroom apt. in old house, 1 block to camp. Friend neighbor hospital, 2 blocks from town center. One roommate to share 2 BR duplex house Close to Lakewood. Close to Coca-Cola. Call 749-794 or 844-8857 Female wanted to lease 1 bbm of 3 dbm duplex at Hawthorne. Call 844-7439 for information. route, Ns, no pets, leave message for him. 832-200 route, Ns, no pets, leave message for him. 832-200 newer home w/many comforts, Fireplace, deck, tub, pat hut, D/$90 mow/use. Ref. refl. refl. refl. Grad. student学习roommate for 2-bbmr $209-$309, or 2-bmrm $290- + electricity, N/S preferred 284-5347 Female roommate, beautiful 3 dbm, cone on bus pets, call 749-2886 (913)608-2054 leave message (913)608-2054 leave message One non-smoking roommate want to share a new 4-bedroom townhouse $200/month/i-14/cu- ffr. Cable 822-795-3611. NEEDED? Two commutes male or female for a Orchard Corners 4-belt apt 4btn / moo + utilities, furnished and KU bus route. Call Derek or Chris 843-6100. - By Mail: 119 Stuart Flint, Lawrence, KS 66045 ROOMMATE WANTED! FE n/n House w/ ow Dogs caught in window. Dogs Dogs waited. Chat please. call 811-265- 3470 Responsible & neat M/F, non-smoker for comfortable 2 B+ 1B; touch Apt. cable, Water, gaseo, A/C & heat pad. Nice pool. Clear Checkers, on bus route, $243 +$, utilities. Anne 839-968. Ads phone in may be called to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made. 119 Staffer Flint Stop by the Kansan 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 classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas office. Or you may choose to have billed to your MasterCard or VISA account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date. 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 ape 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. When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or VISA, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available. The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansan office for a fee of $4.00. Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication, Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication, Cost per line per day DX 2-3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 30+X 2.10 1.60 1.10 .90 .75 .50 1.95 1.20 .80 .70 .65 .45 1.90 1.10 .75 .65 .60 .40 1.80 .95 .65 .60 .55 .35 Num. of insertions; Example: 3 lines for 5 days — 3 lines X 5 days X $1.10=$16.50 Please print your ad one word per box ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print: 140 lbs & found .. 385 for sale 202 help wanted .. 340 auto sales 225 professional services .. 360 miscellaneous 225 yoyo services 105 personal 110 business personales 120 announcements 130 entertainment 1 | | | | | | 2 | | | | | 3 | | | | | 4 | | | | | 5 | | | | | 370 want to buy 405 for rent 430 roommate wanted Total ad cost:___ Classification:___ Date ad begins: ___ Total days in paper ___ Phone: Address: VISA Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □ Visa (Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansan) Furnish the following if you are charging your ad: Account number: _Expiration Date: Print exact name appearing on credit card: MasterCard Signature: The University Dataly Kannan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 60042 *The University Dataly Kannan*, 119 StauFFER Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 60042 THE FAR SIDE By GARY LARSON THE ARACCHNATEERS Hi, I'm Rusty! Kids shows that bombed 8 Friday, August 26,1994 UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N THE HARBOUR LIGHTS 1031 Massachusetts Downtown THE HARBOUR LIGHTS 1031 Massachusetts Downtown 20% OFF ANY PURCHASE FANTASTIC SELECTION! Choose from over 1,000 frames SPECTRUM OPTICAL Lenses duplicated or made from Doctor's prescription In-Store Lab One Day Service (in most cases) 4 East 7th • Downtown Lawrence • 841-1113 NOT VALID WITH OTHER COUPONS OR OFFERS EXPIRES 9/30/94 20% OFF ANY PURCHASE FANTASTIC SELECTION! Choose from over 1,000 frames SPECTRUM OPTICAL Lenses duplicated or made from Doctor's prescription In-Store Lab One Day Service (in most cases) 4 East 7th • Downtown Lawrence • 841-1113 NOT VALID WITH OTHER COUPONS OR OFFERS EXPIRES 9/30/04 SPECTRUM OPTICAL WELCOME HOME Rebecca Ash Kerri Ashworth Heather Ballard Sasha Ballard Karri Belich Courtney Biehl Lisa Brady Juliana Brooks Kristen Brouhard Jaime Carden Sarah Convy Rebecca Crawford Joanna Danders Amy Drake Andrea Felton Shannon Givens Amy Golub Megan Groner Angela Hannam Kendy Haviland Kirstern Havner Emily Hawes Tianna Lametti Lora Lang Jordana Lebowitz Jaime Mann Kathryn McCabe Emily Morrison Jennifer Myers Elizabeth Neufeld Cassie Neustrom Amy Orr Jennifer Peters Carrie Pettus Amy Post Trina Raney Anne Reagan Christine Roney Stephanie Scagnelli Karis Schmelzle Roshni Shahter Marla Smith Teresa Togtman Kristen Wiebe Heather Wiltshire Amy Orr Jennifer Peters Carrie Pettus Amy Post Trina Roney Anne Reagan Christina Honey Stephanii Stagnelli Karis Schmelzle Roshni Shamir Marla Smith Teresa Toftman Kristen Wiebe Heather Wiltshire PLEDGES, AOT ©1994 Samsonite Corp. stronger than this man's aftershave. Call 1-800-262-8282 and find out where to buy one. BAGS One of these can save you hundreds on one of these --- The University of Kansas STUDENT HAWK BIG J. CJD/001993000-1 Big J Hawk SIGNATURE This card is valid for use ONLY by the identified student when officially enrolled Big J Hawk SIGNATURE This card is valid for use ONLY by the identified student when officially enrolled At the UTC Back to School Blowout! Forms of Payment accepted: Cash, Cashiers Check, Visa, Mastercard, Discover and American Express. Faculty eligible. Monday August 29th and Tuesday August 30th the Union Technology Center will be in the Kansas Union Ballroom selling Macintosh computers at their lowest prices ever on campus! - Prizes and Giveaways - Everything you need for Your Mac - Live Demos - Lowest Prices Ever on Campus! Macintosh. The Power to be your Best at KU. union technology center Academic Computer Supplies, Service & Equipment Brant Unip. E. Lestall A. * 813-264-5690 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN FRIDAY, AUGUST 26, 1994 COLUMNIST CITY OF WEST HOLLYWOOD SECTION B CHESLEY DOHL Players and alumni shoot hoops for fun In the north practice gym of Robinson, driving the paint, rejecting shots, draining three-pointers and hustling down the court, the Kansas men's basketball team was getting in a little preseason scrimmage. Talk about fun. I got to see a miniature NBA training camp. I sat down in the balcony and watched. Kevin Pritchard, Rex Walters, Eric Pauley and Steve Woodberry were back on the court with their former teammates. Allow me to put this into perspective for you: We're talking about some of the best talent in the nation under one roof playing ball for the sheer fun of it. Divided into shirts and skins, they ran up and down the court, competing, pushing, shoving and having fun. It was street ball at its best. That's what was so completely fun to watch about the whole thing. These guys were playing on their own free will. No coaches, no schedules, no pressure, no drills. Self-discipline, a love for the sport and the desire to improve their game brought each of them to the court. The only time most of us ever get to see the Kansas men's basketball team play is at games or end-of-year scrimmages. And naturally, Coach Williams is there. Think about it. Having your coach around puts a different spin on things. Your every move, gesture and word is scrutinized — as well as your future on the court. Performance becomes a do or die situation. That's why this particular scrimage was so unique. It was so ordinary, unlike the NCAA star-athlete hoopla we associate with men's basketball at Kansas. It was more like one of those average college things we all do. Like when you live in a residence hall, a fraternity or an apartment and call your friends up: "Hey guys, why don't we get together for a little looph over at Robinson?" It's the same story with the men's basketball team, and practically the whole team shows up. Not to mention Pritchard, Walters, Woodberry and Pauley. "We have a kinship," said Kevin Pritchard, former point guard for the Kansas 1988 National Championship team. "We come back, and when these guys graduate they'll all come back. Not every program is like this." The fact that alumni come back to Kansas shows they care about the program and the school. It's a family reunion every fall before each of the players return to their respective seasons. Pritchard said he remembered his underclassman years when Cedric Hunter would come back to scrimmage with the team. "He'd give me tips, we'd play hard and we'd compete," he said. "But as soon as practice was over we'd be buddies." There were times when Kansas rookies beat the veteran players — you could just tell it *ate* at that former Kansas star. That professional player would grit his teeth, shake his head and follow up by burying a three-pointer from NBA range. They all looked like kids playing ball and having a good time. They were carefree without pressure, except for the pressure they put on themselves. They'd smile and joke on occasion — but then they'd buckle down and turn out an incredible play. It's good to be a part of Kansas basketball. In spirit, it can be a part of us forever. It's been two years since I've left, but everything's still the same," said Eric Pauley, former Kansas center. "Everything feels the same. You'll find most successful programs have this family atmosphere. Sometimes, I think miss it." Chesley Dohl is a Sylvan Grove senior in journalism. New kicker guided by convictions Bv Matt Irwin Kansan sportswriter At times, it seemed like a greater entity was behind the 50-yard field goals and 60-yard punts of Kansas' all-time leading scorer Dan Eldchoff. Now the Jayhawks have a kicker who genuinely believes there is a greater entity behind him. Redshift freshman placekicker Jeff McCord may not be able to match Eichloh in distance, but McCord said that the Lord guides his actions. "I feel the Lord leads me and guides me in each and everything I do, including kicks," McCord said. "I always pray before a kick. It gives me peace." McCord is in a battle for his position with junior college transfer Phil Brodkin. Brodkin is recovering from an injury he sustained during the early preseason. "It's hard going day-by-day not knowing if you're going to be kicking," McCord said. "If I don't play, I still know the Lord brought me here." McCord spent his redshirt year learning from Eichlöh how to deal with college athletics. "If anything, I grew up mentally," he said. "That's a big adjustment going from high school football to college football. Seeing what he did on the sidelines and getting prepared; that helped me a lot." Wide receivers coach Tim Phillips, who also works with the placeckers, believes McCord is just as accurate as Eichloff but with less leg- strength. In comparing the two, Phillips said he could only look at their abilities on the practice field since McCord has never been in a game situation. "He was very good in high school," Phillips said. McCord made eight field goals in 11 attempts beyond the 40-yard line in high school, his longest being 52 vards. In Eichloff's four years at Kansas, he made 22 field goals of at least 40 yards, a feat surpassed by only 10 other college kickers. The Jayhawks punter this season, junior Darrin Simmons, must also follow four years of Elchloff excellence. Elichloff averaged 41.7 yards a punt over his four years, including two kicks which went 64 yards. "We're the guys that have to get the job done," Simmons said. "It's a fresh slate. There's always going to pressure to play and perform. Somehow you have to channel that pressure into your playing and make that pressure become a positive." McCord said he depended on the Lord for guidance in everything, including pressure situations. He is much like Green Bay Packer defensive end Reggie White, who also tries to use his success on the football field to improve his ministry. "I see their examples, and sometimes when I'm speaking I use their examples," he said. McCord said he was confident of his abilities, even if he falls in his kicking attempts. "Everything about my kicking game relates back to Him," he said. 3 Paul Kotz / KANSAN Jeff McCord, freshmen place-kicker, practices before yesterday's scrimmage at Memorial Stadium. McCord is attempting to fill the void left by Dan Eichloh, who was the team's punter and placekicker last year. Players keep getting a sinking feeling A. Kansas soccer club member Magnus Kindstrom, Stockholm, Sweden, sophomore, moves the ball downfield around a cement post anchor and through torn up grass on the field east of Robinson Center. Naismith Dr. Robinson Gymnasium Soccer field Volley ball Watkins Health Center Tennis courts Robinson's fields Outdoor recreation areas located near Robinson Gymnasium. Sunnyside Ave. Dave Campbell / KANSAN Source: Kansan staff research Poor condition of soccer fields to be mended Bv Kent Hohlfeld Kansan sportswriter Athletes using the University of Kansas practice fields have watched their facilities literally sink from beneath them. "It's so dry that sink holes have begun to form in some of the soccer fields," said Mark Salisbury, Kansas men's soccer club coach. This has kept the people at Recreation Services busy for the last few months. Allan Heinze, director of physical education and recreation services, said the problem started last spring. Crews working on a sewage pipe that ran underneath the fields south of Robinson Center broke a water main during the repairs. "We didn't even know about the problem until we went to start the sprinkler systems and found there was a leak," said Heinze, who oversees the maintenance of the fields. Robinson were the most effected since much of the grass died. That problem grew worse during the summer as hot and dry conditions combined with the lack of water to take a heavy toll on the fields. The fields east and south of "We had a guy who went sliding for a ball and there was so much dust kicked up that you couldn't even see the guy," Salisbury said. The dry conditions led to a second sizable problem. Holes started forming in the unwated fields. "When the dirt gets really dry, it compacts down and creates the holes," Heinze said. He said that crews were struggling to stay ahead of the problem. "We'd go out and fill some holes one day and find more the very next day." Heinze said. Repairs to the sprinklers were completed Wednesday. Some of the problems suffered by the teams should be alleviated, Heinze said. Will Stelle, Syracuse, N.Y., junior and soccer club member, said he would like to see new grass planted to help replace the dead grass. "They need to smooth out the field," Stelle said. "When a ball hits a spot of dead grass or weeds, it makes it jump and hard to control." Heinze said that the high-impact use the fields received made it difficult to keep the grass maintained. "Ideally, we'd alternate the field use so we could re-seed them, but we usually can't do that because of the demand for space." he said. In addition, crews will no longer trench the lines for fields this year. In the past, end lines were cut with a "We'd go out and fill some holes one day and find more the very next day." Allan Heinze Director of physical education and recreation services machine that dug the lines directly into the grass. "Since we use the same fields for the same sports most years, sometimes the trenches would get pretty deep," Heinze said. "This year we're just going to paint the lines." Heinze said that all the trenches should be filled by the end of the week, and new lines should be painted on the field shortly after. Heinze said he wished people would help in efforts to keep the fields in good condition by staying off them after rain storms. "We close the fields, but a lot of times we still see people playing mud football or mud soccer," he said. "That tears those fields up pretty bad." Soccer club set for alumni game By Kent Hohlfeld Kansan sportswriter This weekend should be a blast from the past for the Kansas men's soccer club. The team will hold its first-ever alumni game at 2 p.m. Saturday on the field east of Robinson Center. "We should have at least eight to nine guys back," Kansas men's soccer coach Mark Salisbury said. "If we could get 11 guys back, I'd be thrilled." Salisbury said the game would give former club members a chance to see how the club has changed since they played. "One of the things we struggle with as a club is that we're seen as less of a team than varity sports are," he said. "This game will give the guys a chance to get some of the recognition that they deserve." Keeping alumni involved is one way to help the team raise itself to a higher level, Salisbury said. "All the varsity teams need and have the support of their alumni," Salisbury said. "We're hoping that some of the alumni might be able to help us out financially." Jim Sheldon, who graduated in 1975, was a member of the team during his four years at Kansas. He said that the lack of money was a constant problem back then just as it is now. "We were really run on a sheostring budget back then," Sheldon said. "We put together our own schedules. We basically played wherever we could find a game." Sheldon is now director of the National Soccer Coaches Association. In that position, he said he has seen the changes that collegiate soccer has endured. "The level of play is just light years ahead of where it was when I played," he said. He said the number of Division I programs had grown immensely in the last 20 years, and even club teams have increased their stature with the development of club soccer leagues. One of these is the National Collegiate Club Soccer Association, of which Kansas is a member. Brad McChesney, who graduated in 1991, said he was anxious to see the new club members. "I think this will give the guys a chance to come in and see what's going on with the club," he said. Swimmers and divers make a splash across U.S. By Jenni Carlson Kansan sportswriter While some Kansas students spent their summers relaxing and sunning by the pool, members of the swimming and diving team spent their time in it. Over the summer, 15 Jayhawks trained for and competed in tournaments across the country. "This was a good-sized group we had this year," Kansas swimming coach Gary Kempf said. Kansas sophomore Seth Dunscomb represented the Jayhawks at the Olympic Sports Festival in St. Louis. Participants in the festival were required to be 18 years old or younger and not a member of the national team. "The Olympic Sports Festival is a program designed to take some of the up-and-coming athletes and try to help them get to the next level, "Kemp said. "It's a very elite-picked team." In the festival, Dunscomb placed eighth in the 200-meter butterfly. He also placed ninth in the 100-meter butterfly and 200-meter individual medley. He served as a captain for the North squad as well. Team members interacted with the crowd, handed out posters and helped to raise the level of enthusiasm. "We would lead cheers," Dunscomb said. "It was great." The squad sent three divers to the Zone National Diving Championships in Houston. Kempf said he was pleased with his divers' performances. "They did an excellent job down there," he said. "They trained hard all summer long to get that opportunity." "Those were very strict qualifying meets," Kempf said. "Those meets you put among the elite athletes in the nation." The swimming and diving national championships were highly selective and competitive meets. The remaining swimmers who competed this summer traveled to the U.S. Swimming National Championships in Indianapolis. "I thought we had a real up-and-down meet," Kempf said. Some team members struggled, but several performances caught the eye of Kempf. Sophomore Eric Burton placed 15th in the 400-meter individual medley, and freshmen Kelly Williams and Kristin Nilsen had good outings. He said he placings were not as important to him as the experience. --- 5 2B Friday, August 26, 1994 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Talks between baseball groups come to a bitter, frustrating halt The Associated Press NEW YORK — Negotiations between striking players and baseball owners broke off yesterday and no new talks were scheduled, dimming prospects that a mediator might help end the two-week-old walkout quickly. "People didn't walk out saying, 'We'll never talk to you again,'" union chief negotiator Donald Fehr said after yesterday's session broke off. "But, clearly there was nothing else to say." Richard Ravitch, lead negotiator for the owners, said that when talks resumed they would involve smaller delegations from each side. "At this point, perhaps there are other ways of getting this negotiation moving, and we are going to try those." Ravitch said. John Calhoun Wells, head of the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service, said the negotiations had been recessed and "subject to call," essentially indicating that the talks were off indefinitely. "We will stay in contact with both sides to discuss the most productive and useful format for these negotiations." Wells said. Earlier, lawyer Eugene Orza said the talks probably would not resume until next week. "Things need to percolate," he said. One player involved in the negotiations saw no early resumption of baseball. "It's just my opinion, but I don't think there is going to be anymore baseball played this year," said Curt Schilling, player representative for the Philadelphia Phillies. "Maybe one of these days we'll be able to report some progress," Fehr said Wednesday after talks resumed for the first time since the strike began Aug. 12. "That day is not today." Yesterday's meeting was the second for the owners and players in two days, but like Wednesday's session, the meeting involved talk but no progress. Twelve management representatives and 21 players faced each other across a bargaining table in a room that, including all the lawyers, contained 55 people. The pair of two-hour sessions consisted of speeches, not give-and-take. When talks resumed yesterday, Ravitch continued to argue for a salary can. "We did not really get to the issue of cost certainty," Ravitch said Wednesday. "I don't think you can expect any instant change in this." reached 169, players released a report by Stanford economics professor Roger Noll, who examined baseball finances for the union and concluded, "The claim of widespread disaster in the sport is pure fiction." As the number of canceled games According to the report, Noll said teams underestimated revenue by as much as $140 million in 1994. However, his statement that revenue is increasing faster than salaries is true only for 1992-93. From 1993-98, player salaries doubled while revenue increased 50 percent. John Harrington, chief executive officer of the Boston Red Sox, called it a "very biased report" that was a "sideshow and a distraction." There was plenty of that in Wednesday's session. Inside the room, 21 players and 12 management representatives, along with their lawyers and four federal mediators, gathered around a large U-shaped table. Outside the room unfolded a bizarre spectacle that included 14 camera crews, about 100 reporters, fans, two player agents, comic Jackie Mason and divorce lawyer Raoul Felder. "This is my specialty," said Felder, who was passing through. "Greed. Avarice. Self-interest." "I think these people have no place else to go in the morning," he said of the lawyers. "It keeps them busy." Players had been insisting for months that owners come to the table. Owners refused until federal mediators entered the talks the day after the strike began. "It's always better to have it rougher and blunter than have it covered up with a lot of polish." Fehr said. In the morning session, three owners and nine team representatives gave speeches from two to 12 minutes in length, all insisting a salary cap is necessary to save the game from financial ruin. In the afternoon, players and their lawyers gave speeches insisting that baseball is a booming business. "It reminded me of what you might expect in a preliminary bargaining meeting prior to a strike deadline," Fehr said. Ravitch and Harrington agreed the atmosphere improved with owners at the table. Harrington said it could not have happened earlier. "The receptiveness prior to this would not have been there," he said. "It's like any other touchy-feely situation." Fehr, as usual, was more gloomy in his assessment. "I don't think that anybody is optimistic about progress," he said. With each day of the strike, 186 players are losing $10,000 or more in salary while owners are pocketing a total of $4.4 million in payroll saved. Top winners and losers: Baseball strike '94 Top payroll savings | DATE | MONTHS | | :--- | :--- | | Yankees | $225,082 | | Braves | $209,937 | | Giants | $208,896 | | Reds | $208,284 | | Blue Jays | $203,726 | $ Top salary losses Daily losses Bobby Bonilla, Mets $31,148 Jack McDowell, White Sox $28,962 Roberto Alomar, Blue Jays $27,322 Roger Clemens, Red Sox $27,322 Cali Ripkin Jr., Orioles $26,230 Daily savings $ Jeff Dionise and Roy Gallop / Knight-Ridder Tribune Source: Associated Press Baseball's eighth work stoppage since 1972 was caused when owners threatened to militerally impose a salary cap after this season. Players struck to force an agreement with free agency and salary arbitration, which have helped the average salary escalate from more than $51,000 in 1976 to almost $1.2 million on opening day this year. the Toronto Blue Jays said. "As long as it there, we feel it will be a stumbling block to baseball being played the rest of this year, and who knows how long after that." Both sides said it was healthy for all the opinions to be expressed. . "We made it pretty clear, our feelings about the cap," Paul Mollor of "There was some venting," Harrington said, adding it was good for the sides to say things "eyeball to eyeball to each other." 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There's nothing dumb about this football player, who is starting his second season at left tackle for the No. 4 Cornhuskers in Sunday's Kickoff Classic meeting with West Virginia. Opponents would have to go a long way to out-think this hulk. The 6-foot-5, 315-pound senior from Lincoln finished his undergraduate work in May, completing his degree in biological sciences with a perfect 4.0 grade point average. He hasn't received a grade less than an 'A' since before high school. No dumb jock stereotype sticks there. "It should be the other way around because I know at Nebraska the graduation rate on the football team is double what the general student graduation rate is," he said. "The GPA is about the same or a little higher." Football players at Nebraska are "locked up" from 11:30 a.m. until early evening with practices, weight lifting and team study sessions, Zatechka said. As far as his own college grades, Zatechka said he was on a mission. - "It's a goal I've had all through college," he said of the perfect grades. It's something I thought about a lot and it's what I wanted to get. I didn't really make it a set goal, but it was one of those things that if it did come, I would be real happy about it." Zatechka admits learning has come easy. He studies only four or five hours a week, but credits his success to studying an area he enjoys. The grades follow. This semester, he is having fun in class. He's taking things like endocrinology, immunology and art history. "It's not complete basket weaving, I'll say that," he said, with a chuckle. "It's something different." Endocrinology involves the study of hormone regulation. "It ought to be a fun one," he said. "Basically it controls everything, anything anybody does, feels — emotions, heart rate, blood pressure. You name it, it does it." The class schedule is lighter than Zatechka has had in the past. "It's nice. I can concentrate on football more than I have in the past," he said. That should be a frightening thought for opponents. Zatechka makes up half of what coach Tom Osborne believes is the best tackle tandem ever at Nebraska. Fellow fifth-year senior Zach Wiegert is the other. Nebraska's offensive line, which boasts five players with at least some starting experience, is excited about their potential this fall. "It's going to be great. We've got five fifth-year seniors and one fourth-year junior in (center) Aaron Graham, "Zatechka said. "Everybody's been around so long and it's such a tight-knit group I think we're going to play really well this year," he said. "Everybody works really well together." "We've put a lot of time and effort into being as good as we can be for this upcoming season. "I'm really excited. I want to get out there and see how well we do in a game." San Francisco's Rice rushes to another record-breaking season By Dennis Georgatos The Associated Press SANTA CLARA, Calif. — So much about Jerry Rice evokes speed and grace, from his wind-matted jersey when he runs a pass pattern, to his sleek black Mercedes sedan with the personalized "Flash80" plates. The San Francisco 49ers wide receiver is in no hurry, though, to look back on an astonishing career, especially not now with another milestone in sight. "All the records I have broken, I really haven't had a chance to reflect on them because it's almost like my career is just flying by on me," he said. "Everything is happening so fast." His next accomplishment could happen just as fast. Rice, entering his 10th season, is just three touchdowns shy of breaking the NFL career mark of 126, set by running back Jim Brown in 1965 after nine seasons with the Cleveland Browns. Chicago's Walter Payton had 125. "When this is all over," Rice said. "I would like to put a song together for all my touchdowns to express the way I do things on the football field. "It's not going to be rap music or anything like that. It's going to be something real laid back." He added with a laugh, "It has to be a long, long song though." Rice, who has scored two or more touchdowns 29 times, gets his first crack at the mark Sept. 5 when the 49ers and Los Angeles Raiders play in the opening Monday night game. "I don't know. I don't feel like I have to break the record the first game," Rice said. "If it's going to happen, it's going to happen and that's the attitude I take." "I'm not going to say when I go up against the Raiders that I'm going to break the record," said Rice, whose 118 touchdown receptions are the most in NFL history. He also has six rushing touchdowns. That said, the 31-year-old Rice believes he's starting the season at his best, a notion seconded by teammates. "Jerry's not slowing down. Jerry's still the best in the business," San Francisco safety Tim McDonald said. "I can't say anything different about Jerry than I've said in previous years. He's the hardest working guy I've ever been around and he's till the same guy." Rice, a seven-time Pro-Bowler, got within striking distance of Brown's mark with an NFL-high 16 touchdowns last season, 15 of them on passes. His 1,503 receiving yards also led the league and marked his eighth, 1,000-yard season, tying with Steve Largent's NFL mark. "Defensive backs are going to get beat. They're going to win some. They're going to lose some." Rice shrugs. "I feel good this year. I don't have any nagging injuries. I feel strong. I feel more explosive this year than I've felt in nine years. It's weird because when I watch myself on film now, I look quicker. And it's not my imagination because my teammates, they keep telling me, 'Jerry, man, you look really explosive. You're moving.' Rice, who hasn't missed a start because of injury, came to San Francisco in 1985 as a first-round pick out of tiny Mississippi Valley State. Since then, he has helped San Francisco's pass-oriented system flourish. In succession, he has been the primary target of Joe Montana and now, Steve Young. All three are former NFL MVPs, Rice when he caught an NFL record 22 touchdowns in 1987. Overall, he has scored an average of better than 13 touchdowns in each of his previous nine seasons. "Jerry's not slowing down. Jerry's still the best in the business." Tim McDonald San Francisco safety "I can't fathom. That's unbelievable," Young said. "You think about it, 10 touchdowns a season is a lot." Rice said he has stayed on top of his game because of a rigorous off-season workout program and healthy eating habits. And he applies the same principles in practice as he does in games, running as hard as he can and as far as he can after every catch. He said it is that ethic that has carried him to the brink of becoming the NFL's most-prolific touchdown scorer. "It's amazing to me that I've been able to get into the end zone this much," Rice says. "Normally, you would think a running back would be able to do something like that, but not a receiver. It amazes me. "I'm not going to say other receivers don't try to get into the end zone," Rice said. "I'm not going to say it's in the right place at the right time. It's just a feeling that you have to have when you're on the football field. You've got to know when you can catch the ball and turn it up field as quickly as possible. I think that has a lot to do with your awareness. Whenever I get my hands on the ball, I feel like my job is not over until I crunch it in the end zone." Crown Cinema CROWN CINEMA MELANIE GRIFFITH ED HARRIS MILK MONEY PG-1 7:30 SATURDAY ONLY! HILLCREST 925 IOWA 841-5191 5:00 7:15 9:30 THE CLIENT SUSAN SARANDON TOMMY LEE JONES PG-1 CLEAR PRESENT DANGER starring HARRISON FORD PG-1 IN THE ARMY NOW PAULY SHORE America, sleep tight. HILLCREST 925 IOWA 841-5191 5:15 7:30 9:30 ALL SHOWS BEFORE 6 PM-ADULTS $3.00 LIMITED TO SEATING SENIOR CITIZENS - $3.00 ALL DAY BLANKMAN DAMON WAYANS COMING TO SAVE YOUR BUTT! PG-1 HILLCREST 925 IOWA 841-5191 7:15 9:45 THE MASK STARRING JIM CARREY PG-1 CHRISTOPHER LLOYD No Rules! CAMP NOWHERE PG-1 WAGONS EAST! JOHN CANDY RICHARD LEWIS PG-1 5:00 7:30 9:45 HILLCREST 925 IOWA 841-5191 VARSITY 1015.MASSACHUSETTS 841-5191 WOLF NICHOLSON PFEIFFER THE ANIMAL IS OUT R A STEVEN SPIELBERG Film JURASSIC PARK PG-1 5:00 7:20 9:45 CINEMA TWIN $1.25 8110 IOWA 841-5191 5:00 7:20 9:45 KENNEDY BLANKMAN DAMON WAYANS COMING TO SAVE YOUR BUTT! BLANKMAN DAMON WAYANS COMING TO SAVE YOUR BUTT! PG-13 THE MASK STARRING JIM CARREY PG-13 5:15 ONLY! HILLCREST 925 IOWA 341-5191 7:15 9:45 MASK CHRISTOPHER LLOYD No Rules! CAMP NOWHERE PG 5:00 7:30 9:45 BLANKMAN DAMON WAYANS COMING TO SAVE YOUR BUTT! PG-B 5:15 ONLY! HILLCREST 925 IOWA 841-5191 7:15 9:45 CHRISTOPHER LLOYD No Rules! CAMP NOWHERE PG 5:00 7:30 9:45 HILLCREST 925 IOWA 841-5191 WAGONS EAST! JOHN CANDY RICHARD LEWIS PG-B 5:00 7:15 9:30 VARSITY 1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841-5191 THE MASK STARRING JIM CARREY PG-13 WOLF NICHOLSON PFEIFFER THE ANIMAL IS OUT R A STEVEN SPIELBERG Film JURASSIC PARK PG-13 5:00 7:20 9:45 CINEMA TWIN $1.25 $110 IOWA 8:47 - $191 5:00 7:20 9:45 PEKING restaurant 北京 饭店 饭店 All-You-Can Eat Buffet Special Lunch Buffet $4.50 Dinner Buffet $5.99 Come and try our new All-You-Can-Eat Buffet! We have over 40 different items to choose from. FREE DELIVERY 749-0003 5-9p.m. 2210 Iowa St. (Behind Hastings) Closed on Tuesdays - Water Proof JOCK'S NITCH SPORTING GOODS The Sports Look of Today! - Casual NIKE REPO MAN Boots! Boots! Boots! Reebok STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA FILMS August 26-August 28 ALL SHOWS IN KANSAS UNION: TICKETS $2.50 MIDNIGHTS $3.00 FREE WITH SUA MOVIE CARD CALL 864-SHOW FOR MOREINFO. FOUR WEDDINGS AND A FUNERAL Friday 7:00 and 9:30 pm Saturday 7:00 and 9:30 pm Sunday 2:00 pm HI-TEC KEEP MAN Friday Midnight Saturday Midnight adidas - Women's - Technical BARNABY BROWN - Mens 840 Massachusetts 842-2442 SIDEWINDERS SALOON WEDNESDAY 25 CENT DRAWS ALL BEERS ON TAP FRIDAY $1.50 32 OZ DRAWS ALL BEERS ON TAP SATURDAY $1.50 ANYTHING $1.00 SHOTS COUNTRY EVERYDAY! AT ITS BEST! 729 NEW HAMPSHIRE OPEN 7PM-2AM 7 DAYS A WEEK 4B Friday, August 26, 1994 NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN KANSAS SPORTS CLUB FAN SHOP Live it! Wear it! Love it! KU! COED NAKED SPORTSWEAR We have Coed Naked, Big Johnson & Game Bar Hats. Come in and see our great selection of NBA, NCAA, NFL, NHL, & MLB merchandise. 8422992 Lunch Specials Generous Portions $1.99-$3.75 JADE GARDEN Dinners $3.95-$5.80 orders can be custom prepared on request Affordable Prices Free Delivery!!! (for dinner only, minimum $10.00 order) 6th Street Kingston 15th Street Dine In or Carry Out Hours: Mon-Sat: 11:00am-10:00pm Sun: 5:00pm-9:30pm (feel free to call after hours ) 1410Kasold Kassebaum sides with Democrats The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Sen. Nancy Kassebaum broke ranks yesterday with Republican Leader Bob Dole and most of her GOP colleagues by siding with Democrats on a key crime bill vote. Kassebaum said she was disappointed that Senate Republicans rejected a Democratic offer to vote at a later date on cutting $5 billion in prevention programs from the $30.2 billion measure. "Ibelieve a vote on social spending in the crime bill would have clearly delineated the differences in the two parties," Kassebaum said. "I think it is unfortunate that my Republican colleagues chose not to accept this offer." Kassebaum was joined by five other Republicans in voting against a procedural rule GOP leaders wanted to use to change the measure. A crime bill unchanged from the House version appeared all but certain to pass, but it was unclear when a final vote would occur. Dole conceded defeat before the first vote. Senate hands crime bill to Clinton "I regret that I failed as the leader to keep our people together on this side of the aisle," he said. "We tried. We made every effort." It was a difficult balancing act this week for Kassebaum, who initially said she supported most of the crime bill passed by the House and had expressed unhappiness with Republican-led delays in the Senate. WASHINGTON — Capping a ferocious six-year debate, Congress handed President Clinton a critical victory last night with Senate passage of a $30 billion, more cops-for-America crime bill. The Associated Press The vote was 61-38. Hours earlier, a handful of Republicans joined Democrats in narrowly blocking a GOP effort that would have derailed the bill. The legislation authorizes thousands of prison cells, establishes new crime-prevention programs, bans assault-style weapons and creates more than 50 new death penalties. It also will help state and local governments pay for 100,000 new police officers, fulfilling one of Clinton's campaign pledges two years ago. The House passed the measure last Sunday, and it now goes to the White House for the president's signature. "The long, hard wait is finally over." Clinton said after the vote. "The American people are going to get the action against crime they have been demanding for over six years." Clinton praised what he called a bipartisan spirit among both Democrats and Republicans that "overcame the ... divisions and false choices" that have blocked final action on major crime bills in the past. "And because they did," he said, "children will be safer and parents will breath a little easier. Police officers will no longer be threatened by gangs and thugs with easy access to deadly assault weapons designed only for war." Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Biden, D-Del., called the package "a tough bill, a straightforward bill that the cops want, the prosecutors want and the people need." But Senate Republican Leader Bob Dole countered that the measure was unduly expensive and loaded with "ork." "When the people wake up tomorrow morning, it's going to be sticker shock," Dole said. The bill was passed with the votes of 54 Democrats and seven Republicans. Voting against it were 36 Republicans and two Democrats. Only Sen. Malcolm Wallop, R-Wyo., did not vote. Earlier yesterday, six Republicans joined 55 Democrats to block a last-ditch GOP effort that would have undone the painstakingly crafted bill negotiated last week by Democrats and moderate Republicans in the House. In that earlier vote, supporters of the crime bill won with only a single vote to spare, 61-39. Republicans could have sidetracked the bill by garnering just 41 votes. Most of the Senate's 44 Republicans wanted to block the bill, calling it too costly and complaining that minimum sentences should have been toughened. They said there were too many dollars for prevention and not enough money for enforcement. Shortly before the final vote on the crime bill itself, supporters once again mustered the 60 votes necessary to choke off speeches demanded by senators such as Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, and Larry Craig, R-Idaho — both board members of the National Rifle Association. That vote also was 61-38. Just prior to the vote on the GOP procedural move, a grim-faced Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell said that Congress had been gridlocked long enough on crime legislation. "Finally there comes a time to act," he said, waving his arm for emphasis. "Finally, there comes a time when delay is no longer an option ... when we must stand up and answer the roll. Are we or are we not willing to put our votes where our speeches are and do something about the tide of crime and violence and fear that engulfs our nation?" But Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah, the Judiciary Committee's senior Republican, slammed the Clinton administration and the bill's supporters saying, "This bill is not tough on crime. Most of the money will be used to help re-elect the people they want to re-elect." Democrats needed Republican help because opponents of the bill needed only 41 votes on a procedural challenge to prevail. There are 56 Democrats and 44 Republicans in the Senate, and one Democrat, Sen. Richard Shelby of Alabama, voted with the Republicans. Republican senators voting to keep the crime bill on track were: John Chafee of Rhode Island, John Danforth of Missouri, James Jeffords of Vermont, Nancy Kassebaum of Kansas, William Roth of Delaware and Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania. All but Specter were among the 10 Republicans who voted last November to add the assault-style firearms ban to the Senate's crime bill. Senate Republican Leader Bob Dole of Kansas said the Republicans "had the votes for about 24 hours" to win the procedural motion but then lost three critical votes to Mitchell. Rollorblade Skates Rental $12 per day New Shipment 1994 skates just arrived Basoball Softball Used ball gloves from $4.99 Golf Bag Golf sets from $49.99 GOLFING Used clubs from $1.00 Buy • Sell Trade • Consign PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS FANTASTIC SELECTION! 1029 Massachusetts, phone 841-PLAY Choose from over 1,000 frames We pay CASH for USED sports equipment 4 East 7th • Downtown Lawrence • 841-1113 NOT VALID WITH OTHER COUPONS OR OFFERS EXPIRES 9/30/04 In-Store Lab One Day Service (in most cases) Lenses duplicated or made from Doctor's prescription K-Mart Cinema Twin 3110 Iowa Walmart SPECTRUM OPTICAL KU WATER SKI Informational meeting Monday 29, 7:30 at Kansas Union in the Kansas Room Any questions contact Lisa Dolejs at 832-0537 Movie Magic at CROWN CINEMA'S CINEMA TWIN THEATRE Haskell University Call 842-6400 for details today!! 23rd 31st For less than the price of a video rental, you can see quality films before they go to home video. And the price...? Every Seat! Every day! $1.25 6th 9th Just frankie goes to hollywood~2unlimited~utah saints~nizer rebb~souxsie & the banshees~the shamen~deee-ii depeche mode~new order~erasure~soft cell~the cure~pet shop boys~enigma~snap~klf SUNDAYS beginning august 28 DJ Ray Velasquez presents club7 drinking & dancing on the 7th day because there is no rest for the wicked classic & current club & alternative hits 18 to enter w/ DJ Tim Johnston 9pm~2am 21 to drink $1 wells GRANADA 1020 Massachusetts St. Lawrence, KS (913)842-1390 ministry~tom tom club~the smiths~donna summer~bizarre inc~bronsk) beat~front 242~taking heads~U2~ck depeche mode~new order~erasure~soft cell~the cure~pet shop boys~enigma~snap NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 5B The Crime Bill: What it means The Associated Press The $30.2 billion, six-year crime bill would authorize: —Spending $13.45 billion for state, local and federal police, including $8.8 billion for a matching program to help hire 100,000 new law enforcement officers to carry out community policing. —Tossing third-time violent and drug felons in prison for life if the third conviction is in federal court, allowing the release of some over 70 years old after they served 30 years. —Spending $9.85 billion for prisons, including $7.9 billion for state prison grants and $1.8 billion to reimburse states for incarcerating criminal aliens. —Banning 19 named types of assault-style firearms and scores of others deemed by the government to meet assault-style characteristics, effective the day the bill is signed. It would limit magazine capacity to 10 rounds. It would exempt 650 named firearms and all guns and magazines legally owned when the law took effect. Because magazines have no serial numbers, the government would have to prove that a magazine was made or purchased after the bill was enacted. —Spending $6.9 billion for crime prevention programs, including $1 billion for drug courts. The prevention efforts include $1.6 billion for the Violence Against Women Act, including money for shelters, and $1.6 billion for flexible Local Partnership Act grants. —Allowing some non-violent, first-time drug offenders to avoid mandatory minimum 5- and 10-year federal penalties. This would be limited to those who use no gun or threat of violence, are not organizers and never served more than 90 days in jail for another crime. —Creating more than 50 new federal death penalty crimes. Many carried that penalty before the Supreme Court overturned capital punishment in 1972. But some would be new, including carjacking slayings, drive-by shooting murders and major drug-trafficking, even when the trafficker is not directly connected to a specific death. Guns take years of potential lives Firearm-related deaths on the rise ATLANTA—Firearms annually waste more than 1 million years of potential life, the national Centers for Disease Control reported yesterday. The Associated Press Each year, the CDC examines the leading causes of death and years lost due to injuries, cancer and heart disease. The agency added firearm-related deaths for a look at years lost between 1980 and 1991. The CDC computes potential lost life by subtracting a person's age at death from age 65, the benchmark for retirement. In 1991, guns cost 1,072,565 years of potential life, up 13.6 percent since 1980, the agency said. In 1980, there were 33,780 firearm-related deaths and 944,125 years lost from guns. "We are destroying our future with firearms," said the CDC's director, David Satcher. "It's not just lives lost, but lives injured or maimed ... children who are too afraid to play in the streets." Nearly 75 percent of the 13.6 percent increase was due to murder, the CDC said. Among the leading causes of death, only complications of AIDS claimed more American lives, said Dr. Patrick Kachur of the CDC's National Center for Injury Prevention and Control. Suicides attributed to guns increased 20 percent, from 15,396 in 1980 to 18,526 in 1991. The years lost in that category increased by 10.5 percent. Data suggest that suicide among the elderly is at a rate not seen since the Depression. Much of the murder increase came in the late 1980s as more young adults died in gunfire, Kachur said. Donna Shalala, the secretary of health and human services, said the CDC report sent a powerful message to "take handguns out of the hands of our children and assault weapons off our streets." Satcher said it was "entirely accidental" that the report was released the day of a key vote in the Senate on President Clinton's long-stalled crime bill, which includes a provision for limiting assault-style guns. WordPerfect Quattro Pro5 WordPerfect QUATTRO PRO 5 Big Deal. Big $99 WordPerfect WordPerfect $99 Word perfect 8.0 DOS and Dictionary The most powerful DOS application ever! SPECIAL LIMITED-TIME OFFER: WordPerfect 6.0 for Windows, Quattro Pro 5.0 for Windows, and Random House Webster's Electronic Dictionary and Thesaurus, College Edition. See your local campus reseller for more information. WORLD'S PRESENTATIONS Parking in the rear Student ENERGYWAYS BEGINNING INTRODUCTION TO ENERGY WORKSHOP RESOURCE FOR ADULTS ENJOY THE CHALLENGES OF ELECTRICITY WORKSHOP $49 WordPerfect Presentations 2.0 for Windows or DOS The ultimate tool for graphics and presentations! $99 $99 Macmillan Student Essential Manipulable PMW 3.0, electronic dictionary, golf same, and more! WordPerfect Novell Applications Group Sports Combination Ticket Distribution Read this before picking up your tickets. YOUR ASSIGNED PICK-UP DATE IS AS FOLLOWS: Where: Memorial Stadium, South End, Underneath the scoreboard Time: 8:30 am-4:00 pm Dates: (see schedule below) A-E Monday, August 29 F-K Tuesday,August 30 L-R Wednesday,August 31 S-Z Thursday,September 1 (Make-Up) Friday.September 2 - If you miss your assigned pick-up date you may pick-up your tickets at the Athletic Ticket Office in the East lobby of Allen Fieldhouse. - You may pick up only your own ticket. - You will receive your football tickets only at this time. You will receive the Men's Basketball and Kansas Relays portion of your sports combo at a later date. More detailed information will be available at pick-up. - You must bring your KUID with a current FALL 1994 fee sticker to receive your tickets. Home Opener, Saturday Night, September 10, 7:00 pm - Jayhawks vs. Michigan State The Etc. Shop 928 Mass.Downtown TOBACCO EXPRESS LAWRENCE'S ONLY FULL LINE TOBACCO OUTLET - Marlboro...$1.50 pk...$14.50 ctn. FREE T-Shirt with 5-pack purchase - Camel ...$1.20 pk...$11.05 ctn. With in-store coupon With in-store coupon - Clove Cigarettes & Import Cigarettes FREE Lighter with a copy of this ad While Supplies Last Surgeon General's Warning Quitting Smoking Now Greatly Reduces Serious Risks To Your Health Sports Bar & Grill Westridge Shopping Center 6th & Kasold 865-4040 JOY Monday Night Football 15¢ wings 1.50 domestic bottles Friday 22 oz. night 2.25 22oz. beer 4.95 22 oz. hot beef sandwiches 3 Big Screen TV's • NTN Trivia • Keno Magazines, Compact Discs, & Cassettes Available at the Kansas Union location. KU KU BOOKSTORES KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store that offers rebates to KU students BE LATE TO CLASS IN STYLE! O TREKUSA SPECIALIZED. cannondale KLEIN GIANT Rollerblade. SAVE BIG BUCKS! On closeout bikes and Rollerblades! Even YOU can find us! 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NEW FROM ISRAEL • Handwoven vests & bags in fall colors • Cotton Pants & Shirts • Earrings & Barrettes Barb's Vintage of Rose 927 Massachusetts • 841-2451 Mon-Sat 11-5 Barb's Vintage Rose Mulligan's PUPS Fun DINE IN or CARRY OUT 11am-3am Downtown Delivery Available Great Food-Great Music Sat Fri Lonesome Houndogs Ricky Dean Sinatra $150 Wells $150 Wells All shows Acoustic/or Unplugged 1016 Massachusetts Downtown Lawrence 865-4055 RECYCLING INTERNSHIPS FALL 1994 CITY OF LAWRENCE Credit/Unpaid ELIGIBLE MAJORS ARTS EDUCATION ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES JOURNALISM NATURAL RESOURCES OTHER MAJORS BY DEPT. APPLICATION RECYCLING APPLY BY SEPTEMBER 2, 1994 CITY OF LAWRENCE RECYCLING OFFICE CITY HALL, 6 E. 6TH. LAWRENCE, KS 66044 CALL PATRICIA MARVIN OR SCOTT SCHULTE 832-3330 SUNWING CENTER SCHWINN SPONSORED BACK-TO-SCHOOL Through August 31st While They Last. Frontier 15 years for fun, alloy runs to save weight MSRP $199 SALE PRICE $179 Additional Savings on Cycle Works's Everyday Low Prices Sidewindel 18 smooth hyper glide gears & all rim ls MSRP $245 SALE PRICE $199 High Plains 21 rapid fir + gears, ch.m f f f r f f r MSRP $349 SALE PRICE $299 impact 18 years, chg. forks & fork冲, chg. MSRP $299 SALE PRICE $249 Moab 21 spr j+ 100% f. bubh c. moll f or f. ar f or f.r. MSRP $399 SALE PRICE $349 High Timber 57X equipment, 100% ch. moly. quarterly $499 MGRP 749 SALE PRICE $649 C CYCLE WORKS CYCLE WORKS CYCLING AND FITNESS 1601 W. 23"*842-6363 HOURS: Mon-Sat 9:30-6; Thurs 'til 8; Sun Noon-4 NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Senate adjourns, delays health reform Break may delay bill until after elections The Associated Press WASHINGTON — The exhausted Senate is leaving health-care reform in limbo while it goes on vacation. With just a few congressional workweeks left this year, the break casts further doubt on the fate of the White House crusade. Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell and other Democrats had vowed to stay until a health-care bill passed. But the latest version of health reform is far from ready for floor consideration, and lawmakers were clamoring to vacation and campaign. Key senators were asked to be on call throughout the recess while their aides worked on a modest bipartisan compromise that is heavy on insurance reform and deficit reduction but far from the universal coverage sought by President Clinton. Conservative Republicans eager to kill health reform for the year portraveled the recess as a final surrender. "It's not over. We're not giving up,' said Sen. Tom Dassle, D-S.D., cochairman of the Democratic Policy Committee. He said the reform drive would resume at a high level of intensity next month. At the White House, Chief of Staff Leon Panetta said senators were so weary and frustrated after a hard summer that it was healthier to send them away while the health-reform principals negotiated in a quieter atmosphere. move forward on the health-care bill, but I think there's a recognition of the reality that they're exhausted," Panetta said in an interview. "This is a dead body that they've been dragging around for the last two weeks," said Sen. Phil Gramm, R-Texas. "Obviously our preference would be to be able to have them continue But, Democrats said, they had just begun to fight. On the home front, lawmakers can expect to encounter constituents in a muddle about health reform. Bad weather halts flow of refugees The House, already in recess, is waiting for the Senate to act first on health reform. When lawmakers return, possibly as late as Sept. 12, they'll be trying to wrap up business quickly, so they can go home and, in many cases, campaign for re-election. The Associated Press HAVANA — Rough weather yesterday did what U.S. policy makers have failed to do, slow the flood of Cuban refugees attempting the treacherous voyage to Florida on homemade rafts. "There's no question the clock is running against us," said White House Deputy Chief of Staff Harold Ickes. "But Congress can work in strange ways and get things done when they're up against deadlines." Public opinion polls show majorities want Congress to act this year. But three-quarters don't expect results, and half would be relieved if Congress didn't pass comprehensive reform this year. After days of bright sunshine and calm seas, gray clouds rolled in with heavy rains, lightning and thunder. Winds whipped the Caribbean into white cans. "We'll wait. We're not crazy," said Luis Lazaro, a 28-year-old electrician among the people waiting at Cojimar Beach outside Havana. He sat beside two rafts he hoped would carry him and eight friends to Florida. 5th Year Anniversary He even invited Americans to bring boats to pick up family members and buy fuel in energy-short Cuba. But the Clinton administration has threatened to confiscate any U.S. boats that carry people out of Cuba. "We told our border guards to make their operations more flexible in respect to illegal exits," he said. A grim reminder of the risks — apparently pieces of a broken raft or bodies — bobbed a half-mile off shore. Exclusively for Women ☆ ☆ Castro blamed the refugee problem on the U.S. government, which he said had encouraged illegal immigration for years by throttling legal visas to a trickle while welcoming illegal arrivals. He also cited the three-decade-old U.S. trade embargo, which has undermined Cuba's never-robust economy. $19 PER MONTH The refugee surge began earlier this month when President Fidel Castro stopped arresting illegal immigrants. In a televised address to Cuba's people Wednesday night, Castro said the door still was open. Any respite in the refugee exodus that is straining relations between the two countries looked to be brief. The driving issues are hung and unem- ✩ ✩ In Cuba, those who want to flee and those who would stay criticized both governments. Call for Details Buy 10 Tans get 5 U. S. officials retorted that Cuba's economic woes are of Castro's own making. They also rejected his call for talks on refugees, the embargo and other issues. "No one can blame us for this situation," the famously long-winded leader said in a two-and-a-half-hour address. "The government of Cuba is the first to lament the lives that have been lost at sea." R "It's like two giants fighting, Cuba and the United States," said Salvador Ramos, a one-legged man sitting near a plaza in colonial old Havana. "It's people who lose, those poor raffers." 749-2424 FREE Value $15 payment, and Cuba's economy will be just as flat when the sun reappears. This seems partly due to state-controlled news media. No photos of Cubans building rafts or saying tearful goodbyes appear in the state-owned newspapers, virtually the only ones Cubans see. BODY BOUTIQUE The Women's Fitness Facility non-members welcome The Women's Fitness Facility 925 Iowa (offer ends 9/5/94) THREE MONTHS FREE FOR FIRST 50 MEMBERS UNIVERSITY DANCE COMPANY UNIVERSITY DANCE COMPANY AUDITION Wednesday, August 31, 1994 7:00 p.m. Studio 242 Robinson Center No solo matte A SUNFLOWER 843-5000 804 Massachusetts Woolrich Royal Robbins THE NORTH FACE Carhartt patagonia Columbia Nautical Car Company Sunflower offers comfortable, functional, fashionable and very dependable clothing for all seasons. Rely on Us. for all seasons. Rely on Us. 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Reebok Hours: Mon-Sat. 9-5:30 Sun: noon-5:30 Thurs. 9-8:30 841-6966 NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Friday, August 26, 1994 7B Girl's heart gives father life The Associated Press ROYAL OAK, Mich. — For Chester Szuber, it was the gift of life, but at a cost so dear he almost didn't accept it. The youngest of his six children — an exuberant 22-year-old nursing student — had been killed in a car accident, and it quickly became clear her heart could be his. The family had little time to decide. Patti Szuber had insisted she wanted her organs donated if she died. But her mother couldn't bear the thought of the risky surgery claiming her husband, too. In the end it was Chester Szuber's decision. "It would be a joy to have Patti's heart," Patti's brother, Bob Szuber, remembers his frail father saving. On Monday, Patti's heart was flown from the Tennessee hospital where she had died only hours earlier to Michigan, where it was implanted and restarted in her father. Chester Szuber, 58, was off a breathing machine by the morning after the surgery and was in good condition yesterday, said deffrey Althusher, who performed the transplant operation. Chester Szuber is expected to leave the William Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak within two weeks, to lead "essentially a normal lifestyle," Altshuler said. His daughter's death on a mountain road in Tennessee came while she was on a trip with a friend before her return to nursing school. "The day she arrived she talked to my mother and said she was having a wonderful, fantastic time," Bob Szuber said yesterday. But on the night of Aug. 18, the car she was riding in went off a curvy road in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park about 40 miles from Knoxville, Tenn. The car hit a rock wall, careened back onto the road and rolled several times. The driver, Todd Douglas Herbst, 24, of Royal Oak was treated for minor injuries. He was charged with drunken driving, possession of an open container of alcohol, driving on a suspended license and unsafe operation, said park representative Nancy From the minute Patti Szuber entered the University of Tennessee Medical Center, her prognosis was poor, her brother said. By Sunday, she had been pronounced brain dead. Grav. "At the time, we had no idea that donation of Patti's heart to our father was even a possibility," Bob Szuber said. A family has two choices once they decide to donate: give the organs to society or specify an individual on the national waiting list whom they know, said Thomas Beyersdorf, executive director of the Organ Procurement Association of Michigan. The family was informed of the choices. Tests were done that showed the father-daughter transplant was feasible. The decision was made. With a team of surgeons, Altshuler flew early Monday to Tennessee to remove Patti Szuber's heart. Five hours and 51 minutes after it had stopped in Tennessee, it was beating in Chester Szuber's chest, said Altshuler, director of cardiac transplantation at William Baumount Hospital. Juicers Showgirls Savannah WELCOMES BACK THE STUDENTS OF KANSAS Featuring Juicers Showgirls WELCOMES BACK THE STUDENTS OF KANSAS Featureting Totally N*de Dancers 18 + Admitted With Valid ID 913 N. Second (Next to Riverfront Square) 841-4122 Brooke Watch Out For Student Specials and New Afternoon Specials Brooke Rings Fixed Fast! Kitter Cummings jewelers 749-4333 833 Mass • Lawrence, KS Welcome to the World Unity Festival. BEDS DESKS BOOKCASES Everything But Ice 936 Mass. Lured by notions of global peace and advertisements promoting a bigname concert, 3,500 people have camped in the ponderosa pine forest 50 miles south of the Grand Canyon. Inside the bus where he was serving peanut-butter sandwiches and pasta with tomato sauce, Greg Jay wiped his hands on his tie-dyed T-shirt. "Yup, that looks like it's worth sweetening," he replied. "Got any more 'shrooms'?" No music, lots of fans A series of mistakes and tiffs The Associated Press FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. — Clad only in corduroy shorts and an earring through his right nipple, Thomas Knuck walked up to the yellow school bus serving as a makeshift kitchen. "Got any sugar for this?" he asked, hefting a plastic container of sun tea he had brewed from hallucinogenic mushrooms. The Flagstaff-based organizer, Michael DiMartio, was nowhere to be found Wednesday. But people kept pouring in, creeping down the dusty dirt road in Volkswagen microbuses, campers and cars. The crowd, which started the week at about 600, was up to 3,500 by Wednesday, said Forest Service spokeswoman Terl Steilen. between organizers and officialdom have left the planned week-long celebration of music and harmony with neither music, harmony, nor an approved campsite. Northern Arizona University officials canceled a promised concert by Jefferson Starship and Richie Havens at the school's domed stadium. Kaibab National Forest officials refused to allow a concert or vendors on federal land. The encampment they have reluctantly allowed to spring up 10 miles from the nearest paved road lacks water, toilets and first-aid facilities. Girl sues for cat LAWRENCE, Kan. — A family who contends the Lawrence Humane Society gave their lost cat to someone else is suing for the cat and $50,000. Robbin Loomas and her daughter, Donniele Kern, filed a lawsuit Tuesday asking for the cat, Bucky, and $50,000 for mental suffering and other complaints, said their lawyer, Don Strole. Shelter manager Renee Harris said yesterday she had been advised not to comment on the lawsuit, which Harris said, the shelter has not yet seen. Bucky was found and taken to the humane society last month. Another Lawrence resident adopted the cat. Before the adoption, Loomas visited the shelter and recognized the pedigreed silver Persian cat. Strohe said the shelter refused to give Bucky back, saying it was too late. STREETSIDE RECORDS REGGAE MON! Feel the rhythm and let the cool Jamaican breeze take you away as you sit back and relax to the island beat. THAT MUSIC THAT tek-a-mouse Mutabaruka SKA VOONER SKATALITES eek • a • mouse Mutabaruka Motama Man Bunny Wailer THE ALPHA LONDY Gregory Isaacs & Friends Amy Nixon Katie Jenkins Maria Korda Jennifer D. Ritchie Patrick Hearn Wendy Harvey Cocoa Tea CT CT BUNNY WAILER Crested 1 Sports Club SOFTWARE Ska Voovee Gregory Isaacs & Friends Sale ends 9/5/94 EACH FEATURED Shanachie RELEASE ON SALE YELLOWMAN Yellowman LOT YOUR CARS DO THE BROWSING ON THE 1 station See store for details 1403 W. 23rd • 840 East Street Watch How You Flex! Mitchell New You Plain! 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REQUIRED LUCKY DUBE VICTIMS EACH FEATURED Shinadrie RELEASE ON SALE MICROSOFT BORLAND AUTODESK CLARIS WORDPERFECT ALDUS COREL LOTUS MICROSTATION MULTIMEDIA Lucky Dube YELLOW WHAT 20th Anniversary Farewell Manus Yellowman LOT YOUR OARS DO THE BROWSING ON THE 1 station See store for details Jayhawk Bookstore only at the top of Naismith Hill! 1420 Crescent Road Lawrence, KS 66044 843-3826 layhawk Bookstore 1403 W.23rd·842-7173 Stay Streetsmart·Shop Streetside 图 ACM 2019 www.acm.org Total trail GIANT Iguana alloy rims with QR oversize cromoly frame oversize alloy fork lifetime warranty free 30 day tuneup FREE lock & cable FREE water bottle & cage FREE T-shirt any bike purchase ends 8/31/94 AVALAT VITAMON IGUANA $419,95 save $50 RICK'S BIKE SHOP Inc. 916 Massachusetts, (913)841-6642 bicycle Is your student organization LOST...CONFUSED...WITHOUT FUNDS??? then don't miss the Treasurer's Workshop presented by STUDENT SENATE THE UNIVERSITY COMPTROLLER'S OFFICE ORGANIZATIONS AND ACTIVITIES CENTER Saturday, August 27th 9:30-11:00 a.m. Pine Room, Kansas Union OR Tuesday, September 6th 8:00-9:30 p.m. Pine Room, Kansas Union Pine Room, Kansas Union STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE TOPICS WILL INCLUDE *How to receive Student Senate Funding* *How to spend state funds* *How to keep accurate records* *Creating University Accounts* --- 8B Friday, August 26,1994 UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N WE CAN'T HELP YOU WIN THE RAT RACE BUT WE CAN HELP YOU FINISH. 1 It's a busy world and it's sometimes hard to know what activity to pursue.And when we need medical attention it can be frustrating trying to find the best place to go for help. (1) At times like these,it's comforting to know that the profes- and the most experienced therapists and specialists in Douglas County. Lawrence Occupational Health Services 865-0700 Lawrence Occupational Health Services offers a full range of industrial medicine options, including injury management, drug screening. physical therapy, occupational therapy and work hardening Prompt evaluations, courteous and timely service, flexible hours and plenty of convenient, accessible Lawrence PromptCare. 865-3997 Lawrence PromptCare is a full service urgent care center and a fast, economical way to seek medical attention. Staffed by experienced and sionals at the new Mt. Oread Medical Arts Centre are there to lend a hand with expanded services. certified emergency medical physicians. Open 9 am-11pm, M-F and 12 noon-11pm weekends, no appointment is neces sary-you'll be greeted by a nurse immediately and treated fast some visits can cost you as little as $45. Lawrence PromptCare is an excellent alternative to long waits in the emergency room or when you can't see your regular physician. Mt. Oread Rehabilitation Services 832-1900 Mt. Oread Rehabilitation Services offers comprehensive rehab services, including physical therapy and occupational therapy with specialization in sports medicine. Under the direction of Medical Director, Michael Geist, M.D. the program offers the broadest range of rehabilitation services MI OREAD SUN KALANIA CENTRE parking make Mt. Oread Medical Arts Centre an agreeable health care alternative. 103 KASOLD & CLINTON PARKWAY 2 4 CAMPUS Local teens gathered for a youth rally Saturday. Page 3A. RAIN LIKELY High 95° Low 72° Page 2. KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA, KS 66612 KU VOL.104,NO.6 THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS ADVERTISING #6443 MONDAY AUGUST 23, 1994 (USPS 650-640) 0. 5 1.0 2.0 3.0 4.0 5.0 Daron Bennett / KANGAN SCHRIERMAN Three of KU's international students (clockwise from top left) Jochum Bohnt, Stimmergart, Germany, Janki Cobanholm, Kyrenia, Cyprus, and Dorthea Axmann, Maizn, Germany came to KU for an education, but not everything they have learned happened in class. International students find KU welcoming By Shannon Newton Kansan staff writer "I have had a good start," Yanki Cobanogu, grandman from Kyrenia, Cyprus said. "And I really felt like the orientation helped us get used to things such as the enrollment process and the big classes." From shopping at Wal-Mart to adjusting to a life far away from their families, international students at the University of Kansas have to adjust to the University as well as American culture. Cobanoglu, along with other international students, arrived in Lawrence in August to begin an extensive orientation program sponsored by International Student Services. For three exchange students, the transition to American college life has been relatively smooth. "I was not used to such a big store as Wal-Mart," Cobanoglu said, "And I ended up staying there for 3 hours." Cobanoglu said he found that his biggest adjustment was with the whole atmosphere, from Wal-Mart to the 8-hour time difference. Cobanoglu said he has not had any problems with the formalities involved at the University. He plans to spend four years at KU to get an electrical engineering degree. Dorthea Axmann, a graduate student from Mainz, Germany, said her biggest problem was getting used to not being able to come home to her family every day. "I felt cut off from home," she said. "When I first arrived, I dreamt about them a lot." She also was not used to the hustle and bustle of the American lifestyle. "Here there is always something to do," Axmann said. Jochen Bohner, a graduate student from Stuttgart, Germany said he had no extreme problems when he arrived at the University. "The orientation really helped out," Bohner said, "Most importantly because we got acquainted with other international students." The orientation program included bus tours of the campus and community, workshops on enrollment procedures and a panel discussion featuring international students who have been attending KU. "They were helpful in advising us and relating the problems that they first had when they arrived," Bohner said. "It was also nice to meet the other international students before most of the American students arrived." The biggest advantage for Bohner at the University are the facilities. "I can always find a computer room when I need to," Bohner said. "And I really like the bookstores because they tell you what you need, and you do not really have to look hard." Bohner also liked the social life that Lawrence had to offer. "I really like to go downtown, because I like the bars and the live music," he said. INSIDE Blast from the past 1 Former Kansas men's basketball coach Dick Harp, who followed the names of James Naismith and Phog Allen, returned to Lawrence and spoke in honor of Naismith on Saturday. Paro18 Shanks jury returns guilty verdict Former coach acquitted of one rape charge By Manny Lopez Kanean staff writer Kansan staff writer About 30 people watched Friday as Jeffrey Shanks fell to his knees and wept as the verdicts were read at the conclusion of his rape trial. The former graduate assistant football coach, who was tried on two counts of rape, was acquitted of the first charge and found guilty of the second. Shanks will spend the next six weeks at the Douglas County jail until he is sentenced Oct. 6. Douglas County District Attorney Jerry Wells said the average sentence for a rape conviction is about six years. "Although the acquaintal was disappointing for the victim, I also understand date rape is difficult to prove," Wells said. "At least we've proven on one count that he is a ransist." Barbara Ballard, director of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, said she hoped the guilty verdict would encourage people to come forward and report attacks. "The verdict sent a message," said Ballard, who also is associate dean of student life. "It proves someone can be found guilty of their actions and that victims don't press charges without some reason." The jury did a responsible job, Ballard said. She said she thought serving on the Shanks jury would have been difficult. "The jury holds someone's fate in their hands and that can cause extreme emotional trauma for people." Ballard said. It took almost six hours for the jury to decide on a verdict. After the verdicts were read, one of the jurors who asked to not be identified said the jury couldn't convict Shanks on one of the counts because police were not thorough enough in their investigation. "We were uniformly upset with how the state handled the case," the iuror said. The juror said that he believed both women's stories, but that he was unsure why more people were not interviewed and used as witnesses. He said Shanks' former roommate should have been called to testify because he allegedly heard the woman say, "Stop" at the time of the incident. Shanks testified the woman never said anything. KU Police did not return phone calls to the Kansan Friday. The reading of the verdicts was as emotional as some of the trial testimony. At 10:22 a.m. Friday, Mike Warner, Shanks lawyer, came out of the courtroom to tell Shanks and his family that a verdict had been reached. Immediately, Shanks hugged his mother, who already had tears in her eyes. As the jury filed into the jury box, Shanks looked at each juror individually. When the first verdict of not guilty was read, Shanks fell to his knees, clasped his hands as if praying for a second not-guilty verdict. When the guilty verdict was read, Shanks slumped to the floor and cried. After polling each juror about the guilty verdict, Shanks was taken into custody. I Earlier in the day, Warner filed a motion for a mistrial after the trial was suspended Thursday because a juror was in the hospital. That juror returned Friday for the deliberations. Monument commemorates Naismith By Shannon Newton Kansan staff writer The inventor of basketball and the University's first men's basketball coach, James Naismith, was honored on Saturday with the dedication of a new monument in the cemetery where he was buried. The event began at Lawrence Memorial Park Cemetery with a visit to Naismith's grave. Before the dedication began the Marching Jayhawk played such songs as "I'm a Jayhawk" and "Crimson and the Blue." Hank Booth, of KLWN Radio, encele the event, and after the national anthem and an invocation, there was a ribbon cutting ceremony by members of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce. Children and adults clapped to the songs as they sat in chairs in front of the podium watching the band, while others tried to find shade under nearby trees. Visitors who attended the dedication ceremony Saturday at Lawrence Memorial Park of a memorial to James Naismith, the inventor of basketball, held hands as they paid respect to Naismith's grave. Naismith was the first men's basketball coach at KU. Family and friends of Naismith were there to witness the long awaited dedication. Every person giving remarks, spoke of Naismith's excellent and memorable qualities and accomplishments. Bob Allen, F.C. "Phog" Allen's grandson, spoke about how his grandfather felt about Naismith. "My grandfather used to tell me what Naismith always said to him," Allen said. "And this has stayed in my mind. 'Don't be afraid to serve humanity, and wait for your reward.'" He thanked Naismith for all of his services. "Thank you for creating the game that was my grandfather's life." Allen said. The memorial is a large stone with a picture of Naismith carrying books in one hand and a basketball in the other. Naismith coached basketball at KU from 1898 to 1907 and taught physical education from 1898 to 1937. He retired from the University in 1937. Dan watkins of the Chamber of Commerce said that Naismith's tradition of excellence had played a large role in the community. "His dedication was to students and athletes and that tradition lives on," Watkins said. Other speakers at the event were Marlan Washington, women's basketball coach and former men's basketball coaches, Dick Harp and Ted Owens. Washington said that the people of Lawrence should be honored and proud to be a part of Naismith's history. Roy Williams, men's basketball coach, was not able to attend the dedication because he was out of town. Bob Frederick, KU athletic director, read a letter from Williams apologizing for missing the tribute. "He also supported women's athletics as co-coach of the women's basketball team." Washington said. Another honored guest of the dedication was Bernice Webb, author of The Basketball Man, a biography of Naismith. She said that the dedication was a climax for a long awaited memorial to the inventor of basketball. "The dedication came in a burst of glory." Webb said. Naismith died in 1939 at age 78 and is buried at the Lawrence Memorial Park Cemetery. He was elected into the National Basketball Hall of Fame in 1959. Homosexuality depicted in commercial City and County Tolerance of Apple By Nathan Olson Kansan staff writer An alarm clock beeps loudly as white words on a black screen read "Sunday Morning." The words fade, and a series of images appear showing a baby being fed, a church choir, and a football game. The commercial, which aired on KSNT in Topeka Friday, was produced by Alliance for Progress (AFP), a Dallas-based nonprofit human rights organization. The images are part of a television commercial intended to show that these activities are normal in the lives of gays and lesbians. Jarrett Lane / KANSAN About 50 gay rights supporters gathered at a downtown Topeka bar to watch the commercial's debut. The group then walked to the Capitol for a press conference and gay rallies. Eric Moore, director of LesBiGay Services of Kansas, addressed a group of about 50 gay rights supporters Friday outside the Capitol in Topeka in support of a gay commercial. Jon Etienne Mourot, alliance co-founder, said the commercial was debuted in Topeka because of its location in the "heartland of the nation." The group also wanted to counteract the influence of anti-gay groups there, Mourot said. Christopher Parman, alliance co-founder, said he was pleased with the commercial. "Our aim is to air the commercials nationwide." Mourt said. Eric Moore, Lawrence senior and director of LesBiGay Services of Kansas, spoke at the rally. "We're here to thank AFP for helping us to educate KU students," he said during his speech. Moore said the commercial made educating the public easier. "Aside from education, we hope to allow gay and lesbian people to become a part of "How do I know this?" he said. "The Bible tells me so." the American mainstream," he said. Paul Evans, minister for the Metropolitan Community Church of Topeka, also spoke at the rally. He said that gays and lesbians were humans and that God loved all people. Forum set on rape prevention Kansanstaffreport Recent rapes in Lawrence have prompted Douglas County Rape Victim/Support Services to hold a community forum on rape and sexual assault at 7:30 tonight at New York Elementary School, 936 New York St. The forum will provide the public a chance to ask questions about rape, said Sara Jane Russell, director of the group. Russell said everyone was encouraged to attend. The event is sponsored by the group, which is partially sponsored by Student Senate and student fees. 2A Mondav. August 29, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Horoscopes HAPPY BIRTHDAY! IN THE NEXT YEAR OF YOUR LIFE. Decide your priorities and develop a plan that will let you achieve them. Luckily, you can in a position to gain the backing of someone influential. Put your best foot forward! False modesty will not serve your interests. A close personal relationship will be strengthened by an outspider's actions. A new residence is likely early in 1905. Next spring, weigh the advantages of changing jobs. Let your conscience be your guide in affairs of the heart. CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DATE, superstar Michael Jackson, actress Isabel Sanford, director William Friedkin, football player Carl Banks. T ♒ ARIES (March 24-19) The emphasis today is on planning for the future. You will never get where you want to go if you keep looking back. Call on the experts if you lack good money management skills. 15 TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You are quick to sense what is needed at work. Higher-ups see you in a favorable light. A news report or complimentary message validates your methods. **LIBRA** ( Sept. 23-Oct. 22). You have the ability to make someone's dreams come true. Champion the needs of the needy. Be blunt with a family member who has tried to guide you. You must follow your own staircase. ♂ m GEMI1 (May 21-June 20): Be outcourges in encounter with members of the public. Sign up for a community project and be as generous as possible towards a charity, and have loved ones will create new rapport. SCOРИPO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Guard against accidents in the work place. Obeying all safety regulations is a must! A love relationship will flourish if you show your tender, sentimental side. 69 ✈ CANCER (June 21-July 22): Risks of all kinds should be avoided today. Protect your financial assets by refusing to lend cash. Sharing your home with a newcomer can be difficult. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Pressure to complete tasks and errands may run counter to your energy level now. Prioritizing and pacing will allow you to get through the list at your own tempo. Enhance your social life by extending invitations. VS 8 CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Business and professional matters deserve top priority this morning. Stop brooding about old romantic wounds. Your career is your salvation. Landing a special contract or assignment will be quite a feather in your cap! water AQURIUS (Jan 20-Feb. 15): A good day to take care of important correspondence. Making the first move in romance gives you a feeling that there on vacation have an opportunity to meet someone completely different. Be big! WP VIRGO (Aug. 29-Sept. 22) Efforts to reach an agreement are best postponed until tomorrow. Going over the details of your strategy will allow you to perfect a backup plan. Aid the family member family members and friends. X PICSCE (Feb. 19-March 20): Recognize extravagance for what it is. Do not allow friends to intrude on family decisions. Advice or criticism offered in disguise may be a blessing in disguise. Follow your heart. Forge old resentments. TODAY'S CHILDREN are logical, perceptive and eager to help others. Prolific readers, they seem to know something about almost every subject. Count on them to use their intellectual gifts to make the world a better place! While these Virgos keen analytical skills make them good at research, their understanding hearts make them wonderful counselors. A healthy and moral lifestyle is very important to these clean-living Virgos. They make affectionate but somewhat stern parents. ON CAMPUS The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stairflort-Hill Hall, Kanec, Kanon, 6045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 6044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $90. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee. Horoscopes are provided for entertainment purposes only. Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence. KAn. 66045. St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate daily Mass at 12:30 p.m.today at Danforth Chapel. KU Women's Rugby Football Club will meet for practice at 5:30 p.m. today at Shenk Complex, 23rd and Iowa streets. For more information, call Jeff Hoobler at 766-5300. KU Kempo Karate Club will meet at 6 p.m. today in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Mandana Hurt at 842-7413. KU Tae Kwon Do Club will meet at 6 p.m. today in 207 Robinson Center. For more information, call Jason Anishansilin at 843-7973. Yoga Club will meet at 7 p.m. at Room 310 in the Burge Union. For more information, call Michele Risdal at 841-8818. Department of Communication Studies has scheduled the Oral Communication Exemption Exam for Thursday, Sept. 8. Interested students must register in 3000 Wescoe by September 2. A $10 non-refundable deposit is required to register. KU Cultural India Club is accepting nominations for Organization President. To nominate yourself or someone else, call Paul Bajaj at 842-7900. International Studies and Phi Beta Delta will sponsor a Worldview Lecture, "Ukraine: The Political Challenge of the 1990's," at noon tomorrow at Alcove A in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Carine Ullom at 864-4141. fbccareine@ucl.edu Department of Music will sponsor a lecture, "The English Music Education System," by Robin Wells, Director of Music at Charterhouse School in Godalming, England, at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow at Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. For more information, call Walter Clark at 864-3206. KU Women's Soccer Club will hold an informational meeting and practice at 5 p.m. tomorrow at Robinson Soccer Field. For more information, call Megan Poplinger at 865-1642. Amnesty International will hold an informational meeting at 6 p.m. tomorrow at Alcove A in the Kansas Union. Hispanic American Leadership Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Jacqueline Flannigan at 864-8219. International Students Association will meet at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Kansas Union Ballroom. Phi Alpha Delta, a pre-law society, will hold a rush party at 7 p.m. tomorrow in the Mallot Room of the Kansas Union. For more information, call Shawna Hilleary at 749-5861. Center for East Asian Studies will sponsor a lecture, "Multiculturalism and the 'Disuniting of America,'" by William Theodore de Bary, Provost Emeritus at Columbia University, at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Big Eight Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Bertha Jackson at 864-3849. A yellow parking permit valued at $58 was stolen sometime between Aug. 15 and Wednesday from a car parked in a parking garage near Allen Field House, KU police reported. ON THE RECORD dent unhurt and with his wallet, said police, who have a description of the suspects. A car valued at $18,242 was stolen from Sonny Hill Chevrolet-Geo-Oldsmobile, 3400 S. Iowa St., on Thursday, Lawrence police reported. Police said an employee of the car dealership drove away with the 1994 Chevrolet Lumina Tuesday afternoon and did not return the next day. Thursday, police said, they received a call from police in St. Peters, Mo., who encountered the employee and the car when the employee got into a fight at a Dillons store there over returned goods. The St. Peters police let him go, then called Lawrence police. Police said the dealership then reported the car stolen. A Lawrence resident held off a robbery attempt while walking on the 2300 block of Orchard Lane Thursday night, Lawrence police reported. Police said the 23-year-old Lawrence resident was walking down the street at about 11:30 p.m. when three men drove up beside him in a sporty car. One yelled for the resident to give them his wallet, police said. When he refused, the three exited the car and approached him. The resident, a black belt in a martial art, kicked the closest one in the face during the ensuing struggle, police said. They left the resi- Weather Lawrence Kansas City Topeka Wichita Omaha Tulsa Des Moines St. Louis Chicago Atlanta New York Los Angeles Seattle TODAY'S TEMPS TUESDAY WEDNESDAY 40 percent chance for thunderstorms, partly cloudy in the afternoon H I G H L O W 88° • 71° 96° • 73° 95° • 73° 102° • 76° 95° • 65° 93° • 76° 93° • 63° 95° • 77° 88° • 77° 91° • 70° 90° • 72° 91° • 72° 88° • 62° 8871 30 percent chance of morning showers. 86 69 THURSDAY Slightly cooler, clear skies 7557 $ August 29,1994 Stock market report Dow Jones 51.16 3,881.05 NYSE 2.64 260.82 Nasdaq Shares Traded: 365,765,230 Advances 1,508 Declines 699 Unchanged 670 ↓ ↑ 8.14 762.94 0 0 - ASE 2.44 449.56 Camera America ONE HOUR PHOTO Lawrence's Largest Supplier of Darkroom Materials 1610 West 23rd Street 841-7205 Crown Cinema BEFORE 6 PM ADULTS $3.00 (UNION TO SEATING) SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00 VARSITY (DIN MASSACHUSETTS) 841-5191 wagens East PG-13 8:00 7:15, 8:30 Camp Nowhere PB In The Army Now PB Blankman PB The Mask PB-13 The Client PB-13 Clear & Present Danger PB-13 CINEMA TWIN LITTLETON 457 518 $1.25 T SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY Jurassic Park PB-13 6:00, 7:30, 8:45 Wolf R 6:00, 7:30, 8:45 FAREWELL MY CONCUBINE MON. 9:30 PM TUES. 7:00 PM STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA FILMS FILMS FOR AUGUST 29-31 BELLE EPOQUE CO-SPONSORED BY HALO TUES. 9:30 PM WED. 7:00 PM & 9:30 PM ALL SHOW IN WOODRUFF AND TICKETS $2.50, MIDNIGHTS $3.00 FREE WITH SUA MOVIE CARD CALL 844-SHOW FOR MORE INFO. Vile, Ugly, Nasty...Dirt This bike was made to wallow in it. TREK.USA T Was $479 Now $399 True Temper custom butted cro-moly frame & fork stocked with Hyper Drive & Hyper Glide, Shimano STX drive train and Matrix Single Track rims. Trek 920 SUNFLOWER BIKE SHOP 604 MASSACHUSETTS 843-3000 As always, with any new bike purchase you recieve a free "U" lock or $20 free accessories, a free tune-up, and a free bike repair clinic If you're hoping for a bright future,we'd recommend you start early. With us.The Jayhawker Yearbook is now looking for individuals, from first year to graduate students, in any major who are interested in getting practical experience on campus. If you think you have what it takes (we only require enthusiasm),you might be interested in one of the following positions: DON'T YOU WANT A JOB YOU CAN PUT ON YOUR RESUME? - Section Editor (Student Life, Greek Life, Entertainment, Academics, Athletics, Portraits, Organizations, News/Index) - Assistant Section Editor - Reporter - Photographer - Production Assistant For more information, call: Jayhawker Yearbook 864-3728 Call Carol for college cash. Cynthia R. Brown MERCANTILE BANK Member FDIC Equal Opportunity Lender - A personal commitment to you. - More than 30 years of student loan experience. - If you need money for college, Carol Wirthman at Mercantile Bank has the answer. In fact, several answers,depending on your financial needs and college plans.Mercantile is the right choice for student loans, offering: - Professional Student Loan Specialists who will help you every step of the way. - In-house processing and servicing of all student loans until repayment. Put Mercantile to work for you.Call Carol at 865-0278. LICENSED CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Monday, August 29, 1994 3A --- Youth gather to end drug use, racism By Carlos Tejada Kansan staff writer The letters KKK painted on the wall of the women's bathroom were a rude introduction to hate during Diane Foster's final year at junior high school. "I wanted to change that," said Foster, an African-American who is now a Lawrence High School senior. "I didn't want to be in that environment." So Foster joined Project Freedom, a group sponsored by the Kansas Health Foundation to fight racism and help keep young people off the street. Foster was one of the coordinators at Project Freedom's "Back to School Youth Rally" against drugs and racism Saturday afternoon in South Park. About 150 youths — some from Lawrence, some from Kansas City, Mo. — attended the rally, which was sponsored by Sunflower Cablevision, the city of Lawrence and Project Freedom. The rally featured local bands, live comedy and KJHK disc jockeys. Teenagers in T-shirts, tank tops and shorts spread blankets under the trees and watched the show while trying to fan away the 100-degree heat. The rally was held to discourage racism and show teenagers alternatives to drinking and drugs, said Lori Johns. Project Freedom coordinator. "This is one of many ways to do it," she said. "There's not a whole lot for kids to do in this town and they helped us put this together." Local musicians Cicada Rhythm, Motherwell, Dave Lipkind, and the Good Christians performed along with the Renegade Youth Theatre and the Youth Rally Dance Troupe. All the performances were a welcome respite from the usual, said Ellen Lowe, Lawrence High School senior. Lowe said Lawrence usually did not offer entertainment for people younger than college students. "There's just not much," Lowe said. "Unless you want to drink, there's not much to do." Mallory Schmidt, Lawrence High junior, and Nicole Negley, Lawrence High senior, agreed with Lowe. They also said they came for the rally's antiracism and anti-violence message. "It's important," Negley said. "If it weren't, we wouldn't be here watching it today." The message of the rally was not lost on Shonda Williams, a fifth-grader at Carver Christian Academy in Kansas City, Mo. She watched the performance from the edge of the park while playing with friends. "Drugs can kill you and they're bad for your body," she said. "It's not good for the people around you to see you doing drugs." (2) Sara Embree, Davenport, Iowa junior and promotions director for KJHK, ran a table for the radio station and its DJs. She said the station got involved because it felt more KU organizations should take part in the community. Jay Thornton / KANSAN Patrick Sumner, youth organizer for Project Freedom of Lawrence, sits in the shade during a performance at the Back to School Youth Rally at South Park on Saturday. The rally offered positive solutions to youth problems. Fee payment line reduced by mail-in system By Colleen McCair Kansan staff writer The line of students waiting to pay fees snaked through the Big Eight Room, down the hall and down two flights of stairs Aug. 19 in the Kansas Union. But comptroller Kathe Shinham said the line was not indicative of the fee payment system's effectiveness. "We had a printer stolen on the second day of fee payment, so that caused a back-up of students waiting for their statements," Shinham said. "The line moved very quickly, and it truly took 20 minutes from start to finish." This semester, only 3,150 students did not pay all of their fees by mail. and fewer students had to endure fee payment lines at the Union, Shinham said. Mail-in fee payment was implemented in the fall of 1992. Prior to that, all students were required to stand in lines at the Union to pay their fees. Shinham said the mail-in system provided students with an assessment of fees when they enrolled in Spring 1994. Students then were billed in early July. Students could pay all or part of their balances by mail, but every student had to pay at least $260 of their balances by mail. Shinbham said. Diane Del Buono, director of the office of student financial aid, said the mail-in system had become more effective as students became more familiar with the process "I don't think there ever will be a time when there won't be some students at fee payment," Del Buono said. "But I think that given the limitations of the University, the system is working as well as it can." Richard Morrell, university registrar, said the system would be at its best when students' financial aid could be transferred electronically into their bank accounts, eliminating lines of students waiting to pick up financial aid checks. "The system isn't perfect yet, but we have been able to automate more and more," Morrell said. "Under the old system, students stood in very long lines and we kept all of their statements in boxes." The possibility of lines at fee payment didn't faze Michael Ezra, Rockville Center, N.Y. graduate student. He said he would continue to pay his fees in person, even if it meant waiting in line. "I guess you could say I don't trust the mail," Ezra said. "It's nice that students have the option to pay by mail, but I want to see the transaction done in front of me." Laura Pickard, Hays senior, said students should continue to have the option to pay by mail or in person. "I had to stand in the long fee payment lines when I was a freshman, and the new system does eliminate the lines," Pickard said. "But some students just don't have the money to mail in ahead of time." "At the top of Naismith Hill" Hrs: 8-7 M-Th., 8-5 Fri. 9-5 Sat. 12-4 Sun. 843-3826 SUNFLOWER OUTDOOR & BIKE SHOP 804 Mass • 843-5000 "Your Book Professionals" MC Jayhawk Bookstore Now Hiring Reliable, motivated KU Students to call KU Alumni Tuesday and Thursday evenings 5:45, 9:45 pm September 13 through December 2 $4,90 per hour starting wage. EAGLE Call Marie Adams-Young 9-11 and 2-4 M-F 864-4201 FREE PIZZA BUY ONE & GET ONE FREE! From Your Friends at Pyramid Pizza TROPHY (of course!) Fast & Friendly Delivery (limited area) 842-3232 14th & OHIO (UNDER THE WHEEL) SPECIAL COUPON PYRAMIDPIZZA MONDAY MANIA Buy Any PYRAMID PIZZA & Get The Second Pizza (of equal value) FREE! 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Straw.) only 99¢ Limited Time Only Bucky's 9th & IOWA • 842-2930 SPECIAL OFFER Double Cheeseburgers only $1.29 Milk Shakes (Choc., Van, Straw.) only 99¢ Limited Time Only The Only Thing Tougher Than Going to Law School ...is not getting in. NO ONE KNOWS THE LSAT LIKE KAPLAN TEST PREP 842-5442 Glass Starts Aug. 30 TREATING WITH CHILDREN The Only Thing Tougher Than Going to Law School ...is not getting in. NO ONE KNOWS THE LSAT LIKE KAPLAN TEST PREP 842-5442 Glass Starts Aug. 30 Class starts Aug. 30 4A Monday, August 29,1994 OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Romantic film informative in lesbian culture COLUMNIST DAVID JOHNSON Although amateurish in production, award-winning movie gives unique view of lesbian lifestyle. I just recently caught a showing of Rose Troche's "Go Fish," a new film, for lack of a better description, about lesbians. The film is a little amateurish (both the acting and directing), but in this case, that adds to the charm. Aside from warm, fuzzy feelings about lesbian love, I also got a little bit of a culture lesson. Even though I'm gay myself, I am somewhat "lesbian illiterate." Of course, this must be followed by the standard, "this movie is not a representation of the whole lesbian community," much like I am in no way a representative of the queer community. But this film did provide a brief, intense glimpse into the lesbian experience. Where else can you hear a discussion of the proper terminology for referring to female genitalia? ("Honey pot" fortunately won out over "love mound.") This small, independent film shares the title of Best in New Queer Cinema with Greg Araki's "The Living End," a film about two HIV-positive men who meet by chance and end up on the road leaving a few dead bodies and empty food containers in their wake. By no means am I meaning to compare these two films on the basis of content (they're as different as fags and dykes — like I know, right?) But there is a comparison to be made on the effect of these films. The overall feeling I got from "Go Fish" was, as I said, warm and fuzzy — it's a romantic comedy but also confronts issues lesbians come up against every day (outing, men, relationships, etc.) But the overall feeling from "The Living End" is one that is tragic; two men who have nothing to lose and end up losing themselves to each other and, eventually, AIDS. Noncartoonish portrayals are what seem to be the larger strength in these films. "Fish" and "End" are the antitheses of "Desert Hearts" and "Philadelphia," respectively. These are films for the community. The attitude is, "Hey, if straights like it, more power to them." Hollywood is still, for some ungodly reason, unable to confront homosex. While I empathize slightly, there are still a lot of people who have a good friend who's gay but cannot handle the sex. The power of "Go Fish" is far more redeeming than films like "Henry and June" or even "Fried Green Tomatoes," where lesbians are relatively prominent characters. But homosexuals are not the target audience. "Fish" is not obvious in its intentions. It's like the first time you go to a gay bar (the Edge doesn't count). You've seen gays and lesbians before, but now they're in their own territory, answering to no one. Unfortunately, "The Living End" tries to make so many statements in the small space of the film (and succeeds at a few), but really all that's left is a misogynistic roller coaster ride with two buff guys having great sex. VIEWPOINT David Johnson is a Coffeyille senior in magazine Journalism. Critics should keep quiet about moment of silence Georgia recently enforced its state law that requires all public schools to observe up to one minute of silence at the start of the school day. Critics of the law have work, think about their weekend plans, or choose to do nothing. labeled it as unconstitutional because it fosters an establishment of religion that is in direct conflict with the First Amendment. The Georgia law does not attempt to advance or inhibit religion, rather it gives the student the option to choose whether to silently say a brief prayer to start the day. This law accommodates students who have deep religious beliefs, and at the same time it protects the rights of SILENCE IN SCHOOLS SILENCE IN SCHOOLS The Georgia law that allows a moment of silence in schools respects students' religious and constitutional rights. However, the purpose of the law is not to force the students to pray. The law only gives the students a chance to pray if that is in fact their desire. Under the moment of silence law, students may also do their home- other students who may have opposing viewpoints. Because of its neutrality and fairness, the Georgia law should continue to be enforced in the public school system. LANCE HAMBY FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD. Station shows courage broadcasts gay rights ad The First Amendment promises freedom of speech, even to the press. less of the consequences. However, fears of lowered advertising sales or a drop in viewers have been known to keep a story from being broadcast or printed. During its newscasts, KSNT broadcast the country's first gay-rights television commercial. Topeka television GAY RIGHTS This is especially true in the case of material portraying homosexuality, such as a kiss between two men In fact, the station took an unprecedented risk by being the station resists advertising pressures and shows commercial to dispel sterotypes about homosexuals. on FOX's "Melrose Place," which ended up on the cutting room floor. The commercial, first of a possible four, emphasizes But a Topeka television station chose to assert its First Amendment rights Friday night, regard- first in the country to run the commercial. Baltimore stations may also be running the commercial. that homosexuals have the same values — including family and church attendance — as the heterosexual community. Unfortunately, it took until August 1994 to be aired. BOBERTA JOHNSON FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD KANSAN STAFF STEPHEN MARTINO Editor CATHERINE ELLSWORTH Systems coordinator TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser CHRISTOPH FUHRMANS Managing editor JEN CARR Business manager JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser CAMERON DEATH Retail sales manager Editors Editors News ... Sara Bennett Editorial ... Donelia Heame Campus ... Mark Martin Sports ... Brian James Photo ... Daron Bennett ... Melissa Lacey Features ... Tracil Carl Planning Editor ... Susan White Design ... Noah Mueller Assistant to the editor ... Robbie Johnson Business Staff Campus mgr ... Todd Winters Regional mgr ... Laura Guth National mgr ... Mark Maestro Coop mgr ... Emily Gibson Special Sections mgr ... Jen Pierer Production mgrs ... Holly Boren ... Regan Overy Marketing director ... Alan Stiglitz Creative director ... John Carlton Classified mgr ... Heather Niehaus **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 are required to use standard formatting. *The University of Michigan is not responsible for errors in formatting. The University does not accept responsibility for any errors that may occur.* 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. ...AND IN A PRESIDENCY AS TROUBLED AS CLINTON'S. THE FUTURE OF THIS BILL IS ABSOLUTELY CRUCIAL. CLINTON WILL BE FURTHER SEEN AS INEFFECTUAL IF HE HANDLES THIS BADLY. IT'S NO EXAGGERATION TO SAY... ...CLINTON'S PRESIDENCY HANGS ON HIS HANDLING OF THIS BILL!" BUT-- IT'S JUST THE BILL FROM DINNER! ...AND IN A PRESIDENCY AS TROUBLED AS CLINTON'S. THE FUTURE OF THIS BILL IS ABSOLUTELY CRUCIAL. CLINTON WILL BE FURTHER SEEN AS INEFFECTUAL IF HE HANDLE THIS BADLY. IT'S NO EXAGGERATION TO SAY... "CLINTON'S PRESIDENCY HANGS ON HIS HANDLING OF THIS BILL." BUT-- IT'S JUST THE BILL FROM DINNER! Sean Finn/ KANSAN Athletes should not be viewed as infallible You hardly can pick up a newspaper these days without reading about some new scandal involving a professional athlete. For months now America has been greedily devouring every detail about O.J. Simpson, whether it be in Time magazine or the National Enquirer. Before that we read about Jennifer Capriati being arrested for marijuana possession, Daryl Strawberry going into drug rehabilitation and Michael Jordan's gambling problem. Oh, and who could forget the whole Tonya Harding thing? Perhaps it is time we stopped putting professional athletes up on pedestals and then watching them fall. I'm not saying that the stars mentioned above all fell from grace because of media and fan pressure, but think about it: In today's society, professional athletes are media dartlings and national heroes. Some, such as Capriati and Harding, are thrust into the spotlight at early ages, even before they can legally drive. The pressure to succeed, to win, to get the best advertising contracts and make millions of dollars has got to be Maybe that's where we went wrong. Maybe, as fans, we shouldn't have elevated the athletes to such an elite level. Maybe Charles Barkley was right when he said he wasn't a role model. At least he admits it. People don't expect Barkley to be perfect. Oh the contrary, they expect him to be bad. But that leniency doesn't seem to be granted to most other top professionals. And so every move, every mistake COLUMNIST ERIKA RASMUSSON COLUMNIST phenomenal. And while each one made a choice to pursue greatness, and thus put themselves in the public eye, they probably didn't count on becoming role models for an entire country. And when they make an inevitable mistake, the fall is long and hard. As much as I love and am involved in sports, I think too much pressure is put on professional athletes. When the public turns them into household names, national heroes, and role models, they become elevated to a level they can't possibly be expected to stay at. By idolizing professional athletes, we forget that underneath the fame they are only human, and humans make mistakes. In the end, I think, it spoils the game for everyone. You might disagree with this. You might think the public deserves to know what athletes in the professional leagues of their sport are doing. And if they're doing wrong, then so be it. You might say an athlete in the spotlight, such as Jordan or Barkley, has no choice but to be a role model, regardless of whether they want to be. Erika Rasmusson is a Minnetonka, Minn, senior in magazine Journalism. they make, is recorded for all to see, hear, or read about. However, I see it from a different angle. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR James D. Caruthers professor of english and associate dean of liberal arts and sciences I was not sure whether to just laugh or to both laugh and write after reading the editorial on the selection of a new chancellor for the University. The editorial was one of the most wishy-washy, I don't want-to-offend anyone editors I have ever seen from the Kansan editorial board in the two years I have been at this school. The board should take a more forceful position and defend adequately in choosing issues to comment. Horoscopes? James B. Carothers What the editorial should have said in half the words is that there should be no unwarranted discrimination against any applicant. Should the selection committee discriminate at all? I would hope so. Discrimination is not entirely a bad idea. I would hope that the University would discriminate against those without the adequate education or experience to lead the University. I am worried about the editorial board's position that "...some attitudes are still in need of overhand..." Does anyone else smell the stinking rat of political correctness and the thought police? It is to be hoped that this University will not succeed to the temptation of thought control or abridging the First Amendment rights of students and faculty. Some might think that I defend racist notions by criticizing policies thought to be helpful to minorities. I do not, but I feel that "making" people more "sensitive" backfires and can lead to more animosity. Tom Grelinger Kansas City, Kan., senior You are extremely fortunate to have this man at the helm of the student services division – he is second to none! I strongly urge the members of student government to geto know him, for his wisdom and knowledge of the university system will be valuable assets to you. As for the remainder of the student body, make it a point to get to meet Dr. Kitchen, I guarantee that you will not regret it. I am writing this letter to you in regard to Dr. James R. Kitchen, your new dean of student life. Joel S. Kostman During my two years as the student body president of the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, I had the opportunity to work closely with Dr. Kitchen on various projects and committees. He is without a doubt the most student-orientated administrator I ever had the pleasure of working with. His caring and devotion to the student cause is unparalleled. I have said it many times since Dr. Kitchen agreed to take the position at Kansas — the Rebels loss is certainly the Jahayhaws gain. Joel S. Kostman University of Nevada-Las Vegas student body president, 1992-94 HUBIE SO, UH, JAMISON— WHO ARE THOSE CHICKS OVER THERE? SUN WHENER JET SO, UH, JAMISON — WHO ARE THOSE CHICKS OVER THERE? THOSE ARE FRESHMAN GIRLS WHO CAME TO COLLEGE HOPING FOR LOVE AND ACCEPTANCE IN A HARSH WORLD. THEY CAME SEARCHING NO, YEARNING FOR A WAY TO DEFENT THEIR PITTIFUL LIVES AND BECOME LIKE THOSE WHO PUSH THEM AWAY. THEY ARE LIVING SYMBOLS OF OPPRESSION AND INJUSTICE. WE REALLY SHOULD FEEL DEEP, INTENSE PITY FOR THEM. SNIFF SNIFF HONK SRIK SENUS — I'M LIVING PROOF THE END OF THE WORLD IS UPON US IM SO AMAZED GH GOT CUT FROM ALL THE SORORITIES, EH? THEY CAME SEARCHING- NO, YEARNING FOR A WAY TO DEFEAT THEIR PITTIFUL LIVES AND BECOME LIKE THOSE WHO PUSH THEM AWAY. SEX SENSA - THE LIVING PROOF THEY ARE LIVING SYMBOLS OF OPPRESSION AND INJUSTICE. WE REALLY SHOULD FEEL DEEP, INTENSE PITY FOR THEM. THE END IS WITH THE WORLD UPON US I'M SO MYHAMED! GH SNIPF SNIPF HONK THEY CAME SEEING- NO, LEARNING FOR A WAY TO DEFEAT THEIR PITFUL LIVES AND BECOME LIKE THOSE WHO PUSH THEM AWAY. SEX DEVILS I'M LIVING PROOF By Greg Hardin I'M SO ADHAMED THE END OF THE WORLD IS UPON US 「神奈川県」 GOT CUT FROM ALL THE SORORITIES, EH? YUP. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Monday, August 29,1994 5A Watkins will benefit from fees By David Wilson Kansan staff writer As President Clinton struggles to pass health care legislation in Congress, KU students have already approved a $15 increase in the student health fee for the expansion and renovation of Watkins Health Center. Students approved the increase in Spring 1994 after Student Senate voted to put the issue on the ballot for Student Senate elections. Student health fees are now $86 a semester. Jim Strobl, director of student health services, said construction on the $5.5 million project would begin in May 1995. The expansion will bump up the number of examination rooms on the first floor from six to 26. Strobl pointed to an architect's drawing of the expansion and explained that each physician would get an office and two examination rooms. With two examination rooms, a nurse could be taking the blood pressure of a student in one room while the physician examined a student in the other room, he said. Watkins Health Center Year Physician Visits Total Visits 1983 15,229 49,127 1984 29,713 95,848 1985 30,833 99,461 1986 31,193 100,623 1987 36,714 188,432 1988 36,194 116,754 1989 30,941 142,905 1990 39,408 131,373 1991 41,291 137,834 1992 44,971 142,818 1993 49,255 183,840 we're trying to become more efficient." he said. On the second floor, additional gynecology examination rooms will be built. Renovation of current space will expand the room for counseling and psychological services. The urgent care department on the first floor will add six beds to the current three. Strobl said Strobl said that when Watkins was built in 1972, its designers didn't anticipate the flood of students that would use the health center today. The problem at the health center was that the building was built as an in-patient hospital," he said. "Today, it's the biggest doctor's office in Lawrence." Srobt said that from 1983 to 1993, student visits to Watkins Health Center tripped, but that enrollment in those 10 years increased only slightly. The increased demands on Watkins prompted Strobl to ask fellow members of the Student Health Advisory Board to recommend a $15 student fee increase to expand and renovate Watkins. The board is made up of student senators, faculty and a representative from Watkins. Student senator Jill Bechtel said that although Student Senate voted to put the issue on the ballot, many senators were skeptical about the raise. "Initially, there was a lot of concern about whether it was justified," she said. Student senator Ken Martin said one concern was that most current students would be paying a fee for a facility they would never use. But Martin, who voted for the bill, said he was counting on student altruism to override that concern. KU WATER SKI Monday 29,7:30 at Kansas Union in the Kansas Room Informational meeting Any questions contact Lisa Dolejs at 832-0537 Rings Fixed Fast! Kizen Cummings jewelers 749-4333 833 Mass Lawrence, KS Whv rent a TV? Come in and ask us for details. Buy a TV from us at the beginning of the semester and we will buy it back from you at the end of the semester. (or whenever you no longer need it) Lawrence Pawn & Shooter Supply 718 New Hampshire 843-4344 Art Fridays Save 10% on all art,design and archi-itectural supplies... --- CROCODILE Jayhawk Bookstore 1420 Crescent Road. 643-3826 OPEN TIL 7:00p.m. Mon-Thurs every Friday JOICO --- KMS Now that you're back in lawrence you can get really good Chinese food Buffet Specials Everyday 3 Daily Dinner Buffet 7 Days a week 5:30-9:00 $6.95 Daily Specials Everyday Monday-Saturday 11:30-2:30 $4.95 Sunday 11:30-3:00 $5.95 25 items including... Soups, Salads, Appetizers, Fruits, Entries, and Dessert! 520 West 23rd 841-5885 Take outs available by the touch of the phone 841-1688 2907 W. 6th Street (across from Dillions) PEPLMITCHELL REDKEN NEXUS BEAUTY WORKHOUSE 聚豐園 GJ IMPERIAL GARDEN FALL CLOTHING ARRIVING DAILY Betsey Johnson, French Connection, Roxy, Ecote, Anthropologie, Spot Free People, Soda Blu & More. We also offer an extensive line of jewelry & accessories. [Egyptian relief showing a figure wearing a headdress with an eagle on top.] CLEOPATRAS a unique boutique 743 MASS ST. Downtown Lawrence, KS 913-749-4884 Sun. 12-5 M.W. 10-6 Th.Sat. 10-8 10 Tans for $25 Sun THE SUN DECK - Money Saving Packages - 8 Wolff Systems Beds - Airconditioned Rooms - Private Rooms with Stereo - Open 7 Days a Week 842-SUNN 9th & INDIANA UNIVERSITY DANCE COMPANY AUDITION Wednesday, August 31, 1994 7:00 p.m. Studio 242 Robinson Center No solo material required. For more information, please call 864-4264. The Reverend Horton Heat 1994 LIQUOR IN THE FRONT TOUR OF NORTH AMERICA LIQUOR COCKTAILS Starring The Reverend Horton Heat TENDERLOIN PAW Thursday Sept. 15 Tickets at all TicketMaster outlets and Liberty Hall. Liberty Hall 644 Massachusetts Lawrence, KS 913-749-1972 AUDITION Wednesday, August 31, 1994 7:00 p.m. Studio 242 Robinson Center No solomaterials For more information The Reverend Horton Heat 1934 LIQUOR IN THE FRONT TOUR OF NORTH AMERICA LIQUOR COCKTAILS Starring The Reverend Horton Heat TENDERLOIN PAW S.U.B. P.O.P. Thursday Sept. 15 Tickets at all TicketMaster outlets and Liberty Hall. Liberty Hall 644 Massachusetts Lawrence, KS 913-749-1972 6A Monday, August 29, 1994 VOLABETT 45 V HEARNET The Etc. Shop 928 Mass. Downtown Park in the rear VUHANET BANK The Etc. Shop 928 Mass. Downtown Park in the rear BEDS DESKS BOOKCASES Everything But Ice 936 Mass. BEDS DESKS BOOKCASES Everything But Ice 936 Mass. POSTER SALE Recycled Sounds from Lawrence & KC NATION/WORLD U2 • Coltrane • Lemonheads • Joplin Rush • Bjork • Zappa • Soundgarden Kravitz • Resevoir Dogs • Cure • Ice T House of Pain • Hendrix • Dylan Smashing Pumpkins • Metallica Sting • Breeders Jane's Addiction BB King • Rage Just the Machine Clapton • Blind Mice • Billie Holiday Stick • Beatles • Madonna • Beasties Led Zeppelin • Morrissey • Einstein Chilis • Depeche • Nirvana • Amos Pink Floyd • Taxi Driver • Marley Miles • Lush • Green Day • Movies Mon., August 29 - Fri., September 2 Kansas Union Gallery Level 4, Kansas Union 9am-5pm Mon.- Fri. STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS JUST DO IT!! New Horizons Tae Kwon Do New Horizons Tae Kwon Do One Week Intro $19.95 You always wanted to try martial arts,but never quite got around to it until now. You knew that the martial arts had a lot of benefits such as stress relief, flexibility, fitness and weight loss. And you always wanted that confident feeling that comes from knowing that you could defend yourself or your family. Now is the time to start. Call now! 749-4400 Call us today and set up an appointment for your first lesson. New Horizons UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Black Belt Academy of Tae Kwon Do Holiday Plaza Shopping Center 25th & Iowa, Lawrence (Across the street from Food For Less) Trade report reveals secret budget plans The Associated Press WASHINGTON — The Defense Department intends to ask Congress to approve a $27 billion, six-year spending plan for the super-secret National Security Agency and two other intelligence groups, according to a trade publication report. This week's edition of Defense Week said it had obtained internal Pentagon documents which spelled out the budget requests as approved by John Deutch, deputy defense secretary. The figures are for the National Security Agency, the Defense Intelligence Agency and the Central Imagery Office. They do not include budgets for the other main intelligence agencies — the CIA and the National Reconnaissance Office. Not only are these individual agencies' budgets classified secret, but the government's overall intelligence budget is secret, too. Defense Week, apparently the first to publish official figures for budgets of the NSA, DIA and the imagery agency, said it obtained the figures from an Aug. 16 memorandum signed by Deutch. "It's an example of the futility of the secrecy" practiced by the government, said Jeff Richelson, an author of U.S. intelligence agency books. Steve Aftergood, a Federation of American Scientists specialist in government secrecy, said he believed publication of the budget figures by Defense Week would lead to further erosion of the secrecy surrounding intelligence budgets. Some members of Congress have tried in recent years to stop classifying the government's overall intelligence budget, but the Clinton administration and its predecessors have prevailed, arguing that it could give an advantage to potential adversaries. Overall U.S. spending on intelligence is believed to be about $28 billion this year. Aftergood said that included about $3 billion for the CIA and about $6.5 billion for the National Reconnaissance Office, which develops and operates svs satellites. Defense Week said the National Security Agency, which is responsible for intercepting and processing foreign communications as well as safeguarding U.S. voice transmissions, had a fiscal 1995 budget request of $3.47 billion. The request for the Defense Intelligence Agency, which is responsible for the collection and processing of military intelligence, totals about $4 billion for the 1996-2001 period, Defense Week said. Its 1995 request was $621.9 million. Kansas to gain from crime bill The Associated Press WASHINGTON — The crime bill passed by Congress could mean at least $236 million for Kansas during the next six years, including $110 million to hire 1,200 police officers, according to a Senate analysis. Meanwhile, Republican Sen. Nancy Kassebaum's office was bombarded Friday with hundreds of telephone calls rater over her decision to vote for the bill and its assault weapon ban. Kassebaum was one of six Republicans who voted with 55 Democrats to pass the bill Thursday night. GOP Leader Bob Dole against the bill. Besides the 1,200 police officers, a Senate Judiciary Committee analysis indicates Kansas could get $68 million in prison grants. $11.1 million for other law enforcement, $10 million for drug courts and $2 million for judges, prosecutors and public defenders. Kansas also stands to receive more than $34.7 million through the year 2000 for programs, such as midnight basketball, anti-gang efforts, innercity economic development and prison drug treatment. 5th Year Anniversary Exclusively for Women $19 PER MONTH Call for Details Buy 10 Tans get 5 FREE Value $15 non-members welcome 749-2424 925 Iowa (offer ends 9/5/94) THREE MONTHS FREE FOR FIRST 50 MEMBERS One of these can save you hundreds on one of these The University of Kansas HAWK BIG J. C10/001993000-1 Big J Hawk This card is valid for use ONLY by the identified student when officially enrolled At the UTC The University of Kansas STUDENT HAWK BIG J. C10/001993000-1 Big J Hawk This card is valid for use ONLY by the identified student when officially enrolled At the UTC Back to School Blowout! Monday August 29th and Tuesday August 30th the Union Technology Center will be in the Kansas Union Ballroom selling Macintosh computers at their lowest prices ever on campus! Forms of Payment accepted: Cash, Cashiers Check, Visa, Mastercard, Discover and American Express. Faculty eligible. - Prizes and Giveaways - Live Demos - Everything you need for Your Mac - Lowest Prices Ever on Campus! Macintosh. The Power to be your Best at KU. union technology center KU Academic Computer Supplies, Service & Equipment Academic Computer Supplies, Service & Equipment Burge Union *Level 3* + $391-864-5690 4 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN MONDAY, AUGUST 29,1994 10000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 GERRY FEY Little League still contains love for game SECTION B The love affair starts with a kid's glove. For me, it started at the age of seven when my dad came home from work with a brand new Rawlings in his hand. He asked if I wanted to play YMCA baseball, and that was the clincher. With this season's major league strike and professional baseball's current state, I have a bad taste in my mouth as many other fans probably do. I've loved baseball ever since Millions in the United States and the world have the same obsession, and I would imagine it started somewhat the same way. My friends wonder how I can be fanatical about a sport that may seem outdated and slow. To them, I say if they were in my shoes they might have a different opinion. The contest got back to the game's very essence — six innings filled with great plays and players that simply enjoy hitting and fielding a baseball. After you take that first glove, work it with oil to loosen the leather, and use it in your first-ever game, you will be a fan. It's like any sport. If you've played it before, there is a better understanding of the game's intricacies. But Saturday, I received a shot in the arm that strengthened me more than any cortisone shot could have. I watched the Little League World Series' final game. Venezuela defeated the California team representing the United States 4-3. It was disappointing because the U.S. team lost, but once again it was an exciting game. Now with the strike, I'm convinced those 11- and 12-year-olds play to have fun more than major leaguers do. I know I did at that age. At the age of 11, I almost had the chance to play in that very tournament in Williamsport. Pa. I'dn't play for money, I just played as if the games were on the local sandlot field. That year, the regional tournament was in the small town of Baxter Springs in the southeast corner of Kansas. There was an aura around the field, and everyone felt it when they touched the infield's red clay. The town felt it too. Volunteers mowed the infield grass every day and the outfield every other day. Eight teams from the Midwest competed to advance on the road to Williamsport. Our team from Hillside Little League in Omaha represented Nebraska, and we were in prefect position to advance. But in the tournament's final game a team from Minneapolis, Minn., beat us 5-0. To this day, I think it was because the Minnesota pitcher threw a curve ball — the first time any of us had seen that pitch. Later that summer, USA Today listed the American teams at Williamsport, and Minnetonka was one of them. I still stay in touch with players from our team, and we will always have that bond. This winter will be our 10-year reunion party. That's how much the experience meant to us. I'm sure that's when their love affair started, and I hope that their obsession is still strong. Or maybe they should remember when they got their first glove. But major league players get bonuses for playing in the World Series. Little leaguers don't have contracts, but they can meet the president if they are champions, just like the professional players they try to emulate. The Minnesota team didn't get money to play in the World Series. No teams do. I will never forget that summer in 1985. As the strike continues, and Major League players are at home fishing or watching television, maybe they should have tuned into last Saturday's final game. Kickoff is a classic for Nebraska football The Associated Press EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Nebraska, which ended last season with a heartbreak loss in the Orange Bowl, started this season with an impressive victory in the Kickoff Classic. Fomnie Frazier ran for three touchdowns and passed for one, and Lawrence Phillips rushed for 126 yards as the fourth-ranked Cornhuskers routed No. 24 West Virginia 31-0 yesterday in the opening game of college football's 12th season. Both teams went 11-0 last year before losing their bowl games. West Virginia didn't cross midfield until it recovered a fumble early in the fourth quarter and was shut out for the first time since a 19-0 loss to Penn State in 1986. The way the Cornhuskers played yesterday, they appear capable of reaching another championship game this season. Nebraska missed a last second field goal and fell to Florida State 18-16 in a national title showdown in the Orange Bowl. West Virginia was clobbered by Florida 41-7 in the Sugar Bowl. For the game, the Cornhuskers outgained the Mountaineers 468-89, including 368-8 on the ground. Nebraska gained 285 yards and 17 first downs in the first half while holding West Virginia to 4 yards and two first downs. 0 on Tom Sieler's 32-yard field goal in the opening period. Frazier scored on runs of 25 and 27 yards and threw a 12-yard touchdown pass to Reggie Baul to give Nebraska a 24-0 halftime lead. He added a 42-yard touchdown run in the fourth quarter. Frazier, a junior who has directed Nebraska's option attack since midway through his freshman season, helped the Cornhuskers take command in the second quarter after going ahead 3-1. Frazier, the game's most valuable player, ran 12 times for 130 yards and was 8-of-16 for 100 yards. Phillips, a sophomore making his first college start, carried 24 times and more than filled the gap left by the departure of star tailback Calvin Jones. move the team against a nebraska defense that had eight sacks. West Virginia, which averaged 34 points last season, could do nothing against Nebraska's quick, aggressive defense. Sophomores Chad Johnston and Eric Boykin alternated at quarterback for the Mountaineers, but neither could West Virginia's Robert Walker, who gained a school-record 1,250 yards last season, was held to 46 yards on 12 carries. The only bright spot for West Virginia was All-Big East punter Todd Sauerbrun, who averaged 60 yards on nine kicks, including a school-record 90-yarder in the first quarter. The victory improved Nebraska's Kickoff record to 3-0. The Cornhuskers beat Penn State 44-6 in the inaugural game in 1983 and downed Texas A&M 23-14 in 1988. It was West Virginia's A&M appearance in the game. It was the second shutout in Kickoff Classic history. Florida State blanked Kansas 42-0 last year. Former coach recalls 'big shoes' 5 Dick Harp, who coached the Kansas men's basketball team from 1956 to 1964, spoke at the James Naismith Dedication ceremony at Lawrence Memorial Cemetery Saturday afternoon. Basketball protege replaced the 'Phog' By Chesley Dohl Kansan sportswriter Dick Harp had big shoes to fill, following in the footsteps of legendary Kansas basketball coaches James Naismith and F.C. "Phog" Allen. Harp said he realized that when he first stepped into the coaching position. "One thing about Naismith was that he genuinely cared for young people — they were a very significant part of his life," said Harp, former Kansas men's basketball coach from 1956 to 1964. "I, too, have enjoyed working with young people all my life. There's nothing I would rather do. I wouldn't change a thing." Born in Kansas City, Kan., in 1918, it wasn't long before Harp was walking, running and tackling neighborhood kids in sandlot football. "Times were different then, and kids had to be more inventive," said Harp, who attended the James Naismith Dedication Ceremony on Saturday. "I was fortunate to have an area to play tackle football. I started in grass and gravel, and I thought if I survived that, I might as well keep it up." Harp said he followed Kansas athletics even before he competed in junior high and high school sports. After a successful high school career, Harp received letters from Coach Phog Allen asking him to tryout for the Kansas basketball team. He did, and be made the team. He did, and he made the team. Harp played under Allen for four years, lettering in three of them. He started at guard and was co-captain of the 1939-40 Kansas team that lost to Indiana in the NCAA final. During those years, Harp took an interest in the coaching philosophy of the legendary basketball coach. "He could be very aggressive about coaching, but he never was a big yeller on the court," Harp said. "He was always more of a teacher of the sport." After his senior year at Kansas, Harp went on to law school at the University of Missouri in Kansas City, Mo. Shortly after, Allen recommended Harp for a coaching position at William Jewell College in Liberty. Mo. Harp said he enjoyed coaching at the college but, at the request of Allen, returned to Kansas in June 1948 to assist in coaching. John Gosset, operations manager for the Dr. James Naismith Basketball Foundation in Almonte, Ontario, birthplace of Naismith, said he had spent much of his life studying the life of Naismith. He said Harp was similar to Naismith. "Dick Harp, to me, would represent a model of Naismith," Gosset said. "He is a great reflection of the Naismith way." In 1956, his first year, Harp coached one of the Kansas basketball's all-time greats, Wilt Chamberlain. Harp said the transition of playing, studying and then coaching the game under Allen was not particularly difficult. "Wilt was the prototype player everyone wanted to have," he said. "Wilt was a complete athlete — he was a 7-foot young man who could run, jump and shoot the ball." Harp coached Kansas to the NCAA finals in 1957 when Kansas suffered a heart-breaking loss to North Carolina in the championship game. Harp is one of only five people in the nation to have both played and coached in the NCAA Finals. "As a player, it was a privilege to play in a championship," Harp said. "And then it was the right circumstances that brought me to coach in the NCAA finals. It was surely an honor." Harp retired in 1964, to serve as the vice president of the National Fellowship of Christian Athletes, based in Kansas City, Mo. "For 19 years I had the opportunity to serve and be involved with young people," he said. "I witnessed people adding a new dimension to their lives — a spiritual side." After retiring, Harp assisted Dean Smith in North Carolina from 1986-1989. "Dean left an opportunity for me to come down," he said. "It was a nice experience. It was sort of a serendipity in an old man's years." During the basketball season, Harp often is seen at Kansas basketball practices sitting in the bleachers of Allen Field House, analyzing the workouts and watching the players. "Sports have been a part of my life from the time I could play street ball," he said. "I've been fortunate to find opportunities to continue being a part of athletics all my life." --in the 26 years since the beginning of the open era, six women have won 21 titles, led by Evert's six and Navratilova's four. Graf, Billie Jean King and Margaret Smith Court each won three times, Seles and Tracy Austin captured two crowns, while Virginia Wade, Hana Mandlikova and Gabriela Sabatini each wrote their name into the record books once. Notebook: Houston Cougars The Houston Cougars' future success may lie in the youth of the team. Coming off a 1-9-1 season, the Houston football team has lost 24 lettermen, including 14 starters. OFFENSE! The bright spot for the Cougars is that coach Kim Helton is only in his second year after converting the offense from the run-and-shoot used in his first season. Houston had no tight ends and only three running backs when Helton installed his two-back offense. Helton, who spent 11 years as an NFL offensive line coach, has two tackles who could be the best in the Southwest Conference. Senior right tackle Billy Milner started all 11 games last season after finishing two years at Southwest Mississippi Community College, earning All-American honors. Junior left tackle Jimmy Hermdon started 21 straight games during his first two seasons before missing last year's season finale with an ankle injury. Houston also returns senior wide receiver Ron Peters, who was recruited during the run-and shoot days. In 1992, Peters led the top 50 receivers in the nation in vards a catch with a 26.2 average. DEFENSE: Houston's defense most likely will be led by their secondary by default. The Cougars will probably start four new defensive linemen and three new linebackers. The secondary is led by junior strong safety Gerome Williams, who started all 11 games in 1993 and had 86 tackles. The Cougars also return sophomore quarterback Chuck Clements. Battling Clements for the starting job is the coach's son, senior Clay Helton. After transferring from Auburn, Clay played in eight games in 1993. Compiled by Kansan sportswriter Matt Irwin 92 94 Yumi Chikamori / KANSAN Kansas senior defensive tackle Darnell Britt and junior defensive tackle Troy Harper work through tackling drills at the football practice field yesterday. The Jayhawks will open their season at 7 p.m. Thursday against Houston at Houston's Astrodome. Kansas women's pair to play in U.S. Open The Associated Press NEW YORK — Forget the domination of Chris Evert, Martina Navratilova, Monica Seles and Steffi Graf in women's tennis. "Anyone can win the U.S. Open," Arantxa Sanchez Vicario said. Of the 10 previous open era winners, only two—Graf and Satiniht — are in this year's 128-user field, Graf, the No. 1-ranked woman in the world, is top-seeded and one of the favorites. Still, Graf isn't the overwhelming choice she has been in the past. This year, she's only won one Grand Slam tournament title, the Australian Open. Sanchez Vicario won her second French Open title and her fellow Spaniard, Conchita Martinez, took Wimbledon by beating Navratilova in the final. Senior Nora Koves and Rebecca Jensen, who is planning to play professionally, earned their spot by winning the NCAA Division I Women's Doubles Championship last spring. One former University of Kansas tennis player and a returning Kansas senior player received wild-card berths in U.S. Open tournament doubles play. Kansas tennis coach Chuck Merzbacher was optimistic about their chances as doubles partners at the open. Today Koves and Jensen will be paired with their opponents and may have a chance to play on Center Court. They could be on national television if they draw a highly-seeded team, Merzbacher said. Kensan sportswriter Jenni Carlson contributed information to this story. "This is a first for both," Merzbacher said in reference to the pair not having played in a Grand Slam tournament. "I think physically they're as strong as the professional players, but they lack experience." he said. "It's an honor for them just to be there — they're tickled pink," he said. 2B The Etc. Shop DON'S AUTO CENTER "For All Your Repair Needs" *Imports & Domestics* *Machine Shop Service* *Parts Departments* 841-4833 920 E. 11th Street REVO Sunglasses 928 Mass. Downtown THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS PHI ALPHA DELTA PRE-LAW SOCIETY INVITES YOU TO A RUSH PARTY AUGUST 30,1994 AT 7:00 P.M. IN THE MALLOTT ROOM OF THE KANSAS UNION SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Refreshments will be provided If you have any questions: Shawna Hilleary at 749-5861 Brandy Sutton at 841-0113 Fitness for Women Only ♦ Treadmills, Stairmasters, Bicycles ♦ Nordic Track ♦ Weight Equipment ♦ Sauna & Shower ♦ Tanning ♦ Child care ♦ 20% Discount at Athlete's Foot to members Since 1980 ACE Certified Instructors Hourly Classes Combo, Low Impact, Reebok Step & Slide, Conditioning Seniorise STAND UP TO YOUR FEET FIRST WEEK FREE WITH COUPON Photo by David Turner FIRST WEEK FREE WITH COUPON BodyShapes Fitness Club 3320 Mesa Way 843-4040 Strike jeopardizes Royals' future Despite Kauffman's vision and a fruitful farm system, finances are still a concern The ^associated Press KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The long range plan that a dying Ewing Kauffman hoped would keep baseball in Kansas City is being damaged by the players' strike, team officials said. "If we can't find a buyer in this town, there could be an emotional buyer from another town," said Herman. "At which time you'd have to listen. Mr. K. asked us to try to find a local buyer. We're going to try." President Mike Herman believes if things don't work out and the big-market, small-market issues at the heart of the dispute are not resolved, the future of the Royals in Kansas City could be in doubt. "But if it continues the way it is, with escalating player salaries and the disparity of income between big and small markets, it seems unlikely we'll find a local buver." Kauffman, who died on Aug. 1, 1993, was one of baseball's wealthiest owners and possibly its most generous. Knowing he had terminal cancer, the self-made billionaire locked up expensive free agents such as pitcher David Cone, set aside millions to shore up the Royals' losses the next three years, and ordered an immediate build-up of the minor league system. Upon his death, a succession plan went into effect, pending IRS approval, that turns the club over to the Kansas City Community Foundation and Trust. It was all part of a plan to keep the team in Kansas City, with charities getting all proceeds from the sale of the club. But the strike has caused the Royals to close their important fall instructional league at just the time the minor league buildup seems to be bearing fruit. The Royals' payroll of more than $40 million was already causing the team to lose about $16 million even without a strike, Herman said, making the Royals No. 1 among major league money-losers. At a board meeting next Monday, consideration will be given to laying off full time employees, which was not done during the 51-day strike of 1981. "Our payroll right now is too high. I'll admit it," Herman said. "Mr. K. was willing to lose money. "But he knew our youth movement would come in strong, probably about 1996. And all these current long-term contracts would be expired, and we wouldn't have to renew them. Three of the Royals' minor league clubs have qualified for the playoffs and bright prospects seem to abound. "The game plan was by 1996, we'd have a powerful team. The big-market, small-market imbalance would be straightened out, and we could find the local buyer." “ Ourpayrollrightnow is too high. I'll admit it. Mr. Kwas willing to lose money. Mike Herman Kansas City Royals president including Sergio Numez, an infielder in the Gulf Coast Rookie League who's hitting 399. "We now have the best farm system we've ever had," Herman said. "But their development is being impeded by the strike." The bulk of Kauffman's huge estate will go to charity through the Kauffman Foundation, which would become ultimately responsible for the club if the succession plan does not go through. If a local owner is not found in three years, the foundation's directors would have some tough decisions to make. "The Royals add $200 million a year to the local economy," Herman said. "That's the way Mr. K, justified subsidizing the club. That was the way he always looked at the Royals. KU "I'm optimistic. With the kind of team we're going to have, we'll get the Royals to break even, and maybe get a local syndicate of investors. Just Look at ALL of These Ways YOU Can $ave Some Cash THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN C A R D KU Valid Through July 31, 1995 NCCS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 119 Stauffer-Flint Available at these locations: UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP 1116 W23rd Jayhawk Bookstore S KU KU BOOKSTORES *Second level in the Kansas Union Bookstore, at the Courtesy Counter *First Level in the Burge Union Bookstore, at the Courtesy Counter Restaurants 1819 W. 23rd = 842-1620 Get the daily special prices of every week 1420 Crescent Rd.·Lawrence, Ks. 66044 BLIMPIE SUBS AND SALADS 50 10 24 85 57 AMIGO'S BONANZA BUY 1 6" Cold Sub Sandwich, get 1 for 79£ **BOOKMARK** 2329 S. 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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 119 Stauffer-Filint 864-4358 20% OFF Any Private Party Classified Ad NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Monday, August 29.1994 3B Fraternities go underground to survive The Associated Press MIDDLEBURY, Vt. — The students meet surreptitiously — at a restaurant off campus or for a drive in the countryside. The arrangements, said one participant, would never be made on a campus phone. They are outlaws. If they are found out, they face suspension. They are fraternity brothers. Single-sex social organizations have been banned at Middlebury College, so the brothers of Delta Kappa Epsilon have gone underground. No boisterous beer bashes for them — in fact, they're barred from using their own house. They just have furtive meetings and a will to keep the Dekes alive. "My fraternity brothers have been my closest friends," said Michael Cohen, Boca Raton, Fla., who graduated from Middlebury in May. "Most of my great times at Middlebury have been with Delta Kappa Epsilon and not Middlebury (College). ... It's a tradition that shouldn't die." But not everyone agrees. To some students and college administrators, traditional fraternities are outmoded institutions that promote sexism and inequality. And they have become associated with alcohol abuse and hazing episodes in which students have died. Five of New England's elite private colleges, including Middlebury, have banned fraternities. At many of these schools, the fraternities led college social life for generations. The official end of the fraternity system at Middlebury, a liberal arts college of about 2,000 students, began in 1989 when a student-life study concluded the all-male fraternities were incompatible with college life. Sororities disappeared on their own in the early 1960s. The study coincided with a series of embarrassing incidents, including one in which a female mannequin was suspended in efty from the front of a fraternity house during a party. "We know men. We don't know women's issues," said David Easilick, executive director of the fraternity's national office in Grosse Point, Mich. "It would be a totally different experience." College trustees voted unanimously in 1900 to ban single-sex social organizations. Some fraternities chose to admit women and became part of the college's new social house system, which replaced fraternities as the center of social life. Others dissolved. Delta Kappa Epsilon refused to do either. The fraternity fought the ban in court and lost. Middlebury students have not been prohibited from belonging to fraternities, but they cannot participate in any fraternity activities, even off campus. "I don't believe the conduct of every organization is defensible," said Don Wyatt, Middlebury's vice president for undergraduate affairs. "I think (fraternity activity) is contrary to what our mission is." Wyatt said anyone caught violating the rules would be suspended. "It would be swift and severe," he said This policy has not deterred the underground frats, although Wyatt insisted that their activities are "greatly exaggerated." "It's a fairly natural thing in the death cycle of fraternies," said Jim Kolesar, representative for Williams College in Williamstown, Mass., where single-sex fraternities were banned in 1968, and underground fraternities flourished for years but have since died out. "We expected there would be underground activity and there was," said William R. Cotter, president of Colby College in Waterville, Maine, which banned fraternities in 1984. He said the influence of the secret fraternities was waning. THE NEWS in brief --- Tornadoes kill four; Four people were killed and 22 were injured as tornadoes tore across Wisconsin Saturday night, ripping up small communities and farms. Damage in Adams County was estimated to be $4.5 million. The bodies of an elderly couple were found in the wreckage of their home near Big Flats, Wis. A 3-year-old girl was killed when a trailer home was blown into a ditch. And a woman was killed when her van was blown off the road. SAN FRANCISCO 'Greasy Riders' end journey The transcontinental trek ended late Saturday with the van rolling under a welcoming banner reading "The Lard Car." The four women on board called themselves the "Greasy Riders", and they fueled their 1984 Chevy van with used french-fry oil from fast-food eateries for a trip of more than 3,000 miles. The journey began on Aug. 10. It was part of a "Fat of the Land" project designed to prove the feasibility of using vegetable oil as a vehicle fuel. BEIJING Prisoners provide organs Executed prisoners are the source of most organ transplants in China, and sometimes the donors are still alive when their organs are removed, said Human Rights Watch-Asia. Executions appear to be scheduled according to transplant needs, the human rights group said in a report scheduled for release today. In some cases, kidneys have been removed before execution. Some executions have been deliberately botched to keep the bodies alive, improving chances of organ transplant success, the group said. Officials try to secure troops WASHINGTON U. S. diplomatic and military officials hope to formalize promises next week from Caribbean nations for participation in an invasion of Haiti, the State Department said. Barbados, Jamaica and Belize have agreed to dispatch troops, and Antigua and the Bahamas are expected to do so as well, administration officials said Friday. Most troops would come from the United States. Ban might slow exit of Cubans HAVANA, Cuba — Fidel Castro barred children and teenagers yesterday from leaving aboard rickety rafts and boats fleeing the communist island. The report of the ban in a government newspaper was the first sign the Cuban leader could be cooperating with American efforts to stem the huge outflow of Cubans bound for U.S. shores. Recent storms that slowed flight from Cuba subsided yesterday, and hundreds of people gathered on beaches with innertubes and rafts to prepare to leave the island. A total of 130 refugees were picked up Saturday and taken to the U.S. Navy base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Thousands have been intercepted in the past week. "There is no work, no clothing, not even shoes. Every day things are getting worse," said Esteban Varela, 28, who was on the beach preparing to leave. He said his wife and child already have left Cuba. Compiled from The Associated Press. FREE PARKING WELCOME BACK STUDENTS... CYCLE TO CLASS AND FORGET ABOUT: - Fun Exercise - Easy Access - Low Cost *Auto Insurance *Oil Changes *Parking Stickers - Meter Maids * Air Pollution * Climbing Steps I HOURS: Mon-Sat:9:30-6 Thurs 'til 8 Sun:Noon 4:0 - Schwinn - Mongoose - Univega *Klein *Paramount *Kestrel - Santana - Yakota - Oakley CYCLE WORKS WORKS Where EVERYDAY you get more for your bucks 1601 West 23rd Lawrence, KS 842-6363 Sports Combination Ticket Distribution Read this before picking up your tickets. YOUR ASSIGNED PICK-UP DATE IS AS FOLLOWS: Where: Memorial Stadium, South End, Underneath the scoreboard. Time: 8:30 am-4:00 pm Dates: (see schedule below) A-E Monday,August29 F-K Tuesday,August30 L-R Wednesday,August31 S-Z Thursday,September1 (Make-Up) Friday, September 2 (Make-Up) Friday, September 2 - If you miss your assigned pick-up date you may pick-up your tickets at the Athletic Ticket Office in the East lobby of Allen Fieldhouse. - Youmaypickuponlyyourownticket. - You must bring your KUID with a current FALL 1994 fee sticker to receive your tickets. - You will receive your football tickets only at this time. You will receive the Men's Basketball and Kansas Relays portion of your sports combo at a later date. More detailed information will be available at pick-up. Home Opener, Saturday Night, September 10, 7:00 pm - Jayhawks vs. Michigan State NATURALWAY 820-822 Mass.841-0100 UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Weights 3 4 5 We Buy, Sell Trade & Consign USED & New Sports Equipment used weights—.25cents per lb. PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 1029 Massachusetts phone 841-PLAY FUTONS K.C. Based Manufacturer with 6 Retail Locations This Complete Futon & Frame $269 Twin Futon & Frame $99 Abdiana FUTON Exclusively Hardwood Frames 1023 Mass. St. Lawrence, KS 843-8222 This Complete Futon & Frame $269 Abdiiana JOY B Sports Bar & Grill Westridge Shopping Center 6th & Kasold 865-4040 15¢ wings 1.50 domestic bottles Friday 22 oz. night 2.25 22oz. beer 4.95 22 oz.hot beef sandwiches 3 Big Screen TV's • NTN Trivia • Keno Monday Night Football 15¢ wings 1.50 domestic bottles GET IN SHAPE! I COME JOIN ANY TIME ANY PLACE 32 Weekly Classes! Sessions begin August 29th. More information available in 208 Robinson or call 864-3546. The University of Kansas Bowling Team Orientation Meeting Monday, August 29, 7:00 p.m. Kansas Union Jaybowl Level One of the Kansas Union. You can represent KU in men's or women's intercollegiate bowling competition. For more information contact Michael Fine, 864-3545. KU KU --- --- UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Monday. August 29. 1994 SHIPPING AND DATA ENTRY ASSISTANTS NEEDED Lawrence-based, technical publishing company has several part-time (15-20 hours per week) positions including: managing orders; surfing and mailing statements; copying computer disks for inventory; daily mail delivery to and pickup from the post office; ipaging subscription orders into a computer; and sifting through customer databases with high volume and working as a term required. Ability to maneuver up to 50 pounds and type 50 wren preferred. These positions are part of a large team that includes staff which help other areas of the company as needed. R&D Publications, Inc. is an equal opportunity employer concerned with creating a pleasant work atmosphere. If you are looking for an enjoyable work environment with a reliable company, please come by and fill out an application at 101 West 23rd Street, Suite 210, Lawrence, KS. 5B RD Position Description for the Oread and the UDK. The Office of Systems Development has a half-time Student Monthly position responsible for assisting in maintaining the Apple/Talk/EtherTalk environment, providing software support in Student Affairs, Student Life and Educational Services. Must be currently enrolled during the appointment period. Position requires 50% coursework (£650.00/month) 50% assignment and 20 hours per week. Letter of application, resume, and three professional references to: Mr. Dawid J. Ryan, Systems Specialist II. 37 Strong Hill. All materials are required to: p.m., Tuesday, September 19, 2014. EA/MA Preschool Sub Prefer 7.1, 11-30, 30; or all day any weekday. Jr or Sr in child related field. Center experience (not required). PUBLICATIONS COORDINATING (Student University on Independent Living, Life Spa Institute, University of Kansas, $4.25 or 60.50 depending on experience, 20 hours per week, must be enrolled at the University of Kansas. Complete application in Room 4089 Dole Bldg, University of Kansas. For questions contact Parn Wilts, 884-4094. Application deadline: August 20, 1984. The University of Kansas is equal opportunity affirmative action employer EARN CASH ON THE SPOT $15 Today $30 This week By donating your life saving blood plasma WALK-INS WELCOME! NABI Biomedical Center 816 W 24th 749-5750 Rainie Montessori School located on thirteen acres with horses and a pot-bellied pig named Wilber is looking for a classroom assistant. Hours are available Monday through Friday. Wilber will train. Transportation required, call 843-800-9161. reception needed for Sizzers, 910 kubernetes. After- noms and some Saturday Approvals. Approximately 30 miles from campus. Retired college professor needs local college student (male) to stay overnight. Can sleep on the job and earn $25. Must be available during vacations. R. S. Raymond 215 Arkansas 841:8343 Secretary, 1-6 p.m. weekdays. General office duties include record keeping, computer skills and record keeping for young children. Word Perfect for Windows 2005. Children's Learning Center 205 N Michigan EOE. Mon-Fri. 1015 Iowa SIRLOIN STOCKADE Now hire all restaurant positions. No experience required. Apply in person SPRING BREAK *95*- SELL TRIPS, EARN CASH & GO FREELY !!! Student Travel Services is now hiring campus representatives. Lowest rates to attend. Call 1-800-649-4890. Panama City Beach. Call 1-800-649-4890. STUDENTS "saw a money?" Job hunt going nowhere! "I have no money!" Company now hiring part and full time motivated people to meet the expelling demand for our producers. We have available. Call K-C. ffc 816/3231 1941 8:30. Same phone." Teacher Aide 1:0d 1-5:30 p.m weekdays. Classroom experience with preschool children preferred but children in kindergarten & learning Center, 200 N Michigan EOE Waits needed for sorority house Waiters needed for sorority house Please call 865-0649 or 865-3798. Advertising Pagination Macintosh Proficient $6-8/hour depending on ability to produce. Must be capable of working on Quark XPress in a fastpaced, progressive newspaper setting. You'll use a Macintosh computer to build pages for the Daily Kansan by placing ads on pre-formatted templates. Accuracy and dependability are crucial qualifications. We're looking for a capable problem-solver who can take responsibility while gaining expertise on cutting-edge technology. The Kansan is an awardwinning newspaper that has been nationally recognized repeatedly for leadership through innovation. Mornings-approx. 4 hours Mon Fri You'll become familiar with a wide range of Macintosh-compatible hardware and software that's common in professional advertising, publications, promotional and design agency environments. Call Catherine Ellsworth at 864-4810 between 1 and 6 p.m. Advertising Production Artist THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Macintosh Proficient $6-8/hour depending on ability to produce. ability to produce Flexible hours. Must be capable of designing ads in a deadline-sensitive newspaper setting using Quark XPress for the Macintosh. Experience with Adobe Photoshop helpful, though will consider a quick study. You'll be using cutting-edge computer technology to produce advertisements according to the layouts developed by our clients and account executives. The Kansan is an award-winning newspaper that has been nationally recognized repeatedly for leadership through innovation and has captured several advertising design awards. You'll become skilled with a wide range of Macintosh-compatible hardware and software that's common in professional advertising, publications, promotional and design agency environments. Call Catherine Ellsworth at 864-4810 between 1 and 6 p.m. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Vanted Painter - Maintenance assistant part- time for property management, good pay, resume requirements. Job is based in New York. Work in Biry. If you have transportation can drive 15 minutes to work, and need a flexible scheduler, ask for one on the assembly production. Customer will accept people at 4 to 6 hours a night at 1 to 5 days a week. If your schedule permits and you are needing extra $£, please contact our office immediately. Manpower. WORK STUDY! The School of Business has many work study positions available now. Please come o the Business Placement Center in 125 Summer-ield to apply. 225 Professional Services < Driver Education > offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841.7749 Be healthier and happier! Have fun with massage therapy! Student discounts available 212 · Massachusetts Suite 216 729 · Lunarus and Laura Place at 841-1587 Tarot card classes Love's Success? Career? As featured in the U.S. and 105.9 The Laser. Student discount at 841-1587 S X ||||| Rick Frydman, Attorney 701 Veterans University 843-4023 For free consultation call DUL/TRAFFIC TICKETS OVERLAND PARK-KANSAS CITY AREA CHARLES R. GREEN ATTORNEY AT LAW CARE FOR A FREE TUTOR. English courses, writing, proofreading, literature, ESL classes. Highly recommended tutors. Female Care care provider for individual who is mentally handicapped. Mon./Thurs. overnight starts at 3PM and two Sat. per month. Prefer upper classman or grad. student who has experience working with disabled individuals. References required. Send reply to Carol Koppes P.O. 67532 Topeka, KS 66557-6031 or call 913-271-8420. 486a125 notebook 4mg RAM, 120MB HD, Monochrome, Built-in trackball, 2 PCMCIA Slots. Dos.Windows. Leather case, 3 months old. $1375, 843-8403 305 For Sale SUNFLOWER RIKE SHOP 300s Merchandise SUNFLOWER OUTDOOR SAILBOARD CLOSE-OUTS Mislair, H Fly, O'Brien. Get one cheap. 804 Massachusetts 843-5000 TRAFFIC-DUU'S Fake D's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of DONALD G. STROLE Donald G. Strole 16 East 13th 842-1133 Wanted: Time part teacher for home day care 10-15 hrs./week. Exp.rexf. # 841-781 Tune-ups, overhalls, up-grades, free air. 304 Massachusetts MA-900. BRAXTON B. COPLEY Attorney at Law General Practice We carry Bianchi, Specialized and Trek. Plus accessories & a full service like shop, Layaway 235 Typing Services Work Study! The School of Business has many work study positions available now. Please come to the business placement center in 125 Summerfield to apply. Quality Word Processing Dissertations. These, are the works of business students, Business letters, etc. Laser printing. 655-0022 SUNFLOWER BIKE SHOP Amerec 610 rowing machine $100.98/1721 Beds, Desks, Bookcases Everything In Ice 719 Massachusetts 749-5333 IT'S BEST? 'Put my service to you. For anything you need at all. MAKIN' THE GRADE is the one to call. justices i-der Women Word Processing. Former editor transforms scribbles into accurate pages of letter quality type. Also transcriptions. 843-2063 Traffic Tickets, Misdemeanors, Landlord/Tenant WANT YOUR WORK TO LOOK IT'S BEST! For Car Sales 18000 Cervice Mobil 4-20er,automatisch,at mächtig.For Sale 18000 Cervice Mobil 4-20er,automatisch,at mächtig. 2 and 3 way speakers for sale. Will also custom build Blowon woofers? Torn grills! Will repair. NON-REQUIRED. FOR SALE-New Carpeting*1x28-48 1x24-48 estates real good $30 Call 799-2522 real good $30 Call 799-2522 936 MASS Curtis Audio FOR SALE: Apple II GS 3.5 and 3.5 drives, monitor possible, $500, Call 842-3411 King Waterbed mirrored, headboard $150, 17000TU AC$200, Nintendo and toybrick $50, Wood Hutch $50, Antique Coffee Table $150 Call 865-689 After 6:00 p.m. Macintosh computer and printer $600 w/ wr/ Macintosh Roland keyboard synthesizer $600 Matt 841 959-3276 Macintosh Plus with metro 20HD and Image write- ture in top condition, $650 or best offer. 841-1904 1994 Need a sofa? We have a used one for $44! Blue and seven feet, seven feet between 5 and 10. Phone: 651-0825 between 5 and 10. Nikon F5 High Eye Ref. in, in box. Cost $1200. Sell 8500 or best offer. I37-921-7351. Titutions jackup. 945 Vermont 50¢ SUMMER SALE August 25 to September 6 STUDENTS! Rent a computer; software, and $120 a semester. Call 1-800-958-0494 for information. Zenith Laptop (Z181) and Panasonic Printer Software (Z600). Both computers support both computer and printer 450, 894, 894-006 and 894-006. 1977 Dodge Aspen station wagon - runs well. Make offer 841-4400. 340 Auto Sales 360 Miscellaneous EARNCASH $15 Today $30 This Week Plus a $3 Bonus Bonus By donating your blood plasma Show your student ID car between Aug. 7 and Aug. 31 and receive a $3 bonus on your second donation of the month. Walk-ins welcome walk-ins welcome Lawrence Donor Center Hours: M-F 9-6:30 Sat.10-4 $ 816 W.24th Behind Laird Noller Ford 749-5750 NABI The Quality Source A 400s Real Estate Looking for a place to live? - Computer room with 405 For Rent - Free Utilities - Check out these housing options... - Fullyfurnished - IBMComputers - Quiet Study Areas and carpeted NAISMITH HALL Apple Macintosh and Call Naismith Hall for More Information at 843-8559 Kansan Classifieds Call 864-4358 Mon-Fri 8am-5pm THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Available now in Lawrence 1 to 4 BDRM Home. 842-2388 SUNFLOWER OUTDOOR & BIKE SHOP Looking for a place to live? Check out these housing options... - Front door bus service - Fitness room - Dine anytime meals - Weekly maid service - Private parking Call naismith Hall for more information at 843-8559 NAISMITH Looking for a place to live? Check out these housing options... - Laundry Facilities - Great campus location - A few steps from Allen Fieldhouse NAISMITH HALL Call Naismith Hall for More information at 843-8559 PETS WELCOME No Sublease Fee ORCHARD CORNERS COMPLETELY FURNISHED A BEDROOM South Pointe - On KUBus Route * Close to Campus * SwimmingPool * Stop By Today! Equal 749-4226 M-F 9-5 Opportunity 15th & Kasold Sat 10-4 4 BEDROOM 1230 Tennessee. Unfurnished 2 bdmr, utilities paid, carpeted, no pets. $320 mo. 823-2718 For Rent: MORNING STAR for rooms and apartments and well kept older homes. $MORNING (2022) 2166 W. 26th St. 843-6446 Diplex Close to RU Stadium, large two bedroom, 3 bedrooms. $800 per month. Beverage 825-134 or 866-3124. 866-3124. 866-3124. Fabulous 48mh. house for rent, clean and new room with balcony. No pets. Call 423-7459 available immediately. FEDOROUM APARTMENT Great, plan 2, bath on, no route, NO PETS. AWIVER House For Rent: Four bedroom, central air, washer/dryer hookups, fireplace, 2 bath, all appliances, off street parking. Convenient to RU and downtown. $975/mo. plus call. Deposit #484-8684. Quiet, comfortable, furnished rooms and apartments. Two short blocks from campus. Some utilities paid. Off-street parking. No pets. Call 841-5500. - Swimming Pool G. 2. BDRM apt. off campus. Avail. immed. Lower level garden; new kitchen overlooking living room. Full carpet; working fireplace, dry, A/C. Very clean! $400 + utilities. 841- 1389 - Close to KU Bus Route - Sand Volleyball Court - Ample Private Parking - Water & Trash Paid Outstanding New Staff!!! Semi-private room/apt, spacious and comfort- ful. Call the nearest neighbour's bus route or walking distance of Private-bath. Microwave; laundry privileges; utilities and tools. Prefer mature responsibility/abd/entertainment as $890 per person. Two possible work in exchange for partial rent. No pets. Refs req. 843-7736 after 5 or leave message and train pat. 189-7353 Walk to KU. One bedroom apartment in older house. $800/month, utilities paid, no pets, deposit. Call 843-1835 after p.m. TRAILRIDE APARTMENTS One bedroom available immediately. Gas, water and trailing roof. 430 Roommate Wanted Grad. student study roommate for 3-bdm. apt. of building number 2802 mco. +154967192800 mco. +1 electricity, N/S preferred. 749-3434 ROOMMATE FINDER Non-smoking female $250/month plus utilities 3 bedroom condo Washers/dryer. For more info call NEED A ROOMMATE? 841-5454 A&S MANAGEMENT SERVICES - By phone: 864-4358 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ROMATEM WANTED! FE N / n' House w/ own phone. Quiet length! Please call 841-3847. Quiet length! Please call 841-3847. How to schedule an ad: One roommate to share 2 BR duplex house. Close to campus. Call 749-7949 or 884-0687. Ads phoned in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made. Step by Step the Kansas office between 8 a. m. and 5 p. m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on masterCard or Visa. Classified Information and order form 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 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 gale 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. Do not include When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available. The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00. Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. | | Num. of insertions: | IX | 2-3X | 4-7X | 8-14X | 15-29X | 30-X | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 3 lines | | 2.10 | 1.60 | 1.10 | .90 | .75 | .50 | | 4 lines | | 1.95 | 1.20 | .80 | .70 | .65 | .45 | | 5-7 lines | | 1.90 | 1.10 | .75 | .65 | .60 | .40 | | 8+ lines | | 1.80 | .95 | .65 | .60 | .55 | .35 | Rates per line per day Example: 3 lines for 5 days — 3 lines X 5 days X $1.10=$16.50 ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print: Classifications 105 personal 110 business personalis 120 announcements 130 entertainment 140 book friend 385 for sale 269 helped walk 384 auto sales 225 professional services 360 miscellaneous 225 yelling service 370 want to buy 405 for rent 430 roommate wanted 1 2 3 4 5 Name: Phone: Date ad begins:___ Total days in paper___ Total ad cost:___ Classification___ **VISA** Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard (Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansan) Furnish the following if you are charging your ad: Account number: Print exact name appearing on credit card: _Expiration Date: MasterCard Signature: The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045 THE FAR SIDE By GARY LARSON 9. 17 Session © 1987 Ralph W. Smith by Universal Press Syndicate His rifle poised, Gus burst through the door, stopped, and listened. Nothing but the gentle sound of running water and the rustling of magazines could be heard. The trail, apparently, had been false. 6B Monday, August 29, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WE CAN'T HELP YOU WIN THE RAT RACE, BUT WE CAN HELP YOU FINISH. 一 It's a busy world and it's sometimes hard to know what activity to pursue.And when we need medical attention it can be frustrating trying to find the best place to go for help. PENNANT At times like these,it's comforting to know that the profes- and the most experienced therapists and specialists in Douglas County. Lawrence Occupational Health Services 865-0700 Lawrence PromptCare is a full service urgent care center and a fast, economical way to seek medical attention. Staffed by experienced and Lawrence PromptCare. 865-3997 Lawrence Occupational Health Services offers a full range of industrial medicine options, including injury management,drug screening, physical therapy, occupational therapy and work hardening Prompt evaluations,courteous and timely service, flexible hours and plenty of convenient,accessible sionals at the new Mt. Oread Medical Arts Centre are there to lend a hand with expanded services. board certified emergency medical physicians. Open 9 am-11pm,M-F and 12 noon-11pm weekends,no appointment is necessary—you'll be greeted by a nurse immediately and treated fast some visits can cost you as little as $45. Lawrence PromptCare is an excellent alternative to long waits in the emergency room or when you can't see your regular physician. Mt. Oread Rehabilitation Services 832-1900 Mt. Oread Rehabilitation Services offers comprehensive rehab services including physical therapy and occupational therapy with specialization in sports medicine. Under the direction of Medical Director, Michael Geist, M.D. the program offers the broadest range of rehabilitation services M.L. ORLAD MEDICAL ARTS CENTRE parking make Mt. Oread Medical Arts Centre an agreeable health care alternative. KASOLD & CLINTON PARKWAY CAMPUS A forum last night gave about 20 women an opportunity to voice their concerns about recent rapes. Page 6A FEATURES CHANCE OF RAIN Lawrence's latest gay and lesbian bar has opened to large crowds. Page 3B High 87° Low 64° Weather: Page 2. KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA, KS 66612 RAIN THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS VOL.104,NO.7 ADVERTISING: 864-4358 TUESDAY. AUGUST 30, 1994 (USPS 650-640) NEWS: 864 4810 Campus crime on the decline Crime at KU Crimes reported to campus police during the last three years. 1901 1902 1903 Rape 5 1 0 Motor vehicle theft 9 11 5 Robbery 3 3 4 Burglary 123 115 200 Source: University relations Robbery 3 3 4 Burglary 123 116 200 Source: University relations Statistics show campus safer for KU students Dave Campbell / KANSAN The likelihood a KU student on the Lawrence campus would be a victim of crime decreased throughout the past three years, according to statistics released by the University. "In Fall 1993, a KU student had a one-in-111 chance of being a crime victim," said KU police Sgt. Rose Rozmiarek. "That compares with one-in-89 in Fall 1992 and one-in-76 in Fall 1991." The figures are based on the calendar year and represent all reported crimes on the Lawrence campus. Even though crime rates on the Lawrence campus might be on the decline, Rozmiarek said it was important to be aware of one's surroundings. "The University doesn't have a bubble around it," she said. "People need to remember to lock their doors, not leave their book bags around even for a minute and secure their bikes." While the number of rapes reported on campus went from five in 1991 to zero last year, three have been reported this year, Rozmiaak said. Rape is one of the most underreported crimes on campus, she said. "Often people will report something to someone else, not the police," Rozmiarek said. "Reporting crime to other agencies is a national trend." In 1992, four rapes were reported to other agencies on campus, such as the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center. Three were reported to other agencies in 1993. "Date rape is so underreported," said Barbara Ballard, director of the center. "With all the recent publicity, maybe more people will come forward." The statistics are compiled annually in accordance with the federal Student Right-to-Know and Campus Security Act. That act requires that each year, colleges report statistics of all campus crimes from the three previous years. The University also prints crime statistics and related information in the Timetable and in "Awareness," a University safety publication for students, faculty and staff. Professor makes jazz a way of life BUSKINS CENTER PROFILE Jarrett Lane / KANSAN Dick Wright broadcasts his show, "The Jazz Scene." Wright is an associate professor of music history, and his show has aired for the past 34 years. Special to the Kansan By Jarrett Lane Jazz music lovers, tune in your radio dial at 10 a.m. Saturday mornings to FM 91.5. The reason: "The Jazz Scene" with host Dick Wright. Wright has broadcast his show from the studios of KANU for more than 34 years and has been associated with the station since 1956, when he was hired as music director. Wright playsvintage and contemporary jazz during his three-hour show and often adds insight about the artist and history of recordings. He has one of the largest and most widely recognized collections of jazz recordings in the country. Twelve years ago, he donated more than 20,000 jazz recordings to the University of Kansas. Jazz teachers and musicians all throughout the country know of Wright's record collection and his knowledge of jazz history. They write and call him looking for rare recordings and information. "I supply tapes to a lot of the great jazz musicians who are looking for them," Wright said. "And a lot of schools with jazz programs want to have jazz recordings for their students, and they can't find access to them. So I make them tapes and material." Wright couldn't be happier to help. "I spend about three hours a night in my basement making tapes for people and doing research," Wright said. Recently saxophonist Rick Margitza wrote to Wright See PROFESSOR, Page 6A. Variety, vandalism mark station's history By Jarrett Lane Special to the Kansan When Howard Hill came to KANU, KU's public-radio station, in 1977 as station director, he thought he would be running a fairly typical radio station. But he soon found that typical wasn't the proper word. "If you had told me then that I would be running a radio station that had a troupe of actors, a house band, a pianist ... comedy shows and variety shows, I would have said, 'No, no I don't think that's what we do in radio anymore,' he said. "But we do, and I glad we do." Variety is the word for KANU. Programming includes such award-winning comedy and variety shows as The Imagination Workshop and The Goodtime Radio Revue, as well as classical music, jazz and news. The station came into being in 1952, and in 1971, KANU joined the National Public Radio network. For more than 40 years, KANU, 91.5 FM, has broadcast from KU. Daisy Hill, one of the highest points in Kansas, was the site chosen for the first tower, and in the winter of 1950, construction began. On Dec.28,1950, while under construction, 400 feet of the 514-foot tower collapsed. Newspaper reports at the time suggested that vandals were responsible for the collapse. Trouble has plagued the KANU towers since the station's inception. In 1960, the tower fell during a storm. Massachusetts redevelopment A plan advanced by the city of Lawrence would completely redevelop the 1000 block of Massachusetts within the year. Jo Andersen, Lawrence mayor, said the plan probably would not be enacted but would spur independent development. 10th Street Retail shops Office space Residential apartments Massachusetts Street 11th Street Courtyard, plantings Dunlap County County house The rebuilt tower, raised in 1983, had to be moved to make way for the Lied Center. The third collapse occurred in 1982, once again the victim of vandals, newspaper reports indicated. But some setbacks can turn into advantages. Because the station was not broadcasting in 1960 while the tower was being rebuilt, the money designated for operating expenses was not being used. Instead, it was set aside and used to purchase stereo broadcasting equipment. Thus, in 1961, the station was the first noncommercial radio station in the nation to broadcast in stereo. Source: Kansan staff research Students design a new look for downtown area By Carlos Tejada Kansan staff writer Brad Satterwhite has had a hand in the hypothetical future of downtown Lawrence. Satterwhite, Overland Park senior, was one of three architecture students who worked with the City of Lawrence last spring to redesign the 1000 block of Massachusetts Street, where businesses such as the Granada and the Drake Snack Shop now stand. Although the project is strictly conjecture, city leaders hope the redevelopment plan will spur private businesses on the block to engage in redevelopment of their own. "This was a good project for us," Satterwhite said. "We got to work with a real developer and work on a large-scale project." Members of a design class in the School of Architecture and Urban Design divided into teams and spent 10 weeks designing the block to accommodate retail, residential and office space. Satterthy and his two teammates designed the winning blueprint, which was chosen by the Lawrence City Commission in late May. "It was a little much to fit into one block, but we tried to do it anyway," said Susan Romano, St. Louis fifth-year student and team member. The result was a glass and stone construction with three-story buildings, a pedestrian alley and a courtyard. Retail stores would run along Massachusetts Street, Romano said. Parking would be supplied in a two-story garage under the block. Jo Andersen, Lawrence mayor, said the plan had little or no chance to be implemented. Rather, she said, offering a plan for development would inspire the current lot owners on the block to think about redevelopment schemes of their own. "Right now, the development is going on in our minds," Anderson said. "It's conceptual." The redevelopment plan, which was written by the Downtown Redevelopment Task Force of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, also suggests funding options. According to the report, area property taxes and bonds would help defray the projected $35 million cost. The 700 block of New Hampshire Street is also a possible redevelopment area. Andersen said. But one business owner said such plans were detrimental to redevelopment. Scott Schmalberg, president of Scotch Industries, 1026 Massachusetts St., said business owners wouldn't develop their property or make new investments on the block if they thought it was going to be torn down in the future. Even the suggestion of redevelopment could scare them off, he said. "Nobody would buy a building on this block then go through forced condemnation of their property," he said. INSIDE With three strong running backs, Kansas football coach Glen Mason has moved senior George White to the wingback position,a new addition to the offensive attack. Page 1B. NATHANIEL J. MAYER Student leaders give input in search for chancellor By James Evans Kansan staff writer Sherman Reeves and Jennifer Ford are only two members of the 17-member chancellor search committee. But in the next few months, Reeves, student body president, and Ford, Lawrence senior and Truman scholar, will provide the only student perspectives on what kind of chancellor the University of Kansas should choose. Both said they would be looking for specific qualities in the candidates they recommended. Reeves said it would be difficult to find a candidate who would live up to all the credentials written out in the formal criteria for the position "We have the impossible task of finding the uber chancellor," he said. Ford agreed that an uber, or all-encompassing, candidate would be difficult to find. Ford said the committee never should stress one item in the criteria above another. "By making really rigid guidelines — saying the chancellor absolutely has to be this, and the chancellor absolutely has to be that— we're just setting ourselves up," she said. "There are so many things we want the chancellor to be," she said. But, Reeves said, one specific quality he would be looking for in the candidates was an ability to interact with students. "I think it is very important because a chancellor does set the atmosphere for the campus," he said. "The way he interacts with the staff, the administrators, the faculty or the students really does set the environment of the campus. It can be a sort of distant environment, or it can be very up-close and personal, and that's what we're after." Ford said that although it would be an asset for the chancellor to be more interactive with all members of the campus community, it also was important that the chancellor continued his or her regular duties. "We certainly don't want somebody who is friendly at the expense of being an efficient chancellor." she said Ford also said she wanted to find a candidate who was interested in promoting internships and experience-oriented learning. Ford said her main goal was to try to help the committee find the best candidate for the job. She said she would judge candidates on what they thought the vision and mission of the University should be. Reeves said it would be difficult to find an educational superman who would meet all of his expectations. The new chancellor will have to fill numerous roles, he said. Both Ford and Reeves said they were optimistic that the committee would find an ideal candidate. "I think we need to be more receptive to new educational techniques," she said. "I think we need to be careful that we don't have a vision of the University that doesn't allow flexibility and change." STRONG HALL Sherman Reeves, student body president, and Jennifer Ford, Lawrence senior, are the two student representatives aiding in the search for a new chancellor. + 2A Tuesday, August 30, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ★ Horoscopes HAPPY BIRTHDAY IN THE NEXT YEAR OF YOUR LIFE. Lots of big decisions lie just ahead! Trust your instincts when presented with two attractive choices. Original ideas will send your career in a new direction in November. Give your work top priority from late December through early 1995. Higher ups will applaud your efforts; expect a raise by spring. A fitness program is favored if you follow doctor's orders. A temporary separation could enhance a romantic relationship. T CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DATE: Baseball Hall-of-Famer Ted Williams, actress Shirley Booth, civil rights leader Roy Wilkins, country singer Katie Wiltz. O ARIES (March 21-April 19): Business matters progress nicely now. A difference of opinion could lead to an important change of attitude. Weigh your financial choices with great care. II X TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Taking a greater interest in your community will bring you new social contacts. Harness your vivid imagination to practical endeavors. At work, strive for cooperation over confrontation. GEMINI (May 21; June 20). Your ability to turn a mistake into a financial plus will impress prominent associates. A change in job status is a distinct possibility. Complete routine work assignments on time. 69 **LIBRA** (Sept. 23-Oct. 22); Work conditions improve and so do profits. Be certain to meet any financial deadlines. Your efforts to pave the way for change would benefit from a new approach. Reach out to someone who can help. CANCER (June 21-July 22). Work at a steady pace today. A difficult coworker may interfere with your attempts to concentrate. Be firm where a question of privacy or confidentiality is involved. You are right to maintain high standards! π SAGITTARIO **GSCORPI (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):** Smarten up! Allow other to set the pace for joint activities. A willingness to compromise will be richly rewarded. Old friends show a new loyalty. Voice your appreciation, then show it in tangible ways. Q SAGITTARUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Information regarding the past helps you solve a current puzzle. The announcement of a change in a relationship is well-timed. Count on family members to be supportive but inquisitive. Tell them just enough! VS LEO (July 28-Aug. 22) Good timing is a vital part of your formula for success. Congenial contacts will help advance your career aims. Prove that your romantic partner's trust in you is well placed by keeping a promise. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Stick to projects already underway. A surprise bonus can be a cause for celebration. Check with loved ones before saying "yes" to an unusual invitation. Reading and research keep your mind in high gear. Water WP VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sep. 22): Longer work hours will result in a fatter paycheck. Discuss ways to improve a close relationship. A child's suggestion gives you fresh insights. Getting better organized on the home front will prevent lots of aggravation. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Expansion in conjunction with your business dealings is favored. Reevaluate a partnership. Spend your free time with a different crowd broadens your horizons. Meet others halfway. Issuing invitations will spice up your social life. X PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Romance could play a prominent role in the day's plan. Do those extra little things that endear you to family members. Mend any emotional fences that may have been knocked down in recent months. TODAY'S CHILDREN are thoughtful, highly intelligent and somewhat shy. Adventures and heroes mean little to these studious youngster. They constantly strive to improve themselves through education and on-the-job work habits. Count on these Virgos to become valued employees of any company that employs them. They are especially well-suited to a career as accountants, lawyers or mathematicians. Horoscopes are provided for entertainment purposes only. 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 $90. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee. **Postmaster:** Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 StauFFER-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045. ON CAMPUS OAKS — Non-Traditional Student 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 the OAKS office at 864-7317. International Students and Phi Beta Delta will sponsor a Worldview Lecture, "Ukraine: The Political Challenge of the 1990s," at noon today at Alcove A in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Carline Ullom at 864-4141. The Music Department will sponsor a lecture by Robin Wells, director of music at Charterhouse School in Godalming, England, at 3:30 p.m. today at Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. For more information, call Walter Clark at 864-3206. KU Study Abroad in French- speaking countries will sponsor an informational meeting at 4 p.m. today in room 4001 Wescoe. KU Women's Soccer Club will have an informational meeting and practice at 5 p.m. today at Robinson Soccer Field. For more information, call Megan Poplinger at 865-1642. Amnesty International will sponsor an informational meeting at 6 p.m. today at Alcove A in the Kansas Union. Hispanic American Leadership Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Jacqueline Flannigan at 844-8219. Water Polo Club will meet at 7 tonight at Robinson Natoratium. For more information, call David Reynolds at 749-1873. Phi Alpha Delta Pre-Law Society will have a rush party at 7 tonight at the Mallott Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Shawna Hilleary at 749-5861. Asian American Student Union will meet at 7:30 tonight at room 100 in Smith Hall. Center for East Asian Studies will sponsor a lecture, "Multiculturalism and the 'Disuniting of America,' by William Theodore de Bary, professor and provost emeritus at Columbia University, at 7:30 tonight at the Big 8 Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Bertha Jackson at 864-3849. Department of Communications Studies has scheduled the Oral Communication Exemption Exam for Thursday, September 8. Interested students must register in 3090 Wescoe by Sept. 2. A $10 nonrefundable deposit is required to register. Student Political Awareness Task Force will sponsor a voter registration drive from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. tomorrow on Wescoe Beach. For more information, call Mark Wilson at 865-0066. ON THE RECORD ■ Entertainment equipment valued at $26, 881 was stolen from two KU students Sunday afternoon, Lawrence police reported. Police said the burglar's walked in the apartment, which is located on the 2400 block of Alabama Street, through an unlocked back door. The burglar's stole 947 compact discs, a Packard Bell computer, a NEC cellular phone, an AIWA stereo, a fax machine and an Alpine car stereo, police said. A man who was moving out of his ex-girlfriend's apartment Saturday took more than $1,245 worth of the woman's belongings, including a Nagel painting, a Gucci watch, a suitcase and a cappuccino machine, police reported. Lawrence police Sgt. Rick Nickell said the police had contacted the man, who agreed to return the goods. A bicycle valued at $190 was stolen Saturday afternoon from an apartment in the 900 block of Pamela Lane, Lawrence police reported. Police said the bike was a 26-inch, turquoise15-speed Giant bicycle. ■ Merchandise valued a $350 was taken from a car that was broken into Saturday while parked in the 1000 block of Wellington, Lawrence police reported. Police said a Sony Discman, a compact disc case, compact discs and earphones were stolen from a 1984 Ford Bronco II sometime before 7:45 a.m. Weather YESTERDAYS TEMPS Lawrence Kansas City Topeka Wichita Omaha Tulsa Des Molnes St. Louis Chicago Atlanta New York Los Angeles Seattle HIGH LOW TODAY WEDNESDAY 40 percent chance for thunderstorms, partly sunny and humid T O M L O W 79° * 63° 86° * 56° 83° * 57° 100° * 71° 73° * 54° 94° * 73° 81° * 52° 96° * 63° 79° * 53° 91° * 74° 87° * 71° 90° * 68° 71° * 60° 8764 Cloudy and cooler with a slight chance of showers 7761 THURSDAY Partly cloudy and cool Source: Glenn Martin, KU Weather Service 7560 August 29,1994 Stock market report $ Dow Jones 17.80 3898.85 Shares Traded: 326,649,400 NYSE .46 261.28 ↑ Advances ↓ Declines Unchanged 1,237 Nasdaq .27 763.21 903 ASE 1.90 451.46 G ROLLERBLADE® BEDS DESKS BOOKCASES Everything But Ice 936 Mass. Rentals Sales PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 1029 Massachusetts 841-PLAY(7529) BE A TEAM PLAYER at the - Sign up in person or by phone ·Pay for 13 weeks in advance, get two weeks FREE ·FREE SHOE RENTAL for league bowlers ·Discounts and freebies! ·You don't have to be a pro to win! - Sign up in person or by phone Kansas Union Gallery Level 4, Kansas Union 9am-5pm Mon.- Frl. *You don't have to be a pro to win! Located on level one • Kansas Union • 864-3545 STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA THE UNIVERSITY OF SARASBURG Jaybowl KANSAS UNION Fall Leagues Are Forming Now! Monday Mixer Tuesday Varsity Mixer Wednesday Mixer Thursday Mixer 50% off all services Thursday Mixer Hairport 842-1978 925 Iowa Hillcrest Shopping Center valid only with a student ID POSTER SALE Recycled Sounds from Lawrence & KC U2 • Coltrane • Lemonheads • Joplin Rush • Bjork • Zappa • Soundgarden Kravitz • Resevoir Dogs • Cure • Ice T House of Pain • Hendrix • Dylan Smashing Pumpkins • Metallica Sting • Breeders Jane's Addiction BB King • Rage at the Machine Clapton • Blind Msg • Billie Holiday Stick • Beatles • Madonna • Beasties Led Zeppelin • Morrissey • Einstein Chilis • Depeche • Nirvana • Amos Pink Floyd • Taxi Driver • Marley Miles • Lush • Green Day • Movies Mon., August 29 - Fri., September 2 Sports Combination Ticket Distribution Read this before picking up your tickets. YOUR ASSIGNED PICK-UP DATE IS AS FOLLOWS: Where: Memorial Stadium, South End, Underneath the scoreboard. Time: 8:30 am-4:00 pm Dates: (see schedule below) A-E F-K L-R Monday,August29 Tuesday,August30 Wednesday,August31 Thursday,September1 S-Z (Make-Up) Friday, September 2 - If you miss your assigned pick-up date you may pick-up your tickets at the Athletic Ticket Office in the East lobby of Allen Fieldhouse. - You may pick up only your own ticket. - You must bring your KUID with a current FALL 1994 fee sticker to receive your tickets. - You will receive your football tickets only at this time. You will receive the Men's Basketball and Kansas Relays portion of your sports combo at a later date. More detailed information will be available at pick-up. Home Opener, Saturday Night, September 10, 7:00 pm - Jayhawks vs. Michigan State CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Tuesday, August 30, 1994 3A [Image of a multi-story residential building under construction, with scaffolding covering its upper and lower floors.] David Turner / KANSAN Arrangements were made for some women to temporarily move into Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall while Corbin Hall was under construction. Students play resident hall shuffle as Corbin renovations continue By Ashley Miller Kansan staff writer Allison Presley may not have electricity, but at least she is in her own room. The Overland Park freshman was one of 18 women displaced to Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall this semester because of construction work in Corbin Hall. The Department of Student Housing made arrangements during the summer to move the women from Corbin to GSP until the work was done. Presley was notified of the room change about one week prior to moving to Lawrence. She moved into Corbin from her temporary room in GSP Friday to find out the lights did not work. "Moving twice was a huge hassle, but I like this room a lot better than GSP." Presley said. Kenneth Stoner, director of Student Housing, said eight of the women displaced to GSP moved into Corbin last week. The remaining 10 should move in by next weekend. He said most of the current reconstruction was necessary because the residence hall did not meet building code standards. A second interior stairwell was added to provide residents with another fire escape. Several dead-end corridor walls also were knocked out to give residents more fire exits. "This prepares us for future renovations." Stoner said. In addition to the code upgrading, Corbin will have a new exterior and an adaptive living wing for handicapped residents. Stoner said the adaptive living wing would have slightly enlarged rooms for easier wheelchair accessibility and would house about 20 residents. Right now, there are no applicants for the adaptive living wing. Stoner said that unless someone requested to live on that floor, it would not be used until next fall. He said that the current construction was phase two of three and that it should take about six months to complete. Phase one of the reconstruction was completed four years ago. At that time, lighting near Corbin was improved, parking was expanded and one floor of Corbin was renovated for student housing offices. Phase three will not begin for three or four years, Stoner said. All of the rooms will be renovated then. Phases one and two cost about $1.3 million each, he said. Funding for the first two phases came from a student housing reserve fund. Money from each resident in student housing was set aside to build up the fund for occasions such as the reconstruction process, he said. Stoner said he thought the third phase would run in excess of $2 million. A bond may be necessary to pay for the third phase of reconstruction. Early figures do not reflect University enrollment By David Wilson Kansan staff writer After releasing first-day enrollment numbers Friday morning, KU administrators vowed never to release the figures again. David Shulenburger, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said first-day enrollment numbers never were an accurate reflection of how many students attended the University of Kansas each semester because it takes at least two weeks for students who enrolled late to show up in the computer. The difference, he said, could be as many as 2,000 students. "It's pretty significant," Shulen-burger said. This semester, 26,665 students were enrolled on the first day of classes, a drop of about 1 percent, or 289 students, from the first day of classes in Fall 1993. But in the 20 days after the first day of classes in Fall 1993, enrollment rose by 1,565 students. Administrators said they expected the same thing to happen this year. Shulenburger said Chancellor Del Shankel would ask the presidents of other Board of Regents schools to recommend to the Regents that in the future, only 20th-day enrollment numbers be released. The Legislature uses 20th-day enrollment numbers to determine how much money the University will receive from the state treasury, Shulenburger said. He said that most of the students who enrolled late had forgotten to pay tuition on time but that some students were expected to enroll on the first day of class. For example, public school teachers taking education classes don't enroll until the first night of class. Shulenburger said that even collecting the numbers was a waste of time. "It's pointless to collect and focus on those numbers," Shulen-burger said. "They really don't have any meaning." COME JOIN ANY TIME ANY PLACE GET I 32 Weekly Classes! 32 Weekly Classes. VVVVVVVVVV MasterCard VISA EMERCENCY VISA DISCOUNT Personal Checks DISCOVERY Personal Checks GUMBY'S Pizza 1445 W.23rd 841-5000 FAST FREE DELIVERY - Get a medium pizza for $1.89 when you buy any Gumby's Pizza at our already incredibly low coupon price. 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Rudy Tuesday 2 10"Pizzas ONLY $8.99 2 toppings 2 drinks RUDY'S PIZZERIA 7 19 0055 Open 7 days a week Home of the Pocket Pizza PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 1029 Massachusetts phone 841-PLAY PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 1029 Massachusetts phone 841-PLAY Students! First time Haircut and Blow-dry only $10.00 off (Reg.$18.00) 20% off Perms & Color Mary L. Offer good only with Mary PLEASE CALL 749-0771 Standing Ovation, Inc. Hospitality, Blue Care & Healthcare 1109 Massachusetts ≈ Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Work 913*749*0771 Home 913*883*4238 Bring in this coupon & SAVE. FUTON This Complete Futon & Frame $269 K.C. Based Manufacturer with 6 Retail Locations This Complete Futon & Frame $269 Twin Futon & Frame $99 Abdiana Futon Exclusively Hardwood Frames 1023 Mass. St: Lawrence, KS 843-8222 Abdiiana First meeting of the semester Tuesday, August30,6:30 pm Pioneer Room,Burge Union NAHO Call 864-4256 for more information Vile, Ugly, Nasty...Dirt This bike was made to wallow in it. TOLLAND 7 True Temper custom butted cro-moly frame & fork stocked with Hyper Drive & Hyper Glide, Shimano STX drive train and Matrix Single Track rims. SUNFLOWER BIKE SHOP 804 MARRACHSETTB 913-5000 Trek 920 Was $479 Now $399 As always, with any new bike purchase you recieve a free "U" lock or $20 free accessories, a free tune-up, and a free bike repair clinic 4A Tuesday, August 30, 1994 OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN COLUMNIST Media are blind to issues of the visually impaired HEATHER KIRKWOOD The media have long portrayed blind people as helpless, and it's time for a change. Whenever I see the issues of blindness addressed in the media, alarm bells automatically go off in my head. After years of reading the typical reporter's dribble about the blind, I have become skeptical that the blind will ever be portrayed fairly in the media. When making a list of topics to write about this semester, I had planned to write a column about blindness. After all, I would be a fool to turn down the opportunity to set the record straight. I had not planned to address the issue this soon. However, after the recent broadcast of NOW, a news magazine program on NBC, I think I need to put things in perspective. A summary of the story. Retinitis pigmentosa is a hereditary A summary of the story: eye disorder. Usually people with retinitis pigmentosa lose their vision slowly. At first they cannot see at night, and then gradually their field of vision narrows until it is so small that it is of little consequence, or they go blind. At this time, there is no cure for retinitis pigmentosa, or is there? Recently a doctor in Cuba has developed a treatment that looks promising. There's just one catch: Because of the embargo, it is illegal for an American to go to Cuba for treatment. The NOW story began with the following characterizations: The reporter said, "Routine tasks are difficult now," and, "It's only a matter of time before the faces of her three children will disappear to her." These statements, however, do not hold true of many blind people. The patients in the story sounded as though they were making a life-ordeath decision. It sounded as if they thought that by going blind their quality of life would be severely hindered. This is simply not true. Blind people routinely raise children, hold responsible jobs and take part in their communities and churches. I know several blind lawyers, a blind city commissioner, blind teachers, a blind foreign service officer, a blind journalist ... the list goes on and on. The assertion that everyday tasks are somehow made more difficult because one is blind is not true, although this might seem to be the case to a newly-blinded person or to a blind person who has not been taught alternative techniques. Concern for factors like seeing what one's children look like are understandable for a newly blind person, but any blind parent you will tell you it is not a matter of quality of life. NOW found a reasonable topic for a story. Next time, however, NOW ought to look into some other equally serious stories that have not been covered by the mainstream media. For example, why are so many blind people unemployed? The unemployment rate for working-age blind adults is 70 percent, although thousands included in this number are just as capable as their sighted peers. What happened to all that headway in Congress with the Americans with Disabilities Act, anyway? What about literacy for blind kids? Accordig to 1994 statistics, as many as 31 percent of blind kids enrolled in elementary and secondary schools all throughout the country are "nonreaders." Only 9 percent read braille, and for those who read print, it is often not the best option for them. Where is the public outcry? The cameras? Blind people don't need a continuance of the propaganda about what they can't do. What we do need is a chance to perform on a level playing field with the rest of society. Blindness itself is not a big deal, but the misconceptions about what it means to be a blind person are. Heather Kirkwood is a Wichita Junior in magazine Journalism. VIEWPOINT Guns should be banned despite hunter opposition Many are skeptical about the effectiveness of gun control in reducing crime. The argument is that criminals will find the means to get guns and that the people who will be affected by gun control will be those who hunt. Should we sacrifice the hobby of killing animals to save Reducing the number of guns will decrease the number of accidents and the number of murders by first-time murderers. Banning guns reminds us that the function of a FOR THE GUN BAN Saving even one life is more important than protecting hunters' rights to use the semi-automatic weapons banned. gun is to kill and that we should be able to live without guns. The ban will facilitate future bans. human lives? Definitely. The crime bill will reduce the number of guns produced. Hunters may suffer, but then again, soon virtual reality will allow them to kill as many animals as they want. JUAN VARGAS FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD. Congress misses target with crime bill gun ban Congress should not have incorporated the assault weapon provision into the crime bill. That provision bans the domestic sale of 19 named types of rifles and vests a federal official The banned firearms are semi-automatic:One squeeze of the with the authority to ban weapons of similar configuration. of operation between the named rifles and other semi-automatics are virtually identical, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms estimates that the ban will permit the government to AGAINST THE BAN The ban would allow the government to later ban up to 170 more firearms commonly used as sporting rifles. trigger yields one bullet. The bullets are no larger or faster than those in common sporting rifles. ban up to 170 firearms. The ban will only divert resources from the task of preventing true crimes. So-called assault Because the principles weapons are used in fewer than 3 percent of all crimes in which firearms are involved. The ban was flawed at the outset. ZACKARY STARBIRD FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD. KANSAN STAFF STEPHEN MARTINO Editor CHRISTOPH FUHRMANS Managing editor JEN CARR Business manager CATHERINE ELLSWORTH Systems cordinator TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser CAMERON DEATH Retail sales manager JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser Editors News ... Sara Bennett Editorial ... Donella Heame Campus ... Mark Martin Sports ... Brian James Photo ... Daron Bennett ... Melissa Lacey Features ... Tracel Carl Planning Editor ... Susan White Design ... Noah Muser Assistant to the editor ... Robbie Johnson Editors Business Staff Campus mgr ... Todd Winters Regional mgr ... Laura Guth National mgr ... Mark Mastro Coop mgr ... Emily Gibson Special Sections mgr ... Jen Pierer Production mgrs ... Holly Boren Regan Overy Marketing director ... Alan Stiglio Creative director ... John Carlton Classified mgr .. Heather Niahaus Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the name, name address and telephone number of the person affiliated with the University of Kawasaki (name address and telephone number to be filled in). Guest columns should be typeed, 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. Hallmark reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest postings and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas newroom, 111 Staffer Flint Hall. THE CRIME BILL BANS 19 ASSAULT RIFLES Hood UDK 1994 Now That's Health Care! Matt Hood/ KANSAN Look at the bright side of the baseball strike Millions of weepy words have been written about the alleged pain and suffering of baseball fans since the players sulked away and the games ended. But there is no evidence of any sharp increase in the number of fans who fling themselves from a roof or are institutionalized because they have been deprived of the sight of a pudgy third-base coach pulling his crotch and spitting toward the cameras. There has also been considerable public anguish for the ballpark vendors who sell overpriced hot dogs, peanuts and cheesy nachos, and are being deprived of their income. On the other hand, their products are loaded with grease and fat and salt that clogs the arteries and raises the blood pressure. Combine these elements with a hot bleacher, sun, too many beers and the frantic excitement of a pennant race, and you have eyes bulging, tongues protruding, death rattles rattling and stiffs plopping all over the country. Now my sympathy is being sought by Steve Sarmier, who probably represents many others who consider themselves innocent victims of the greedy players and owners. "This year I stand to earn $1,000 if the Cubs win fewer than 84 games, which would have been a cinch. "I also have the Yanks and Mets over the Phils and Pirates for $440 and have a big lead in that one. "But these bets are dependent on the teams playing 160 games or else the money is refunded. Since my bets are virtual locks, I'll be out $1,440 because of the strike. I want justice." MIKE ROYKO There must be thousands of strike victims like Sarmier: gamblers who had the skill, foresight and boldness to bet a goodly sum in a barroom or workplace, but now see their poten- COLUMNIST describes himself as "a very disgruntled fan and angry professional gambler. I don't doubt that such a dull-witted person exists. For most of my life, I've been around Cubs fans. Their glassy-eyed faith has been both an inspiration and a subject for psychological research. Note that Sarmier boasts of having found a Cubs fan willing to bet $1,000 that the Cubs would win more than half of their games. Instead of moaning about losses we are suffering because of the baseball strike, we should look at the many benefits. In major cities across the nation, tax dollars aren't being spent on cops directing baseball traffic or hauling drunk fans to the jug. Mountains of hot dogs and other deadly morsels will be unleane, saving the citizenry a fortune in EKG tests, angiograms, bypasses and other unpleasant experiences. And millions of baseball addicts will not be wasting precious hours of their lives gaping at a highly paid crotch-grabber on their TV. They can gape at a bass fishing show instead. Is there no sympathy for them? No, not from me. tial winnings wiped out. Mike Royko is a syndicated columnist with the Chicago Tribune. COLUMNIST Unisex fashion is a comment on our society ERIKA RASMUSSON Lately, I've noticed more and more people taking a middle-of-the-road stance when it comes to the issue of men's and women's fashion. It appears that today's society is becoming an increasingly unisex one. Not that there is anything wrong with that. On the contrary, I think it proves our society is moving forward. Men are getting in touch with their feminine sides by becoming more fashion-conscious, and women are getting in touch with their masculine sides. On the whole, it seems that fashion today is about having the confidence to wear whatever you want. The line that once defined "menswear" and "womenswear" is blurry. Consider some examples: Besides the fact that it is now socially acceptable for men to have long hair and earrings, it isn't unheard of for men to wear skirts, either. Axl Rose used to wear a kilt on stage during Guns N' Roses concerts, and I've even seen guys in Lawrence sporting a skirt. What's more important is that most passersby didn't even give a second glance. Is this a sign of fashion tolerance? Or do people in Lawrence just not give a damn? Finally, Calvin Klein, the fashion guru for both men and women, has come out with a unisex fragrance. It's called CK One, "a new fragrance for a man or a woman." Actually, I like it, but that's entirely beside the point. The point is that cologne is supposed to be individual and sexy. Can you imagine asking your date what scent he or she is wearing and then exclaiming, "Hey! That's what I wear!" It might be embarrassing. Example number two: In my hometown, Minneapolis, there are unisex toilets. No, that is not a misprint. I've never actually used one, so I can't describe what they are like, but they're there. Is this a major trend I've missed out on? Or is Minneapolis simply a hub of unisex tredetters? But then again, it might not be. It could be a sign that you're hip, wearing a politically correct, nondiscriminatory fragrance. And you could even put it on in a unisex bathroom. HUBIE Erika Rasmussen is a Minnetonka, Minn., senior in magazine journalism. JUMP JUMP HEY GUYS!!! IS THAT "WENDY WHOPPERS" I SEE OUTSIDE?? STAMREDE! HUBLE. WHAT'S YOURS? By Greg Hardin HUBIE, WHAT'S YOURS? UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Tuesday, August 30,1994 5A Exercise facility catering to all fitness types By Jennifer Freund Kansan staff writer By Jennifer Freund Lawrence's Junkyard's Jym & Nautilus Center, formerly located at 1410 Kasold Drive, has changed its name and location as well fitness philosophy. Rick Sells, owner of the newly opened Lawrence Athletic Club. 3201 Mesa Way, has moved away from catering to hardcore body builders and is emphasizing fitness for all. While the club still offers services to those interested in serious body building, it has expanded its services to cater to women and those not-somuscle-bound men. "We now have, what I call, the intimidation room where women or other men who are intimidated by the larger and younger guys can work out," Sells said. While strength building still will be stressed, a new emphasis has been placed on cardiovascular fitness, Sells said. "We have the largest aerobic floor in Lawrence," he said. "It's 28,000 square feet and has suspension floors." Sells said that he wanted to get men more involved in aerobics. "The men say, 'Why don't you have a window so we can watch the women doing aerobics?' and I said, 'If you want to watch girls do aerobics, get involved.'" he said. Sells said that he would begin a men's introductory aerobic class where men could become familiar with the calls and steps they didn't know. While men are intimidated by aerobic classes, Sells said, women are intimidated by weight lifting. He said he also would offer a weight lifting class for women only. Although the aerobics floor still is under construction, Sells said that the club would be fully operational by Sept. 1. Sells said that many of his clients and employees were students. Most of the student employees are working on their degrees in exercise science or kinesiology, the study of muscular activity and the mechanics of move- What it offers: A 4,000 square-foot free weight room containing more than 30,000 pounds of free weights Two racquetball courts pounds of free weights Daycare - Locker rooms with showers, Jacuzzis and a sauna steam bath - Tanning beds Student rates: $189 peryear $120 per semester $14 per month plus a $99 deposit It plans to offer group rates to members of greek chapters and other campus living groups. ment. at the University of Kansas. Debbie Faber, Wichita senior, said that she was considering joining the club. "It's definitely the nicest place in Lawrence," she said. "They have a lot of really good workout equipment and a lot to choose from. The staff is really helpful and friendly." 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For only $2 you can put this guaranteed investment THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN *Second level in the Kruisan Union Bookstore at the Courtyard *First Level in the Burge Unilew Bookstore at the Courtyard 1628 W 23rd/b42-8158-1101-Tuphar b/914a-8436-2309-Haskell Ave/b42-8553-3 830 Haskell Ave/Tuphar j'9ca-8436-NO (LIMIT) UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP Available at These Locations: into your back pocket. $4 SC GUANA Jayhawk Bookstore Total trail GIANT Iguana $ Hours: M-F 9-6 Sat 10-3 816 W.24th Behind Laird Nolier Ford WELCOME BACK EARN CASH $15 Today $30 This Week 749-5750 The Quality Source NABI See our ad in the classified section Plus a $3 Bonus By donating your blood plasma By donating your blood plasma Walk-ins welcome Lawrence Donor Center Show your current student ID card between August 17 and August 31 and receive an extra $3 bonus on your second visit of the month. Join SUA. Adam Sandler Jurassic Park Stan Herd Exhibit Union Open House Dr. Jean Kilbourne Tori Amos New Orleans Vacation Prick Up Your Ears STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Programs With Personality. Add Your Personality to Ours. Join SUA. Information Meetings for committee members are: Tuesday, September 6 & Wednesday, September 7 Burge Union, 7:30pm. Applications also available September 1-9 at SUA Box Office, 4th Floor Kansas Union: 864-3477. Applications due by NOON Sept. 9th. PV = 1234567890 The BA II PLUS has unique display prompts that guide you through problems. It offers basic business functions like time-value-of-money. Plus, it delivers cash flow analysis for internal rate of return (IRR). Net present value (NPV). Bond calculations. Depreciation. Advanced statistics. Dollars And Sense. Management, marketing, finance or accounting major? You know dollars and cents. Get a BA II PLUS Calculator from Texas Instruments. It's designed for students and professionals and recommended by professors. Or try the BA-35, our most affordable model for time-value-of-money and one-variable statistics. If you're in the financial fast lane, TI Business Calculators make the most sense. Try one at your local TI retailer today, or for more information, call 1-800-TI-CARES. EXTENDING YOUR REACH™ INS TEXAS INSTRUMENTS e-mail: tl-cares @ lobby.ti.com In Canada call 1 800 881 2907 ©1994 TY. H000181 6A Tuesday, August 30, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Bottleneck 737 New Hampshire Lawrence, KS • (13) 841-LIVE Tues. Aug. 00 Catherine 18+ over Shiner Shallow Wed. Aug. 01 Go-Kart Brandos Thurs. Sept. 1 Overkill 18+ over Pro-Pain Slack Jaw Fri. Sept. 2 Mountain Clyde Slugworth Tix. on Sale Now Shudder to Think Reverend Borton Heat Marl Saunders Professor's knowledge of jazz is widely sought Continued from Page 1A. from New York City asking for a copy of an original recording of a song Margitza wanted to cover. Margitza couldn't find a copy anywhere in New York but knew Wright would have the recording. He is definitely the best-known jazz authority in the Midwest," said Bob Hammond, KANU's jazz director. "In fact, I think he stacks up with any jazz authority in the world." Wright was honored in 1993 by the International Association of Jazz Educators, which presented him its first-ever Lifetime Achievement Award. Wright received a bachelor's degree in voice from the University in 1953 and was drafted into the U.S. Army on his wedding day. In the Army, Wright found his interest in radio. "They didn't know what to do with me," Wright said. "Here I was, a guy with a voice degree, and what do you do with 'em in the Army? So, they put me in charge of the Armed Forces Radio Station in Greenland." Two years later, Wright returned home from the Army. He also returned to KU on the GI Bill and earned a master's degree in voice. He went to New York after winning the regional Metropolitan Opera auditions. Wright found the auditions discouraging. The Met told Wright to learn some opera roles and come back later. He returned to Kansas and applied for "I just got so all-of-a-sudden interested in jazz history, the historical aspect of it, that I sort of lost sight of going back to New York." he said. the music director position at KANU with the idea that he could work at the station and learn the opera roles at the same time. It was then that Wright fell in love with the history of jazz. To make ends meet, Wright found himself working at the radio station, teaching part-time at Washburn University, singing at weddings and funerals and filling machines at 4 a.m. on the KU campus. "It finally got to me," Wright said. In 1968, he left KU to work at a family-owned music store in downtown Lawrence. "I kind of enjoyed it, but my heart really wasn't into it," Wright said. "University life is really what I wanted to be involved in." Two years later, in 1970, "Lo-and-behold, the University called me back to be the director of the station," Wright said. He took the position and remained KANU's director until 1977, when he began teaching full time at KU. His big teaching break at KU came in 1971 when one of the teachers in the music department went on sabbatical, and the University brought in another teacher, Frank Turro, to fill in for a year. The only way Tirro would come to KU, Wright said, was if he was able to teach a jazz-history course. "Once he got here on campus, he found out about me, and he insisted I come down and do some of the lectures," Wright said. When Twoe left at the end of the year, he went to the chairman of the music department and said, "You really ought to have this guy Wright down here teaching," Wright said. So the department offered Wright the job, and Wright accepted. From 1972 to 1977, Wright was both director of KANU and the jazz-history course teacher. "The more I taught, the more I knew I loved teaching," Wright said. "It's really what I wanted to do. It got so my heart really wasn't into running KANU." In 1977, KU hired Howard Hill to be the director of the station and moved Wright to the position of executive director. That move allowed Wright to continue teaching without having the entire burden of directing the station on his shoulders. He has taught full time in the music department as a tenured professor since 1984. "It's been such a rewarding life because being a jazz historian, there aren't a lot of us around. I'm so thankful to the University that I'm one of the few," Wright said. When Tirro left at the end of the year, he With Wright's well-known knowledge of jazz history, he has been sought by other universities. But Wright can't see working anywhere other than KU. "Other jobs have opened up — North Texas State and other jobs — and people say, 'You ought to go there.' I just say, 'No thanks.' I really am happy here, and I can't even think what it would be like leaving here," Wright said. "I have a feeling even when I retire I'll still be doing things up here in the archives." Rape verdict sets stage for community forum By Nathan Olson By Nathan Olson Kansan staff writer The recent trial of former graduate assistant football coach Jeffrey Shanks provided a close look at how society deals with rape. That was the verdict last night at a community rape forum sponsored by Douglas County Rape Victim Support Services. About 20 women attended the forum at New York Elementary School, 936 New York St. Much of the forum consisted of questions concerning the trial of Shanks, who was convicted last week of one count of rape and acquitted of another. Representatives of the Rape Victim Support Services attended the trial in an advocacy role for the women, said Sarah Jane Russell, the group's director. "What I saw last week convinced me of the damage that can be done on both sides" she said. Barbara Ballard, director of Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, focused on the positive aspects of the trial. "The verdict sent a message to people saying that prosecution is worth a try," she said. Sharf Seifert, Naperville, Ill., sophomore, said she sympathized with the women who came forward in the trial. "The feelings rape victims are normal feelings in abnormal situations," she said. "Sadness, guilt and self-blame are normal feelings that rape victims think aren't normal." Russell also cited rape statistics at the forum. She said that rape was the fastest growing crime in the country and that only 10 percent of rapes were reported to police. 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For a limited time, it comes bundled with a unique new student software set available only from Apple. It's all the software you're likely to need in college. You'll get software that takes you through every aspect of writing papers, the only personal organizer/calendar created for your student lifestyle and the Internet Companion to help you tap into on-line Macintosh Performa 636 4/250, Apple Color Plus 14" Display, AppleDesign Keyboard and mouse. Only $1,399.00. Macintosh Performa 636 8/250 with CD-ROM, Apple Color Plus 14" Display, AppleDesign Keyboard and mouse. Only $1,699.00. Macintosh Performa 636 8/250 with CD-ROM, Apple Color Plus 14" Display, AppleDesign Keyboard and mouse. Only $1,699.00. research resources. Plus ClarisWorks, an intuitive, integrated package with a spreadsheet, word processor, database and more. Buy a select Performa with CD-ROM, and you'll also get a multimedia library of essential reference tools. And now, with an Apple Computer Loan, you can own a Macintosh for less than a dollar a day! It's the power every student needs. The power to be your best. Apple POWER through it. Macintosh. The Power to be your Best at KU. union technology center union technology center KU Academic Computer Supplies, Service & Equipment KU Academic Computer Supplies, Service & Equipment Burge Union * Level 3 * 913/864-5690 APPLE Offer expires October 17, 1994, available only while applicable. At © 1994 Apple Computer Inc., all rights reserved. Apple, the apple logo, Attachments and "Power be your boss" are required trademarks of Apple Computer Inc. AppleWorks is a trademark of Apple Computer Inc. ClarkWorks is a registered trademark of Clarion Corp.'s estimate based on an apple Computer Loan of $1,549.15 for the Performax II and $1,882.59 for the Performance C with CLROM system shown above. Price and loan amounts are changed to change without notice. See your Apple Computer校友 or for configurative for current system price. A 5.5% loan fee will be added to the requested loan amount. The interest rate is variable, based on the commercial paper rate plus 5.35%. The interest rate is not (10.10% with an APR of 11.36%). It year长 term with no prepayment penalty. The monthly payment abnormally assumes of principal or interest. Students may defer principal payments up to 4 years, or until the due date. Deferment will change your monthly payments. The Apple Computer Loan is subject to credit approval. SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN TUESDAY, AUGUST 30, 1994 Kansas volleyball nets first win SECTION B Jayhawk newcomers benefit from weekend scrimmage with alumni By Chesley Dohl Kansan sportswriter A scrimmage with Kansas volleyball alumni isn't exactly a match against nationally-ranked Santa Clara or Northern Arizona. But a scrimmage Saturday in Ottawa was a positive beginning for the Kansas volleyball team as it defeated a team of former Kansas players 10-15, 15-11, 15-11, 15-4. "It was especially good for the freshmen," sophomore outside hitter Katie Walsh said. "It got them ready, and it got the jitters out. They played very well." The Jayhawks will begin their season Sept. 2 at the Colorado State Tournament in Fort Collins, Colo. In its first day of competition, Kansas will face Northern Arizona and Santa Clara — both top-20 teams. "The scrimmage went very well," Kansas coach Karen Schonewise said. "I was pleased with the team. We started out slow, but we improved with each game." Schonewise said she was happy with certain aspects of the game, but that she was somewhat concerned with simple mistakes. "There were a lot of errors early in the match," she said. "But that happens when you're adjusting, and you have serves coming over at that caliber." Schonewise said she was especially pleased with the strong play of the freshmen and the cohesion of the team, despite the loss of three players. "We served very well, and we had a lot of aces in the match." Schonewise said. "Serving was a bright spot." unable to compete due to an error in her certification for NCAA eligibility. Kansas sports information officials said Lindgren's high school in Brighton, Colo., had neglected to list her graduation date on her eligibility form. Freshman outside hitter Kendra Kahler was not able to play because of a strained calf muscle, and senior outside hitter Janet Uher is still recovering from shoulder surgery last spring. A third player, freshman setter Trisha Lindgren, was "Our starting setter couldn't play due to NCAA certification problems, but Tiffany Sennett did a good job in her place." Schonewise said. "She got a lot of playing time and gained some experience." This season the Jayhawk starting lineup will include three freshmen. That alone was reason for a scrimmage, junior outside hitter Lara Izokatis said. This week in practice, Schonewise said the team will concentrate on sharpening its transition game as well as its blocking strategy. The transition game is the quick, effective movement of the team, mentally and physically, from offense to defense. "There's always that first time of being out on the court," Izokaias said. "I think we played well, but during your first game, it always takes some time getting used to playing with each other. It was a good experience." M Jay Thornton / KANSAN Kansas volleyball coach Karen Schonewise talks at a news conference at the Parrot Athletic Center. The team will start three freshmen in its first match of the season Sept. 2. WYOMING Jay Thornton / KANSAN Kansas football coach Glen Mason discussed the upcoming season and his top players with members of the press at the Parrot Athletic Center yesterday afternoon. The Jayhawks' season starts at 7 p.m. Thursday against the Houston Cougars at Houston's Astrodome. Big Eight football ready: Future is not Conference's Big 12 playoff still in doubt By Matt Irwin Kansan sportswriter The Big 12 is still more than two years from existence, but already questions have arisen about a conference-championship game. Kansas coach Glen Mason said he had not been consulted about the matter, but that he believed a championship game would be logical. "If you have two divisions, and you don't have a playoff, then why the hell do you have a conference?" Mason said. The Jayhawks are preparing to play their first game of the season at Houston on Thursday, Sept. 1. Houston went 1-9-1 in Kim Helton's first season as head coach in 1993. The two divisions most likely would be divided, with Oklahoma and Oklahoma State joining the Texas schools and the remaining former Big Eight schools in the other division. "They don't look like we did when we were 1-9.1." Mason said. Nebraska coach Tom Osborne also will be taking his school to Texas to play a Southwest Conference team. On Sept. 8, the Cornhuskers will play at Texas Tech, a future Big 12 school. Coming off a 31-0 trouncing of 23rd-ranked West Virginia, Osborne thought his team played well but was wary of judging its performance. 1993 Big Eight final standings Conference W L T Overall W L T Nebraska 7 0 0 11 1 0 Colorado 5 1 1 8 3 1 Kansas St. 4 2 1 9 2 1 Oklahoma 4 3 0 9 3 0 Kansas 3 4 0 5 7 0 Missouri 2 5 0 3 7 1 Iowa St. 2 5 0 3 8 0 Oklahoma St. 0 7 0 3 8 0 Source: Street and Smith's Dave Campbell / KANSAN At Missouri, the Big Eight Conference welcomes its first new coach since 1989. Former Southern California coach Larry Smith is hoping to change the attitude of his team. After being absent from the game for a year, Smith expressed excitement about coaching. "Overall, I was very pleased," Osborne said. "I don't know if we beat a really good team or not." At Colorado, Bill McCartney is impressed with how his team is coming along. He said that the Buffalooes' offense was sharper than he had ever seen it in the preseason. McCartney said he was confident about his defense this season. Oklahoma opens the season at the Carrier Dome against Syracuse. Syracuse will be working with a new quarterback, after highly touted Syracuse quarterback Marvin Graves graduated. "I think I was eager for it about a year ago right now," Smith said. Wingback added to Jayhawks' running attack By Matt Irwin Kansan sportswriter A player who makes plays that break a game wide open is not what Kansas football coach Glen Mason needs. He said Kansas doesn't have a player like that on its roster. The use of a wingback, a new position added to the Kansas offense this season, is similar to that of a running back but frequently used in passing situations. In fact, the team had so many good running backs that senior George White was moved to the wingback position. What his team does have, Mason said, was consistently good players — especially at the running back position. "It's not that different from tailback," White said. "We used to send the tailback out there, so I'm pretty familiar with it. "It's a terrific position. It gives me the opportunity to showcase my abilities. I'm happy that the coaches think that well of me to put me out there." White will see more action than he would have if he were still competing with the Jayhawks' top three running backs, sophomore June Henley, sophomore Mark Sanders and junior L.T. Levine. "You can't get much better tailbacks than that," White said. "Those guys have the ability to play anywhere. They all happened to come here. Those are the best three guys and they're going to get the job done, so I'm all for it." The Jayhawks' running game last season was led by June HENLEY's Big Eight freshman rushing record of 1,127 yards. Levine was second on the team with 542 yards and started six games. Sanders' had a strong spring, making Mason's job difficult only in choosing who to start. "Maybe I'll start all three," Mason said jokingly about his top running backs. "I guess we'll start Henley. I guarantee all three will play. We'll just go with the hot hand." Mason said he had lost no confidence in White. "If we had the ball in George White's hands every play, I'd be happy," Mason said. Ironically, White has been moved to the wingback position after leading the team in rushing in his last full game as a Jayhawk. White rushed for 74 yards on 15 carries and ran back the opening kickoff 48 yards against Florida State in last season's Kickoff Classic. White's injury in the first quarter of Kansas' second game of the season caused him to miss the season's remaining games. The only question the Jayhawks have about their running game is the depth of their offensive line. Although the quality of the starters in the offensive line is high, any injuries could lead to trouble. The line is so diminished that Mason asked former Jayhawk tackle Derek Brown to come back to the team, an offer Brown accepted. Brown is now a law student with a year of eligibility. White received a medical redshirt and will be able to finish his senior season, perhaps collecting more receptions than rushes. Conspiracy to destroy drug test did not exist Olympic official says The Associated Press PARIS — The Olympics' medical chief confirmed yesterday that several positive drug tests were destroyed at the 1984 Los Angeles Games, but denied any conspiracy or cover-up. Prince Alexandre de Merode, chairman of the IOC medical commission, called the case an accident and blamed it on the haste of L.A. organizers to close down as soon as the Games ended. “This was a small incident,” de Merode said in an interview at the International Olympic Committee's Centennial Congress in Paris. "It's not a scandal." The program said the tests were never acted upon because all material related to the cases were taken from de Merode's offices at the Biltmore Hotel in Los Angeles and destroyed in a shredder. A BBC television program, quoting two anti-drug officials, reported last week that nine athletes failed drug tests during the last two days of the Games. The BBC report suggested that orders had come from a top official to shut down the drug-testing laboratory before the end of the Games and to cover up the nine positives. De Merode said he knew of five, or possibly six, positive tests but denied there were nine. He said he doesn't know who the athletes were because all the test codes were destroyed before he could look at them. Merole said he was told of the positive tests the evening after the final day of the Games. But when he went to his Biltmore headquarters, he found that everything had disappeared and the offices had been converted back into a hotel suite. De Merode said he considered the episode an honest mistake. The next morning, de Merode went to the organizing committee headquarters to find out what happened. He said he was first told by a committee official, Tony Daly, that the drug test documents were being flown to IOC headquarters in Lausanne, Switzerland. "I must tell the truth," de Merode quoted him as saying. "Everything was destroyed in the paper shredder. We are sorry, but we can't produce anything from your documents." "I don't believe it was intentional because it's certainly not in their interest," he said. "The U.S. mentality was the Games were finished. They didn't want to pay. They were a private organization. The U.S. attitude is not the same as the European one. They have their efficiency. Everything is done very quickly. They like to save money." De Merole said the hotel explained that all Olympic offices were closed as soon as the Games ended because the privately-funded organizing committee was not paying for rooms beyond the closing date. A main source for the BBC report was Arnold Beckett, a former member of de Merode's commission. Beckett was dropped from the panel after the 1992 Barcelona Games because of disagreements over several drug cases. Lemieux's career halted; fatigue keeps him off ice The Associated Press PITTSBURGH — Mario Lemieux made it official yesterday, saying that fatigue will sideline him for the entire 1994-95 season and that there is no chance he will try to play even in the playoffs. However, Lemieux still is bothered by fatigue — apparently the after-effects from radiation treatment for the cancer and the cortisone shots he received last year for his back pain. He has had two back operations in the past four years. Lemieux confirmed what was first reported a month ago — that fatigue from two medical problems will force him to sit out the entire hockey season. Doctors told him he has no recurrence of the Hodgkin's disease that was diagnosed in January 1933 or of the anemia he developed last season. "Right now, my health is a lot more important than hockey." Lemieux said. "I'm going to miss going to the rink every day. I'm going to miss being around the guys, because we have a good club here." His physicians tell Lemieux he has a good chance of returning eventually, but he said he would make a decision about the 1995-96 season a year from now, after a year mostly spent resting. In the past month, Lemieux has undergone medical tests that determined his only problem is the persistent fatigue. Doctors said only rest will cure that, and that fatigue is common for up to two years after receiving radiation treatment. He said he will return only if he can "play like Mario Lemieux can play," and that he would never return as a part-time player or as one who has been stripped of many of his skills. "If I feel I'm not able to go out on the ice at close to 100 percent, another decision will have to be made," Lemieux said. Neither Lemieux's agent, Tom Reich, or Penguins' chairman Howard Baldwin would disclose the terms of Lemieux's contract for this season. However, Lemieux will receive his full salary under a $42 million contract he signed two years ago with the Penguins. The money apparently will come from the Penguins' insurer. Baldwin also said any season-ticket holders who want their money back because Lemieux won't play will get a full refund. "But I can't see many of them wanting to jump off the bandwagon," Baldwin said. Lemeut, who initially signed with the Penguins 10 years ago, is a fourtime NHL scoring champion and two-time league MVP who led Pittsburgh to Stanley Cups in 1991 and '92. However, with him at less than 100 percent strength the past two years, the Penguins have exited early in the playoffs. 2B Tuesday, August 30, 1994 bifi's 925 IOWA 841-7226 Lunch & Dinner Great Food NATURALWAY 820-822 Mass. 841-0100 NEW FROM ISRAEL - Handwoven vests & bags in fall colors * Cotton Pants & Shirts * Earrings & Barrettes Barbe Vintage Rose 927 Massachusetts • 841-2451 Mon-Sat 11-5 State Radiator Student Friendly We repair • Brass • Aluminum • Plastic Radiators Heaters, water pumps, and A/C service tool 842-3333 FILMS FOR AUGUST 30-31 STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUAC FILMS Crown Cinema FAREWELL MY CONCUBINE TUES. 7:00 PM BELLE EPOQUE CO SPONSORED BY HALD TUES. 9:30 PM WED. 7:00 PM & 8:30 PM ALL SHOWS IN WOODMUFF ADD. TICKETS $2.50, MURCHISON $3.00 FREE WITH SUA MOVIE CARD; CALL 864-SHOW For More Info. BEFORE & PM ADULTS $3.00 (UNDER 18 YEARS ONLY) SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00 Wagons East P8-13 6:00 7:15, 9:00 VARSITY BRIANATASAL HOLIDAYS 841-5701 Camp Nowhere PB $9.00 In The Army Now PB $2.99 Blankman PB $15 The Mask PB-13 $7.18 The Client PB-13 $7.18 Clear & Present Banger PB-13 $9.00 CINEMA TWIN $1.25 Jurassic Park PB-13 628, 725, bd.8 Wolf ™ 628, 725, bd.45 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Buy 1 Large PYRAMID PIZZA With two toppings for only $7.99 and get 1 liter of pop for no buck$ no buck$ no buck$ TERRIFIC TUESDAY 842-3232 CARRY OUT, DELIVERY OR EAT AT THE WHEEL ONLY GOOD WITH THIS COUPON Ballplayers trade bats for paintball guns The Associated Press SAN DIEGO — In the canyons of San Diego County, down among the bushes and trees, lurk major league ballplayers hard at work. They're playing ball, all right — paintball. during the strike — they put on camouflage, grab their pump guns and goggles and head into the wilderness. Probably the best baseball player who dabbles in paintball is Ken Griffey Jr. Other athletes, including Tonya Harding, have played it. Andy Benes and Phil Plantier of the Padres, Howard Johnson of the Rockies and former major leaguers Kurt Stillwell and Jeff Gardner are regulars at the game, an adult version of "Capture the Flag." Once a week in the off-season — and now, every Monday For now, Benes and his pals will settle for the relatively tame canyons of southern California, although there just might be some dangers lurking there, too. "It's amazing the first time you play." Benes said. "You're kind of apprehensive where you move around, you don't know what is in the bush, what animals might be there. And then when guys start shooting at you, you dive and you are not thinking about that. "Not that we've seen anything to worry us," Benes said. "You hear about snakes in the canyon and I'm not a big fan of snakes. But I've never seen one. But If I do, I'm out of there." The sport has 25 million participants and is played in 30 countries. The sport has 25 million participants and is played in 30 countries. UNIVERSITY DANCE COMPANY AUDITION ON AUDITION Wednesday, August 31, 1994 7:00 p.m. Studio 242 Robinson Center No solo material required For more information, please call 864-4264. Just Look at ALL of These Ways YOU Can Save Some Cash THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN C A R D KU Valid Through July 31, 1995 NCCS KU THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Available at these locations: 119 Stauffer-Flint UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP 1116 W23rd Jayhawk Bookstore KU KU BOOKSTORES 1420 Crescent Rd.·Lawrence, Ks. 66044 *Second level in the Kansas Union Bookstore, at the Courtesy Counter *First Level in the Burge Union Bookstore, at the Courtesy Counter Restaurants AMIGO'S 1910 W. 92rd + 840 BLIMPIE SUBS AND SALADS BONANZA 2329 S. Iowa St • 842-1200 $3.99 Freshastics Food Bar BUY 1 6" Cold Sub Sandwich, get 1 for 79¢ 1819 W. 2360 A-822-1820 Get the daily special prices everyday of the week DOMINGO'S PIZZA 832 Iowa St.*841-8002 25% OFF Any Delivery Order(not valid with any other offer) B008145 815 New Hampshire 841-7286 BUY1 Menu Item, and get the Second One at 1/2 Price DRAKE'S SNACK SHOP ESPRESS O'HOUSE 10 E. 9th St*843-3007 1006 Massachusetts*843-0561 10% off of purchase of $2.50 or more FULL MOON CAFE $1.00 OFF Any Purchase Over $3.50(Includes food and coffee drinks) $1.00 OFF Sandwiches and Dinners Before 6 P.M., Tuesday 624 W 12h84-812-310F FREE Cup of Our House Coffee (Certified Organically Grown) with Anv Meal Purchase GLASS ONION 2907 W 6th-841-1888-FREE Soft Drink (wITH FREE refills) with Purchase of Daily Buffet Specials 401 N 2nD-842-0377-BUY a cheeseburger with fries at reg. price, get ordered for $1.00 Mon-Fri 4-9pm PERKINS FAMILY RESTAURANT 1711 W.23;842-9040 IMPERIAL GARDEN JOHNNY'S TAVERN PIZZA SHOPPE 601 Kasold·842-0600 $1.00 OFF Any Entree, Anytime, 24 hours a day Med Pizza $5.95, 2 for $9.95; Lg Pizza $7.95, 2 for $13.95 PIZZA SHUTTLE 1601 W23rd-842-1212 One Pizza with One Topping $2.60 plus tax Carry Out Only PIZZA SHUTTLE PYRAMID PIZZA 14th & Ohio #422-323=$4.00 Mm, add. tops 50c; Md.$6.00, add. tages 75; $8.00 Lg, add. tages 1.00; Car Out Only RUNZA 2700 Iowa·749-2615*FREE Medium Drink with Purchase of TACO JOHN'S 1628 W3rd/842-8185-1101 W6th/843-0936-2309 Haskell Ave./842-5533-3Hardt S胆囊片 for $99 (NO LIMIT) WEST COAST SALOON WEST COAST SALOON 2222 Iowa St.·841-2739 $1.50 OFF Any Sandwich Retail/Merchandise ATHLETE'S FOOT ATHLETE'S FOOT 914 Massachusetts-841-6966 15% OFF Regularly Priced Shoes BOBBI'S BEDROOM 2429 Iowa 843-7278 BARB'S VINTAGE ROSE 20% OFF Any Purchase Over $20.00 Excluding Rentals 731 Massachusetts-843-4191+15% OFF All Apparel + FREE FREE T-Shirt w/ purchase Over $25.00 GENERAL NUTRITION CENTER 745 New Hampshire+834-3282+$2.50 Discount for Diatomics. Ungrade Labor, System Cleaning on IBM Compatibles. CENTRAL DATA CLEOPATRA'S CLOSET 743 Massachusetts 749-466 FRANCIS SPORTING GOODS 15%OFF Any Pro-Performance & 24-Hour Diet Item 174% Massachusetts-749-4664 75% Off Any item (excludes sale items) 20% OFF Entire Inventory (excludes sale items and outlet priced items) JAYHAWK BOOKSTORE 10% OFF All Academically Priced Computer Software JAYHAWK BOOKSTORE 1240 Crescent Rd-843-3826 10% OFF Any Reference or Study Aid JAYHAWK BOOKSTORE 10% OFF Any Typewriter, Printer Ribbon or Printer Ink Refill JAYHAWK TROPICAL FISH 846 Illinois, Suite D+842-5950-20% OFF Whisk Brand Power Filters, and All Other Brand Undergravel Filters JOCKS NITCH KANSAS SPORTS CLUB 107 W. Mason Boulevard 842-936 840 Massachusetts-842-2442 15% OFQ All Footwear, Excluding Sale Items 837 Massachusetts·842-2992 20% OFF KU Sweatshirts KU BOOKSTORE KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS-864-4640 Any Size Exam Book (Blue Book) 5¢ KANSAS AND BURGE UNION$846-4840 $5.00 OFF Anj Avhawk Clothing or Hat Over $20.00 KU BOOKSTORE KU BOOKSTORE KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS-864-4640 10% OFF Any Art, Engineering or Drafting Supply KIZER-CUMMINGS 833 Massachusetts>749-4333 15% OFF Non-Sale Gold Chains LAWRENCE ONE HOUR PHOTO 2340 S. Iowa*842-8564*30% OFF C41 Process (Not Valid MERLE NORMAN MIRACLE VIDEO 910 N 2n/841-8903-1910 Haskell Ave. Suite 1/841-7504 $1.00 OFF Movie Limit(limit one per visit) NATURAL WAY 740 Massachusetts-843-3933 15% OFF Any Regular Priced Item OUTFITTER'S Lawrence, Ks>865-0692 10% OFF All Sales RECYCLED MUSIC CENTER 716 Massachusetts-841-1762-20 OFF (CD: Tapes, Movies, Video Games) Tuesday & 15% on (Can or Cash) on Buybacks RECYCLED SOUNDS RENTCO USA 622 W 12th St. *841-9475*-$2.00 Offer Any One CD, Tape, or LP with Value Greater Than $5.00 1741 Massachusetts-749-1605 25% OFF All Monthly Rentals SHARK'S SURF SHOP 15% OFF Any Non-Sale Purchase (excluding Stussy) UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP SPRINGMAID/WAMSUTTA 1025 N. 3rd-83d-1100 10% OFF Any Purchase VIDEO BIZ 832 Iowa*749-3507*2+ for 1 Video Rental Monday - Thursday (limit one per day) 1116W, 23rd*G4-75206 20% OFF of all clothing (excluding sale items) Services B.C. AUTO & CYCLE 510 N 6TH -841-6955 10% OFF All Parts BRADY OPTICAL 737 Massachusetts+842-0880 15% OFF Complete Eyesight Purchase CHIROPRACTIC HEALTH CENTER 814-357-2067 Initial Consultation at No Charge (Usually $30-$70) CRANDON & CRANDON OPTOMETRIST 1019 Massachusetts-843-3844*$25.00 OFF All Fashion Velvess Frames-Basics-843-3844*$25.00 OFF All Fashion 1601 W23rd-841-6232-FREE 2 Tans with Purchase of 7 Tans For $20 and FREE Trial Formula One (1/customer) MANFTAMERS $3.00 OFF Haircut or $5.00 OFF Chemical Service PLANNED PARENTHOOD 15th & Kasold*832-0281*25%.OFF Initial or Annual B.C. $ STADIUM BARBERY H.C.C. • STRAIGHT BARRING 1033 Massachusetts?749-5363 Any Haircut or Hairstyle $5.50 SPECTRUM OPTICAL $35.00 OFF Lenses and Frames w/FREE Adjustment TWIN OAKS GOLF COURSE K-10 & County Rd. 1057-(913)542-1747 Buy One Small Bucket of Balls, Get One Small Bucket ULTIMATETAN 2449 Iowa St.*842-4949+1 FREE Session with the purchase of a 9.Session Package (Save $5.50) UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 119 Staffer-Flint*864-4358 20% OFF Anv Privative Classified Ad . UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Tuesday, August 30,1994 3B lifestyles KANNAA Jay Thornton/KANSAN Kerry Johnson, co-owner of Hideaway,106 North Park St., and Ken Stewart, general manager, sit in the "love pit" and discuss Lawrence's past gay bars. The new Hideaway has been open since July 17. 'This is not a closet Lawrence's newest gay and lesbian bar opens its doors so that its customers have a safe place to 'come out' By Carlos Tejada Kansan staff writer in July, a bar like no other bar in Lawrence quietly opened its doors. However, you would have to look hard to find the difference. If youhug out in the game room for a while, you'll see the usual pool tables and darts. The jukebox has Bob Marley, Meatloaf and Brooks and Dunn. At the bar, you can get mixed drinks or a glass of Boulevard from the tap for $2. They also serve martinis and custom drinks. On the dance floor — nicknamed "The Love Tunnel" — facets of red, beige and blue lights race across the floor. The music moves the house to music from U2. The only indication you may get that this place is different is the sign you see when you open the front door: "This is not a closet." "I want people to be themselves when they come in," says Kerry Johnson, owner of the new Hideaway, 106 North Park St. "I want them to be comfortable here. They can come in and do what they want, as long as they behave themselves." Hideaway is a gay bar. It opened in July where the old Hideaway was, at the south corner of the west side of the Massachusetts Street strip. They dropped the "the" from the name and didn't keep much else either. Only the location and the bar top itself are the same. "Now, the name has a totally different connotation," says Johnson, who owns the bar with her husband. For Johnson, this is a golden opportunity. She says Lawrence's diverse gay community has been traveling too far to find a bar that accepts them. Now, they have a place that will tolerate everybody right in their own hometown. "Why somebody didn't open a gay bar five years ago, I don't know." Johnson said. But since opening, Johnson said, the Hideaway is the first gay bar to open in Lawrence since the others closed in the 1980s, Johnson said. Diamonds is now the Yacht Club, 530 Wisconsin St., and the Room Downstairs is now the Big 6 Sports Club, 701 Massachusetts St. The only other gay bars around are in Kansas City and Topeka. community has responded. An average night can bring about 150 people, while a busy night could see about 300 people passing in and out of the bar during the evening. The secret to its success is diversity, says Ken Stewart, general manager. For drinkers and talkers, the bar area offers tables, as well as bar stools. The Love Tunnel is for those who like to dance. The game area is for the more competitive. And at the far end of the bar is "The Love Pit," where furniture, a coffee table and works by local artists have been set up for the more serious and intellectual. "We want this to be a gathering place, a hangout." Stewart says as he sips coffee in the Love Pit. "There are a lot of people who don't drink. You want to offer something to everybody. "In that way, we're like a three-ring circus." Stewart said. Stewart describes Hideaway as an "alternative lifestyle" bar, not just a gay bar. So, he says, Hideaway's spectrum of customers is pretty wide: homosexual and straight, flamboyant and reserved. In fact, he said, a significant number of its patrons are straight. "There are a lot of young people who don't care," he said. "They just want to party." The bar is looking to further expand and diversify, Stewart says. Plans call for enlarging the dance floor and broadening the Top 40 and techno music format. He also said shows — local homosexual bands, drag shows, amateur night, body painting, body piercing and other features — soon would be on the bill. For now, he says, the format will remain the same. But patrons who were there Saturday night seemed to like what Hideaway offered so far. "It's an inviting place and environment," said Bob McKinney, Lawrence resident. "It's more to my standards. The staff here is very polite. They make you feel quite at home." Chris McHale, Lawrence resident, said the atmosphere was welcoming. "There's room for everybody," she said. "I don't like reverse discrimination. I'm not prejudiced toward bisexuals and heterosexuals. I have been, but I didn't want to live like that. So I appreciate a bar like this. Nobody will be turned away." The 125 Subject Notebook 21 OLYMPUS Pocketziner S924 HIGH RESolution TV RECORDER Becoming a Great Dictator M Marine Biology 234 Observing Human Anatomy Pondering Your Future The Diver in You If You Rudely The World Series 10 Intense French The Inner Voice Quoting Kensue Cafeteria Catherine Geology 105 Muttering Obscenities Psychology 203 Capturing Your Coach Getting Payed Political Science 215 Coffee Talk Rise and Resume The Meaning of Life Phone Numbers Hot Phone Numbers Phone Numbers To Die For Reminiscing with Yourself Speech Communications Outlining a Screenplay Communicating 101 Talking While Masticating Professor Bashing and Reading the Book Recordings Secretary Shopping List Reminder Ennouncement 301 OLYMPUS MICROCASSETTE'SYSTEM Top 10 Answering Machine Greetings Challenges 405 What You Should Tell Your Parents Conversation to Father Mock Interviewing Massaging Shakespeare Building Your Vocabulary Reality Reading Mars, Lenson and McCarrney Swap Open Analysis More Electives ... Never miss another ○pqrstuvwxyzabcdefghijklmn. Available in Camera America 1610 West 21st Street, Lawrence, Kansas 60464 + Wolf's Camera Shop 615 Kansas Avenue, Topeka, Kansas 66051. And Other Fine Shoots. If you can't find the Olympus Microscopes™ Recorder you (the 9829 figure) call here (1-800-221-1004 for information) KMS KMS JOICO KMS JOICO NEXUS BEAUTY WAREHOUSE & HASKINONE 520 West 23rd 841-5885 FILL MIDDLE REDKEN 5 Wanted: Funny or unusual roommate stories. The features page is preparing an article on the "real world" of living with friends and enemies. If you have any anecdotes or contributions, call Traci or Casey at 864-4810 or stop by Room 111 in Stauffer-Flint Hall before Friday. Now Hiring Reliable, motivated KU Students to call KU Alumni Tuesday and Thursday evenings 5:45-9:45 p.m. September 13 through December 2 $4.90 per hour starting wage. Call Marie Adams-Young 9-11 and 2-4 M-F 864-4201 CRAFTSMAN What is the best way to SAVE money in Lawrence? the answer is simple: Available at these locations THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN C A R D Wilmington, DE 1984 NCSS UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP 1116 W23rd Jayhawk Bookstore 420 Commerce Place, Atlanta, GA 30314 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN KU KU BOOKSTORE 119 Stauffer-Flint *Second level in the Kansas Union Bookstore at the Counter Court First level in the Burge Unit Bookstore at the Counter Court DON'T YOU WANT A JOB YOU CAN PUT ON YOUR RESUME? If you're hoping for a bright future, we'd recommend you start early. With us. The Jayhawker Yearbook is now looking for individuals, from first year to graduate students, in any major who are interested in getting practical experience on campus. If you think you have what it takes (we only require enthusiasm), you might be interested in one of the following positions: - Section Editor (Student Life, Greek Life, Entertainment, Academics, Athletics, Portraits, Organizations, News/Index) - Assistant Section Editor - Reporter - Photographer - Marketing Intern - Production Assistant For more information, call: Jayhawker Yearbook 864-3728 . AEROBICS with --- BODY BOUTIQUE The Women's Fitness Facility Purchase 10 tans for $30 and get 5 tans FREE - Nautilus & Freeweights - Reebok Step - Stairmasters/Treadmill - Personal Fitness Training - Full Spa Area - Lifecycle/Rowing Machine - 60 Aerobic classes per week * 2 Aerobic rooms FIRST VISIT FREE! $19 PER MONTH 3 month Free for 50 members 749-2424 9th & Iowa • Hillcrest Plaza 4B Tuesday, August 30, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 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 G STONEBACK'S APPLIANCE DORM SIZE REFRIGERATORS FOR RENT 2 cu. ft. $45 4 cu. ft. $65 school year 929 Mass. FREE DELIVERY 843-4170 929 Mass. 843-4170 FREE DELIVERY BEDS DESKS BOOKCASES Everything But Ice 936 Mass. Sunday, August 25th - Sunday, September 4th ONLY SPECIAL PRICES ON BAUSCH & LOMB & RAW-BAN SUNGLASSES --- CATS as low as $23.95 WAYFARERS as low as $39.95 --- AVIATORS as low as $29.95 THE DEAL: The Etc. Shop $30 OFF ALL BUSCH & LOMB AND RAY-BAN SUNGLASSES REGULARLY PRODED $59 OR MORE EXCEPT FOR KILLER LOOP SUNGLASSES. $50 OFF OVER 30 STYLES OF RAY-BAN SUNGLASSES (140 PAIR IN STOCK). $50 OFF ALL STYLES OF VOUGE-FREIZE FASHION SUNGLASSES FROM BUSCH & LOMB ON DISPLAY. 928 Massachusetts • 843-0611 OPEN: 10:53 Mon-Sat • Thurs 'til 8pm • 12-5 Sunday VISA, MASTERCARD, DISCOVER, AMEX All prices marked on bags are our regular prices - no markup to mark down. Limited to stock on hand - no special orders or layaways at these special prices. All your favorite music...and more! 1299 CDs 899 Cass. Freedy Johnston L7 HUGBRY FOR STINK Featuring: Andreas • Beat Haro Again • Past My Prec This Perfect World Bad Imagination BIRD CITY MILITARY BASE BIRD CITY MILITARY BASE BIRD CITY MILITARY BASE "water are ground" "water are earth" "material matter" KU WORKSTUDIES KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store that offers rebates to KU students WATKINS We Care For KU' 1907 Anonymous HIV Antibody Testing What? the test for HIV - the AIDS virus Where? Watkins Health Center Cost? $19 cash (paid at initial visit) When? Mondays 864-9507 "Anonymous Testing" means you do not use your real name when 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 SERVIC 864-9500 Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA 820-822 Mass.841-0100 Through August 31st SCHWINN SPONSORED BACK-TO-SCHOOL BEAUTY SPECIALIST While They Last. SALE Additional Savings on Cycle Works's Everyday Low Prices Frontier 15 years for all armory to save weight. MSRP $199 SALE PRICE $179 High Plaina 21 impal five + gear, ch.m.f &r f &r f &r MSRP $349 SALE PRICE $299 Frontier 15 gears for fun. Sidewinder 18 smoothed hyper-glide wrenches & all rimrs MSRP $245 SALE PRICE $199 impact 18 gears, bm moyt framework fm, qr fe, rf MSRP $299 SALE PRICE $299 Moab 21 ap f+ 100% d. bob chly moly f& f or f.r for r. MSRP $399 SALE PRICE $349 High Timber $7X equipped 100% ch. mol, rock shade quadron 10. MSRP $749 SALE PRICE $749 C CYCLEWORKS CYCLING AND FITNESS 1601 W. 23*rd*·842-6363 HOURS: Mon-Sat 9:30-6; Thurs 'til 8; Sun Noon-4 JOCK'S NITCH SPORTING GOODS The Sports Look of Today! Over 20 Styles of Watches - Sports - Outdoor TIMEX SPLIT-SECOND SPORTS - Running - Dress TIMEX INDIGLO 840 Massachusetts 842-2442 Classified Directory 100s Announcements 105 Personal 110 Business 114 Travel 120 Announcements 130 Entertainment 130 Art 205 Help Wanted 225 Professional Services 235 Typing Services All real estate advertising in the newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise 'any preference, race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or dis- 200s Employment Classified Policy The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any personal group based on race, color, religion, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are subject to a certain fee. 1 K Professor will pay for ride from Lawrence to 12th and Quivera in O P. on occasional thursday or Friday afternoons. Call Dr. Hawkins 864-3436 or 842-1731. 105 Personals WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO Really Listen 100s Announcements 305 For Sale 340 Auto Sales 360 Miscellaneous 370 Want to Buy 408 Real Estate 430 Roommate Wanted THE ETC. SHOP 328 Mass. STERLING SILVER JEWELRY Rings, Hoops, Bracelets, & Pendants LEATHER 110 Bus. Personals 300s Merchandise LEATHER Backpacks, Belts, Jackets, & Purses Bausch & Lomb, Rayban, Killer Loops, i's, Réco, Serengeti, and Vuarnet THE ETC. SHOP 928 Mass. STERLING SILVER JEWELRY SUNGLASSES Bausch & Lomb. Ravban. Killer Loops 400s Real Estate 405 Real Estate Kansan Classified: 864-435R Really Listen Call or drop by Headquarters RECYCLE THE KANSAN THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Call or drop by Headquarters We're here because we care. 841-2345 1419 Mass. We're always open. Regular Clinic Hours Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm Saturday 8am-11:30am Pharmacy Hours Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm Friday 8am-6pm Saturday 8.30am-12.30pm Sunday 11am-3pm Watkins Health Center 864-9500 Urgent Care (Additional Charge) Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm Sunday 8am-4:30pm FUNDRAISING Choose from 3 different fundraiser lashes eitheringlem orment. Earn $$$ for your group plan plus personal cash balance. Call 1-800-932-0238, Ext. 65. CASHI FOR COLLEGE 900,000 GRANTS AVAIL- ABLE IMEDIMETALLY 1900-2432-8788 QUALIFY 120 Announcements Recycled Soundscapes 12th & Oread 841-9475 Where have all the posters gone... See us in the Union! Pay Cash for CD's Milk Volunteers Needed ! 130 Entertainment 842-7766 For Stress Reduction 1 hr. classes OGA 0 Headquarters Custor Center Caring people needed to learn basic counseling. Information Meetings, 1419 Massachusetts Wed. Aug. 24 or 31, 8-9 pm, 841-2345. G FREE POOL DAILY 3-8 pm Bottlenck 737 New Hampshire St ALVAMAR YOGA A 140 Lost & Found Looking to give away one year old puppy found one week ago in West Lawrence to good home. Potty trained and extremely lovable but we can't afford it. Call Kim or Stephenay. 748-7530. 男 女 200s Employment 205 Help Wanted NOW HIRING **BILLIONS OF DOLLARS** have been earned in the environmental industry are being set up for work as well. They staff various time/part time positions. For information call 913/287-2120 ext. 405 For Little Caesars Pizza locations at 23rd and 15th or 15th and KAARD. EARN UP TO $10/HOUR. Apply in person. Driver must have a driver's license and drive licence and be at least 18 years old and drives license and be at least 18 years old. $100/hr. possible mailing our circulars for info $100/hr. 10Watters on Wheels is hiring now! *Delivery position* *Must have own team and be able to prove* Adams Alumni Center Need a m. & p.m. dishwasher, cooks a m. & p.m. flexible hours, desserts person for Tues., Thurs. & Sat. from 3-11 p. Positions available immediately. Angie in person, 1966 Broad Ave ATTENTION O.T. and P.P. students. Female attendant needed for disabled woman. Mon. through Sat, mornings and 2 evenings per week. Bachelor's degree in Human Career Work Study. 110 Birch. 84-1794. Babyairy needed for two delightful toddler girls on a holiday in NYC, from 5 days/evenings/wEEKends. Experience, own car, and rea'f are required. Short drive from KU. Please respond to box 221. University Daily Kansas 1198 BABYSITTER NEEDED Mornings 8:30-10:20 for friendly, bright 3 year old, 841-309,早 a.m. or after 7:30 p.m. Beautician/Barber Part-time Looking for two-part time hairdryers who want to clean on weekends or evening. 20 location. Childcare needed for a 4 year old in home, Friday morning 9 a.m. - noon. Cc and references regard- COLLEGE STUDENTS #14 25.11.15 STARTING Local branch of na! cal. Fitting immediate entry level openings. Flex time schedules. 3-5 days, per week. Weekends opt. all majors accepted For 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. Course credit will be required. A GOOD DRIVING RECORD IS A MUST. Please apply 08/31/94 at Cottonwood Inc. 2801 W. 31. EOE. CRUISER SHIPS NOW HIRING - Earn up to $150/month工资 Travel from Canada to World Travel. Seasonal & Full-time employment available. No experience necessary. For more information call 1-206-638-0489 CUSTODIAL WORKER: Two (2) positions open for student hourly custodial workers at Watkins Health Center. Approximately 15-20 hours a week (M-F) with an occasional Saturday morning. Must be an enrolled K.U. student. Work schedules will vary according to hours the facility is open. Must apply in person to Personnel Office, Watkins Health Center. Weekend: August 30-September 2 between 4:05-9:00. E and E Display Group is taking applications for E-time assembly屏器 on all shifts. Please apply in person Monday thru Friday between 8:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. 910 E. Street-Lawrence Godfather's Pizza is in now hiring day and night cafe and evening drives. Apply in person at 711 Director, Junior & Senior High Jewish Youth Groups. Supervise about 25 enthusiastic Lawrence teens. About 30 hr/month. Start ASAP. May 1995. $250/30 per month/depending on qualifications of student. Admission is ground preferred but not required. Previous experience in JWY Youth Groups desired. If you are: experienced, dedicated, 21 & over, have our own car and enjoy this type of work send letter of application including names and phone & a community drive, drive Lawrence KS 6044. Job share possible. Domino's Pizza in hiring. 10 delivery positions available, two inside positions available. Apply for 4 am per day at Domino's Pizza, 9th & Ila. Benefits include: free meals, flexible schedule, driver take home cash money, discounted menu prices. Employer will be willing to work nights & weekends. DORMEN NEEDED Must be friendly, but able to handle confrontation. Call 749-5039 - Ask for ZAC Handyman/Gardener needed. Flexible hours area must be experienced. Mature age. 1827 years old. Godfather's Pizza in now hiring day and night cooks and evening drivers. Applicant in a patient厅 N 129, N 320. Graduate Student Assistant. Half-time position available in the Student Assistance Center. Position for ongoing attention to the concerns of gay, lesbian, transgender students. Bachelor's degree and graduate student status for Fall 1994 and Spring 1995; demonstrated ability to work with a variety of publics and constituencies, including sexual persons; the ability to work independently; and availability Thursday evenings. Required Application Form, available in the Student Assistance Center. Class time: 12:00 p.m. (noon), September 9, 1994, in 138强 Hall. University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas is equal opportunity/affirmative action school. Graduate student with a reliable car to pick up me at the airport and drive me once a week to info. call: (206) 632-1146 ex Internship Opportunities INTERNATIONAL EMPLOYMENT - Make up to $2,000.00 +/m on teaching basic conversational English in Japan, Taiwan, or S.Korea. No teachio nment required. (电话:089-6134-1167 for required. Fax no. (电话:089-6134-1167 for required.) **SURE REVENUES** Hiring students to contact Alumni 5-45 9:45 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday. $49.90 hr. start wage; September 13 to December 6. Please call Marie Adams-Young at 864-4201, 9:11 and 2-4 Day thursday through Friday Kansas Technology Enterprise Corporation c/o Internship Coordinator 112 W. 8th, Suite 400 Toronto, KS66032 The Kansas Technology Enterprise Corporation, a non-profit corporation which fosters technological innovation in the State of Kansas, seeks graduate students with an interest in engineering, law, computer science and finance. Students should be able to devote 15+20 hours per week, and will be compensated over a 10 or 12 month period. Candidates must be available to apply to the jobeka. Send a letter of application and resume to: KU Adams Alumni Center is now hiring for part-time banque server and host positions. Looking for responsible, hard working applicant with experience in areas 162, 163, 164 Oread, cadry corner from the Kansas Union. Jon's Notes of Lawrence is anxious to hire quality note takers for the Fall semester. Preferred GPA of above 3.5. Pick an application at Jon's Notes office at the Kansas Union. Mass Street Deli is now hiring: Nanny/Babyssity position and/or job share for Monday, Wednesday, Friday in our home for one newborn. Must be responsible; references: Call 843-240 and leave a message. Need graphic artist for T shirt design. Rage Images. Car Jarrod Tenendt, 841-7988. All wait staff, bartenders, line cooks, prep cooks All availability needed. Experience preferred for food service at the Schumann Food Company business office, 719 Uptairsta above Buffalo Bills's Smoke house) NEEP SPENDING CASH3 B.P.1 Building Services now provide a variety of varieties of NEEP Spendings. Call today for an appointment 842-6264 Ask for Jeannie SHIPPING AND DATA ENTRY ASSISTANTS NEEDED RADP Publications, Inc. is an equal opportunity employer concerned with creating a pleasant work atmosphere. If you are looking for an enjoyable work environment with a reliable company, please come by and fill out an application at 1601 West K23rd Street, Suite 302, Lawrence, KS 2347. Lawrence-based, technical publishing company has several part-time (15-20 hours per week) positions in accounting and mailing statements; copying computer disks for inventory; daily mail delivery and to pickup from the post office; inputting subscription orders into a computer; and sorting and distributing software packages with high volume and working as a team required. Ability to maneuver up to 50 pounds and type 50 wpm preferred. These positions are part of the Information Technology department which helps other areas of the company as needed. R.D Secretary, 1-6 p.m. weekdays. General office duties include accurate record keeping, computer proficiency, ability to work well with public and young children. Word Perfect for Windows required. Apply at Children's Learning Center, 205 N Michigan, EOE. SIRLON STOCKADE Now hiring all restaurant positions. No experience required. Angela in person Mon-Fri, 1054 Iowa STUDENT CLEERIAL ASSISTANT I Deadline: 9/29% Salary: $4.35/hour. Duties include typing, filing, photocopying, distributing mail, and performing all assigned client tasks to maintain all procedure documentation for this position. Required: must be enrolled in 6 hours at the University of Kansas. To apply, complete a job application available in the Computer Center, EO/A EMLOYER. SPRING HEBREY 9-SELL TRIPS EARN CASH & GO FREE!! !!!! BEST Travel Services is now hiring campus representatives. Lowest rates to Jamaica, Cancun, Daytona and Panama City PYRAMID PIZZA "We Pile It On!" Now Taking Applications Looking for enthusiastic people who understand what great service is all about! Now Hiring: DRIVERS (HOURLY PLUS COMMISSION, MUST HAVE OWN CAR AND PROOF OF INSURANCE) FULL AND PART TIME Apply in person 14th and Ohio (under the Wheel) UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Tuesday, August 30, 1994 5B Advertising Pagination Macintosh Proficient $6-8/hour depending on ability to produce ability to produce. Mornings-approx. 4 hours Mon-Fri Must be capable of working on Quark XPress in a fastpaced, progressive newspaper setting. You'll use a Macintosh computer to build pages for the Daily Kansan by placing ads on pre-formatted templates. Accuracy and dependability are crucial qualifications. We're looking for a capable problem-solver who can take responsibility while gaining expertise on cutting-edge technology. The Kansan is an award-winning newspaper that has been nationally recognized repeatedly for leadership through innovation. You'll become familiar with a wide range of Macintosh-compatible hardware and software that's common in professional advertising, publications, promotional and design agency environments. Call Catherine Ellsworth at 864-4810 between 1 and 6 p.m. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Part time, evenings and Sat - new home construction up to Lavender $ 5 90hrs {781-331-8131} Part time help needed for delivery work. After Part time help, Appl. in person Hannah's appliances 832 Mass. *Part-time cleaning time for property management* *Personal references and resume* *Morning Star; 917 Tenn.* Part-time time opportunity. Mark Shale at Country Club Plaza has day, evening and weekend available. Hourly plus bonus. Generous discount. Call Eva at (816) 765-3858 Preschool Sub Prefer 7-1, 11-30 to 30, or all day any weekday. Jr. Assistant (fulltime) Attendance Across School 842-2232, Burnden (fulltime) Attendance Across School 842-2232 PUBLICATIONS COORDINATOR (*Student Hourly Position*). Research and Training Center for Human Resources, University of Kansas, $4.25 to $6.00 depending on university of Kansas, $4.25 to $6.00 depending on experience, 20 hours per week, must be enrolled at the Student Health Department, Room 409 Dole Bldg, University of Kansas. For questions contact Pam Wills, 864-4065. Application deadline: August 30, 1994. The University of Kansas is an equal opportunity/affirmation action employee. Reception wanted for Sizlers, 910 Kentucky. After- reception on Saturday. Approximately 30 hours. Apply in person. Retired college professor needs local college student (male) to stay overnight. Can sleep on the job and earn $23. Must be available during vacations. R S Hayman 2015 131 Arkansas 841-8543 Rainire Montessori School located on thirteen acres with horses and a pot-bellied pig named Wibur is looking for 2 classroom assistants. Hours are Monday-Friday, 9am-5pm, will train. Transportation required; call 843-8000. Advertising Production Artist Macintosh Proficient $6-8/hour depending on ability to produce. Flexible hours. Flexible hours. Must be capable of designing ads in a deadline-sensitive newspaper setting using Quark XPress for the Macintosh. Experience with Adobe Photoshop helpful, though will consider a quick study. You'll be using cutting-edge computer technology to produce advertisements according to the layouts developed by our clients and account executives. The Kansan is an award-winning newspaper that has been nationally recognized repeatedly for leadership through innovation and has captured several advertising design awards. You'll become skilled with a wide range of Macintosh-compatible hardware and software that's common in professional advertising, publications, promotional and design agency environments. Call Catherine Ellsworth at 864.4810 between 1 and 6 p.m. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN J. CREW FACTORYSTORE OPENING OCT. LAWRENCE, KS RETAIL Our Factory Store captures all the color & spirit of our catalogues. J. Crew is looking for a few exceptional candidates fill sales positions in our newest Kansas factory store location. SALESASSOCIATES J. Crew will provide you with an exciting work environment, competitive salary and a great store discount. We will be You must be able to provide J. Crew with an outstanding customer service, a positive and enthusiastic attitude, a great work ethic and a commitment to be part of a successful team. We will be conducting conferences 8:00am to 9:00am Tuesday, 6:60am Wednesday, Sept. 7th ELDRIDGEHOTEL 701 massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas Noappointmentsnecessary Nophonecalls,please Onetia Factory Store now hiring MWF midwife shift. Work 8-40 hours, Pick your own schedule Limited weekends. Apply in person 10-5 daily. Suite 103, Lawrence Riverfront Plaza, 749-6412. EARN CASH ON THE SPOT $15 Today $30 This week By doubling your life saving blood plasma WALK-INS WELCOME! NABI Biomedical Center 816 W 24th 749-5750 STUDENTS Need extra money? Job humbum going nowhere? Can you support a company now hiring part and full time motivated people to meet the expanding demand for our product: Professional training available. Call K C K Teacher's Aide: 10:35-50 p.m weekdays. Classroom experience with preschool children preferred but not required. Apply at Children's Learning Center, 205 N Michigan EOE Valley View Care Home is currently seeking molliont position. Work in the CAJDA day shift and evening positions. Worff flexible scheduling, competitive hourly wages and benefits on person at 2518 Ridge Court. LAWENE LEOE Wanted: Painter - Maintenance assistant part-time for property management, good pay, resume required. Send resumes to: Wanted Group, Attn: Sarah Meyer, 301 N. 27th St., Chicago, IL 60609. WILLIE C SCAFE & BAR This Ain't Your Ordinary Ho-Hum Company! If you are looking for a fun and challenging position with opportunity for career development within and entrepreneurial company, come join our team. We have experience in unconventional restaurant management team. Prior restaurant experience NOT necessary. Prefer individuals with a solid background in people management. We provide good communication, attention to detail, high energy level, positive attitude, and the ability to manage multiple projects and people while running high sales. If this sounds like the career for you, contact us. Dawn Benson 1320 E. Kellogg Drive Wichita KS 67211 k forward to hearing from you Work in Perry If you have transportation, can drive 15 minutes to work, and need a flexible schedule this job is for you. This work involves light training in Microsoft Excel, preparing a 4 to 6 hour a night 1 to 5 days a week. If your schedule permits and you are needing extra $,$ please contact our office immediately. Manpower. WORK STUDY: The School of Business has man- work study positions available now. Please come to the Business Placement Center in 125 Summer-field to apply. 225 Professional Services THE LAWYER < Driver Education > offered thru Midwife Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749 OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense Rick Frydman, Attorney 701 NEAS 8433 For free consultation call BRAXTON B. COPLEY Attorney at Law General Practice DUL/TRAFICICKETS OVERLAND AND PARK-KANSAS CITY AREA CHARLES R. GREEN ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Call for a free consultation (816) 367-9949. ENGLISH TUTOR. English courses, writing, proofreading, literature. ESL classes. Highly qualified tutors. Req. B.A. or同等学历. Female care care provider for individual who is minally handicapped. Mon./Thurs overnights starting at PM and Sat. two per month. Perl super upper classman or grad. student who has experience working with disabled individuals. References required. Send reply to Carol Kopper P.O. Box 623 Topeka, KS 66637-0623 or (913) 471-3911 719Massachusetts 749-5333 Wanted: Part time teacher for home care day 10-15 /week. /exp. reff. #41-758 Work Study: The School of Business has many work study positions available now. Please come to the business placement center in 125 Summer- field to apply. Landlord/Tenant SUNFLOWER DIVE SHOP TrafficTickets, Misdemeanors, Tune-ups, overhauls, upgrades, free air. 304 Mas sacchsutsb 843-5000 TRAFIC-DUI'S Fake IDs & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal and civil matters The law offices of 235 Typing Services SUNFLOWER BIKE SHOP We carry Bianchi, Specialized and Trek. We accessorize a full service bike shop Layway - SUNFLOWER OUTDOOR SAILBOARD CLOSE: SUNFLOWER O'Brien. Get one cheap 804 Massachusetts sailboat for $165. BOLD G. STROLE Donald G. Strole 16 Eaat13th 842-1139 1:der Women Word Processing. Former editor transforms scribbles into accurate pages of letter quality type. Also transcriptions. #435-2063 Quality Word Processing Dissertations, Theses, term-papers, Resumes, Business letters, etc. Laser printing. #855-0062 WANT YOUR WORK TO LOOK IT'S BEST? Put my service to the test. Fine-tune your needs. MARIN' THE GRATE is the one to call see sec 365-123 X 78 Toyota Celica. Good condition. Only 91%km. Ne alpine radio with 4 speakers. A支付 $2300 for new equipment. 300s Merchandise 305 For Sale 1992 Stump Jumper FS. Fall DX, Specialized Stump疾, low hamps, Call 842-3069. 486&125 notebook. 4gm RAM 120MB HM Monochrome. Built-in trackball. 3PCMA Slots. Dos. Windows, Leather case. 3 months old. $1375.849.999 Amerere 610 rowing machine $100 842-1731 Beds, Desks, Bookcases Everything But Ice $100.000 Beds, Desks, Bookcases Everything But Ice 936 Mass Curtis Audio 2 and 3 way speakers for sale. Will also custom build 4 inch wooftors? Tom griller! Will repair FOR SALE: Apple II GS 3.5 and 5.25 drives, monitor possible, $500; Phone 842-3411 For Sale 1800 Chevy Malibu 4-door, automatic, air conditioning, 105,000 miles. C电话 Car Mall at 866-257-3800. For Sale. Mac SB, lots of loaded software, printer, carrying case, call 816-335-1249 with best offer Honda Aero Bce scooter. Low miles excellent condition. Roles double mounted tag (campus access) King Waterbed with headboard $150, 1750- TUAC $200, Nintendo and joystick $50, WoodHutch $40, Antique Round Coffee Table $150. Call 865-969- @ 6: 00 p.m. Mackenzie Plus with metro 201D and Image wifi+ printer in top condition 645 or best offer 841 Need a sofa? We have used one for $40! Blue and seashell feet long. Call 862-9528 between 5 and 10am. Nikon F 18 H Ledge Eye point. in box, Cost $2,150 Boker sold or best offer. 913-723-913. Tulips suit up. STUDENTS! Rent a computer, software, and hardware in a semistaff Call 800-693-6048 for more information. 340 Auto Sales 91 WJ Wetta GL, 5K. 5-speed, sunroof, AC tape, great shape, max grip (negligible, 1374-87) --and carpeted 1977 Dodge Aspen station wagon- run well. Make of 84,84,840. 1962 Pontiac Grand Am GT, V6, Loaded $14,500, Day: 79-950 · Evening: 1:836-307 360 Miscellaneous Need a Break from Classes? Get credit having fun riding horses. Enroll in HPER 180 HORSEMANSHP Call Joy 159-481-604 for more info. --and carpeted MIRACLE VIDEO FALL ADULT VIDEO CLEARANCE $7.88 910 N. 2nd • 841-8903 19th & Haskell • 841-Z504 ★★★★★ Used & Curious Goods 731 New Hampshire 841-0550 Noon-6:00 Tues-Sat Buy·Sell·Trade THE CHAPMAN 4221 A 405 For Rent FOUR BEDROOM APARTMENT (Great location on bus route, NO PETS) PAVILION AVAILON 619-742-8924 Diplex Cone to KU Stadium, large two bedroom, three bath home for $800 per month a 600-meter 803-524-1948 or 804-312-5807 803-524-1948 or 804-312-5807 Rent a WASHER & DRYER For Only $45 a Month PETS Available NOW. Call 749-4228. House For Rent. Fountain bedroom, central air, washer/dryer hookups, fireplace, two all appliances, laundry room, kitchen/bathroom 795/month $750, plus deposit. Call #424-8884. Lg. 2 BDRM apt. off campus. Avail. immed. Lower level garden; new kitchen overlooking living room. Full carpet. fireplace, live fire, A/C. Very clean! $400 + utilities. 10:39 400s Real Estate Available now in Lawrence | to 4 BDRM Home 802.2388 For Rent: MORNING STAR for rooms and apartments and well treated by HORMAL STAR (STAR) DISHWASHER 1258 Tennessee. Unfurnished 823m. utilities paid, carpeted, no pets. Beds 830m. 832-2718 Fabulous 4bdm room for rent. clean and new room. No Pets. Nb Call 842-7459 available immediately! - Free Maintenance - GE quality Two Speed, Heavy Duty, Large Capacity - Computer room with Looking for a place to live? Check out these housing options Apple Macintosh and Check out these housing options... *NoDeposit Delta Corporation 842-8428 3301 Clinton Parkway Ct. Suite #5 Lawrence, KS 66047 -Fullyfurnished IBM Computers Renta - Free Utilities - Quiet Study Areas NAISMITH Call Naismith Hall for More Information at 843-8559 Looking for a place to live? Check out these housing options... - Front door bus service - Dine anytime meals - Fitness room - Weekly maid service - Private parking NAISMITH Hall Call naismith Hall for more information at 843-8559 Seni-private room/apt, spacious and comfortable, in nice home in West JF neighborhood. Wash clothes only, bath only. Microwave, laundry privileges; utilities and rent negotiable. Prefer mature responsible tenants. Possible work in exchange for partial rent. No refs. Refs. req. 843-7368 after 5 leave message. TRAILRIDE APARTMENTS THE TRAILRIDE immediately heated. Water and trash腑 843-7233 Looking for a place to live? Check out these housing options... - Great campus location Quiet, comfortable, furnished rooms and apartments. Two short blocks from campus. Some utilitarian amenities. PETS WELCOME - LaundryFacilities No Sublease Fee - A few steps from Allen Fieldhouse - Close to KU Bus Route South Pointe NAISMITH Hall 2166 W. 26th St. 843-6446 - Sand Volleyball Court Call Naismith Hall for More information at 843-8559 - Swimming Pool - Ample Private Parking - Water & Trash Paid Outstanding New Staff!!! ORCHARD CORNERS COMPLETELY FURNISHED A BEDROOM Walk to RU. One bedroom apartment in older building. Bedrooms are paid, no pet,depot. 683-1453 after 1 p.m. - On KU Bus Route * Close to Campus * Swimming Pool * Stop By Today! Equal 749-4226 M-F 9-5 Opportunity 15th & Kasold T 10-4 ROOMMATE FINDER A&S MANAGEMENT SERVICES A&S NEED A ROOMMATE! MANAGEMENT SERVICES 841-5454 Grad. student seeking roommates for 2-bdm. Np. Great location, on bus route, jacuzzis, $30/mo. Need to be 18 yrs old or older. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ROOMMATE WANTED! PE / Ns.户 w/ w/ Dogs Dogs Dogs Dogs Dogs Dogs Dogs Dogs Outing, Outgoing. Call 144-811-9780 How to schedule an ad: - By phone: 864-4358 Non-moking females $80/month plus utilities 3 months. Washer/dryer. For more info call: 719-743-1624 - By Mail: 119 Stauffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 66045 Ads phone in may be held by your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made. * In person 1301 Stuffler Floor Two females looking for a third to share three bedrooms. Call immediate. Cable paid $850 mow. Call 842-7831. Classified Information and order form Wanted: Two seat, responsible, n/4 commutes to share new house. 3rd bath, 2 beds. Quit neighbor. Grad students preferred. $225 + 1/2 utilities. Please call 843-8478 Stop by the Kanza offers 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 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 the deadline. When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Renewals on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check with cash are not available. Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insections 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 ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run. The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a lee of $4.00.
Num. of insertions:Cost per line per day
1X2-3X4-7X8-14X15-29X30+X
3 lines2.101.601.10.90.75.50
4 lines1.951.20.80.70.65.45
5-7 lines1.901.10.75.65.60.40
8+ lines1.80.95.65.60.55.35
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Example: 3 lines for 5 days — 3 lines X 5 days X $1.10=$16.50 Classifications 105 personal 110 business persons 120 announcements 130 entertainment ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print: 1 | | | | | | 2 | | | | | 3 | | | | | 4 | | | | | 5 | | | | | 1401 horse and bond 355 for sale 205 help wanted 340 auto sales 222 professional services 360 miscellaneous 235 typing services 370 want to buy 405 for rent 430 roommate wanted Name: Phone: - Date ad begins: Total days in paper Total ad cost: Classification: Date ad begins:___ Total days in paper_ Address: Method of Payment (Check one) Check enclosed MasterCard Visa (Please make checks payable to the University Dalkan Kansu) Furnish the following if you are charging your ad: Account number: Expiration Date* Print exact name appearing on credit card: MasterCard Signature: The University Daily Kansas, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66445 THE FAR SIDE By GARY LARSON Okay, " How do you do. My name is Tarzan, and I believe you are Known as Jane." "Allow me to introduce myself. I am Tarzan, Lord of the Jungle... And you ?" "You must be Jane... I am Tarzan. It's a pleasure to meet you." There she is. Me Tarzan! You Jane! Damn. 6B Tuesday, August 30,1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WE CAN'T HELP YOU WIN THE RAT RACE, BUT WE CAN HELP YOU FINISH. C It's a busy world and it's sometimes hard to know what activity to pursue.And when we need medical attention it can be frustrating trying to find the best place to go for help. P At times like these,it's comforting to know that the profes- and the most experienced therapists and specialists in Douglas County. Lawrence Occupational Health Services 865-0700 Lawrence Occupational Health Services offers a full range of industrial medicine options, including injury management, drug screening, physical therapy, occupational therapy and work hardening Prompt evaluations, courteous and timely service, flexible hours and plenty of convenient, accessible Lawrence PromptCare is a full service urgent care center and a fast, economical way to seek medical attention. Staffed by experienced and sionals at the new Mt. Oread Medical Arts Centre are there to lend a hand with expanded services. Lawrence PromptCare. 865-3997 board certified emergency medical physicians. Open 9 am-11pm, M-F and 12 noon-11pm weekends, no appointment is neces sary—you'll be greeted by a nurse immediately and treated fast some visits can cost you as little as $45. Lawrence PromptCare is an excellent alternative to long waits in the emergency room or when you can't see your regular physician. Mt. Oread Rehabilitation Services 832-1900 Mt. Oread Rehabilitation Services offers comprehensive rehab services including physical therapy and occupational therapy with specialization in sports medicine.Under the direction of Medical Director, Michael Geist,M.D.the program offers the broadest range of rehabilitation services ME OREAD MEDICAL ARTS CENTRE parking make Mt. Oread Medical Arts Centre an agreeable health care alternative. P KASOLD & CLINTON PARKWAY COMMUNITY Massachusetts Street soon will be home to a new McDonald's restaurant. Page 3A FEATURES CHANCE OF RAIN A KU English class learns the value of reading by teaching University employees. Page 4B KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY High 76° Low 57° Weather: Page 2. TOPEKA, KS 66612 KANSAN THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS VOL.104,NO.8 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 31, 1994 (USPS 650-640) ADVERTISING: 864-4358 NEWS:864-4810 Coalition built to oust Haitian regime Knight-Ridder Tribune PACIFIC AFRICA Three nuns mourn the death of Rev. Jean-Marie Vincent, a friend of exiled Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, v cent was shot and killed Sunday night. His death has sparked increased pressure against the military government of Haiti. KINGSTON, Jamaica — Four Caribbean nations have agreed to join an American-led military coalition to remove Haiti's ruling junta if it resists pressure to quit, U.S. government officials said yesterday. Even as the Clinton administration worked at building a coalition, Lt. Gen. Raoul Cedras and his cohorts in Port-au-Prince refused to meet with U.N. envoy Rolf Knutsson, who was in the Dominican Republic primed to negotiate the junta's departure. "We have not been successful because the military people in Haiti refused to talk with my special representative," U.N. Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali said in New York after briefing the Security Council. He said he would abandon the initiative "unless in the future I receive a mandate from the Security Council or if there is a drastic change in Haiti." Foreign ministers of Jamaica, Trinidad, Barbados and Belize told U.S. officials meeting in Kingston they would contribute to a Caribbean force of 266 soldiers to participate in the military operation to remove Haiti's military leadership. American troops would be in the first wave, with the Caribbean troops going in immediately afterward. A similar arrangement was used in the invasion of Grenada in 1983 to topple a leftist regime that had executed the prime minister. Guyana, the Bahamas, and Antigua did not make a final commitment to contribute to the 266-man force pending further internal consultations, the U.S. officials said. It was not immediately clear why the three balked. Earlier, U.S. officials said they had received assurances they would participate. "We consider what happened here today in Kingston a watershed," said Strobe Talbott, deputy secretary of state, who attended the meeting with Deputy Defense Secretary John Deutch. "We hope the military dictators in Haiti will get the message." Deutch and Talbott, joined by Leon Feurth, the national security adviser to Vice President Al Gore, later flew to the north coast of Dominican Republic. At a windswept outpost called Monte Cristi, the U.S. officials received a briefing by U.S. Army Col. William McDonough, commander of the multinational observer group that is gearing up to monitor the Dominican-Haiti border. McDougall said that by mid-September, U.S., Argentine and Canadian troops would be manning four of five planned outposts along the 160-mile border. Their goal is to "observe and report" violations of the .embargo. They will be lightly armed but not authorized to stop any of the contraband. That will be left to the Dominican Republic's forces, which are be equipped with new U.S. equipment such as all-terrain vehicles, helicopters and binoculars. But the Dominican Republic, which shares the Caribbean island of Hispaniola with Haiti, will not contribute troops to a multinational invasion, its foreign minister, Carlos Morales Troncoso, said yesterday. Haiti's violent history --- 1492-1934: Colonization and political unrest 皇 - Since 1934: Unstable governments, often run by military or dictators Military seizes control Dictatorship Democratic election 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 **SPAIN** 1492-1697 Most native Indians die; Africans brought as slaves FRANCE 1697-1804 SELF-RULE 1804-1915 More Africans Unstable; brought as more than plantation 30 rulers slaves Since 1934: Unstable governments, often run by military or dictators Military seizes control Dictatorship Democratic election 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 U.S. 1915-1934 1945, 1950 1957-1960 Two Demilitar rule no dictators 1990: Jean-Bertrand Aristide wins first democratic election 1991: After coup, efforts to restore Aristide begin KU experts don't agree with coalition By Nathan Olson Kansan staff writer Knight-Ridder Tribune/RON CODDINGTON SOURCES: World Book, Europa World Year Book; research by PAT CARR And according to local Haitian experts, a U.S. invasion of the tiny Carribean country considered the poorest in the Western Hemisphere would only add one more mountain for Haitians to climb. Bryant Freeman, director of KU's Institute of Haitian Studies, said that an invasion should be avoided if at all possible. Haitians have a saying about their country's geography: "Deye mon, gen mo," behind mountains, there are mountains. The saying could also summarize the difficulties Haitians have seen in the past ten years. "What Haiti needs is a real embargo and not the excuse for an embargo which is going on today," he said. The problem with the embargo now, Freeman said, is Haiti's 241-mile border with the Dominican Republic. The border is guarded loosely, allowing goods to flow freely into Haiti. Freeman said that those suffering the most in Haiti have been the city dwellers, who cannot afford nine-dollar-a-gallon gasoline. Unemployment is at 70 percent, Freeman said, and widespread disease is not uncommon because electricity, which is used to store vaccines, is scarce. Charles Stansifer, professor of history, agreed with Freeman that an invasion would not be a good idea. "If there's any lesson we've learned about invasions, it's that they don't work," he said. For one, Stansifer said, most Caribbean invasions by the United States have occurred because of the political problems in the United States and not a desire to help other countries. Stansifer said that Haiti should put together its own solutions. The United States could help by giving financial assistance and by training Haitians to be more economically competitive. "But the United States should be extremely patient with Haiti," Stansifer said. Sara Lechtenberg, second-year law student, was in Haiti in May and June working on a project for the U.S. State Department. She said that an invasion would be a disaster. "No one wants an invasion," she said. "The people there have lots of pride and want to solve problems on their own." Cab driver arrested and charged with rape HAITI: Local experts focus on why Caribbean nations decided to join the United States against Haiti. **Page 3A.** By Manny Lopez Kansan staff writer A Lawrence cab driver wanted on one count of rape was arrested Monday afternoon. Richard Alan Countess, 33, Lawrence, was arrested after a month-long investigation. Lawrence police said Countess was working for A-1 City Cab July 24 when the alleged attack took place. Countess is charged with raping a 20-year-old Lawrence woman the morning of July 24th at his mobile home on the 1700 block of West Fourth Street. See CAB, Page 5A. Illegal money scam will leave people broke By Manny Lopez Kansan staff writer The scheme, police said, is for the president, or top of the pyramid to get two people to pay him or her $150. Those people recruit two others to pay the president. New players are recruited until the president makes $1,200. The president then drops out of the scheme and the next two people become presidents on different pyramids. No one gets paid until they are president, which keeps them involved in the game. Pay someone $150, get some friends to do the same and eventually make $1.200. No sweat, no work, no problem. But if that sounds too good to be true, it is, Maj. Ralph Oliver of the KU police said. "It's the first time I have ever heard of this type scheme since I've been here and that's been 10 years," Oliver said. "The pyramid money schemes tend to leave people with empty promises and lost money." The KU police, Lawrence police and Kansas Securities Commission are investigating the pyramid, which is illegal. People could face criminal and civil charges, Oliver said. Police said they had received phone calls from people asking about the legality of the pyramid money scheme. "Kansas does not have a specific law that prohibits pyramid money schemes," Jim Parrish, Kansas Securities commissioner said. "But these games fit the definition of securities because there is investment of money in common enterprise with the expectation of profit." Parrish said people who were caught could have problems trying to get jobs related to the securities market because they could have a conviction or record of dealing in the securities market without a license. "Some random woman stopped me at Kwik Shop on Sunday and asked me if I had heard about the pyramid yet." Amy Sammons, Chicago junior said. "I just thought it was a scam and I didn't have the money anyway." Sammons said that she thought the game was well organized and had been on campus since Sunday. She said that she knew other people who were involved in some capacity with the game. Oliver said the beginning of the school year was a good time for such a scam to exist because students had money. He advised students to contact the police if confronted about the game. Students also can call the Crimestoppers number and report information anonymously. Rewards are offered to people whose tips lead police to an arrest. INSIDE After a summer that included several tournament victories, senior golfer Tyler Sheltan looks ahead to the upcoming Kansas golf season. Taking aim The golfer is putting the ball into the hole. Page1B. Joint alcohol policy a possibility for Greeks By Ashley Miller Kansan staff writer Students involved in the greek community soon may have a new set of rules to follow if they want to have a party. The Interfraternity Council, in conjunction with the KU Panhellenic Association, proposed and briefly explained a joint alcohol policy at their general assembly meeting last night. Panhellenic will present the policy at their delegate meeting on Sept. 6. Mark Galus, vice president of public relations for IFC, said the proposed policy would combine the separate policies that IFC and Panhellenic have right now. However, because fraternities and sororities are not completely familiar with one another's rules, the policy may seem new. Jennifer MacDonald, president of Panhellenic, said the joint alcohol policy was created to ease communication between fraternities and sororites when planning a party. "Right now we can't really collaborate because of the separate policies," MacDonald said. "This way we would have something substantial between the two of us for functions." Galus said the joint policy requires fraternities and sororities to provide food and non-alcoholic beverages at all parties. Right now, only the Panhellenic policy requires this. Galus said several guidelines in the IFC alcohol policy also were included in the joint policy. Right now, only fraternities See ALCOHOL, Page 5A. ONE L Photo Illustration by Paul Kotz/ KANSAN A proposed policy could change the way students party at the University of Kansas. Included in the proposal would be requirements to serve food and non-alcoholic beverages at fraternity and sorority functions. Q THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN C A R D KU Valid Through July 31, 1995 NCCS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN KU THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Available at these locations: NCCS UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP 1116 W 23rd Jayhawk Bookstore S 1420 Crescent Rd.*Lawrence, Ks. 66044 KU KU BOOKSTORES -Second level in the Kansas Union Bookstore -First Level in the Burge Union Bookstore Restaurants & Bars AMIGO'S 1819.W.23rd·842-1620 Get the daily special prices everyday of the week BUY 1 6" Cold Sub Sandwich, get 1 for 79¢ BLIMPIE'S SUBS AND SALADS 2540 Iowa 865,4000 BONANZA DOMINO'S PIZZA 832 Iowa St *841-8002 25% OFF Any Delivery Ordernot valid with any other offer) DOS HOMBRES 815 New Hampshire:841-7286 BUY1 Menu Item. and get the Second One at 1/2 Price DRAKE'S SNACK SHOP 10% off any purchase of $2.50 or more 10% Massachusetts*843-0561 10% off any purchase of $2.50 or more ESPRESS O'HOUSE 10 E. 9th St;843-2007 $1.00 OFF Any Purchase Over $3.50(Includes food and coffee drinks) FULL MOON CAFE $1.00 OFF Sandwiches and Dinners Before 6 P.M., Tuesday GLASS ONION 624 W 12h84H-2310 FREE Cup of Our House Coffee (Certified Orenically Grown) with Anv Meal Purchase IMPERIAL GARDEN 2907 W 6th·841-1688·FREE Soft Drink (with FREE refills) JOHNNY'S TAVERN 401 N 2nD-842-0377-BUY a cheeseburger with fries at reg. fries at $1.00 per hour Thu Apr 4 10:49 PERKINS FAMILY RESTAURANT 7141 W OG 98 0216 $1.00 OFF Any Entree, Anytime, 24 hours a day PIZZA SHOPPE Med Pizza $5.95, 2 for $9.95; Lg Pizza $7.95, 2 for $13.95 PIZZA SHUTTLE 1601 W 23rd St. 842-1212 One Pizza with One Topping $2.60 plus tax Carry Out Only PYRAMID PIZZA 14th & Ohio@842-3232-$40.0m add, tops 50e; Md.$6.00, add tgs 75e $8.0L m, ad tgs 1.00; Carry Out Only 2700 Iowa·749-2615·FREE Medium Drink with Purchase of RUNZA TACO JOHN'S 1626 W 23/d/84-8185-1101 W 6/84/H3-0986-2369 Haskell Ave.82/543-3Hardshell Tsack's for i/99 (NO LIMIT) WEST COAST SALOON 2222 Iowa St.·841-2739 $1.50 OFF Any Sandwich Retail/Merchandise ATLETTES'S FOOT 914 Massachusetts*841-6966 15% OFF Regularly Priced Shoes ATHLETE'S FOOT BARB'S VINTAGE ROSE 20% OFF Any Purchase Over $20.00 Excluding Rentals BOBBI'S BEDROOM 8400 Iowa 840 7278 20% OFF Entire Inventory (sale items excluded) CENTRAL DATA 745 New Hampshire@843-3282-$2.50 Discount for Diagnostic, Upgrade Labor, System Cleaning on IBM Compatiables CLEOPATRA'S CLOSET 743 Massachusetts-749-4664 15% Off Any Item (excludes sale items) 731 Massachusetts-b443-4191*15% OFF All Apparel + FREE FREES T-CrisT w/ purchase Over $25.00 FRANCIS SPORTING GOODS GENERAL NUTRITION CENTER 250 & Louisburg 352-760 OFF Any Pro-Performance & 24-Hour Diet Item JAYNAWK BOOKSTORE 10% OFF All Academically Priced Computer Software JAYNAWK BOOKSTORE 1420 Crescent Rd*843-3826 102% OFF Any Reference or Study Aid 10% OFF Anv Tynewriter. Printer Ribbon or Printer Ink Refill 846 Illinois, Suite D=842-5950-20% OFF Whisk Brand Power Filters, All Other Brand Undergraduate Filters JAYHAWK BOOKSTORE JAYHAWK TROPICAL FISH JOCKS NITCH 840 Massachusetts*842-2442 15% OFF All Footwear, Excluding Sale Items KANSAS SPORTS CLUB 837 Massachusets* 842-2992 20% OFF KIU Sweatshirts KU BOOKSTORE KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS-864-4640 Ansize Size Exam Book (Blue Book) 5¢ KU BOOKSTORE KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS*864-4840 $5.00 OFF Anj Avyhawl Clothing or Hat Over $20.00 KULBOOKSTORE KANSAST AND BURGE UNIONS-864-6460 10% Off Any Art, Engineering or Drafting Supply KIZER-CUMMINGS LAWRENCE ONE HOUR PHOTO 2340 S. Iowa·842-8564·30% OFF C41 Process (Not Valid MERLE NORMAN 9th & New Hampshire·841-5324 10% OFF All Skin Care Products 910 N 2nd/841-8903-1919 Haskell Ave. Suite 1/841-7504 $1.00 OFF Movie Rent (limit one per visit) MIRACLE VIDEO NATURAL WAY 820 Massachusetts*841-0100*20% Off All Cotton T-Shirts Mens and Women's (Organic Cotton, Green Cotton, and Recycled Cot OUTFITTER'S 740 Massachusetts·843-3933 15% OFF Any Regular Priced Item PRO SOUND Lawrence, Ks=865-0692 10% OFF All Sales RECYCLED MUSIC CENTER 716 Massachusetts-841-1762-200 OFF (CD): Tapes, Movies, Video Games) Tuesday & 15% on (more on Credit) on Buybacks RECYCLED SOUNDS 622 W 12th St. 841-9475 $2.00 ON Any One CD, Tape, or LP (with Value Greater than $5.00) 1741 Massachusetts*749-1605 25% OFF All Monthly Rentals 15% OFF Any Non-Sale Purchase (excluding Stussy) SHARK'S SURF SHOP SPRINGMAID/WAMSUTTA 1025 N. 3rd St. B32-1100 10%OFF Any Purchase HYPERJET VIDEO BIZ 832 lowa*749-3507+2 for 1 Video Rental Monday Thursday (limit one offer per day) Services B.C. 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STADIUM DARBY 1033 Massachusetts>749-5363 Avail Haircut or Hairstyle $5.50 TWIN OAKS GOLF COURSE SPECTRUM OPTICAL $35.00 OFF Lenses and Frames w/ FREE Adjustment K-10 & County Rd. 1057-(913)542-1747 One Buy Small Bucket of Balls, Get One Small Bucket ULTIMATE TAN 2449 Iowa St.*842-49491-FREE Session with the Purchase of a 9 Session Package (Save $5.50) UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN BE A TEAM PLAYER at the - Sign up in person or by phone ·Pay for 13 weeks in advance, get two weeks FREE ·FREE SHOE RENTAL for league bowlers ·Discounts and freebies! *Discounts and freebies! •You don't have to be a pro to win! Located on level one • Kansas Union • 864-3545 Jaybowl KANSAS UNION Fall Leagues Are Forming Now! Monday Mixer Tuesday Varsity Mixer Wednesday Mixer Thursday Mixer Tonight!! 25¢ Draws $1.25 Margaritas $1.25 Swillers Thursday!! James Jeffley Trio Friday!! 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COMPUTER PRINTERS STARTING AT $100 Microsoft Office 2016 Professional Microsoft Word 2016 Professional Microsoft Excel 2016 Professional Microsoft PowerPoint 2016 Professional Microsoft Access 2016 Professional COMPUTER PRINTERS STARTING AT $100 Wolfe's carries a large selection of dot matrix, bubble jet, laser and color printers for printing your classwork, business printing and home records. We're easy to find! Take I-70 to the east Topeka exit, I-70 downtown to the 8th Street exit, straight on Madison to 6th. Cross I-70 on 6th and west 3 blocks to Kansas Ave. Go south one block. Wolfe's is on the NW corner. Wolfe's Cameras, Camcorders & Computers Weekdays: 8:30-5:30pm Thursday: 8:30-8:00pm Saturday: 8:30-5:30pm 635 Kansas Avenue Downtown Topeka, KS (913)235-1386 --- CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, August 31, 1994 3A Chancellor namesake buildings Twelve buildings have been named for previous chancellors at the University. They are shown with the dates each chancellor was in office. James Marvin 1874-83 Francis Snow 1890-1901 Joshua Lippincott 1883-89 Jayhawk Blvd. Ernest Lindley 1920-39 Frank Strong 1902-20 Clarke Wescoe 1960-69 John Fraser 1867-74 Franklin Murphy 1951-60 Deanne Malott 1939-51 Sunnyside Ave Not shown: ■ Nichols Space Technology Building on West Campus, Raymond Nichols, 1972-73 ■ Dykes Library for Health Sciences on the KU Medical Center Campus, Archie Dykes, 1973-80 R. W. Oliver 1865-67 Source: Kansan staff research Dave Campbell / KANSAN Budig must wait for immortal status No new buildings needing names in near future By David Wilson Kansan staff writer Former KU chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe has Wescoe Hall. Former chancellor Joshua Lippincott has Lippincott Hall. And former chancellor Frank Strong has Strong Hall. But former chancellor Gene Budig may have to wait a few years for his namesake building. No new major buildings will be built on campus for at least that long, said Allen Wiechert, university architect. Recommending names for new campus buildings is the job of a building naming committee, which is assembled when new buildings need names. "You have to have something to name," he said. The committee doesn't meet often because new buildings aren't built often, said Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor and a current committee member. Meyen said the committee had no priority list of names for new buildings. "It's not a list," he said. "It's a collective judgment." After the committee recommends a name for a new building, the Kansas Board of Regents must approve the name. The Regents must approve new building names in all regents schools. Warren Corman, director of facilities for the Kansas Board of Regents, said the Regents don't often reject the recommended name. But, Corman said, he doubted Budig's name would be rejected. "They wanted to name a building after a guy who they later found out was in jail," he said. But once, the Regents rejected a name recommended for a new building at Wichita State University, a Regents school, Corman said. "I don't suppose Budig's in jail," he said. According to a biography of former cancellors provided by University Archives, Chalmers saw student dissent as healthy. He drew heavy criticism when KU students participated in a nationwide protest of the Vietnam War in 1969. Of the 13 chancellors that came before Budig, only one does not have a namesake building or library. E. Laurence Chalmers, who was chancellor from 1969 to 1972, presided during the heights of the Vietnam War. The Regents saw Chalmers as permissive — something that might have cost the University contributions from alumni. In 1970, an effort by some Regents to oust Chalmers failed by a vote of 4-3. Chalmers left in 1972 to become the president of the Chicago Art Institute. Today he lives in San Antonio. Corman, said Chalmers reigned during a tumultuous time. Language classes pushed with fliers "At the time he was here, he and the Board had some controversies," he said. "At that time, they probably wouldn't have considered naming a building after him." By Colleen McCain Kansan staff writer Posted in Wescoe Hall among the fliers advertising refrigerators and used mountain bikes is an unusual turquoise advertisement. "Last chance until Fall 1996 - Beginning Norwegian." it reads. The advertisement lists the line number and the time of the class and encourages students to enroll. "Students do not really scour the timetable, and they never hear about languages like Norwegian and Polish," he said. "Languages other than Spanish and French are just as important, and this is the most effective way of informing students." Norwegian is a four-semester sequence. Students could not enroll in the first semester of the sequence again until Fall 1996, Watkins said. "When we put up signs two years ago, it was quite successful." Keel said. "Our enrollment this fall is down, but the omission from the timetable probably contributed to the drop." William Keel, head of the Germanic languages and literature department, said staff members in his department posted the signs after Norwegian 104 was omitted from the Fall 1994 timetable of classes. Four students have enrolled in Norwegian this semester, compared with 17 students in Fall 1992. Keel said advertising was unnecessary for popular classes with high enrollments. "I don't see the point of advertisements for popular classes, but I think some publicity is warranted for little-known classes," he said. Publicizing a new professor was Elizabeth Kuznesof's reason for putting up signs advertising Economics 582. Kuznesof, director of the department of Latin American studies, said she wanted students to know that the Economic Growth and Development class would be taught by a Latin American. "Mehrene Larudee is the first Latin American economist we've had at KU in more than 20 years," Kuznesof said. "We thought this news was stunning enough that we should advertise. I've had students come in and tell me that they saw the signs." Larudee said although she didn't mind the signs, she didn't think they would impact enrollment dramatically. "I know that a few students have come to the class because they've been encouraged by the Latin American studies department," Larudee said. "But I doubt if the signs will make much difference." After he read the two advertisements posted on a bulletin board in Wescoe, Lenexa junior Jason Keiter said it was unlikely he would enroll in either of the classes. "I didn't know that some of these classes existed, but I'm not going to go right out and enroll," Keiter said. Eric Stevens, Jacksonville, Fla., junior, said the signs were useful. "I think the signs show that the professor is enthusiastic about the class," Stevens said. "If I were adding a class, I would definitely look at enrolling in one of these classes." By Carlos Tejada Korean staff writer Downtown building to get McDonald's Kansan staff writer A Big Mac and one large fry, please. And hold the secret sauce. Right now, that phrase will get you nothing but confused looks in downtown Lawrence restaurants. But by December, one downtown Massachusetts Street restaurant will understand that order. And businesses are divided over what effect that might have. Lawrence's fourth McDonald's restaurant will move into the old F.W. Woolworth Co. building, 911 Massachusetts St., during Thanksgiving week, said Marilyn Dobski, franchise co-owner. She said construction soon would begin on downtown's first fast-food restaurant, which will take up 30 square feet on two floors of the vacant department store. "Basically, they're taking the building down to the shell," Dobski said. "Then they'll start work." Dobski — who with her husband owns the other three McDonald's at 901 W. 23rd St., 1309 W. 6th St. and at the Wal-Mart at 3300 Iowa St. — said the downtown McDonald's wouldn't compete with the 21 restaurants already located between the sixth and twelfth blocks of Massachusetts Street. She said McDonald's was different from the sit-down, waited-upon format of the other restaurants. "There's not a lot of places you can just walk up, wait your turn, get your bag and take it to wherever you're going." Dobski said. At the same time, she said, the new restaurant would attempt to hand itself with the storefront of downtown. "We're hoping to fit in to the environment of downtown," Dobbs said. "We'd like it to be an uncreative Mr Donald's." The McDonald's wouldn't have room for drive-through service, Dobski said. City ordinances prohibit signs such as the tall golden arches signs common at McDonald's locations from being erected downtown. The downtown McDonald's also would feature a downstairs meeting area for business lunches, she said. Dobbsi also said a fifth McDonald's soon would move in on the corner of 6th Street and Wakaraura Drive, but that restaurant hasn't yet met with the approval of city officials. A decision on that could come later in the year, she said. Opinions about the future McDonald's have been mixed, said Lisa Blair, administrator of Downtown Lawrence, a community organization. "Some see it as an asset, and others see it in a wait-and-see mode," she said. MASSACHUSETTS STREET On one hand, Blair said, restaurant owners were afraid McDonald's would take some of their business. Some business owners also were afraid a fast-food restaurant would ruin the downtown atmosphere, she said. But Blair also said other business owners thought the restaurant would attract customers who normally might not visit downtown. She said some restaurant owners thought the restaurant would attract the downtown lunch hour crowd who go to Sixth Street fast-food restaurants to eat. "There's a lot of businesses where employees have only a half hour for lunch and don't have time to sit down," Blair said. Ellsworth converts dining hall to laundry room Ellsworth McCollum Hall positioned for next renovation By Ashley Miller Kansan staff writer Karen Young, St. Louis, Mo., freshman, unloads her laundry, while Krissondra Brauer, Dodge City Ks., freshman studies while she衣 for clothes to drv. The two were using the new laundry facility in Elsworth on Sunday afternoon. This year, residents in Ellsworth Hall can study for a test, finish a paper and wash a load of teans all in the same place. Ellsworth's cafeteria, which shut down in the summer of 1991 to consolidate staff in preparation for the opening of Ekdahl Dining Commons, was renovated into a laundry facility this summer. The facility includes a walled-in study area where students can study without worrying about their clothes being tampered with. Dana Blecher, Phoenix freshman, said she liked the new facility. "It takes a lot of time to do your laundry, and it's nice to have the ability to do laundry and homework at once without having to leave," she said. Jim Rupprecht, complex director of Hashinger and Elsworth Halls, said the new laundry facility was necessary because Elsworth lost one of its two original laundry facilities to the telecommunications department. The department handles both telephone service and networking for the University. It was housed in the Ellsworth annex prior to the cafeteria's renovation, but expanded to the laundry room on the south side of the residence hall earlier this year, leaving residents with only one room of washers and dryers. Rupprecht said the new facility had 14 washers and dryers, five more of each than last year. Both the washers and dryers cost 75 cents each. Ken Stoner, director of student housing said McCollum's cafeteria probably would be the next to be renovated. The cafeterias in McCollum, Hashinger, and Templin Halls also were shut down last year when the new cafeteria opened. Stoner said plans for the cafeteria were similar to the plans implemented in Ellsworth, including a laundry room, game room and a room for vending machines. Offices for the Association of University Residence Halls, housed in the cafeteria now, would remain there. The association still is considering what to do with Templin's cafeteria. Stoner said one idea included using Templin for lecture classes during the day and a movie theater at night. Renovations also would include a welcome center similar to the information board located at the corner of 15th and Iowa Streets. But Templin's center would have someone available to answer questions. Stoner said there were no plans for the cafeteria in Hashinger, but Mark Douglas, vice president of the association, said the hall wanted to extend its academic resource center into the abandoned space. The resource center provides residents with several types of reference materials including books, tapes and magazines. "I'm hoping that we finish them this year." Stoner said. No dates have been set to begin renovations in the other cafeterias. Caribbean nations pledge support in case of invasion Kansan staff writer Yesterday's announcement that four Caribbean nations would join the United States in the event of an invasion of Haiti was not a surprise, KU professors familiar with the area said. Charles Stansifer, professor of history, said that the nations — Jamaica, Trinidad, Barbados and Belize — had more to gain by cooperating with the United States than by not cooperating. "Those nations are so tied to the United States that they must conform to our wishes," he said. "They don't identify with the fate of Haiti," he said. Stansifer, who has traveled in Barbados, said that in those countries the feeling about Haiti was apathy. "Hattit is so poor and economically so far behind the other countries that it's considered kind of a pariah," Stansifer said. Haiti's poverty has led to a significant cultural division between it and other Caribbean nations, leaving Haiti very isolated. Stasier said. Stansiver said that other Caribbean countries have begun expanding their economic interests. Jamaica, for example, has a thriving publishing and telephone answering industries. Bryant Freeman, director of KU's Institute of Haitian Studies, said that the other nations joined the United States to show their support for democracy. The other nations are democracies which understand the power of military rule, he said. "The other countries want to make an example out of Haiti." he said. Haiti has been under military rule since Sept. 1991, when elected president Jean-Bertrand Aristide was ousted in a military coup. Freeman said that a saying from Aristide expressed the conditions under which Haitians lead. "Aristide said that it would be a long trip from misery to mere poverty," Freeman said. The Associated Press contributed information to this story. 4A Wednesday, August 31, 1994 OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN COLUMNIST Laws to control handguns magnifv violence DAVE HULL There is logic in the gun control movement but weak examples used to justify it. Sixty-six point seven million. It is a large number but it is little more than a quarter of all the firearms in the United States. Those 66.7 million guns are handguns. And, actually, according to the Department of Justice, they are used to terrorize far more people than they kill. Considering 22,000 people are killed with a handgun each year, the figures for those terrorized must be great. And they are. Each day 33 women are raped by assailants wielding handguns, 575 people are robbed and another 1,116 are assaulted. Given these figures, it is no wonder people like Senator John Chaffee of Rhode Island and organizations like Gun Control Incorporated want to ban handguns. But what is the relationship between the number of handguns in circulation and the rate of violent crime? Chaffee and the folks at GCI believe the relationship is a directly proportionate one. In support of this claim, they point to examples like Great Britain and Japan, countries with strict gun control laws and very low rates of violent crime. If the logic of Chaffee and GCI were sound, countries like Switzerland, New Zealand and Israel should have violent crime rates much higher than they currently do. Even on our own shores there are examples counter to the claims of Chaffee and GCI. But they fail to acknowledge counterexamples. South Africa and Mexico both have very strict gun control laws and a murder rate twice that of Florida, for example, has had a falling rate of violent crime since the introduction several years ago of a state law that makes it easier for ordinary citizens to carry concealed handguns. the United States. Even more impressive is the fact that Florida's murder rate has since fallen below the national average. As of November, 1993, 183,561 permits had been issued and only 17 had been revoked because the holder committed a crime with a handgun. On a national scale, according to the thinking of Chaffee and GCI, the U.S. should have experienced a dramatic increase in the rate of violent crime during the 1980s. In that decade, the number of handguns in circulation increased by a million each year. In fact, violent crime rates in the United States remained below the peak levels of the previous decade. Why, then, do proponents of gun control continue to call for the banning of handguns? The answer is simple. It is easier to pass laws banning handguns than it is to address the underlying motivations of violent criminals, namely that the risk of terrorizing others with a firearm is more profitable than working a legitimate job. There is another factor at work as well. Criminals must weigh the possibility that victims will be able to fend them off. And with each passage of a new restriction on handguns, criminals find themselves looking at a pool of victims increasingly unable to defend themselves. Save Hull is a Wichita senior in history and philosophy. VIEWPOINT Extending Saferide program would make summers safer The Saferide program is one of the most popular and widely used programs sponsored by the Student Senate. Saferide provides a ride home for KU students who do not feel safe either walking home from the library or studio at night. dents stay in town over the summer Saferide's value increases. The Student Senate should offer Saferide in the summer by adding a SAFERIDE the summer Saferide is a great program that needs to be available to students who stay in Lawrence over the summer. or driving themselves home after a night on the town. This invaluable service is not available during the summer semester. nominal fee to the summer student fees. As more and more stu- Additionally, Saferide should be made available in the summer to students who are not taking classes, but are enrolled in the coming fall semester, by giving them the option of joining the Saferide program for a small fee. LOU MULLIGAN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD. Hiroshima bomber display sparks Smithsonian debate The airplane that ushered in the modern era is shrouded in controversy nearly 50 years later. The debate surrounds Enola Gay, the nese as victims. B-29 Superfortress that dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima. REMEMBERING WWII The moral and military decision to use the bomb has been debated for years. However, it is not the museum's job to con- Veterans will finally get their wish to see the plane The Enola Gay should be displayed as a piece of history, accompanied only by nonbiased factual information. in the Smithsonian. tinue the debate. Museums should present works of art and history,but they should not interpret The controversy is about the way the plane is to be displayed. It reportedly treats the United States as aggressors and the Japa- them. The Enola Gay is far too important to be ignored or misconstrued. Let America see it and draw its own conclusions. RICHARD BOYD FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD. KANSAN STAFF STEPHEN MARTINO Editor JEN CARR Business manager CATHERINE ELLSWORTH Systems coordinator CHRISTOPH FUHRMANS Managing editor TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser CAMERON DEATH Retail sales manager JEANNE HINES$ Sales and marketing adviser News ... Sara Bennett Editorial ... Andrea Heineke Campus ... Mark Martin Sports ... Brian James Photo ... Daron Bennett Mellissa Lacey Features ... Trial Carl Planning Editor ... Susan White Design ... Noah Musser Assistant to the editor ... Robbie Johnson Business Staff Editors Sean Finn / KANSAN Campus mgr...Todd Winters Regional mgr...Laura Guth National mgr...Mark Masto Coop mgr...Emily Gibson Special Sections mgr...Jen Perrier Production mgrs...Holly Boren ...Regan Overy Marketing director...Alan Stigle Creative director...John Carton Classified mgr...Heather Nielhaus Letters should be type, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the University of Kansas name include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position. Letters must include a university code. Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed. The Kansean reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansean newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. OJ WE SQUEEZE IT FOR ALL IT'S WORTH!" HELLL PPP... OJ "WE SQUEEZE IT FOR ALL IT'S WORTH!" MEDIA MEDIA Joan 1922-1992 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Not scheduling an instructor for the fourth section of Music History 136 is an administrative slip, readily understandable and excusable. However, Music History 136 is a purely lecture course, with no laboratory to limit to the number of hearing terminals. With about 100 students in a section, distributing the fourth section to the other three will add about 33 more to each class. It calls for no more burden on each of these three instructors than having to grade 33 additional papers for two or three hourly exams and a final. Once it is more than 10 or so students, talk of instructor-student ratio is academic gibberish, whether it is one to 100 or one to 1,133 (with the fourth section distributed) makes little difference. It is a burden an instructor must not only not grudge, but be excited about. "A seer is sayer" (Emerson), meaning, he who has worthwhile knowledge is under compulsion to say or disseminate it to as many as possible. The larger his audience, the more his excitement should be. Also, it is a matter of 100 students being burdened with their section canceled or three instructors being a little more burdened, a ratio of 33 to one. Big additional money or funding need not be forthcoming to pay the three instructors extra in proportion to their over-loading. That such response and solution did not "instinctively occur" is a reflection of the sere and materialistic lack of "university spirit" and "scholarly temperament" on KU's faculty. T. S. David Graduate Student Robert Minor, in his rather simplistic "politically correct" analysis of gender conditioning for KU students, was wrong to include the church as an institutional culprit. ("Prof. Cautions KU Students on Gender Roles"). Also, he failed to mention the contribution of the feminist movement to the current battle between the sexes. My years of experience as a psychotherapist convinced me that women who take religion seriously are much stronger than those who don't. They have a center of self-understanding from which they can relate much more independently to males. Women without religion are more likely to treat a relationship with a male idolatrous, (i.e., he loves me, therefore I am) making her more dependent upon the male and therefore more vulnerable to exploitation. Feminist leadership has done women a major diservice in leading them to believe, in the brain-washing crypto-therapeutic nonsense they call "consciousness- raising," that they can solve the primary problem of identity apart from religion. Both church and synagogue have always condemned the double standard and the sexual exploitation of women. The feminist movement, based largely upon an atheistic Marxist-class war dialectic (and therefore, without grounds for any serious discussion of morality) has betrayed women by encouraging a double standard for them also, and by doing so have delivered them right into the hands of the enemy, the exploitative male. COLUMNIST Instead of encouraging women to keep their legs closed and insisting that men shape up, feminist leadership, so eager to advance their real objective, an onslaught on the absolute moral standards of the church and synagogue, encourages immorality and exploitation by women, also leading to the next obvious problem, pregnancy, abortion and in general turning the relationship between the sexes into a loveless, abortion-riddled wasteland. The feminist movement as presently conceived cannot fully succeed as long as church and synagogue stand. They are at odds on the true nature of women. For it to succeed would mean the end of love, for God, we are told, is love. Leonard Magruder COLUMNIST DAVID ZIMMERMAN Life's meaning found in faith not rock lyrics This summer I saw Kansas in concert. The concert was like you would expect: a band with a bunch of guys, about the same age as your father, jumping around and playing songs from 20 years ago. They played a couple of new songs and all those that made them popular. When the concert ended, the crowd went wild. They had all come to hear Kansas' songs, but the band hadn't played the most popular song they ever released. After letting the crowd warm up, the band finally returned and began to sing "Dust in the Wind." Normally, if someone told you that you were only "a drop of water in an endless sea" you would deny it. People don't want to hear that their lives are worthless. But people were chanting to a song that blatantly told them they were nothing in the big picture. If this song correctly captures the nature of the universe — that we are tossed around by random forces beyond our control like a piece of dust in the wind — we are forced to conclude that our lives are meaningless. Though this is a logical conclusion, hardly anyone wants to come right out and say it. I immediately think of Nietzsche as one exception. He acknowledged that there was no absolute meaning behind the universe, and called you "sick" if you tried to find a source for meaning. If I had such a hopeless view of life, I would go insane too. Another exception is the Bible, "Meaningless! Meaningless!" says the Teacher. "Utterly meaningless!" Everything is meaningless" (Ecclesiastes 1:2). The Book of Ecclesiastes is one man's search to find meaning for his life. He tries to find meaning in wisdom, pleasure, work, advancement and money but concludes that they are "meaningless, a chasing after the wind" (Ecclesiastes 4:16). After his attempts he says, "Now all has been heard; here is the conclusion of the matter: Fear God and keep his commandments, for this is the whole duty of man" (Ecclesiastes 12:13). He found meaning in God. If we search for meaning in our lives, we are left with two choices: We are simply tossed around by random, impersonal forces beyond our control, or we live in a universe governed by a loving God, a God who loved the world so much that he gave his only Son that whoever believes in him will not perish but have eternal life. David Zimmerman is a Wichita senior in communications studies. HUBIE SO, CINDY, WHAT DOES A BEAUTIFUL LADY LIKE YOU LIKE TO DO? WHAT INTERESTS YOU? SO, CINDY, WHAT DOES A BEAUTIFUL LADY LIKE YOU LIKE TO DO? WHAT INTERESTS YOU? OH, HANDS, DEFINITELY. YOU SEE, HANDS PORTRAY THE STRENGTH OF ONE'S INNER SELF. So, CINDY, WHAT DOES A BEAUTIFUL LADY LIKE YOU LIKE TO DO? WHAT INTERESTS YOU? OH, HANDS, DEFINITELY. YOU SEE, HANDS PORTRAY THE STRENGTH OF ONE'S INNER SELF. THEY'RE SO TOUGH, YET DELICATE. THEY REFLECT OUR LIVES AS WE LIVE THEM. LET ME SEE YOUR HAND. SEE, YOUR HAND SAYS THAT YOU ARE A HOPELESSLY ROMANTIC PERSON AND THAT THERE IS NO WOMAN IN YOUR LIFE. ... I ALSO LIKE JOY LAWRENCE. WHOA! ZOOA! A man and a woman are having a conversation. They are smiling and appear to be enjoying the interaction. The background is plain and does not distract from their activity. By Greg Hardin ...I ALSO LIKE JOEY LAWRENCE. WHOA! ZOOM! CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN --- Wednesday, August 31, 1993 5A GOP gubernatorial candidate speaks to University students By Colleen McCain Kansan staff writer tepublical gubernatorial candidate Bill Graves says KU students can help end Jim Slattery's political career. Graves spoke to about 60 students during the meeting of the KU College Republicans at 7 p.m. last night at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union. "I'm counting on all of you in November," Graves told the students. "We've been trying to figure out a way to retire Jim Slatter for a long time now." During his 10-minute speech, Graves spoke little about campaign issues and more about his optimistic view of the race, referring to Slattery as the "anointed successor to Joan Finney." Students then were given 15 minutes to ask questions. "I didn't mean to discuss heavy policy issues here," Graves said. "We just like to have fun at these meetings." During the question-and-answer period, Graves said he was an ardent supporter of qualified admissions at Kansas Regents universities. "I think qualified admissions is something we'll see in the next gubernatorial administration," Graves said. "I'll be speaking in support of qualified admissions from the first day I take office." Graves, who is currently Kansas secretary of state, said admitting Washburn University to the Regents system was also a goal. "We will look at making Washburn a Regents school when it is fiscally and politically favorable," he said. "In the long run, this change would be beneficial to the state." "That means jobs," he said. "I will work so that students will have jobs when they graduate from KU." after the meeting, Graves said KU students needed a governor who would create a positive economic environment. Graves, who completed 43 hours toward a master's degree in business at KU, said he was glad to be back in Lawrence. "I still have a degree of regret that I didn't complete my master's," he said. "I attended KU in 1978 and 1979, and I left to work on George Bush's campaign staff in 1980." Brad Burke, Topека sophomore and vice chair of KU College Republicans, said he was excited about Graves' candidacy. "He's a great candidate because he's been in Kansas, and he knows what needs to be done here," Burke said. Graves worked on Bush's presidential campaign during the spring and summer of 1980, and although Bush lost the Republican nomination, Graves didn't return to KU. "I guess if I hadn't KU to work for Bush, I probably wouldn't be here as a candidate today." Ggrave said. KU graduate and former chair of the KU College Republicans Leigh Smith said she returned to campus to hear Grays sneak. "He was simply fantastic, "Smith said. "Students need to remember that they have one vote, and Bill Gravies has all the qualities that we need." I'll just provide the text as it is. The image does not contain any visible text. Jay Thornton / KANSAN Bill Graves, gubernatorial candidate for the Republican party, spoke at the KU College Republicans meeting at the Pine room in the Kansas Union last night. The group meets every other Tuesday. Cab driver arrested after investigation Continued from Page 1A. Police said the woman was at a party on the night of July 23rd at the Adams Alumni Center at the University of Kansas and had been drinking. She was invited to the party by friends, but left by herself after calling a cab. After the woman passed out in the back seat of the cab the driver took her to his home where the alleged incident took place, police said. "She reported the incident the same day," Lt. Ed Brunt of Lawrence Police said. "She woke up early in the morning and realized she did not know where she was or who she was with." A-1 City Cab refused to comment, but their lawyer, David Berkowitz, said a different series of events took place that evening. Berkowitz, who represents the company but not Countess, said A-1 officials told him that Countess clocked out for the night after dropping the woman off at her destination, called the dispatcher, gave his mileage, then went off duty. "He was on-duty when he picked her up," Berkowitz said. "He delivered her to where she asked to go and then they later got together when he was off duty." Berkowitz said he only recently learned of the charges against Countess and he said he did not know what A-1 planned to do about Countess' employment with the company. "The driver hasn't been terminated," Berkowitz said. "That decision will have to be made by management." Brunt said the arrest of Countess was not related in any way to a series of three alleged sexual assaults in northwest Lawrence and around the 800 block of Maine. Greek alcohol policy a possibility Continued from Page 1A. are required to fill out forms notifying the IFC office of a party. Joint policy requires all houses having a party to register it first with the IFC. Galus said fraternities and sororites were protected by the joint policy. Under the separate policies, only the house registering the party is liable for the consequences. Under the joint alcohol policy, both the house sponsoring the event and any other houses participating in the event are liable. Violations include not registering the party on time, having too many people at a party, and allowing guests in that are not on the guest list. "I think it makes the most sense to have a joint alcohol policy because fraternities and sororites party with each other," Galus said. "I can't believe we went this long without it." Galus said representatives and delegates would have two weeks to consider the policy. gates would spend the two weeks looking at the policy on their own. Representatives and delegates from IFC and Panhellenic will vote on the policy Sept. 13. If the policy is adopted, it will go into effect immediately. "Theoretically, we would like them to take it back to their houses and get feedback from the members," Galus said. It was more likely that the representatives and dele- Galus said that if the joint alcohol policy was adopted, a Greek judicial council would be created to oversee joint fraternity and sorority activities. The council would consist of five men from the IFC judiciary board, which oversees 23 of the fraternities on campus, and five women from the Panhellenic judiciary committee, which oversees 15 of the sororites on campus. Individual house problems would still be brought before either IFC or Panhellenic. Galus said most of these problems were rush violations. Some houses might react negatively to the new policy, said Bill Nelson, coordinator for Greek activities and assistant director of the Organization and Activities Center. "There will be a perception that all of a sudden Panhellenic and IFC are lowering the boom, but we're doing people a favor," he said. BRITCHES CORNER It's Coming Tomorrow! Be there! 12p.m. Now Hiring Reliable, motivated KU Students to call KU Alumni Come see why experience counts. Discuss the issues with... Congressman Jim Slattery Democratic Candidate for Governor September 1, 1994 8:00 p.m. Kansas Union Jayhawk Room Jim Slattery. 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Last week, Baker petitioned the Douglas County Commission to be removed from the authority of the district because the district wanted to remove beaver dams in the Baker Wetlands. The district said the dams could block up Lawrence's drainage system and cause problems on city streets. Baker officials had said the dams are were a vital part of the area and kept water inside the wetlands. The Baker decision will be made at 6:35 tonight at a commission meeting at the Douglas County Courthouse, 1100 Massachusetts St. Hannes Combest, educational assistant to Haskell president Bob Martin, said Haskell would petition the county to be removed from the authority this week. "We were wondering about any real benefit we were receiving from the district," she said. The district filed suit earlier this month against Baker because the university wouldn't allow the dam removal. Exclusion from the district would make the lawsuit invalid. Haskell owns parts of the wetlands just north of the waterway where the beavers are located. District officials said at a county commission meeting Aug. 24 that the area north of the waterway was mostly unimportant for drainage purposes. KU Fulbright professor discusses Ukraine By David Wilson Kansan staff writer Reports of the Ukraine's death have been greatly exaggerated, said Paul D'Anieri, professor of political science, in a speech yesterday. D'Anieri, a returning Fulbright professor, said that despite the country's economic and political problems, the endurance of the Ukrainian people would carry the country. About 40 people squeezed into Alcove A in the Kansas Union to hear D'Anierl, who spent 10 months living in the Ukraine, talk about the country's political problems. The Ukrainia is a former republic of the Soviet Union that lies The problems suffered by the Ukraine, which gained its independence from the Soviet Union in December 1991, are a result of the split between the country's eastern and western regions, D'Anieri said. north of the Black Sea in eastern Europe. People in the eastern region are more likely to look to Russia for guidance, while people in the western region are more nationalistic and reform-minded because of their proximity to Europe, he said. For people in the western region, "keeping separate from Russia was priority one," D'Anier said. But the recent election of Leonid Kuchma, a pro-Russian president, proved that people in the western region weren't violently opposed to ties with Russia, he said. the war was over. Some analysts had predicted that the regional split might have sparked a civil war, but D'Anieri said that would not happen. "They don't dislike each other," he said. "They just have different priorities." But the problems in the Ukraine should not be underestimated, D'Anieri said. Inflation is rampant. The police take bribes. The rule of law is all but nonexistent. "The stories you've heard about the Mafia are true," he said. To elude the 50 percent tax on all business income, Ukrainians have set up a "gray market" where "basically honest people learn to disobey the law to run a business," he said. Because of the gray market, small businesses flourish in the Ukraine. But D'Anieri said the leap to flourishing big businesses would take drastic economic reform, which is unlikely in the face of government paralysis. Between the president, the prime minister and parliament, no one branch seems to be the clear leader, he said. "They need a new constitution," he said. "In the end, that's the problem in the Ukraine." Senate often attracts more apathy than attention Students find little interest in proceedings By James Evans Kansan staff writer Jason Freeman has never had a real interest in Student Senate in his years at KU. Freeman, Overland Park senior, said the only action he could remember Senate taking in the last four years was allocating more money for campus lighting. "There's not been that many issues I've been interested in," he said. Like Freeman, many students said they didn't care about Student Senate proceedings. They said they didn't have the time or interest to follow the body's actions. Freeman said he had never put Student Senate high up on his interests in college. But Freeman said that if he knew more about Student Senate's powers, such as the power to allocate a budget of $1,291,300 to organizations and services on campus, he would "definitely be more interested." Curtis Spencer, Topeka senior, said he also did not have time to follow Senate's activities. Spencer said he spent his spare time working and studying. "I've been too busy," he said. Spencer said that he was aware of the power of Senate had to allocate his $28 student activity fee each semester. But he said he trusted the Senate would spend his money wisely. "As long as they are productive, it doesn't bother me how they use the money," he said. Student apathy toward Senate could be seen in April when Student Senate elections were held. Only around 4,000 students voted. "I don't think students know the amount of input that Student Senate has in faculty governance," said Kim Cocks, education senator and Senate Executive Committee member. "That's why I think they may not care." One student senator said that if students better understood the power of Student Senate, they would be more interested. She said that if students knew how much input Student Senate had, they would care more. "They don't realize that we have as much voice as we do," she said. "Senate is looked at as the student voice." Ken Marin, SenEx member, said that students often viewed Student Senate as a funding organization only. But he said it was much more than that. "It also provides representative organizations to the different University governance boards and the state and local boards that Senate is represented on," he said. Marine said that Sherman Reeves, student body president, had set an agenda to try to build students' awareness of senate's activities. They've got the power Student Senate had the power this year to allocate $1.29 million to organizations and services on campus.The following is a list of how the $28 student activity fee was distributed to organizations this year. | | Activity fee breakdown ($) | Actual budget breakdown ($) | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Black Student Union | 0.38 | 16,793 | | Campus Transportation | 7.63 | 332,950 | | Chamber and Concert Music Series | 2.24 | 97,700 | | Elections Commision | 0.16 | 7,200 | | Graduate Student Council | 1.92 | 83,700 | | Headquarters | 0.80 | 35,000 | | Hilltop Child Development Center | 0.38 | 16,441 | | K. U. Bands | 1.88 | 82,175 | | K. U. Forensics | 0.25 | 10,800 | | Legal services for Students | 3.12 | 136,000 | | Additional Summer Revenue | 12.56 | 62,000 | | Multicultural Center | 0.46 | 20,000 | | Rape Victim Support Services | 0.55 | 24,000 | | Student Bar Association | 0.14 | 6,320 | | Student Senate | 1.73 | 75,515 | | Additional Summer Revenue | 1.44 | 6,485 | | University Dance Company | 0.16 | 7,200 | | University Theater | 1.43 | 62,500 | | Women's Transitional Care | 0.23 | 10,000 | | Student Organizations | 3.57 | 156,000 | | Unallocated Account | 1.43 | 42,521 | **TOTAL** | | **1,291,3000** | Dave Campbell / KANSAN Source: Student Senate SAVING MONEY IS IN THE BAG. Hours: Get a fresh new look at Cost Cutters. 2329 Iowa Mon-Thurs: COST CUTTERS* located in 9-8pm FAMILY HAIR CARE Fri: We're your style: Dickinson Plaza 9-7pm Sat: 9-6pm Shampoo and Cut regularly $10.95 $8.95 expires:9/14/94 COSTCUTTERS FAMILY HAIR CARE We're your style: $5.00 off Any Hair Color (we carry Redken shades) expires:9/14/94 COST CUTTERS FAMILY HAIR CARE We're your style: THE NAKED TRUTH ADVERTISING'S IMAGE OF WOMEN Dr. Jean Kilbourne ... Free Advertising is more than a $130 billion a year industry. We are each exposed to over 1500 ads a day. The ads sell a great deal more than products. They sell values, images, concepts of success and worth, love, sexuality, popularity and normalcy. Sometimes they sell addictions. Jean Kilbourne, Ed. D., internationally known media critic and creator of slide presentations and films, is known for her ability to present provocative topics which encourage insightful dialogue. With expert knowledge, insight, humor and commitment, she moves and empowers people to take action for their own, and society's interest. Thursday, September 1, 1994 The Lied Center of Kansas 8pm THE LIED CENTER OF LAWS The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUAK THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS The Department of Communication Studies NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, August 31,1994 7A IRA expected to announce cease-fire The Associated Press BELFAST, Northern Ireland — Reports that the Irish Republican Army was about to call a cease-fire after a quarter-century of bloodshed put nerves on edge yesterday in Northern Ireland's majority Protestant community. Expectations of a breakthrough rose as the United States granted a visa to veteran IRA man Joseph Cahill. Arriving in New York, Cahill said the trip was a private visit, but the timing suggested it was part of a carefully choreographed build-up to an announcement. "I believe we are poised for peace and in a very short time we will be able to make an entirely new beginning on this island," Irish Prime Minister Albert Reynolds said in Dublin. That enthusiasm was not shared in Protestant districts of Belfast, where any agreement acceptable to the IRA is automatically suspect. "Sure the English want rid of us," said Jimmy Creighton, a Protestant community worker in the pro-British Glencairn district. "They'll do a deal with the IRA if the loyalist people let them. But we won't let them." Speculation became intense after Gerry Adams, leader of the Sinn Fейn Party, said Monday that he had met with IRA leaders and told them the time was right to "break the political, constitutional and military stalemate and create the potential to eradicate the underlying causes of conflict." Adams, whose party is the main political ally of the IRA, said the group's leaders promised a swift response. In an interview with Ireland's RTE television, Adams made three demands of Britain following a ceasefire. "There must be immediate recognition in a meaningful way of our democratic mandate," Adams said. "There must be an immediate end to censorship and issues like demilitarization, all the issues of injustice — all immediate." Adams did not elaborate, but he appeared to be seeking an early meeting between Sinn Fein and the British government, a reduction in British troop deployments in Catholic areas and an end to a ban on Sinn Fein-IRA supporters' voices being broadcast Many among the Protestant majority feared the IRA would not suspend its terror campaign to reunite the province with the largely Roman Catholic Irish republic unless it had won concessions from the British government. The Ulster Defense Association, one of the two main Protestant-based paramilitary organizations, warned of civil war if the IRA had its way. "Do you, the Irish, seriously believe we will sit back and allow ourselves to be coerced and persuaded into an all-Ireland?" the group, which also is outlawed, said in a statement to news media. The British and Irish governments agreed in December that there would be no change in Northern Ireland's status without the consent of a majority of its people. They also said Sinn Fein could not participate in peace talks unless the IRA permanently halted violence. The British government denied there had been any change in its policy on Northern Ireland. In Dublin, Reynolds met with his Cabinet yesterday. Unconfirmed news reports said the Irish government had been informed of the terms of an IRA cease-fire announcement. Irish rebels fought under the IRA banner against Britain between 1916 and 1921, when the Irish republic became independent and Northern Ireland remained part of Britain. But the IRA was inactive and poorly armed when ethnic violence blew up in Northern Ireland in 1969. The IRA last called a cease-fire in 1975, but felt it had been deceived by British officials. The British concluded the IRA was interested only in a breather while it built up for further attacks. In recent years, Protestant-based "loyalists" have killed more people than the IRA. So far this year, the IRA has killed 17, compared to 18 by the Ulster Volunteer Force and 11 by the Ulster Defense Association. Slaying of Haitian priest may foretell violent era The Associated Press PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — The ambush slaying of a priest and supporter of exiled President Jean-Bertrand Aristide may foretell an era of open violence against Haiti's activist clergy, a prominent priest warned. The Rev. Jean-Marie Vincent, gunned down late Sunday outside his home, was the first priest ever assassinated in Hati. "Probably it is the beginning and we have to expect that many others will follow," the Rev. Antoine Adrien said at a news conference Monday. "This was a message to Aristide," Claudette Werleigh, a minister in Aristide's government-in-exile, said by telephone from Washington. "They're showing that nobody in Haiti is safe anymore." The death shocked the pro-Aristide community and shattered an apparent taboo against killing priests that had protected the clergy after the military seized power in a September 1991 coup. In a statement from Washington, Aristide called Vincent "a champion of democracy, self-determination and empowerment." Secretary of State Warren Christopher called Vincent's death "a tragic and sad reflection of the state of brutal repression and violence that characterizes life in Haiti today." Gunnen waiting in a car across the street from the Congregation of Montfortain Fathers headquarters shot the 49-year-old Vincent, said Jean-Yves Urfe, coordinator of the Creole-language weekly Libete. Authorities quickly took away Vincent's body and car, Urfie said, reading a statement signed by 53 priests and nuns of the Haitian Conference of Religion. The body had not been released as of late Monday. Adrien said. Friends said Vincent had recently received death threats, which he feared anticipated a purge of Aristide's supporters. Vincent saved Aristide's life on Aug. 23, 1987, by diving between him and a band of thugs with machetes during an election campaign. Vincent suffered head wounds in the attack. Vincent continued his work with the poor. He raised money for grass-roots groups, helped peasants find better markets for their crops and channeled money from Europe, Canada and the United States to small neighborhood businesses. Since 1991, he had been director of the National Fund for Economic and Social Development, a peasant development project. Adrien vowed Monday that fear of violence against the clergy "is not going to derail our decision to protest and to work for change in this country." Invasion into Haiti considered The Associated Press UNITED NATIONS — A U.N. mission to prepare for the peaceful departure of Haiti's military rulers has failed, and the next step could be a U.S.-led invasion, Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali said yesterday. U. N. envoy Rolf Knutsson returned Monday from the Dominican Republic after Haitian military leaders refused to meet with him. Knutsson was there to prepare for formal negotiations on their departure. "We have not been successful because the military people in Haiti refused to talk with my special representative," Boutros-Ghali told reporters after he briefed the Security Council on the mission. Security Council president Yully Vorontsov said council members "deplore the rejection by the illegal de facto regime" of the U.N. mission. "Once again, the regime has discarded a possibility of peacefully implementing" U.N. resolutions, said Vorontsov, the Russian ambassador. British Ambassador Sir David Hannay said it was "deplorable and sad that they have rejected yet another opportunity to do this peacefully." On July 31, the United Nations called on Haiti's military leaders to peacefully step down. The resolution also authorized a possible U.S.-led invasion to restore elected President Jean-Bertrand Aristide to office. Aristide was ousted in a military coup nearly three years ago. "We tried to have a peaceful implementation of Resolution 940 but we have not been successful," Boutros-Ghali said. "The Security Council will have to decide what it wants to do or the group of states that have sought the mandate (for the invasion) ... will have to make their own decision." In Kingston, Jamaica, U.S. officials met with representatives from Caribbean nations to discuss their possible participation in a U.S.-led military force. Alvaro de Soto, a senior political advisor to Boutros-Ghali, said Haitian military authorities refused to meet with Knutsson, and he only was offered meetings with military-installed civilian leaders. Yesterday, the Security Council also condemned the slaying of a pro-democracy priest who championed the rights of poor, and himself saved Aristide from assassination. The Rev. Jean-Marie Vincent, gunned down late Sunday outside his home, was believed to be the first priest ever assassinated in Haiti. Becky's HAIRSTYLING 2108 W. 27th • Park Plaza • 843-8467 Hours: Mon. & Fri. 9-6, Tues.-Thurs. 9-8, Sat. 9-5 • 15 Stylists • 3 Manicurists • 2 Massage Therapists Back row: Angie Pollock; Kendra Katter, Asst. 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The surprise decision seemed intended to reward Brown for pushing President Clinton to sever the link between trade and China's human rights practices. It also was seen as China's way of thanking the United States for Brown's visit, which both sides say marks a new era in Chinese-U.S. business ties. Brown, leading an entourage of two dozen American business executives, is the first Cabinet member to visit China since Clinton decided in May not to make the annual renewal of China's most-favored nation trade status contingent on improvements in its human rights practices. Clinton's policy change was an important boost to American corporations seeking to expand or establish themselves in China, the world's fastest-growing economy and biggest single consumer market. In subsequent months, businesses ranging from Boeing to Wal-Mart have announced agreements with the Chinese. Brown told a news conference he was "exhalated by the results" of his trip so far. He said nearly $5 billion in business deals have been concluded in the first three days of his eight-day trip, but did not give details. "We came with high expectations about our ability to have a profoundly positive impact on the relationship between China and the United States. We have already met and surpassed those expectations," he said. Brown said Foreign Minister Qian Qichen would be visiting the United States at the end of September for talks, but said he had no other details. China and the United States have been holding informal discussions on human rights since 1990. But that dialogue was suspended after Beijing reacted with fury to a meeting between U.S. Assistant Secretary of State John Shattuck with leading dissident Wei Jiengsheng during a visit in February. The flap over the Shattuck-Wei meeting helped taint the subsequent visit of Secretary of State Warren Christopher in March, when dozens of dissidents were detained or put under surveillance. Many of those detained remain in custody. Only one dissident has been detained during Brown's visit, but that may be because the most vocal political activists are already in detention. Human rights activists charge China has become even more heavy-handed in suppressing dissent since Clinton's decision lifted pressure on the issue. Clinton and many U.S. business leaders argued that using the annual threat to withdraw MFN from China was not an effective way to bring about improvements in China's human rights practices. Serbs vote on peace plan The Associated Press BELGRADE, Yugoslavia — Hundreds of Bosnian Serbs voted Sunday in the Yugoslav capital on an international peace plan their leaders have already condemned, defying opposition by Belgrade authorities. Bosnian Serbs were determined to give an overwhelming 'No' vote to the plan crafted by the United States, Russia, Britain, France and Germany. Serb-led Yugoslavia, desperate to have crippling economic sanctions lifted, supported the plan and cut off supplies to Bosnia's Serbs when their leaders rejected it earlier this month. The plan would reduce Serb holdings to 49 percent of Bosnia's territory from the 70 percent they seized during the war. A federation of Bosnian Muslims and Croats, who have accepted the plan, would have 51 percent. Serb President Slobodan Milovec branded the weekend referendum a crude attempt by Bosnian Serb leaders to shift responsibility for a bad decision to ill-informed voters. Milosevic was meeting Sunday night in Belgrade with Russian Foreign Minister Andrei Kozyrev. They were expected to discuss a proposal to ease the sanctions if the Serb leader allows international monitors on the border with Bosnia to ensure his break with the Bosnian Serbs is real. Bosnian Serbs said Friday that Serb officials would not allow voting in Serbia proper. But balloting was held anyway, with no apparent interference by Serb police. By mid-afternoon Sunday, some 1,500 Bosnian Serbs had voted in downtown Belgrade. "This is a disgrace," Vladimir Karadatz, a 67-year-old Bosnian Serb refugee said as he cast his "No" vote. "We have to sneak and hide if we want to say what we think about the plan. Results of the two-day referendum were expected early this week, but few doubted the peace plan would be overwhelmingly rejected, despite pressure from Yugoslavia to accept it. "There has been no dilemma for me," said Skavko Nenadic, a 34-year-old refugee. "I voted against it. That's not a peace plan." Bosnian Serb leaders say the plan would leave them with an unviable state and prevent them from uniting with Serbia. The quest for such a union was the reason the minority Serb rebelled in April 1992 as Bosnia broke from the old Yugoslav federation. Since then, an estimated 200,000 Bosnians are dead or missing. West unlikely to punish Serbs The Associated Press SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina — Bosnia's prime minister said yesterday he has little hope the West will punish Serb rebels for rejecting an international plan to end their 28-month-old war. Tens of thousands of people will be in danger of dying from hunger and cold this winter, Prime Minister Haris Slajdzic said in an interview with The Associated Press. The plan rejected by Bosnian Serbs this weekend would have split the former Yugoslav republic with a Muslim-Croat federation, reducing Serb holdings from the 70 percent of territory they control to 49 percent. Slijadzic said he expected the United States to keep its promise to lift the arms embargo unilaterally against the Bosnia government if the Serbs continue to reject peace proposals. Britain and France say that could force them to withdraw their peacekeeping troops. "It would be the final announcement by the United Nations that despite tons of paper on human rights, despite the U.N. Charter, that they have no answer to a handful of people who break all rules, that we as humanity know," Slaizidic said. Washington has said it will try to exempt Bosnia's government from the arms embargo imposed on former Yugoslavia if the Bosnian Serbs don't accept a peace plan by Oct. 15. "We believe it is important for the Bosnian Serbs to understand that they cannot go on like this forever, and for the Bosnians to be able to defend themselves," Madeline Albright, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, said yesterday. The U.N. Security Council is divided over how to handle the Serbs, Russian Foreign Minister Andrei Kozyrev has warned that if the United States lifts the arms embargo, Russian hard-liners will want to break sanctions imposed on Serbia for its support of the Serbs. "I expect the international community to give the Serbs a new deadline, that's all. More of the same," Silajdiz said. "They are not doing anything. They cannot find a consensus on the measures to be taken." Population conference faces boycott CAIRO, Egypt — Saudi Arabia and Sudan are boycotting next week's United Nations population conference in Cairo following criticism by Muslim clerics that the meeting violates the principles of Islam. The Saudi representative at the United Nations in New York sent a message earlier this week "regretting they are not going to participate," an official at conference headquarters in Cairo said yesterday. Sudan's government announced Monday night it would boycott the meeting and urged other Muslim nations to also withdraw because the meeting would result in "the spread of immoral and irreligious values." The Associated Press Saudi Arabia and Sudan are the first countries known to withdraw from the U.N.-sponsored International Conference on Population and Development, which is expected to draw some 15,000 people to Cairo beginning Sept. 5. The leaders of two other predominantly Muslim nations canceled plans to attend the conference. Prime Minister Tansu Ciller of Turkey announced yesterday that a lower-level official would head her country's delegation. Bangladesh's prime minister, Khaleda Zia, made a similar announcement Saturday. Yesterday, an Egyptian court rejected a suit by Muslim fundamentalists aimed at blocking the conference. The suit argued that Egypt, which says its legal code is based largely on Islamic law, could not hold a conference which runs counter to Islamic principles. But the court said the matter was outside its jurisdiction because President Hosni Mubarak had the right to invite the conference to be held in Egypt. The meeting is intended to set guidelines for the next 20 years for halting the growth in world population and encouraging economic development, particularly in the Third World. Pope John Paul II has criticized the conference for several months. 'Gorillas in the mist missing in Rwanda In the forest that straddles Rwanda's border with Zaire and Uganda, the research camp featured in the movie "Gorillas in the Mist" stands ransacked and nearly deserted. Associated Press KARISOKE RESEARCH CENTER, Rwanda — Shards of glass and torn files litter the forest floor, evidence that Rwanda's deadly civil war has reached high into the Virunga Forest, home to half the world's rare mountain gorillas. But what has happened to the shy primates themselves? Only about 600 mountain gorillas remain on Earth. Some 320 lived in Virunga Forest before the civil war erupted anew in April. A group of Rwandan trackers returned in early August and have traced the base's three gorilla groups used for research. But about 60 gorillas usually shown to tourists are still missing. "There's no reason for major worry right now," said Jose Kalpers of the International Gorilla Conservation Program, which helps run Karisio. "As long as there's no disturbance in the forest, the gorillas have no reason to move — it's not as if they're listening to the radio. "But there's no surveillance at all and the potential risks are quite high," he added. In mid-July, Karisoke's 30 employees and another 80 Virunga Forest rangers fled advancing Rwandan Patriotic Front rebels and are now refugees in Zaire. The victorious rebels now form Rwanda's government and are encamped just south of the forest. Over the border, Rwanda's defeated Hutu army feverishly plots revenge. The forest is a tense no man's land, parts of which are said to be mined. Without rangers, it is open to antelope and buffalo poachers, who can kill or ensnare gorillas on purpose or by mistake. Up to 3,000 Rwandan villagers and their livestock fled through the forest in July, but Kalpers said gorillas probably took refuge up the slopes only to return later to their home ranges. Leonidas Munyatarama was equally confident as he stepped through the debris at the camp founded by Dian Fossey, the American naturalist. "Even if they fled over the border, they'll be back. Gorillas don't need passports," he said. Fossey, whose campaign to protect the gorillas was the basis for "Gorillas in the Mist," was murdered in 1985 and buried at the camp among the remains of some of the animals she loved. "We don't know if it was soldiers or poachers," said Munyatara, who returned to Karisoke last week, the first research student back since the staff's panicked flight. "The first thing is to get all the trackers back, so we can start searching for all the gorillas, start research, start patrolling." Easier said than done. An attempt by the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees to ferry the trackers home ended in disaster Aug. 24 when supers loyal to Rwanda's old government attacked them as they waited for U.N. trucks. Tracker leader Jean-Bosco Bizumenryl, who said at the time he wanted to return "because gorillas are more peace-loving than men," was nearly beaten to death with rocks. Shape it up, baby! Shape up and look your best with products from America's diet store, GNC. Nobody can match the selection of diet products you'll find at the Lawrence General Nutrition Center. And every diet product at GNC is satisfaction guaranteed. You'll love it, or your money back. Start losing weight today and save money, too. GNC, America's diet store. GNC GENERAL NUTRITION CENTRE Where America Shapes For Health* OPEN 10-8 M-F 10-6 Sat. 1-5 Sun. 20% off any one item Good only at the 23rd and Louisiana GNC. Not good w/ any other offer. 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He told reporters that a juncture in peace efforts had been reached requiring "all our efforts to further consolidate our march toward peace, comprehensive peace in the region." Egypt has brokered talks between Israel and other Arab states since signing a treaty with the Jewish state in 1979, and has been trying behind the scenes to break the deadlock in Israeli-Syrian negotiations. Space ship attempts to dock The Associated Press MOSCOW — A space ship carrying fresh food and American research equipment failed yesterday on its second attempt to dock with Russia's orbiting space station Mir. Russian television showed a live broadcast of the cargo ship approaching the Mir, then slipping past. It said a third attempt at docking might be made. Earlier, Russian space officials had said the Progress supply ship might not have enough fuel for a third attempt. If it fails to dock, it will eventually burn up in the atmosphere. TOKYO — Japan would fail $125 million short on its payments to maintain U.S. military bases here, according to a proposed fiscal year 1995 defense budget released yesterday. Payments may fall short The Associated Press Japan agreed in 1991 to pay salaries of Japanese civilian workers and utility costs for the 141 U.S. military installations in Japan. Those costs were to be covered in full by the fiscal year that begins in April. But the Defense Agency budget would cover 91.5 percent of the costs, or $1.35 billion. Officials told reporters that the amount — up 10 percent over the current year — was all that could be spared under a maximum 0.9 percent increase in defense spending authorized by the Cabinet. Japan's jobless rate jumps The Associated Press TOKYO — Reflecting the lingering recession, Japan's unemployment rate jumped to a seven-year high of 3.0 percent in July, the government said yesterday. The jobless rate, up from 2.9 percent in June, matched the same rate set in January and June of 1987, said the Management and Coordination Agency. Japan's highest jobless rate since the agency began taking statistics in 1953 was 3.1 percent in May of 1987. International Trade and Industry Minister Ryutaro Hashimoto told a regular news conference that he was "very concerned about the higher unemployment figure." Japan's central bank last week said in a monthly report that consumer spending was on the rise but corporate capital spending remains sluggish. In the latest reporting month, the number of unemployed totaled 1.88 million, up 18.2 percent, or 290,000 people, from a year earlier. Compiled from The Associated Press. The Associated Press Intensely patriotic, many Russians still resent that the Soviet collapse transformed their motherland from world power to struggling outsider. Russian troops to return home "It's good we are leaving, it's high time," the semi-official daily Rossiskaya Gazeta said in a front-page story yesterday about the German withdrawal. "But there is a trace of bitterness in the elated mood of today's celebrations." The Russian army ends its half-century presence in Germany with ceremonies today, the same day it formally shuts down a 54-year military operation in the Baltics. Some Russians said the troops are leaving without the fanfare they deserve, but that their soldiers are coming home with dignity. The defeat of Nazi Germany at the cost 20 million Soviet lives was perhaps the Soviet Union's finest hour on the world stage. But victory turned into occupation and the Cold War, so starkly symbolized by the Soviet-built Berlin Wall, divided the world anew. For Lev Pushkaryyp, who fought in World War II, Russia's current chaos recalls what troops came home to 49 years ago. "It was even more difficult for us to come back to our devastated country then, but we overcame the hardships," said Pushkaryov, a "We can only welcome the fact that our troops are leaving Germany. Maybe we should have done that earlier." historian. The Belarus train station in Moscow where soldiers will arrive from Germany on Saturday has been repainted, and a parade route leading into the city center scoured. Against the backdrop of those festivals, however, extensive media coverage reflects widespread ambivalence about the dual pullets and the reopening of a painful debate about Russia's role in the world. Several newspapers expressed bitterness that the Russians were excluded from a joint farewell parade in Berlin on June 18 for French, British and American troops, who also are leaving as part of the agreement that brought German reunification in 1990. Russians will have to settle for a less grandiose ceremony that the newspaper Komsomolskaya Prava da called a "second-rate send-off." "The feeling that they (the Germans) aren't seeing us off but are hurrying to drive us away, doesn't create an atmosphere of celebration," the daily said in a long commentary. Compared to the other allies' withdrawals, the Russian departure resembles an "escape" more than an organized farewell, Rossiiskava Gazeta said. Only about 3,100 Russian soldiers and their families remain of the more than half-million in Germany prior to the fall of the Wall in 1989. The last should be gone by Sept. 9. Hard-liners and ultranationalist politicians such as Vladimir Zhirinovsky want to re-establish the Soviet empire and have accused the West of trying to disarm and weaken Russia. Gen. Valentin Varennikov, one of the organizers of the 1991 coup attempt who was acquitted this month, urged Russia's soldiers to "hoist your combat banner, feel pride and dignity" as they leave Germany, Latvia and Estonia as "liberators, not as aggressors or looters." "Despite the slander and lies of Western politicians and some of our compatriots, every soldier must remember that the historical truth is on our side," Varennikov said. News of the German withdrawal took precedence over the Baltic pullout this week, but many Russians consider the Baltics more important. The government has accused the Baltic nations of discriminating against their ethnic Russian residents. As the daily Izvesta noted: "It's easier to leave Germany than the Baltics. We spent less time there and never felt at home." "Even the Russian nationalists don't want particularly to keep the troops in eastern Europe," historian Richard Pipes said in a telephone interview from New Hampshire. "I don't think the pulling out of troops is a big emotional issue" for the general population. "The Baltic countries are different, because there are Russians living there and the Baltic countries were part of the Russian empire before 1917," he said. Just Look at ALL of These Ways YOU Can Save Some Cash KU THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN C A R D Valid Through July 31, 1995 NCCS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Available at these locations: 119 Stauffer-Flint UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP 1116W23rd T Jayhawk Bookstore KU KU BOOKSTORES Restaurants *Second level in the Kansas Union Bookstore, at the Courtesy Counter *First Level in the Burge Union Bookstore, at the Courtesy Counter BLIMPIE SUBS AND SALADS 1819 W. 23rd * 842-1620 Get the daily special prices every day of the week BUY 1 6" Cold Sub Sandwich, get 1 for 79g BUNKER 2329 S. 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Trotter of harassing her, defending her and firing her because she filed sex discrimination complaints with federal and local employment officials. The harassment, Diles alleged, was part of longstanding "policy and pattern of conduct" at the civil rights organization. She sought more than $2 million in back pay and damages. The NAACP and Trotter, of St. Louis, denied Diles' allegations in court documents. "To the extent any statements were made about (Diles), such statements were true and protected by either a qualified or absolute immunity or privilege," they said. The settlement was reached Aug. 17 and filed one day later in U.S. District Court in Baltimore. Terms were not disclosed Neither Trotter nor Diles could not be immediately reached for comment yesterday. Dennis Hayes, NAACP general counsel, was out of town and unavailable for comment. Diles' attorney, Howard Needle, declined to discuss the case, citing a confidentiality clause in the settlement. "My hands are tied. I'm afraid." Needle said. Diles had asked for $27,914.34 in back pay, unused vacation and severance. She also sought $600,000 in compensatory damages and $1.3 million in punitive damages for the loss of her job, defamation of character and emotional distress. Chavis was fired as NAACP executive director Aug. 20 mainly because he used the group's money to settle sex discrimination claims raised by Mary E. Stansel, his former assistant. Civil rights leader assaulted Rosa Parks, whose refusal to give up her bus seat to a white man sparked the modern civil rights movement, was assaulted at her home last night and hospitalized with facial injuries. Authorities said the assault occurred between 8:30 p.m. and 9 p.m. but no other details were immediately available. Parks, 81, was taken to Detroit Receiving Hospital, where she was being examined late yesterday. Her condition wasn't immediately known, said hospital spokesman Dennis Archambault. Parks was 42 when she committed an act of defiance that was to change the course of American history and earn her the title "mother of the civil rights movement." At that time, Jim Crow laws enacted after the post-Civil War Reconstruction required separation of the races in buses, restaurants and public accommodations throughout the South. The Montgomery, Ala., seamstress, an active member of the local chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, was riding on a city bus Dec. 1, 1955, when a white man demanded her seat. Parks refused, despite rules requiring blacks to yield their seats to whites, and was jailed. The arrest triggered a 381-day boycott of the bus line, which resulted in the desegregation of the buses. ANCHORAGE, Alaska Jurv deliberates Exxon case exxon Corp. deserves a dose of discipline known as "tough love," said a lawyer seeking $15 billion to punish the oil giant for the nation's worst oil spill. But an Exxon lawyer said in his closing argument that the company has already learned its lesson from the 1989 Exxon Valdez wreck, which spilled nearly 11 million gallons into Prince William Sound. Jurors in the federal lawsuit got the case late Monday and deliberated about a half hour before retiring. They were to resume yesterday. Brian O'Neill, representing more than 10,000 Alaska Natives, fishermen and landowners, said the $15 billion in punitive damages was justified since Exxon nets an average of $5 billion in profits each year and company stock His value is so great that Holding up a copy of the book "All I Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten," O'Neill asked jurors to follow its simple advice: was valued at $20 billion. "When you hurt someone, you say you're sorry. When you make a mess, you clean it up. We didn't have that here." This亿万 lawyer James Neal said the company already has been fined nearly $1 billion in the government's criminal case and spent more than $2 billion on cleanup. Neal said Exxon should get credit for imposing a more stringent alcohol policy for tanker crews, adding crew members to prevent fatigue and requiring trainees to study the disaster. LOS ANGELES Rapper pleads no contest Grammy-winning rapper Dr. Dre pleaded no contest to drunken driving charges Tuesday and was sentenced to eight months in jail for violating probation from a 1993 battery conviction. Dr. Dr., whose real name is Andre Young, entered the plea before Municipal Judge Paula Adela Mabrey, who also ordered him to pay a $1,053 fine and attend an alcohol education program. Young, 28, was arrested Jan. 10 after a chase through Beverly Hills and Westwood in his 1987 Ferrari that police clocked up to 90 mph. Police said the rapper failed a field sobriety check and submitted to a breath test that showed a blood-alcohol reading of 0.16 percent —twice the state's legal limit of .08. Young's latest conviction violated terms of his probation on a battery conviction last year. In that case, Young was convicted of punching a man in the face, breaking his jaw, outside the rapper's girlfriend's home. Young won a Grammy this year for best rap solo for his hit "Let Me Ride." He also produced Snoop Doggy Dogg's topselling 1934 rap album "Doggystyle." LIMA, Peru Drug agents killed in jungle LIMA. Peru Five U.S. drug agents were killed in a weekend plane crash in a remote area of Peru's cocaine-producing jungle, a search party has confirmed. The plane crashed Saturday in the Upper Hullaaga Valley, where most of Peru's illegal coca crop is grown. Rain and clouds had hampered efforts to reach the crash site until Monday. The agents were identified as Frank Fernandez Jr., 38, of Washington, D.C. J.C. Jay W. Seale, 31, of Los Angeles; Meredith Thompson, 33, of Miami; Frank S. Wallace Jr., 37, of Houston, and Juan C. Vars, 32, of San Antonio, Texas. Search helicopters spotted the plane Sunday in the Andes foothills about 285 miles northeast of Lima. Heavy rain prevented eight Peruvian air force commandos who reached the site Monday from evacuating the bodies, said Maíl Marcos Velasquez. The CASA C-212 twin-engine plane was traveling from Santa Lucia when it lost contact with air traffic control. The cause of the crash was under investigation but there was no sign of fire or explosion, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration said. The agents were taking part in Operation Snowcap, an effort started in 1987 in which U.S. agents work closely with Peruvian and Bolivian officials to dismantle cocaine networks. About 10 DEA agents are assigned to Peru and another 12 to Bolivia, the DEA said. Peru is the source of more than 60 percent of the world's coca, from which cocaine is manufactured. WASHINGTON Crew faces possible trial The Associated Press The board of senior Air Force officers has proposed that the five crewmen of an AWACS radar-control aircraft face dereliction of duty charges in connection with the accidental shooting in April — one of the military's deadliest friendly fire tragedies, the officials said Monday night. WASHINGTON — A military board is recommending that up to five members of an aircraft crew be court-martialed for the "friendly fire" downing of two U.S. Army helicopters over Iraq that killed 26 people, Pentagon officials say. "This is a very preliminary recommendation to the senior convening authority," said one senior Pentagon source, speaking on condition of anonymity. That authority, a three-star Air Force general, must review the recommendation and decide whether to send the cases on for further action in the military's judicial system, the official said. The two F-15 pilots who actually shot down the helicopters also are expected to face some type of disciplinary A Pentagon study of the incident released last month suggested that the controllers on board the AWACS aircraft knew the two Black Hawk choppers were in the area, but failed to warm two F-15 pilots when the flyers reported that they had sighted the helicopters. The two F-15 pilots, believing the Black Hawks were braids, shot them down one after another. action but whether they also will face courts-martial is still under review, a second official said. The recommendations about the AWACS crew members will go to Lt. Gen. Steve Croker, the commander of the 8th Air Force in Barksdale, La., who has charge of all the Air Force's Airborne Warning and Control Aircraft. Croker will decide whether the recommendation should be accepted and the cases against the crewmen allowed to move forward. Last week, Defense Secretary William Perry decided that the Pentagon would pay $100,000 to each of the families of the 11 foreign citizens killed in the accident. LOS ANGELES REhab reduces crime, taxes LOS ANGELES The study for the California Department of Alcohol and Drug Programs comes at a time of public skepticism over the benefits of such programs. "Most people don't believe treatment works, and they're wrong. That's why a study like this is so important," said Alan Leshner, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse. The study estimated that $1.5 billion in savings resulted from the $209 million the state spent on treatment between October 1991 and September 1992. Most of the savings came as a result of fewer crimes committed by those in treatment. The rest was largely due to a drop in health care expenses for the users. The study based its conclusions on subjects' recollections of their behavior before and after they had undergone treatment. The authors said they took pains to avoid exaggerating savings. The study found that use of crack cocaine, cocaine powder and amphetamines declined by almost half after treatment. Heroin use dropped by one-fifth and alcohol use by nearly one-third. The study's authors were surprised to learn crack cocaine use could be treated so effectively. "No one has really determined that previously," said Dean R. Gerstein of the University of Chicago's National Opinion Research Center, which conducted the study with Lewin-VHI Inc of Fairfax, Va. Leshner and Andrew Mecca, director of the state Department of Alcohol and Drug Programs, said they would use the study, which cost $2 million, to persuade elected officials to continue to invest public money in treatment programs. LITTLE ROCK, Arkansas Elders'son receives 10 years LITTLE ROCK. Arkansas U. S. Surgeon General Joycelyn Elders questioned whether her son's cocaine selling was a crime as she testified at a hearing yesterday that led to his release on bond while appealing his drug conviction. Kevin Elders, 29, was convicted last month of selling one-eighth ounce of cocaine to a police informant and sentenced to 10 years in prison Monday. He was released "into his mother's arms" on a $10,000 appeal bond, a sheriff's deputy said. Elders testified that while on bond, Kevin Elders would live with her older son, Eric Elders, a schoolteacher, and would help manage the family's rental property. She said her son would not flee if released and would continue a drug treatment program he entered before his trial. When asked if she thought he would commit other offenses, she said, "I don't feel that was a crime." She did not elaborate in court and would not do so after the hearing. She has made no substantive comment about the case except in testimony. After the hearing, she would not say whether she thought her son did not commit a crime because it was a case of entrapment, as he contended at trial, or if she thought that selling cocaine was not a crime. "I was surprised that someone in her position would make a comment like that," Deputy Prosecutor Chris Palmer said, noting that Kevin Elders wrote a letter to the court acknowledging that he had committed a crime and owed a debt to society. Defense attorney Terri Farnell said an appeal has been filed challenging Circuit Judge John Plegge's rejection of the entrapment defense and his application of the sentencing law. At his trial, Kevin Elders admitted having a decade-long drug habit and a three-year addiction to cocaine. Man charged with killing cops A 26-year-old man charged with murdering two police officers told authorities that if he hadn't stashed away his weapons while trying to flee, he would have killed other officers as well. ST. PAUL, Minnesota Guy Harvey Baker, was held in $2 million bail on two charges of first-degree murder. "God, I shouldn't have gotten rid of the guns," authorities quoted Baker as saying. Ramsey County Attorney Tom Foley called the deaths Friday "two of the cruelest, most sickening, cold-blooded homicides" ever in St. Paul. At the time of the shootings, Baker was wanted in his home state of Iowa for allegedly violating probation on drug and firearms charges. He was captured six hours after shooting Ryan. Baker said that after he had killed Jones, who spotted him hiding in a fish shack, he hid both officers' guns and his own revolver under a tile of scrap lumber. While hiding under a woodpecker, he said he noticed some officers about four feet away. "If'd had a gun on me, they'd have both been dead," he said in the statement. In a statement to police released Monday, Baker described how he shot officer Ron Ryan Jr., who found him sleeping in a car in a church parking lot, and then Tim Jones, called on his day off to join more than 100 other officers in the manhunt for Ryan's killer. The Mason City, Iowa, man is the first person charged under the Heinion Crimes Act, a new state law mandating life in prison without parole for anyone convicted of killing a police officer. SAN FRANCISCO Mexican refugee dies of AIDS The first person granted asylum by a U.S. immigration officer because of sexual orientation has died of AIDS. The case of Ariel Da Silva prompted Attorney General Janet Reto to declare that persecution based on sexual orientation is grounds for political asylum, a principle now binding in all immigration cases. Da Silva said he was afraid he would be persecuted in his native Mexico because he was a homosexual. Da Silva, 36, died last week in a Los Angeles hospital, five months after the favorable ruling by an immigration hearing officer, attorney Marc Van Der Hout said Monday. Da Silva, who entered the United States in the 1980s, was diagnosed with the AIDS virus in November 1991, Van Der Hout said. He had been working in health education and AIDS prevention in the San Francisco gay community since 1987. Da Silva had spoken publicly about his case under a pseudonym, Jose Garcia. WASHINGTON Quayle for president in'96? Former Vice President Dan Quayle has all but decided to seek the presidency in 1996 and is beginning to lay the groundwork for a campaign, a close associate said Monday. He will begin to campaign for Republican congressional and gubernatorial candidates and is planning major speeches to try out possible themes for the 1996 campaign, according to the associate, who spoke on condition of anonymity. Quayle recently returned with his family from a long vacation, during which they discussed whether he should seek the Republican nomination. All indications are that the answer is yes, said the friend who spoke to Quayle after the vacation. Another associate said Quayle has made clear to friends that he would like to run and continues to evaluate the feasibility of a race by contacting potential campaign contributors. Quayle's positive leaning was heavily influenced by the strong sales of his book, "Standing Firm." He had counted on the response to the book, which has sold more than 500,000 copies, to give him an indication of his support. The book is largely a memoir of his vice presidency under President Bush, four years during which he was dogged by ridicule and a lightweight image despite his substantial political role within the White House. DAYTON, Ohio Man protests skating ticket Bill Rain thinks his roller skates are a form of transportation. The city considers toys, and police gave him a $42 ticket for skating in the street. A judge will decide. Rain, a businessman, is contesting the citation he got two weeks ago when he donned in-line skates to scout downtown locations for commercial and residential space. He argued before a magistrate Monday that the law should treat Rollerblades like bicycles and allow them in the street as a transportation alternative. 1 consider them the same as riding a bike," Rain said. The court is expected to rule in three to four weeks. Art Fridays Save 10% on all art,design and arch- itectural supplies... every Friday Jayhawk Bookstore 1420 Crescent Road.843-3826 OPEN TIL 7:00p.m. Mon-Thurs BENEFITS Join SUA. Adam Sandler Jurassic Park Stan Herd Exhibit Union Open House Dr. Jean Kilbourne Tori Amos New Orleans Vacation Prick Up Your Ears STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUK THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Programs With Personality Add Your Personality to Ours. Join SUA. Information Meetings for committee members are: Tuesday, September 6 & Wednesday, September 7 Burge Union, 7:30pm. Applications also available September 1-9 at SUA Box Office, 4th Floor Kansas Union: 864-3477. Applications due by NOON Sept. 9th. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, August 31, 1994 11A Congratulations 1994 New Initiates ABXM∏ΦΩΗΚAMNΟΠОР2TY=Q≠Ψ/ABXM∏ΦΩΗΚAMNΟΠOP2TY=Q≠Ψ/ABXM∏ΦΩΗΚAMNΟΠOP2TY=Q≠Ψ/ABXM∏ΦΩΗΚAMNΟΠOP2TY=Q≠Ψ/ABXM∏ΦΩΗΚAMNΟΠOP2TY=Q≠Ψ/ABXM∏ΦΩΗΚAMNΟΠOP2TY=Q≠Ψ/ 星星 Leigh Bassman Allison Bernard Misty Bruna Jennifer Buck Roseanne Ciarlelli Jama Crady Christie Crouse Jennifer Dieterich Julie Eberle Andrea Erickson Stephanie Finely Shannon Frederick Lori Gasaway Stacey Gordon Caroline Goss Bridget Hansen Cheryl Hearth Ashely Hock Susan Hoffman Kelly Jones Amy Kramer Becky Kucera Congratulations ΓΦB Pledges! Karolyne Leung Lindsay Lundholm Holly Mason Jill McIntyre Corrie Moore Shelly Mudd Katherine O'Brien Lori Olsen Allison Pierce Courtney Ryan Lisa Sapasap Sara Shay Jamie Skidmore Meredith Thedinger Kristin Underwood Gina Vig Lindsay Wedel Lindsay Willis Sara Wright Gina Yorkovich Love, The Actives SIGMADELTATAUWELCOMES THEXINEWMEMBERCLASS OF'94-'95 Tracee Badzin Ellen Barkin Ellen Block Laura Breslow Lee Dame Jessica Dinnerstein Amy Duke Allison Feldberg Stacy Fine Robin Friedlander Mindy Gidlow Wendy Glick Lindsey Gordon Lisa Greenfield Mara Hurwitz Jessica Kaplan Cassie Kirschbaum Lisa Langeland Kelly Leydon Courtney Lindgren Hillary Meyer Kim Rosenfield Kelly Savoy Michele Sherman Lori Siegel Jonna Silver Sheri Silverman Sara Weber Karen Zeitman Emily Zien The Actives CONGRATULATIONS PLEDGESI Allison Arbuckle Christian Barringer Betsy Beverage Shannon Bishopp Gina Brown Courtney Burbridge Julie Carlin Ann Cornwell Erin Dean Julie DeWitt Alisa Fallon Molly Fast Kimberly Friedricksen Amy Gaal Jessica Gibson Brittany Harris Laura Haunschild Amy Higgins Jacquelyn Hubbard Catherine Kieman Jennifer Kimball KKΓ Meredith Kreamer Stephanie Lindquist Catherine Milligan Meghan Nelson Lindsay Oliver Anna Parrott Kristin Paul Mary Rapp Robin Reed Cathleen Ryan Julie Schaeffer Erica Schmid Lindsay Scoby Carrie Simpson Alisha Starnes Sally Stauffer Lora Stephanchick Sarah Tague Sara Thompson Regan Tompsett Lisa Whitehead Love, The Actives Welcome Delta Darlings! 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Ami Aleshire Deina Anderson Shara Beckmon Crystal Burgess Katherine Carlson Heather Christensen Michaela Deroussed Sommer Dietz Lori Dillehay Anne Donohue Cara Drennan Stephanie Fitch Amanda Freeman Helanle Gassel Michele Gilman Andrea Gisi Turi Grimm Kathleen Gunja Kelly Hansen Amy Hamel Carlie Henderson Julie Hinshaw Sandra Kallaos Kattie McCarthy Erica Miller Staci Miller ROSE Carrie Moore Meghan Pence Amy Peters Karla Peterson Frances Pickett Cynthia Pratt Anne Robertson Melissa Robinson Erin Royer Jaime Runyan Ern Russell Dayna Sanford Melissa Severson Michelle Sonner Michelle Stepp Amy Stetzler Kami Taylor Lisa Van Campen Erin Veazey Angela Weber Kathryn Willett Amy Williams Hillary Young Jennie Younger ❤ The Actives My Greecka Iguana University Fraternity & Sorority Paraphernalia Call Today FREE catalogue 1800 633 2943 WELCOME HOME ALPHAS Carrie Bruesing Kori Burch Britta Cambell Jodie Chester Regan Cowen Jody Drehr Jennifer Ericson Erin Fox Pam Frieling Annie Goodmiller Gretchen Graham Katy Guest Tracy Hepler Amy Hibbs Tiffany Holmes Darcy Jacobitz Angie Johnson Tiffany Kohl Amy Leiszler Brandi Loney Bridget Mason Molly Meschke Kristin Moore Becky Nicholas Amy Pacey Katie Richardson Jami Ring Lisa Rozenburg Kristyn Sawrey Laura Sawyer Leanne Sheely Becky Simpson Lindsay Solomon Mindi Stoppel Kari Sunstrom Erin Turack Leszlie Valentine Allison Vaughn Alison Wheeler Julie Whitaker Rebecca Whitehair Heather Whitney Mandi Wilde AΔIP LOVE, THE DELTAS AOI AOI AOI AOI AOI AOI AOI AOI AOI O Π A O Π A O Π A O Π A O Π A O Π A O Π A O Π A O Π A O Π A O Π CONGRATULATIONS AOπ New Members 2 Love, The Actives AOI AOI AOI AOI AOI AOI AOI AOI AOI AOI WELCOME NEW MEMBERS CONGRATULATIONS AXO Jennifer Anderson Meghan Anderson Stacy Andry Angela Arnold Kristin Baker Tiffany Baker Laura Bakker Badkin Tobilz Christian Bryer Amy Devore Amber Eaton Sally Eaton Krista Engelmann Vaughn Farrar Nicole Franklin Kate Freeland Jerry Gimmaro Kristie Gomez Amy Cookman Marcy Griffin Gina Hart Angela Hirt Karen Kinney Sharon Leubitz Casey Liebst VII Tori Luna Jennifer Marstall Amy May Megan Mayerson Laura McClure Michelle Meyer Carrie Mulligan Tara O'Callaghan Julie Phillips Jessica Piel Bridgett Price Ericka Sanner-Stiehr Amy Schildmeyer Amy Schuetz Lisa Seeger Anna Sieve Olivia Thompson Krista Tiller Carla Tomc Jennifer Venzke Megan Walker Melanie Whitman Janet Williams Ashley Winn Beth Winter Tara Witthuhn Love, The Actives Dillons FOOD STORIES You'll *3000 W. 6th *1015 W. 23rd *1740 Massachusetts What We've Done In Lawrence Family Pack Fryer Leg Quarters 49¢ lb. Register To Win 2 K.U. Football Season Tickets (50 Sets to be given away.) *Register at any Lawrence Dillon Store Aug. 31 - Sept. 6. *Need not be present to win. *Drawing held Sept. 7, 1994. *Dillon employees and their immediate family not eligible to win. - Bakery Coupon - 10 ct. Multipack Hostess Twinkies Buy One, Get One FREE! Coupon good through September 6th, 1994. Lays/Wavy Lays/Ruffles Potato Chips Super Size 18 oz. to 20 oz. Assorted Varieties $289 Coke Classic Caffeine Free Diet Coke, Diet Coke, Sprite or Diet Sprite 24 pack, 12 oz. cans $489 Rocky Top Pop 6 pack, 12 oz. cans Assorted Varieties 99¢ Schaefer Beer 12 pack 12 oz. Cans Regular or Light $369 Purex Liquid Laundry Detergent pp $2.99, 64 oz. Original or With Bleach 2/£5 -Dillons Ice Cream Sandwiches 6 pack... Buy One Get One FREE! Snow Crab Clusters Frozen... $499 lb. Create-A-Print Create your own print from the negative you bring. Print sizes from 5"x7" to 11"x14" plus panoramic enlargements. 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Men's golf team enters fall season with new leader By Jenni Carlson Kansan sportswriter Kansas senior golfer Tyler Shelton is a living example of what a little confidence can do. Success in regional and national amateur golf tournaments this summer has elevated Shelton to the top of his game. "He played as well as any amateur in this area has in a long time," Kansas men's golf coach Ross Randall said. Shelton began playing golf under the instruction of his father when he was just five years old. Shelton said his father was an avid golfer. When he was 13 years old, Shelton had his first exposure to tournament competition. "I thought it was kind of fun," he said. "Of course there's going to be some pressure and some nerves. You want to do well for your family and for yourself." Desire for success, however, did not equate to pressure from his father, Shelton said. "He didn't put too much pressure on me when I was younger," he said. "He never has." Shelton realized early in high school that he wanted to play at the collegiate level, and attending the University of Kansas was a natural choice. His parents and grandparents graduated from Kansas. "All through high school, my main goal was to play college golf," Shelton said. "Once I got a scholarship offer here, then I pretty much jumped on it." "I knew he had a good solid game," Randall said. "He just had to get going and play the way he's capable of playing." During his first three years at Kansas, Shelton played in a limited number of tournaments because of the team's talented upperclassmen and, at times, a personal lack of confidence in his game. Shelton's jump-start began this summer when he won the Kansas City Match Play Championship, Randall said. Shelton agreed his confidence was a key this summer and would continue to be throughout the upcoming season. "Things get going and you play better, and all of a sudden you shoot better scores and your confidence soars," Randall said. "That's what happened to Tyler this summer." "My confidence level is at an all-time high this year," he said. "I feel like my game has reached a new level. I think it's going to carry on through the college season." Shelton said he now hoped to consistently shoot low scores. "I'm going to consider myself one of the leaders on the team," he said. Randall said Shelton's leadership through low scores would motivate the squad. "in golf you can be a leader just by playing well," he said. "When one guy or two guys play well, it brings up everybody else on the team." The Jayhawks will have only a week of practice before their first meet this fall. Because of the limited practice time, Randall will place golfers according to their summer play. Since Shelton had a successful summer, he will likely be the No. 1 player to begin the fall, Randall said. "If he continues to play the way he has, he deserves to be in the No. 1 snoot." Randall said. And if he continues to play the way he has, Shelton sees only good things ahead. He said he wanted to win a couple of tournaments and gain All-American status. "that's kind of a high goal," Sheilton said. "But I feel like with my play this summer, if I can keep it up, I can do it." In addition, Shelton had lofty expectations for the Jayhawks. Shelton'ssummer "I want our team to win the Big - Won the Missouri Amateur Championship and the Kansas City Match Play Championship - Shot the lowest score by an amateur in the tournament - Missed qualifying for the round of 16 in the Western Oer Eight Championship and go to nationals, and just play well there," he said. KANSAN Shelton is more enthusiastic than ever about his golf game and the upcoming season, Randall said. "You can definitely see a change in him after what went on this summer," he said. "Golf's really important to him." This May, Shelton will walk down the Hill and receive his diploma. He said his plans after graduation were not set in stone but that he was considering a professional golf career. Cougars' front line similar to Kansas' "As of right now, I would say I'm going to try pro golf for a couple of years," Shelton said. "I'd probably kick myself later in life if I didn't give it a go." Houston standouts lead like Hawks' offensive guards By Matt Irwin Kansan sportswriter The Houston Cougars are just like their opponents this Thursday, the Kansas Javhawks, at least in one way. Coming off a 1-9-1 season, there are few similarities between Houston's football program and Kansas' football program, except how their offensive front is led. Like Kansas, the Cougars are led by two linemen who have the potential to receive post-season honors. The Jayhawks travel into Texas to face the Cougars at 7:20 tomorrow night in Houston's Astrodome. The game will be televised on KSMO, Sunflower Cable Channel 3 in Lawrence. Kansas senior guards Hessley Hempstead and John Jones lead the Jayhawk line, while a pair of tackles, senior Billy Milner and junior Jimmy Herndon lead Houston. Herndon, the left tackle, was selected to the 1993 second team All-Southwest Conference team and had started 21 consecutive games before missing last season's finale with an ankle injury. Milner, the right tackle, started all 11 games last season after transferring from Southwest Mississippi Community College. Milner was a junior college All-American in 1992. Despite last year's rough season, Milner said the mood was enthusiastic when spring practice started. "We didn't want to go through that again," Milner said. Offensive coordinator and offensive line coach Neil Callaway, who said he has sent 13 offensive linemen to the NL during his 12 seasons at Auburn, is not as impressed with his two top linemen as everyone else is. Callaway described both as hard workers who were very competitive. But Callaway said Milner had less experience than Herdon, though. "Coming from a junior college, he hasn't had a lot of reps," Callaway said of Milner's game experience. "He's not really strong in the room." Mohammad Mousavi Callaway emphasized the need for strength. Callaway said that Herndon also is not very strong and that having a 6-foot-8 frame didn't help him add on the necessary muscle. "The stronger they are, the better they are." Callaway said. Callaway said he still believes both have the frame to be NFL linemen. Jimmy Herndon C Biliv Milner "Fundamentally they also have a lot of work to do," Calloway said. Hernndon said his strength was the pass-blocking ability that he developed from blocking in the run-and-shoot system his freshman season. Despite this experience, Herndon said he even had to change the way he pass-blocked. Houston coach Kim Helton, an NFL offensive line coach for 11 seasons, taught the linemen a different way to pass-block. Herdon said it was even more difficult to adjust to run-blocking in Helton's new system. The run-and-shoot offense offered only four running plays. Accuracy of eligibility system questioned after Kansas gaffe "The run-blocking was totally new," Herdmond said. "I hadn't done that since high school. In terms of experience, it was hard to deal with." By Chesley Dohl Kansan sportswriter There was no reason to believe Trisha Lindgren would not be cleared by the Initial Clearinghouse Committee to compete in NCAA athletics. Lindgren, a freshman setter on the Kansas volleyball team, graduated from Faith Christian Academy in Brighton, Colo., with a 3.97 grade point average and an ACT score of 23. But still, the Initial Clearinghouse in Iowa City, Iowa, neglected to certify Lindgren because there was no proof on-hand that Lindgren had graduated. "We are asking a company to certify thousands of athletes who don't have any particular interest in these students," said Richard Konzem, assistant athletic director in charge of compliance. The good news is that Kansas managed to get the mixup rectified with Clearinghouse. Lindgren will start as Kansas's setter in the Colorado State Tournament Friday. But still, the Initial Clearinghouse System has many glitches to iron out this year to prepare for the avalanche of athletes who will apply in 1995 to compete in NCAA athletics. The Initial Clearinghouse system, which is in its first year, is an alternative system voted on by the NCAA to clear up confusion by institutions about academic eligibility. Konzem said the clearinghouse system was an idea decided on by the Big Eight schools to eliminate the confusion. "They voted on the idea to have this one company take care of the certification at this one location," Konzem said. "Sure it sounds like a good deal on paper. It's a good philosophy - but all it is is a big bureaucracy," Konzem said. The clearinghouse system works much like the ACT test process. The system is, in fact, run by the same company that handles ACT testing. Graduating high school seniors hoping to compete in collegiate athletics have to submit $18 along with a student release form. From there, the student-athlete's high school is required to submit the student's transcript, core courses, ACT scores and proof of high school graduation. B. J. Skelton, head of the Initial Clearinghouse Committee and athletic director at the University of Texas at Arlington, said many of the problems with the clearinghouse were due to a lack of communication. "In May of 1993 we sent 26,000 packets to high schools across the nation explaining the clearinghouse," Skelton said. "I don't know if they never got the information or what. But there are policies that obviously need to change for next year's run of students who register." Kansas volleyball coach Karen Schonewise said she could not believe Lindgow was not cleared to compete Saturday. But she said she was relieved it happened instead of the day before this weekend's tournament. "There were no red flags," she said. "There were no indications we had any problems with anyone on the team. The high school did all it could to get the clearinghouse the information. The clearing house dropped the ball. They just didn't get it done." Skelton told the system was unlike any other in that not everyone would walk away satisfied. But he said the clearinghouse was working overtime and hiring help to get the paperwork processed. "I won't be so naive as to say the system doesn't have its problems," Skelton said. "This first cycle has been tough." Next year Lindgren won't have to go through the cleanhouse, but that doesn't make her feel any better about missing the team's scrimmage. "I looked forward to playing and getting some experience under my belt," she said. "I was very disappointed." BRIEF Basketball coaches to receive equal pay After 22 years of coaching the Kansas women's basketball team, Marian Washington has signed a four-year contract that will make her base salary equal to men's basketball coach Roy Williams' by 1997. Kansanstaffreport PETER JAMES KIDMAN $90,000 this season, $100,000 in 1996 and $110,000 in 1997. The salaries of Williams and football coach Glen Mason are listed at $100,450. Washington will receive Marlan Washington Washington, who made $75,000 last season, has been at Kansas longer than any current Kansas coach. Kansas is the second Big Eight school to announce that its men's and women's basketball coaches would be paid the same. Previous finish drives team Captains want no repeat of last year Kansas seniors Michael Cox and David Johnston faced this situation last season. After both athletes finished in the top 10 at the District V meet in 1992, they were redshirted for the 1993 season. By Kent Hohifeld Waiting can be tough for any college athlete, especially when the athletes are two of the top runners on the Kansas cross-country team. The move gave a freshmen-dominated team in 1993 a chance to mature, while saving Cox and Johnston a year of eligibility. Kansan sportswriter "It was tough watching last season," Johnston said. "But we needed to keep it in perspective for this year." The men's team finished eighth in the Big Eight Conference last season, which both runners said was a motivating factor heading into this season. "We went a little farther down than we figured," Cox said. "I'd say it gives us a hunger to do more this year." He said injuries to sophomore runners Clifton Railsback, Chris Ronan and Jeff Peterson late in the season hurt the team in Big Eight and District meets. Schwartz said the addition of Cox and Johnston would add more than All-American-caliber talent to the team. Cox went to the indoor championships last year. Both Cox and Johnston were part of the cross-country team that went to nationals in 1991. They will use that experience in guiding the team as this season's co-captains. "This year, they will add the maturity and experience of having competed in nationalists in more than just cross country. "Schwartz said. Kansas coach Gary Schwartz said that the last-place finish was not due totally to the absence of Cox and Johnston. "I think it's been a while since two such different people were named captains of the team." Johnston said. The way the two spent their summers showed those differences. Cox spent his summer working at a YMCA camp in Estes Park, Colo. Johnston interned at Sen. Nancy Kassbaum's. "I think there is a myth that, to be a good team, athletes have to be really close and spend all their time together," Schwartz said. "We have a lot of people with totally different personalities on this team." Both Cox and Johnston agreed that being named co-captains gave them more responsibility than just finishing first and second for every race. Those goals include a trip to the NCAA Championships, Nov. 21, in Fayetteville, Ark. Johnston said that having that goal meant they had to focus more on the larger meets than their early season meets. "One of our biggest jobs is to help with team unity," Johnston said. "If we go out and finish one-two in every race, that still won't fulfill the team's overall goals." "Our goals are higher than even our coaches," Cox said. "We wouldn't be satisfied if we went undefeated this season and didn't make it to nationals." Johnston and Cox said their off-field differences didn't extend to their on-field performances. office. 7 "I did as much faxing as he did rock climbing." Johnston said. JACK MORRIS AND JAMES O'Shea RUNNING IN A NETTLE Kansas seniors David Johnston, left, and Michael Cox run a few laps around Memorial Stadium during cross country team practice. The two athletes have returned to Big Eight competition after being redshirted last season. . 1 2B Wednesday, August 31, 1994 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Attorney: Jordan's accused killers should not be charged with crimes The Associated Press LUMBERTON, N.C. — Charges should be dismissed against one of the teen-agers charged with killing Michael Jordan's father because the prosecutor has held back critical evidence, defense attorneys said yesterday. Evidence includes one sighting of James Jordan after the date he was supposed to have been killed and two reports indicating other people talked about committing a similar crime, said defense lawyer Woodberry Bowen. The evidence is a year old. "Most of these reports would have been in the district attorney's hands way back in the fall," Bowen said. "Some of them contain exculpatory material." Bowen represents Daniel Andre Green, who with Larry Martin Demery, is charged with first-degree murder, armed robbery and conspiracy to commit armed robbery in the elder Jordan's death last July. Demery and Green were charged Aug. 15. Superior Court Judge Gregory Weeks said he would rule on the motion by the next hearing, which may be held in October. The judge will review the reports in the meantime. District Attorney Richard Townsend said he made the decision to hold the reports back, but that the defense had gotten or would get everything it was entitled to. "In a case like this, there are a lot of incredible claims that are made," he said. Bowen said whatever the nature of the claims, the defense hadn't had the chance to investigate them until now. The prosecutor apparently hasn't followed them up in an effort to exclude other possible suspects, he said. "There is no order this court can enter that can give us our year back to go back and pick up our trail." Bowen said. Bowen said Townsend gave the defense 23 statements from individuals from as far away as Florida, New York and California. The statements were handed over on Friday and should have been provided much earlier and certainly no later than a discovery conference held in July, he said. Bowen said the statements included: A report from a Cumberland County librarian who said a man identified himself as James Jordan and tried to call his son at Fort Bragg. The man was with two other men, neither of whom was the defendant, and said he had lost his car in the county because of a bet. A report from a New York woman that her sisters living in Florida had as a guest a man who was a neighbor of Jordan's and who told them last Aug.15 he had "killed a man in the woods of South Carolina." A college student in Fayetteville overheard four men talking in a cafeteria last summer that "they had left a car in Fayetteville, disposed of a body in another state and that they had done it to throw off a police investigation." Bowen didn't elaborate on the statements Bowen didn't elaborate on the state items. "This is not negligent conduct," Bowen said. "This is intentional conduct ... (Green's) investigation has been thwarted. His constitutional rights have been trumped on." Pain forces Daly out of tournament. The Associated Press John Daly withdrew from this weekend's European Masters yesterday with an alling back that his agent said was the direct result of a scuffle with a spectator after last weekend's World Series of Golf in Akron, Ohio. "He's in pain. He's out indefinitely," agent John Mascallo said yesterday from his office in Herndon, Va., in confirming Daly's withdraw from the tournament that runs Thursday-Saturday at Crans-sur-Sierre, Switzerland. Daly's mother, Lou Daly, described her son as being in "a great deal of pain" when reached at her home in Dardanelle, Ark. on Monday. In a story published yesterday in the Washington Post, Mas- catello said X-rays taken in Akron showed no skeletal damage, but Daly intended to have more extensive X-rays taken this week near his home in Memphis, Tenn. Mascatello also said he was considering legal action against Bob Roth, the 62-year-old who confronted Daly in the parking lot after Sunday's final round. "We're weighing our options," Mascatella said. "John has several commitments for the rest of the year, including business things that he may or may not be able to fulfill." Daly, 28, has a pre-existing back condition and withdrew from at least one other tournament earlier this year after it flared up. "John clearly was the injured party in the parking lot situation," Mascatello said of the confrontation, which ended with Daly and Roth rolling around on the pavement until caddies and spectators managed to separate them. "He (Daly) was attacked. He was confronted. He was verbally abused (by members of the Jeff Roth contingent) on the golf course." Mascatello said. Daly, playing in the group directly behind one that included national club pro champion Jeff Roth on the Firestone Country Club, was accused by Roth of hitting into his group during the final round at Firestone Country Club. Following an exchange of words with Jeff Roth, Daly was leaving the clubhouse when he was confronted by Bob Roth, the player's father. Another exchange of words followed. Dolores Roth, the elder Roth's wife, said she witnessed the incident and Daly cursed both her husband and berself. The woman said Bob Roth then grabbed Daly from behind and both men fell to the ground, batting until they were separated. The elder Roth, in an interview with the Ventura (Calif.) StarFree Press, said he initiated the fight after Daly shouted obscenities at his wife. "That was it," Roth said. "I went after him and jumped him from behind. "There were no blows thrown, and we were separated. This happened in front of 500 or 600 people. John took off and he was gone." Olympic committee to protect environment The Associated Press PARIS—The International Olympic Committee's centennial congress opened today with calls for the Olympic movement to take further steps to protect the environment. French Environment Minister Michel Barnier proposed that the IOC create a permanent committee devoted to ensuring that the Olympics and other major sports events do not destroy their surroundings. Barnier, who was co-president of the organizing committee of the 1992 Winter Games in Albertville, also proposed environmental protection standards be added to the Olympic Charter and Olympic host cities meet regularly to discuss environmental issues. "The Olympic Games can be an opportunity to embellish a region, as was clearly demonstrated by Lillehammer and Norway (at the 1994 Winter Games) and as illustrated by the project developed by the city of Sydney which will host the Games in the year 2000." Barnier said. Barnier was the keynote speaker on the first day of the four-day Olympic Congress. More than 3,000 officials from around the world are attending the congress, with the four main themes being: One of the issues that will be discussed is doping. Several cases have emerged in recent days: The International Olympic Committee medical chief confirmed that documents detailing several positive drug tests at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics were destroyed before they could be acted upon. Horace Dove-Edwin, the Sierra Leone sprinter who finished a surprising second behind Linford Christie in the 100 meters at the Commonwealth Games in Canada, tested positive for steroids and was stripped of his silver medal. He was the third athlete to test positive at the Games, while two English athletes were sent home for failing drug tests at earlier meets. The French cycling federation accused four-time Tour de France winner Miguel Indurain of taking a banned substance, but the IOC and the international cycling federation absolved him of any wrongdoing. The Olympic movement's contribution to modern society; the contemporary athlete; sport in its social context; and sport and media. British diver Tony Ali was suspended for six months by the international swimming federation for refusing to take a random drug test. The case of the missing drug tests from the 1984 Los Angeles Games was addressed for the first time Monday by the man who was and still is in charge of the IOC's medical commission, Prince Alexandre de Merode. five, or possibly six, positive tests from the final days of the Games were reported to him the day after the closing ceremony. He denied a BBC television report that there were nine positive tests. De Merelo said when he went to his offices at the Bilmore Hotel to examine the tests, he found that everything had disappeared and the rooms had been converted back into a hotel suite. De Merode said the hotel explained that all Olympic offices were closed as soon as the Games ended because the privately funded organizing committee was not paying for rooms beyond the closing date. The next morning, de Merode went to the organizing committee headquarters to find out what happened. He said he was first told by a committee official, Tony Daly, that the drug test documents were being flown to IOC headquarters in Lausanne, Switzerland. After de Merode said he would get on the next plane to Lausanne to study the tests, Daly changed his story. "I must tell the truth," de Merode quoted him as saying. "Everything was destroyed in the paper shredder. "We are sorry, but we can't produce anything from your documents. I apologize but we can not do anything." De Merode said he considered the episode an honest mistake. total look! 842-5921 9th & Mississippi Rings Fixed Fast! Kitz Cummings jewelers 749-4333 833 Mass • Lawrence, KS Weights + We Buy, Sell Trade & Consign USED & New Sports Equipment used weights—.25cents per lb PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 1029 Massachusetts phone 841-PLAY The 125 Subject Notebook OLYMPUS Powerbank S924 MEETING CENTER 7XA Becoming a Great Dictator Marine Biology 234 Observing Human Anatomy Pondering Your Future The Dive In You You Did You The World Express 101 Intense French The Inner Voice Quoting Karenwa Cafeteria Cathrissi Geology 105 Muttering Obecinities Psychology 203 Capture Your Coach Getting Psyched Political Science 215 Offer Your Teen Your Roommate The Meaning Of Life Phone Numbers Hot Phone Numbers Phone Numbers To Die For Reminiscing With Yourself Speech Communications Outlining a Screenplay Communicating 101 Talking While Masticating Professor Bashing and I Am Not A Secret Recordening Secretary Shopping List Reminder Emancipation 301 Top 10 Answering Machine Greetings Chilling 405 Thinking You Should Tell Your Parents Confessions to Father Mock interviewing Massaging Shakespeare Building Your Knowledge Knitting Your Miracle and Reality Recalling Man, Lennon and McCartney Soap Opera Analysis More Electives... 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Lawrence Donor Center Walk-ins welcome $ NABI The Quality Source Hours: M-F 9-6 Sat 10-3 816 W.24th Behind Laird Noller Ford 749-5750 See our ad in the classified section SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, August 31, 1994 3B SPORTS in brief KU Man accused of shooting golfer sentenced in court NILES, Ohio — The man accused of firing the shot that wounded LPGA golfer Kim Williams was ordered to pay a $25 fine after pleading no contest to a charge of disorderly conduct. The Associated Press Niles Municipal Judge Thomas Townley sentenced Gary Swaney, 35, of Howland, Ohio, to 30 days in jail and fined him $250 plus court costs. But the judge then suspended the jail term and all but $25 of the fine. The 9mm handgun used in the July 2 shooting was ordered to be destroved. swainy was originally charged with negligent assault, which carried a maximum penalty of 60 days in jail and a $500 fine. Niles Prosecutor Bruce Bennett said the plea agreement was approved by Williams through her lawyer and her father, who also serves as her manager. Williams, 31, of Boca Raton, Fla., could not be reached to comment. A phone message was left at her home. Police said Swainey was shooting a target practice in woods about one mile from the discount store parking lot where Williams was wounded. Williams, who was in town to play in an LPGA tournament, had gone to the store after a rain delay in the tournament. Becker ousted in U.S. Open's first round The Associated Press NEW YORK — Doubles specialist Richey Renebert ousted seventh-seeded Boris Becker from the U.S. Open in a five-set first-round victory. No. 2 Goran Ivanisevic fell in four sets to Markus Zoeke, and 16th-seeded Petr Korda withdrew from the tournament with a pulled groin muscle. No. 3 Sergi Bruguera, No. 6 Michael Chang, No. 12 Wayne Ferreira and No. 13 Thomas Muster were seeded players to win. On the women's side, Gigi Fernandez, a Wimbledon semifinalist in July, bumped No. 12 Sabine Hack. No. 2 Arantxa Sanchez Vicario, No. 3 Conchita Martínez, No. 4 Mary Pierce, No. 9 Mary Joe Fernandez and No. 16 Amy Frazier advance. Baseball mediators to meet separately The Associated Press NEW YORK — With 10 percent of the season canceled because of the strike, federal mediators said they would meet separately today with baseball players and owners. Management leader Richard Ravitch has hinted strongly that owners are prepared to sacrifice the World Series in order to gain the salary cap they want. Teams' events vary in first football week The Associated Press ANAHEM, Calif. — Joey Galloway caught a record 67-yard touchdown pass and scored on a reverse as No. 20 Ohio State beat Fresno State 34-10 in the Pigskin Classic. Tailback Eddie George finished with 90 yards on 24 carries and two touchdowns. TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Florida State officials ruled offensive linemen Marcus Long and Forrest Conolly ineligible for Saturday's season opener against Virginia. Long was declared ineligible for the first two games of the season while Conolly will continue on an indefinite suspension ... AUSTIN, Texas — Attorneys hired by the university of Texas are investigating whether star receiver Lovell Pinkney may have taken a trip to Los Angeles in May to meet with a sports agent, said athletic director DeLoss Dodds ... NEW ORLEANS — Alcorn football coach Cardell Jones was placed on a one-year probation and the school will lose one football scholarship next year for a holding a conditioning session in June, the Southwestern Athletic Conference announced. U.S. golf team set for Presidents Cup AKRON, Ohio — Hale Irwin gained a player's role on America's inaugural Presidents Cup team and, in doing so, confirmed Paul Azinger as the co-captain of the U.S. team for the new international event. The tournament, set for Sept. 16-18 in Lake Manassas, Va., matches a 12-man American team against 12 foreign players whose countries aren't eligible for the Ryder Cup. The Associated Press Compiled by The Associated Press and Kansan sports staff Lockout possible for NHL players The Associated Press NEW YORK — Labor problems are not confined to baseball. The NHL has one that threatens to shut down training camps on Monday. The Dallas Morning News quoted an unidentified source yesterday as saying that commissioner Gary Bettman will order a league-wide lockout beginning Monday. "There will be no hockey whatsoever without an agreement," the source told the Morning News. "(Management's) position is that it makes no sense to start, then stop and then start again." NHL spokesman Arthur Pincus said, "The story at this time is incorrect. We have set no deadline (for a lockout)." "A strike or lockout is a distinct possibility," Mike Gartner, president of the NHL Players Association, said Monday. "I hope neither one of them happens, but they are possibilities when both sides can't come to an agreement." The Toronto Maple Leafs forward thinks a salary cap is a big enough issue to force hockey into a similar circumstance as baseball — a work stoppage. trying to work a salary cap that the players have said for months that they don't want," Gartner said. "We're still talking about a salary cap, which we don't want to have anything to do with, either. There are a lot of other problems in the game and problems in the upcoming agreement that have to be ironed out." "The (baseball) players are hanging tough, and it seems the owners are Salaries are the main issue. Owners are seeking to tie salaries to team revenues. Players hope to have salaries set by the open market. The players' ultimate goal is free agency, something owners have rejected in the past. This time, both sides hope to avoid the problems of two seasons ago when the players staged a 10-day strike, the first in league history. "We're trying to go through all the different scenarios that can happen and we've been trying to set up some meetings to discuss what our next step is in getting to an agreement," Gartner said. "No matter what happens, you still have to work out an agreement." Big bucks? Top average salaries/winnings for major sports in the United States. Looming large is a series of sanctions that Bettman threatened to impose Thursday, when the Winnipeg Jets are scheduled to become the first team to open training camp. Bettman has said if a new agreement is not Sport Average yearly salary/winnings NBA Baseball NASCAR NFL NHL Men's tennis PGA tour ONE DOLLAR $500,000 $1,000,000 $1,500,000 NOTE: Team sport averages reflect all players. NASCAR averages are for the 39 drivers who entered at least 10 events. PGA Tour average is for the top 125 money winners. Tennis average is for top 100 money winners. SOURCE: Newsday Daily Press research Newport News Daily Press, Knight-Ridder Tribune/M. GONTESKY 7/20/94 worked out by then, he will eliminate meal allowances, force players to pay their way to training camp and reduce rosters, among other things. "He has not rolled back a lot of things—he's rolled back everything," Gartner said. Gartner made the remarks at a charity golf tournament in the New York area, while Bettman was making a statement from his New York office about the contract talks "We're trying to make a deal," Bettman said. "Our goal is to make a deal. As far as any other issues are concerned, we are operating on a day-to-day basis as if it were business as usual." Players have been without a contract since Sept. 15. They last met with owners last week, but have no meetings scheduled at this point. Upsets mark first day of Open The Associated Press NEW YORK — What a difference a Grand Sham makes. At Wimbledon in June, veteran Lori McNeil pulled off the biggest upset of the year when she ousted defending champion Steffi Graf in a first-round match. At the U.S. Open Monday, Graf, the defending champion, sped past her opening-rouf foe, but McNeil, a Wimbledon semifinalist, fell to Anna Smashnova of Israel, who is playing in only her fourth Grand Slam tournament. Graf, top-seeded in the 128-player women's field, needed only 45 minutes to oust 19-year-old California Anne Gath 6-2, 6-1. Smashnova, who had to go through qualifying to gain the main draw at the Australian Open in January, shocked McNeil, who was 13th-seeded. 6-2, 6-4. Fifth-seeded Kimiko Date easily won her first-round match Monday, beating fellow Japanese Rika Hiraki 6-0, 6-2. It wasn't that long ago, 1989 to be exact, when Graf and fellow German Boris Becker sat atop the world of tennis, with each having won both Wimbledon and the U.S. Open. Now, only Graf has a chance to win here this year. Becker could only come up with a long list of excuses after losing to Richey Reneberg, a player more accustomed to success in doubles than singles. On opening day, which didn't end until shortly after 12:30 yesterday morning, Becker and several other seeded players were knocked out of the year's final Grand Slam tournament. "They made the court extremely slow this year, especially center court and the Grandstand, and they changed the balls," Becker said. "They made them very heavy and very soft, and that is very bad for my game." "Basically the fifth set was the best set I've ever played in my life," Reneberg said after upsetting the seventh-seeded Becker 6-1, 6-4, 4-6, 1-6, 7-6 (7-5). "I had nothing to lose. I could go for my shots. "There was no way I could play any better. I was making just about everything." What was worse for his game was the play of Reneberg. It took six match points, but Reneberg finally prevailed, with the winning point coming on a smash that sent the winner's arms skyward and Becker packing. But he wasn't the only one ousted. But he was the only one outcast Markus Zoecke of Germany upset No.2 Goran Ivanisevic 6-2,7-5,3-6,7-5 in the men's singles, while Gigi Fernandez, a Wimbledon semifinalist in July, bumped No.12 Sabine Hack of Germany from the women's field. And 16-seeded Petr Korda of the Czech Republic withdrew from the tournament with a pulled groin muscle. Among others seeing action Monday was Jim Courier, who was ranked No. 1 in the world and top-seeded here a year ago. Also playing first-round matches were Stefan Edberg, 1988 winner Mats Wilander and 1990 women's champion Gabriela Sabatini. Seeded 11th this year, Courier took on the dangerous veteran Aaron Krickstein. Not every seeded player had problems Monday, however. Among the men, No. 3 Sergi Bruguela stopped Bryan Shelton 6-0, 6-2, 7-5; No. 6 Michael Chang defeated Andrei Cherkasov 6-4, 6-2, 6-2; No. 12 Wayne Ferreira ousted Wade McGuire 7-5, 6-2, 6-2, and No. 13 Thomas Muster beat Daniele Musa 6-3, 6-2, 6-0. The women were led by French Open champion Arantxa Sanchez Vicario, seeded second who eliminated Linda Ferrando 7-5, 6-1, and Wimbledon winner Conchita Martinez, seeded third, who defeated Veronika Martinek 6-1, 6-0. New Spurs coach ready to run team The Associated Press SAN ANTONIO—After going 2 1/2 months without a head coach, the San Antonio Spurs finally hired one. Orlando Magic assistant Bob Hill was named to the post Monday, ending the team's search for a successor to John Lucas, who resigned June 9. Irus is the best opportunity I have had in my career and my life," said Hill, who coached the New York Knicks in the 1986-87 season and the Indiana Pacers from 1990-93. "He is one of the most highly regarded technicians in our league, and his expertise will be paramount to this team's success," said Gregg Popovich, the Spurs' executive vice president of basketball operations. Hill said he would focus on team speed and defense in order to help the Spurs win in the postseason, where they've struggled in recent years — including a first-round upset loss to the Utah Jazz last season. "I like to play a quicker game. We're going to emphasize the defense from game one," Hill said. "I'm extremely excited. I understand the team fairly well. I understand the problems they've had in the past in the playoffs." Hill praised the play of All-Star center David Robinson, who attended the news conference where Hill's hiring was announced. Robinson said a running game suited him fine, but he smiled and expressed a hint of skepticism. "Everybody runs before the season starts," Robinson laughed. "We've got some guys that can do it. We've just got to get it done." Robinson said he had met with Hill while he was in town for one of his interviews but said he didn't have much say in the decision to hire him. "I'd never met him. I didn't know anything about him." Robinson said. "I was impressed. He's an intelligent basketball guy with a lot of experience. I've got a good feeling." When asked how he'd deal with power forward Dennis Rodman's behavior, which led to ejections and suspensions last season, Hill said Popovich would handle any such problems. "I'll be honest with you, I hated Dennis Rodman as an opposing coach," Hill said. "And I'm going to love being on the same team." It had been widely reported that Hill was a front-runner for the job, which had been vacant since Lucas resigned in the wake of a management shakeup. Lucas later was named head coach and general manager of the Philadelphia 76ers. Hill also was courted by the Minnesota Timberwolves, who hired longtime-NBA assistant Bill Blair on Monday. Hill said San Antonio was his preference. "San Antonio is a great, great opportunity," Hill said. "It is a deep team. It has players that can play multiple positions." Hill said he planned to hold a mini-camp for Spurs players and about a dozen free agents Sept. 10-12. 32 Toppings to choose from!!! .357 Special Wednesday carry out only $3 small I topping $5 medium I topping $7 large I topping RUDY'S PIZZERIA 749-0055 Open 7 days a week RUDY'S PIZZERIA 749-0053 GOLF Unlimited WESTRIDGE SHOPPING CENTER 10% off any 601 Kaspid Drive, Suite B-103 purchase with KUID Lawrence. Ks 66049 (excludes golfballs) Monday-Saturday 10-7 ♥ Sunday 12-5 - Traffic - Misdemeanors - O.U.I.-M.I.P. - Fake I.D.'s BRAXTON COPLEY ATTORNEY 719 Mass. 749-5333 KMS JOICO KMS KMS JOICO NEXUS BEAUTY WAREHOUSE & HARDWARE 520 West 23rd 841-5885 FULMJUEL REDKEN would like to congratulate all of its new members. ❤ TFJ all of your sisters ALPHA XI DELTA 8TH STREET TAPROOM 801 NEW HAMPSHIRE MONDAYS 1.50 WELLS 1.50 ANY THING TUESDAYS WEDNESDAYS 3.00 PITCHERS 1.50 PETE'S LONGNECK THURSDAYS FREE POOL #3-8 FRIDAYS SATURDAYS 1.00 KAMI'S 3.00 BRECKEN RIDGE SUNDAYS 22.00 Timberwolf A Cro-moly frame & fork With Shimano TY 30 Thumbshifters, Hyperglide and alloy rims. was $269 Now $249 Bianchi SUNFLOWER BIKE SHOP 804 MASSEACUBRETTY 851-8000 As always, with any new bike purchase you receive a free "U" lock or free bike repair clinic As always, with any new bike purchase you receive a free "U" lock or $20 free accessories, a free tune-up, and a free bike repair clinic lifestyles Trapped by words Daron Bennett / KANSAN Most take writing checks for granted, but for Ed McKelvey it is a new skill learned with the help of his tutor Carrie Gordon, Wheaton, III. senior KU employees are learning a valuable lesson from KU students: the impact of reading. By Casey Barnes Kansan staff writer After a lifetime of struggling to read sentences, Ed McKelvey, 57, has conquered three books and finished 21 pages of math in the past six months. are part of a KU program called Partners in Learning, a student-run organization and the University's response to the nation-wide problem of illiteracy. A class, called Students Tutoring for Literacy, teaches students how to tutor. The students are then matched up with KU employees and Lawrence community members who want to learn new skills. But that may only last until May. Diana Bolton, founder of Partners in Learning and instructor of English 590, said she was told that the funding for the program would be dropped at the end of the school year. But in an interview yesterday, Peter Casagrande, associate dean of liberal arts and sciences administration, denied telling Bolton that funding would be pulled. He said the University was re-evaluating the program and looking for an appropriate placement for it. "She may be worried about the future, but we are very proud of the program and it is not going to be cut," Casagrande said. "We will fund it until May and in the meantime we are trying to find a new home for it." Casagrande said the college originally invested money in the program five years ago because of its merit, but because its services are not limited to the college, it should be located permanently elsewhere. "The program has helped the staff of the entire University both educationally and professionally," Casagrande said. "But because it is such a wide service, we have to find a permanent home for it within the University." But McKelvey, who had to drop out of school in ninth grade when both his parents died, is going to take his opportunity and run with it. "I don't want to go through the rest of my life with people telling me I can't read or do other things," he said. "Once you learn to read and do math, they can't take that away." McKelvey, who became involved in the program after a friend urged him to, said being able to read had given him a new outlook on life. It has made him more independent Even though he had to quit his job at Ekdahl Dining Commons because of heart problems, he still attends class twice a week. and happier with himself. "Before, I couldn't pay my bills, balance my checkbook or write letters to my sister and brother without somebody to help me do it," McKelvey said. "Now I can sit down and write letters everyday." McKelvey is making a scrapbook of the classes he has taken and the names of his tutors so that he will never forget the people who gave him his freedom. A "When I get old and gray and can't get around anymore, I want to be able to look back and see all that I did," he said. McKelvey encourages others to get involved in the program if they can because being literate is so important. "I advise anybody to upgrade their life because it's a nice opportunity," he said. Bolton feels the same passion for the program and the need for literacy on the KU campus. When the class was started five years ago, the main purpose was to let the students get a chance to practice what they learned in the classroom. Bolton and the students learned quickly that they got much more out of it than that. Steve Wilson, Lawrence senior, took the class in the spring. He said the program is a partnership in the learning process. "The people are very appreciative of what you are doing and for the time you are spending helping them learn," Wilson said. "They have also taken a lot of initiative and gathered up a lot of courage to take the program." Although the main goal is to learn educational skills, Bolton said the learning goes much farther than that. "Working with employees, we have terrific successes," Bolton said. "People between the ages of 40 and 60 have learned to read through the program. I see the joy they have with their new skills. It helps their loyalty and their morals. It makes them feel better about themselves and helps reduce accidents that can happen when people can't read instructions," she said. Plane crashes and perhaps even Chernobyl were partially caused by people who couldn't read, Bolton said. "The ramifications are extensive," she said. "There is a practical and moral reasoning for the program. The Clinton administration is shooting for a literate American by the year 2000. We need to get learning back to the people and back to the basics." Although the program has helped 65 employees in the last two years, the number of people who cannot read or do simple math is actually higher, Bolton said. But it is not just practical skills that suffer. "The numbers on illiteracy are not accurate because adults are embarrassed that they cannot read," Bolton said. "We are a literate society and people that are not literate are shy, ashamed and have a low self-image because they don't feel confident." The program was started by three students in English 590 and was originally designed to help people in the community prepare for their general equivalency diplomas. But after the program got started, the students realized that people were not ready to write essays. They needed to master simple skills such as reading, writing and arithmetic first. "People who take the course take it because they have an interest in literacy as a social and political issue," Bolton said. "They take the class because they have a career in mind and want to prepare themselves." Students learning to read have many of the same motives. At a university that's mission is to educate, young people should share the knowledge with the people who cut the grass, cook their meals and even give them parking tickets," Bolton said. "It is a partnership between students and employees who get time off from work to get tutored and exchange that time for learning." Heard around Hollywood The latest news on the lives of famous people The Associated Press LOS ANGELES — Genie Francis and Jonathan Frakes have produced the first of their own next generation. General Hospital's Laura and Star Trek's Cmdr. Will Riker are the happy parents of an 8-pound, 6-ounce boy, Benjamin Ivor Frakes, their publicist said Friday. The album, "Verse Chorus Verse," contains about 30 previously unreleased recordings from 1989 to 1994, including the band's performance last year on MTV's "Unplugged." Four months after the suicide of the grunge rock superstar, a double album of live performances by his band, Nirvana, is set for release in November. The Seattle-based group produced three albums before Cobain, 27, was found dead April 7. Its latest effort, "In Utero," was released late last year and made its debut at Billboard's No.1 spot. SEATTLE — Kurt Cobain lives. On CD. aneway. LOS ANGELES — Harrison Ford is off on another adventure to a mysterious land that was closed to outsiders for many years. Ford's latest mission is to narrate "Mustang: The Hidden Kingdom," a TV documentary about an isolated Buddhist enclave in Tibet that recently opened its borders after decades of seclusion. Ford starred as Indiana Jones in the trilogy of films starting with "Raiders of the Lost Ark," and most recently appears in "Clear and Present Danger," based on the novel by Tom Clancy. The feudal community, in the Himalayas at 13,000 feet above sea level, is one of the few places where Tibetan culture flourishes undisturbed. He won't be raiding any lost arks, though The film premieres Aug. 31 to make it eligible for the Academy Awards. It debuts on cable TV's Discovery Channel on Sept. 11. ATLANTA Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter are off to Africa to check up on the worm situation. NEW YORK — Pearl Jam probably shouldn't have expected Dave Abbruzzese to go quietly. After all, he was the drummer. Abbiruzzese said Friday that he was fired "For reasons that I don't completely understand, the other members of the band decided that it was necessary to fire me," Abbrusselz told ABC radio. "I was not aware of their decision, not involved with it, nor do I agree with it. But I accept it, and I'm proud to have been a part of what Pearl Jam was." and did not leave "amicably" as the band's manager had insisted earlier in the week. The Seattle-based band, led by singer Eddie Vedder, has sold more than 13 million copies of its first two albums, "Ten" and "Vs." A new album is scheduled to be released in the fall. NANTUCKET, Mass. — Jimmy Buffett escaped virtually unscathed when the seaplanet he was piloting crashed into a wave on takeoff. The singer best known for "Margaritaville" was alone in the nine-seat, twinengine plane when it flipped Thursday afternoon. Buffett, 47, of Key West, Fla., managed to swim away and was picked up by a passing boat that carried him to shore. Authorities said Buffett had no visible injuries but complained of pain. he was nne ... He walked out with his friends," said emergency room nurse Donna Fleming. The lawsuit says Copperfield used 1945 footage of Welles without the consent of Welles' daughter, Beatrice. But Copperfield said Thursday that he bought the footage from the widow of the film's producer, who said her husband owned all the rights to it. "I presented his clip in my TV show as a homage to Orson, to show people this other dimension of an art he loved and was very proud of," Copperfield said. SAN FRANCIISCO — Orson Welles' estate is suing Dawid Copperfield over his use of film footage of the late actor and director performing magic. The lawsuit, filed on Aug. 24 in federal court in Los Angeles, seeks a portion of the profits from the television and stage shows in which Copperfield used the film. The lawsuit also seeks to stop Copperfield from using the footage. LOS ANGELES — Burt Reynolds is recovering from surgery to repair a small tear in an old hernia. Reynolds, 58, underwent surgery Aug. 22 at a West Palm Beach, Fla., hospital and then returned to his ranch in Jupiter, Fla., his spokesman, Joe Sutton, said Thursday. "He was an outpatient, he wasn't in there long at all," Sohn said. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN August 31,1994 PAGE 4B KULIFE People and places at the University of Kansas. news of the weird LEAD STORY — In July, after Willoughby, Ohio, police arrested Jamie V. Bradshaw, 23, for breaking and entering, they confiscated more than 450 items of women's underwear from his car and home, all stolen, according to police, from the laundry rooms and 10 apartment complexes over the past two years. Bradshaw is from nearby Painesville, population 15,000, where two years ago another man was convicted of stealing men's underwear, including at least one instance of cutting the briefs off of a sleeping man. In June in London, lawyers for convicted murderer Stephen Young filed an appeal after learning from one juror that three other jurors had conducted a Ouija board seance during jury deliberations and "contacted" the dead man, who named Young as his killer. COURTROOM ANTICS In April, Rodney Williams, 21, appeared in a courtroom in Kelso, Wash., to explain why he had missed a previous court date on an assault charge. Fearing that the judge might not believe his excuse (his mother's recent fatal illness), Williams held up his mother's ashes, in a plastic box, and offered them for the judge to examine. Said of Judge Robert Altenhof, "You think you've heard it all, but somebody always comes up with something new." The lawsuits Irene Geschke, then age 55, filed against a mortgage company in 1979 in Chicago just passed its 15th anniversary without coming to trial. There have been more than 530 motions and orders, and nine dates for trial have come and gone. Geschke claims the mortgage company caused her to go out of business when it wrongly foreclosed on a loan and is now acting as her own lawyer, managing the ton of legal documents involved in the case. - Late last year in Bangladesh, Falu Mia, 60, was released from prison after 21 years. He had been locked up until his trial for theft in 1972, then found not guilty, but a lethargic bureaucracy failed to release him. He recently filed a lawsuit against the government for 21 years' back wages (about $26,000). — In June, a judge in Thousand Oaks, Calif., dismissed neighbor's request for an injunction against Kathleen Adams, who the neighbors said lures squirrels to her home with food and thus See WIERD, Page 5B. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesdav. August 31. 1994 5B WIERD: Crazy psychiatrists Continued from Page 4B. creates a nuisance. Adams claims the area is populated with squirrels, anyway, and that she does not need to lure them. Neighbors' evidence included the fact that Adams posts "Squirrels Welcome" signs in her yard, but the judge said he found the signs unpersuasive in that he doubted that squirrels could read them. — In December, a federal court in San Francisco ruled against former Doobie Brothers drummer John Hartman in his employment discrimination lawsuit over his firing form the Petaluma, Calif., police force. Hartman claimed that his drug use in the early 1970s made him "disabled" under the Americans With Disabilities Act, but the judge ruled that Hartman had not proved that he had done enough drugs to be disabled. — In July, Ontario judge Lee Ferrier upheld the 1991 firing of Sharon Bagnall, 52, by Calvin Klein Canada, where she worked as a cologne demonstrator. The judge said he was persuaded by the company's witnesses, who testified that Bagnall had a "personal hygiene problem" and smelled like an "armpit." PEOPLE UNCLEAR ON THE CONCEPT — In July, University of California at San Francisco clinical psychiatrist Dean Freeman, 35, was arrested and charged with attempted murder after he reportedly attacked a patient with a knife and an axe, inflicting at least 10 wounds. —The Massachusetts Division of Medical Assistance revealed in March that it had spent almost $50,000 in 1993 on fertility drugs for 260 people, including about 80 welfare mothers, two of whom already had eight children. —In a $20 million advertising campaign to shore up its tarnished image, Prudential Securities Inc. began running print media ads praising its agents' integrity, featuring its Beverly Hills broker Susan B. Gooding, who proclaims that her own father is a client. According to a news story in the Chicago Sun-Times in March, Gooding's father, who died in 1991, was never her client. —In July, Lisa Evans, 26, told reporters she had been fired from an adult entertainment club where she worked at a nude peep show "fantasy booth" in Edmonton, Alberta, and that she planned to file a complaint with the Human Rights Commission. Evans weighs 270 pounds, and management said customers said she was difficult to fantasize over. — According to police in Calgary, Alberta, a local pizzeria contains a dungeon-like "trick pad" where teen-age girls are worked as prostitutes and whose catacomb of rooms is littered with sex magazines, liquor bottles and used condoms. However, health officials who inspected it in December refused to close it down. Dr. Paul Hasselback said, "There is no reason to be concerned about the food being served." Hard work and talent propel country artists The Associated Press NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Country music hopefuls walk the streets of Music Row, knocking on doors and dropping off tapes, crashing industry parties and making contacts. How did they do it? David Ball and Chely Wright are two such artists who have bucked the odds, secured contracts and released fine albums. Ball just had a good ride on the charts with his clever "Thinkin' Problem," and Wright is looking for a hit with her debut, "The Woman in the Moon." For Wright, it started early. "I started planning this when I was 4," she said. "When I was 9, I did a Christmas list, and I wanted Legos, Barbie and to move to Nashville, 'cause I knew that was where I wanted to be." Wright, 23, left high school a year early and moved to Nashville from Wellsville, Kan., 40 miles southwest of Kansas City. She performed at the Opryland theme park, fetched coffee for songwriters and answered phones so she could hang out at the offices of music publishers. "I don't claim to be the best singer in the world or the best writer or the prettiest or anything like that—but nobody's gonna outwork me." Wright said. Ball, a 38-year-old honky-tonker from Rock Hill, S.C., has the more weathered outlook of someone who has a couple of decades of club experience and one failed go-around in Nashville. His album is the work of a mature writer, a conceptual, hard-country cycle that explores the ins and outs of breaking up. OPEN ALL DAY & NIGHT LABOR DAY VESS POP $2.98 EVERYDAY BANANAS 19¢ BUD DRY, BUD LIGHT OR BUDWEISER BEER 1170 24 BACK, LEFT, RIGHT 1 ADDITIONAL PURCHASES 132 CANS $12.20 FARMLAND BONELESS HAM 695 EACH WHOLE 1.B. FRESH YELLOW SWEET CORN 10¢ EA. FRESH FRYER LEG QUARTERS 38¢ LB. 10 LB. PKG. BONeless SIRLOIN TIP ROAST OR STEAK 168 LB. ECONOMY PACK T-BONE STEAK 358 LB. ECONOMY PACK LARGE BAKER POTATOES 25¢ LB. FRESH WHOLE SWEET WATERMELON 188 EACH FRESH PORK SPARE RIBS 118 LB. WHOLE SLAB 3-5 SIZE FRESH MISSOURI JONATHAN APPLES 128 LB. BAG SPLIT FRYER BREASTS WITH BONELE 108 LB. ECONOMY PACK FRESH CALIFORNIA BLACK PLUMS OR PEACHES 39¢ LB. BONE-IN BEEF RIB ROAST END OR STEAK 268 LB. ECONOMY PACK FROM THE BAKEFRESH BAKED APPLE PIES 2¢ $3 8", 26 OZ. FAIRMONT-GILLETTE ICE CREAM 288 1 QT OF LAIL FLAVORS FROM THE DELI COLE SLAW MACARON SALAD OR POTATO SALAD 77¢ LB. ECONOMY PACK FRESH BAKED DINNER ROLLS 19¢ MCT GROG. FRESH CRISP SALAD MIX 69¢ LB. BAG BIRDSEYE FROZEN CORN, PEAS OR MIXED VEGETABLES 79¢ LB. FROM THE DELI Sliced OR Shaved DELLAH 98¢ IMPORTED FROM HOLLAND LEEDANMER CHEESE $4.99 LB. BACARDI FROZEN MIXERS BACARDI FROZEN MIXERS CANS ALL NATIONAL BRAND DOG & CAT FOOD 16 LB. LOW INVOICE COST! Checkers LOW FOOD PRICES 23RD & LOUISIANA LAWRENCE GRade AA 1/8 per liter Eggs 1/8 per liter Chicken breasts 1/8 per liter Chicken liver 1/8 per liter Fresh Kansas raised Buffalo daily OPEN 24 HOURS ENTERED SUNFLOWER OUTDOOR & BIKE SHOP 804 Mass • 843-5000 SUNFLOWER OUTDOOR & BIKE SHOP 804 Mass • 843-5000 928 Mass. Downtown The Etc. Shop STONEBACK'S APPLIANCE DORM SIZE REFRIGERATORS FOR RENT 2 cu. ft. $45 4 cu. ft. $65 school year 929 Mass. FREE DELIVERY 843-4170 The Etc. Shop 928 Mass. Downtown The Ete. Shop STONEBACK'S APPLIANCE DORM SIZE REFRIGERATORS FOR RENT 2 cu. ft. $45 4 cu. ft. $65 school year 929 Mass. 843-4170 FREE DELIVERY 1974 MCCA'S BEST 20m MILE MARATHON CHAMPIONSHIP 1974 ACADEMY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY More Bike Less Money ATX oversizealloy frame oversize alloy fork alloy rims with QR lifetime warranty incredibly durable $479.95 save $40 GIANT Sedona RICK'S BIKE SHOP Inc. 916 Massachusetts, (913)841-6642 GIANT Sedona $479.95 save $40 IKE SHOP Inc. tts, (913)841-6642 Want a byte for lunch? You bring the lunch We'll talk about the bytes and bits of useful information about your KU computer account Free noon seminars Computer Center Auditorium September 1994 1 Using e-mail and news on FALCON, STAT1, and UKANAIX 2 Using e-mail and news on KUHUB 7 Dial-in from home with your PC (and your modem) 8. Intro to KUfact(s) (the KU campus-wide information system) 13 Dial-in from home with your Mac (and your modem) September or a byte of dinner----5-6 p.m. 6 Dial-in from home with your PC (and your modem) Ask about other free seminars at the Computer Center. Schedules posted at the Computer Center Reception Desk and available through KUfacts. --copenhagen LIFESTYLE VALUES $149.00 $99.00 $79.00 $119.00 122-STEREO CARNET with glass door. 19 3/4" x 15 3/4" x 46" (70x80x150mm) 116-TVC CAST O CASTENSTS with woven袖 25" X 15 3/4" X 17 3/4" 80mm 146-STERED CABINET CASTERS storage for 120 CD's. 32 1/4" x 15 3/4" x 41 1/2" * 140-7 TV CART ON CASTERS with swivel shelf storage for 60 CD's. 32 1/4" x 15 3/4" x 24 3/4" IVEVER EXTRA LIMITED STOCK, ASSEMBLY/DELIVERY EXTRA Overland Park, KS In the Valley View Center 8511 W. 95th Street (95th & Antioch) (913) 381-5502 111-Y TURN CAB @ CASTORS with swivel top. glass doors. 25 x 13 1/4" x 23 1/2" COPENHAGEN SCANDINAVIAN FURNITURE Lawrence,KS 1012 Massachusetts (913)842-1016 MasterGed SCANDINAVIAN FURNITURE • THE BEST FOR LESS OVERLAND PARK HOURS: Mon. & Thurs. 10-8 Tues., Wed, Fri. Sat. 10-6. Sun. 12-5 LAWRENCE HOURS: Mon, Tues., Wed, Fri., Sat. 10-5:30. Sun. 10-8. Sun. 12-5 VISA VISA 6B Wednesday, August 31, 1994 Camera America ONE HOUR PHOTO Lawrence's Largest Supplier of Darkroom Materials 1610 West 23rd Street 841-7205 One Free Wash & Dry 10am-12am Sept. 1st-Sep. 15th BEDS DESKS BOOKCASES Everything But Ice 936 Mass. 100 INDEPENDENT LAUNDROMAT 26th & Iowa (across the street south from Dairy Queen) Air Conditioned • Vending • Changer Open Daily 6am-12pm A SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Century School, a non-profit private school, is hiring assistant teachers. The students range in age from 3 to 8. The school days are from 7:30 to 5:30, so the hours are flexible and the starting pay is $5.50 per hour. No prior experience required. Want a Great Part-time Job? If you would like to teach some great kids. call Michelle, 832-0101. YOU WANT US? WE NEED YOU! The Department of Student Housing is now taking applications to fill student jobs in the residence hall dining facilities. These positions offer convenient and flexible schedules with wages beginning at $4.35 per hour. Stop by the office in any dining hall, or call 864-7203 for more information YOU'LL GET TO SEE YOUR FAVORITE FACES EVERY MONTH SSS Chiefs' Montana has history of sending Saints marching home By Doug Tucker The Associated Press KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Joe Montana is nearly perfect against New Orleans. As a starter, he's 14-2 against the Saints, 8-0 in the Superdome where the Kansas City Chiefs will open their 1994 season on Sunday. If only Marty Schottenheimer could be sure this string of success would continue. "Their system of defense is quite similar, but the personnel is dramatically different from when Joe last played against them," the Chiefs coach said yesterday. Montana, beginning his 16th NFL season, has defeated the Saints seven straight times, last losing to them on Sept. 29, 1985. "I'm sure there are some subtle things Joe will be familiar with. But I don't think it will be any big (advantage)." Schottenheimer said. There is one player on the Saints' vaunted defense who is painfully familiar to Schottenheimer. "They've still got Sam Mills. He's a guy we cut in Cleveland to keep Bill Cowher. Schottenheimer said, "He's still pointing at where the ball's going to be run before it's snapped. The guy's amazing. They're as well coached as any team in this league." One new Saints face with whom Schottenheimer is less familiar is quarterback Jim Everett, formerly with the Los Angeles Rams. "He's an extremely talented guy and has thrown the ball very, very well in the preseason," Schottenheimer said. "He seems to be at least on schedule at least if not ahead of it in his ability to do the things they want to do. I also have a sense that they're incorporating some things he's done in the past. "The offense is similar to what they've done in the past. There's a little bit they're not doing now. But by and large, it's the same. They're particularly a handful down in (the Superdone)." If Montana has problems, his backup will be Steve Bono, the veteran from San Francisco who was announced as the winner in the battle with Matt Blundin for No. 2 quarterback "The bottom line was the experience that Steve Bono has in actual competition," Schottenheimer said. The Chiefs, the defending AFC West champs, are coming off the most relaxed, informal camp Schottenheimer ever ran. Because the schedule included a trip to Tokyo and exhibition games back in Kansas City, the Chiefs took it easy in their River Falls, Wis., camp. "The conditioning factor is no worry. But I do have a little anxiety, in all candor, about the readiness for the full speed of the game that takes place in the regular season. I stated that to the players," Schottenheimer said. "But we made a decision we wanted to come out of the preseason as healthy as we could. And we've done that. "The new system, I think, makes it imperative to do whatever you can to try to reduce the risk of injury while at the same time trying to get yourself ready." Bills focus on future, not past "I've never prepared a football team like this before." By Jimmy Golen The Associated Press ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. — General manager John Butler opened training camp this summer with the words that have been on everybody's mind since the Super Bowl; "Here we go again." Yes, here the Bills go again, the team to beat in the AFC East and maybe the whole conference, trying to forget about their drive for five and focus on the run for one: One Super Bowl victory that will silence the skeptics and affirm the four-time AFC champions as winners. "Nobody expects you to go. Nobody wants you to go. I think our players' attitude is, 'So beat us,' Butler said." bashed, and they don't respond to it. They've been there. Other teams talk a great game, they're been there — and gone back. That's the difference." Despite more wins than any other team this decade, the Bills still need a world championship to validate themselves as the team of the 90s. After four consecutive conference titles, a first in NFL history, they won't be satisfied unless the ring for their thumbs says Super Bowl champs. "They've heard how they've been "Hell yes, there would be disappointment," quarterback Jim Kelly said. "We expect only the best." Buffalo has lost 12 players from the team that went to the Super Bowl in January, and 25 since it won its first AFC title in 1990. But those that return include nine players with 38 Pro Bowl appearances among them and 20 who have won four AFC championships each. “五或 six of these players, they have never known anything but Super Bowls,” Butler said. “It's their fifth year in the National Football League and that's all they've ever been to. "If you're a young rookie who comes in here and knows nothing different, that's how they see it. They think, 'Well, this is how you become champions.'" Kelly and most of the other Bills will tell you they aren't thinking of the Super Bowl now. Coach Marv Levy is concerned about the opener against the Jets; some others admit to setting their sights on an AFC East title. "Every team wants to go to the Super Bowl, but you have to win the division first and go from there." Amigos FULL RIDE Scholarship Opportunity Attention all students. Are you looking for a part-time job with full time benefits? Amigos has it! Flexible hours with a great hourly wage,paid vacation, meal discounts, and a college scholarship program. The Student Tuition Employment Program (S.T.E.P.) will reimburse students from 25% to 100% of their college tuition. In order to qualify a co-worker must; begin employment at the beginning of the semester, and work at least 20 hours per week during peak times at the restaurant. Reimbursements are made out directly to the student at the end of the semester. Call 1-800-825-0012 for more information. A. Jeremy Kilburn Manager, Amigos Manhattan, KS 10 Jeremy, a native of Randolph, NE. began working for Amigos his freshman year while attending the University of Nebraska at Lincoln. When he graduated in December of 1992 he was receiving the maximum tuition reimbursement. "I really wanted to go to college, but my parents wanted me to pay my own way. I started working at Amigos and within six months was promoted to a shift supervisor which got me a raise PLUS I was still getting the S.T.E.P. money. I worked late night shifts because it met the demands of my class schedule. When I graduated I was offered the opportunity to transfer to Manhattan as a Manager of my own store. Thanks to the S.T.E.P. program I am a new college graduate with NO STUDENT LOANS to pay back." LENGTH OF EMPLOYMENT REIMBURSEMENT $ 0-11 Months = 25% 12-23 Months = 50% 24-29 Months = 75% Over 30 Months of employment receive 100% Tuition Reimbursement (up to $950 per semester) LIMITED SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE baby daughter, and am a full time Law Student at UMKC. I am also a co-worker at the mall in Kansas City. I wanted to pursue my education and also have the flexible hours that an 8 to 5 job doesn't permit. I receive 50% of my tuition paid." Fill out an application at the Amigos nearest you! Catherine Haley S.T.E.P. Student Kansas City, MO "I have a humble Ron Tramp Father of 3 Students on S.T.E.P. Crofton, NE "I have three daughters attending the University of Nebraska in Lincoln. When Stacle started working at 14th & Q Amigos and got on the S.T.E.P. program she told her younger sisters, Kristi and Kari about it. All three sisters are currently employed at Amigos." Stacie graduated last December and was offered a full time management position while she looked for a teaching job. It is a financial opportunity our family as well as an excellent place for young people to learn about the work place." Look for the Modern Reality NEW MUSIC FROM THE EDGE. SPONGE ROTTING PINATA including: NEENAH MENASHA PLOWED MOLLY A. LOVE and Special Sauce epic Kid including: BLUES MUSIC BABY'S GOT SAUCE / DARBAGE MAN / COLD BEVERAGE each featured release ON SALE! SOPHIE B. 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And, If You Have to Wait in Line for More than 5 Minutes YOUR IN FOR FREE !!! So join all of your friends tonite at Coyote's Where Men are Men, Women are Women and everyone gets along just fine You must be 18 years of age to enter & 21 to drink --- 50 Wednesday, August 31, 1994 RR NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Defense companies merge The Associated Press LOS ANGELES — The merger of defense giants Lockheed Corp. and Martin Marietta raised fear of layoffs in recession-weary California and other states where the companies are economic mainstays. The $10 billion merger is expected to result in some job eliminations, company officials said. Workers wond-erd and officials didn't say. dared — and officials didn't say where, when and how many. "I am concerned, not only for my job, but for other jobs here," said Steve Cantrell, an administrative analyst at Lockheed's Marietta, Ga., plant. The new company, Lockheed Martin, will become the nation's largest defense contractor, with 170,000 employees and $23 billion in annual sales. Executives of the companies, which sell defense, space and other hightech products to government and civilian customers, said the merger will allow them to cut costs. There were no immediate plans for layoffs pending completion of a transition study, said Steve Chaudet, Lockheed's vice president for public affairs. However, the 260 employees at Lockheed's headquarters in suburban Calabasas, Calif., already have been warned in a memo that some may lose their jobs and others will be transferred when the headquarters for the new company exists in Martin Marietta's Bethesda, Md., offices. For nearly a week workers have heard rumors of some impending change, but none knew the specifics until Tuesday, said Annette Steifold, associate director of market research. "it's been a building crescent for the past few days. Because there was nothing definite known it was just speculation and the usual, 'What's in it for me, how's this going to affect my life,' she said. News of the merger drew a similar response at Lockheed Missiles & Space Inc. in Sunnyvale, Calif. "Some people are very optimistic and excited about the new opportunities and in others I sense apprehension," she said. "People don't know for sure what will happen. There's a lot to look at and a lot of things to discuss. Right now the reaction is still, "Gee," said engineer Robert Garcia, who learned of the merger from a newscast while cut jobs The merger, which still must receive regulatory and shareholder approval, reflects a trend of consolidation among defense contractors as U.S. military spending continues to shrink in the post-Cold War era. driving to work. The timing couldn't be worse for California, just beginning to show signs of recovery from a five-year recession largely brought on by those very cutbacks. "It's just another indicator of the major turmoil and restructuring that's going on in the aerospace industry," said Jack Kyser, chief economist for the Economic Development Corp. of Los Angeles County. "This is not the last shoe that's going to drop. We can just hope the next one doesn't drop on California." Tide of Cuban refugees slowly begins to ebb The Associated Press WASHINGTON — One week after more than 3,200 Cuban boat people headed for U.S. shores in a single chaotic day, a series of encouraging developments have Clinton administration officials breathing somewhat easier. "Growing numbers of Cubans understand that they will not come to the United States if they are picked up U. S. officials attribute a sharp drop in the numbers of boat people in the last few days to a combination of bad weather and round-the-clock appeals for Cubans to stay home. in the Straits of (Florida)," Undersecretary of State Peter Tarnoff said Monday night. By then, only 118 Cubans had been intercepted by the U.S. Coast Guard throughout the day. The final tally for Monday was 295. Tarnoff also said Cuban authorities have begun to take "some small steps" to counsel Cubans not to flee by boat. Until now, the authorities did nothing to dissuade Cubans from leaving so long as they did so in their own vessels. minors aboard be prevented from leaving Cuban shores. The White House and State Department welcomed the move. And Panama's incoming foreign minister, Gabriel Lewis Galindo, said his country is willing to receive up to 10,000 Cuban refugees for six months if the United States houses them at American military bases along the Panama Canal and takes responsibility for them. In addition, President Fidel Castro has ordered that any vessel with Another encouraging sign, Tarnoff said, is that about 225 Cubans of the more than 13,000 taken to the U.S. naval base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. have asked for permission to return home. Tamoff, interviewed on PBS "MacNeil-Lehrer News Hour," said arrangements for their return will be discussed with Cuban officials today or Thursday when U.S.-Cuban migration talks resume in New York. The last such talks were held in December. Michael Skol, the second-ranking official in the State Department's Latin America bureau, will head the U.S. delegation. He will be joined by Justice Department and immigration officials. Deal could push up prices of insurance Catastrophic plans would replace them The Associated Press WASHINGTON — The health reform plan offered by House Republicans could make standard health insurance so expensive that many people would be driven into minimal-coverage catastrophic plans, congressional analysis says. House Republican Leader Bob Michel of Illinois proposes expanding the availability of catastrophic health insurance plans that would kick in after an individual had spent $1,800, or a family, $3,600, on medical expenses in a year. Tocover out-of-pocket expenses, Michel's plan, developed with Sen. Trent Lott, R-Miss., would allow individuals to establish tax-sheltered medical savings accounts, similar to Individual Retirement Accounts. But, in a 10-page analysis released Monday, the Congressional Budget Office cautioned: "In the long run, the existence of any type of catastrophic-plus-MSA (medical savings account) option that would be attractive to a large number of people could threaten the existence of standard health insurance." Michel is pressing Democrats to use his plan as the basis for congressional action, now that House Speaker Thomas Foley, D-Wash., has conceded Congress is unlikely to pass the kind of broad plan proposed by President Clinton. The agency said Michel's plan would reduce the budget deficit by $11.3 billion over 10 years, but said it would do almost nothing to curb growing health care expenditures and would do little to expand insurance coverage. Michel's plan would allow self-employed people to fully deduct their health premiums. It would limit awards for medical malpractice, require employers to offer, but not pay for, insurance, and restrict the ability of insurance companies to deny coverage to sick people. However, the CBO said the catastrophic option pushed by Michel could prove attractive not just to the uninsured employees of small businesses but also to relatively healthy individuals, who expect few out-of-pocket expenses. If that happened, the people left in standard plans would be those who are sicker and older, driving standard-plan premiums so high that even sick people would find it cheaper to opt for catastrophic plans, the CBO said. It said 2 percent of the population,5 million poor children and 2 million poor adults, could acquire coverage as a result of subsidies Michel proposes. Dole wants GATT delayed The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Sen. Bob Dole says Congress should postpone a vote on a new global trade agreement until next year. Dole's position represents a serious obstacle to the Clinton administration, which has insisted Congress approve the accord negotiated under the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade before it adjourns in early October. If successful, Dole's effort would represent another victory denied the president going into the Nov. 8 midterm election in which Republicans threaten to win control of the Senate. Democrats already are conceding it is unlikely Congress will enact the kind of broad health-care reform Clinton wanted. They must campaign for re-election based on the anti-crime bill passed last week and anything else they can enact. Dole said he favored the 123-nation GATT agreement but believed enough questions had been raised that it would be better to defer approval. "We should not race to complete a major trade bill until we know what awaits us at the finish line," he said in a signed piece published in The Wichita Eagle on Sunday. To take effect, the accord must be ratified by its signatories by June 30. But Clinton administration officials have pressed for approval this year, saying delay could hearten GATT opponents in other countries. New home sales up, though slowing The Associated Press WASHINGTON — New home sales rebounded in July, but analysts said the trend is for slower growth in a sector of the economy that is particularly sensitive to rising interest rates. New home sales surged 8.3 percent in July, the government said yesterday, and the rates for May and June also were revised upward. Still, the June level was a 15-month low, and the July sales were still well below December's peak. "The July rebound is making up some ground, given the huge drop in June," said economist Robert Dederick of the Northern Trust Co. in Chicago. "The basic message we've passed over the top of the market and we've begun to descend. But there's no reason to believe it will be precipitous." Meanwhile, the Conference Board said its widely followed survey showed that consumer confidence in the economy has dropped for the second straight month in August. The index fell to 89.0 from a revised reading of 91.3 in July and 92.5 in June, which was the highest level in four years. Most analysts agreed that the five increases in interest rates by the Federal Reserve since February are taking a toll on the housing market. "Clearly we're showing the effects of rising interest rates," said Jim Irvine of the National Association of Home Builders. "If they continue to rise, we'll have significant problems." The Departments of Housing and Urban Development and Commerce said sales of new homes, which declined a revised 11.4 percent in June, totaled a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 664,000 in July. All regions of the country except the Midwest took part in last month's recovery, which most analysts predicted. The June rate was revised to 613,000, up from an initial estimate of 591,000. Still, the higher figure was the lowest level since the rate was 600,000 in March 1993. The annual rate for new home sales peaked in December at 817,000 in response to the lowest mortgage rates in a generation. The government previously reported that sales of existing homes slipped slightly in July, but construction of new homes was up from June. aged 8.62 percent in July, up from 8.43 percent in June and 8.6 percent in May. Rates hit a 25-year low of 6.74 percent last October, according to the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp. Rates averaged 8.56 percent last week. Fixed rate 30-year mortgages aver- This year's nearly two percentage point increase adds about $200 to the monthly payment on a $150,000 mortgage. But some analysts say the greater availability of adjustable rate mortgages is blunting the impact of higher rates by allowing buyers to pay less in the first years of new home ownership. Whitewater investigators reinstated Bipartisan pressure significant in move The government said sales of homes during the first seven months of 1994 were 6.6 percent above the same period last year. The Associated Press inquiry into several unspecified on-the-job allegations. WASHINGTON — Amid mounting questions from Congress, the Resolution Trust Corp. has put a key Whitewater investigator and two superiors back to work following a two-week suspension, officials said yesterday. Investigator Jean Lewis and her bosses, Richard Iorio and Lee Ausen, returned to their jobs Monday at RTC's office in Kansas City, Mo. They were placed on paid administrative leave Aug. 15 during an internal Agency spokesman Steve Katsanos said the initial review has been completed and results turned over to RTC Inspector General John J. Adair. "We felt there really were some things that ought to be investigated," Katsanos said. Mike Forshey, Ms. Lewis' attorney, said none of the three have been informed of the allegations against them. He said it was odd they were returned to work, particularly in light of last week's letter from top Democrats and Republicans on the Senate Banking Committee raising questions about the probe. politically sensitive time, just after Congress held its first round of hearings into the failed Madison Guaranty Savings & Loan, its links to the Whitewater land venture in Arkansas and President Clinton and Hillary Rodham Clinton. Ms. Lewis recommended in 1992 that prosecutors consider criminal charges following her investigation of check-kiting at Madison. The Clinton weren't accused of wrongdoing. The personnel action came at a The improprieties involving the three RTC officials reportedly include a secret tape recording, misuse of time sheets and compensatory time, use of RTC equipment for personal reasons and questionable business trips. The Associated Press Government agrees to help automakers DETROIT — A partnership between the government and the Big Three automakers to develop 80-mile-a gallon cars will help U.S. carmakers fight foreign competition as well as clean up the air, a top Commerce Department official said yesterday. "The end result should be a domestic auto industry . . . capable of meeting any of the challenges from without," said Mary L. Good, undersecretary of commerce for technology and the Clinton administration's lead player in the Partnership for a New Generation of Vehicles. But the head of a trade group that represents foreign automakers in this country contends the government has been shortsighted in limiting the partnership to General Motors. Ford and Chrysler. "We are the industry, as much as General Motors and Ford," said Philip A. Hutchinson Jr., president of the Association of International Automobile Manufacturers. "we build more cars in America today than Ford, three times as many as Chrysler," he said, referring to the U. S. plants that build Hondas, Toyotas, Nissans and other Japanese名牌. "Our members are technological leaders," Hutchinson said. "We've offered our willingness to participate and thus far that hasn't been accepted. ... It's ironic that you wouldn't want some of your best players participating in these programs." The partnership, announced last fall by President Clinton, focuses federal research dollars and money from the Big Three on development of a car that has three times better fuel economy than today's vehicles. KANSAS SPORTS CLUB FAN SHOP Live it! Wear it! Love it! KU! We have Coed Naked, Big Johnson & Game Bar Hats. COED NAKED SPORTSWEAR Come in and see our great selection of NBA, NCAA, NFL, NHL, & MLB merchandise. DON'T YOU WANT A JOB YOU CAN PUT ON YOUR RESUME? If you're hoping for a bright future, we'd recommend you start early. With us. The Jayhawker Yearbook is now looking for individuals, from first year to graduate students, in any major who are interested in getting practical experience on campus. If you think you have what it takes (we only require enthusiasm), you might be interested in one of the following positions: - Section Editor (Student Life, Greek Life, Entertainment, Academics, Athletics. Portraits, Organizations, News/Index) Fortune, Organizations, * Assistant Section Editor - Assistant Section Editor - Reporter - Photographer - *Marketing Intern - Production Assistant For more information, call: Jayhawker Yearbook 864-3728 Since WATKINS "We Care For KU" Busy days? Watkins Pharmacy is open Monday-Thursday nights. 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 S 864-9500 Serving Only Laurence Campus Students UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesdav. August 31, 1994 918 Traditional family unit disappearing The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Barely more than half of American children live in what many think of as the traditional family. Thirty-three million children live in nuclear households with both natural parents and full brothers or sisters, a new Census Bureau analysis found. The bureau said well over 15 million live in one-parent families, while nearly 10 million are in so-called blended families, which include either a stepparent or step-sibling, or both. Extended families account for nearly eight million youngsters under age 18. Those families include others in the household such as uncles, cousins, aunts or grandparents. The 33.4 million youngsters in nuclear families accounted for 50.8 percent of all young people, according to the report, "The Diverse Living Arrangements of Children, Summer 1991," released Monday. While past studies have reported the relationship of children to the head of a household, Census officials said this was the first to relate children to all members of their household. The bureau noted that the "decline of the American family continues to be a controversial topic," with many people considering the nuclear family the traditional unit. Census researchers limited their study to reporting the numbers of various family and household arrangements, however. The study disclosed sharp differences in children's living arrangements by race and Hispanic origin. For example, 56.4 percent of white children resided in nuclear families with both parents, while just 25.9 percent of black youngsters lived in such households. For Hispanics the figure was 37.8 percent. Hispanics can be of any race and thus are also counted among blacks and whites. Among white youngsters, 19.1 percent lived in one-parent families, with mothers accounting for 16.4 percent. Among black youths, 49.2 percent were in one-parent families, 46.7 percent with their mother. And 31.1 percent of Hispanic youths lived with one parent, 28.5 percent with the mother. Just 1.7 percent of all youngsters live with their grandparents, 0.9 percent of whites, 5.4 percent of blacks and 1.3 percent of Hispanics. The 9.8 million children in blended families had a variety of arrangements depending on whether the blend involved a stepparent, step-sibling, half-sibling or some combination of these. The most common situation was for a child to have a halfbrother or half-sister. Officer's privacy is more important Simpson's lawyers cannot view records The Associated Press LOS ANGELES — Ajudge rejected a request from O.J. Simpson's lawyers to examine a police detective's military records, ruling yesterday that they have no bearing on defense suggestions that the officer is a racist and a liar. "Having heard the argument by counsel for the defendant alleging racial animus and propensity to fabricate ... the court reviewed the military file and found no reports or other information relevant to the issues in this case," Superior Court Judge Lance Ita said in a written order. He said he weighed the privacy rights of Detective Mark Fuhman against the rights of Simpson to gather evidence for his defense and decided against turning over Fuhman's Marine Corps records. Ito, who heard arguments on the issue Monday, did not rule on the defense bid for review of Fuhrman's police records. Io said he would seal the military file and place it in the court record so that it will be available for appellate review only. Fuhrman is a key witness in the Simpson case because he said he found a bloody glove behind Simpson's estate. He has been placed on indefinite vacation leave, police Cmdr David Gascon said yesterday. Logging would create additional debris and require new roads, and the vast majority of forest fires are caused by humans who travel deep into forests on logging roads, Yassa said. The NRDC prefers a long-term strategy for reducing fire threats that includes non-commercial thinning of trees and removal of debris. Some 23,000 firefighters are still battling 29 major fires that have burned more than 452,000 acres in five Western states, according to the National Interagency Fire Center in Boise, Idaho. But Sami Yassa, a spokesman for the Natural Resources Defense Council in San Francisco, called the bill Herger has introduced "a pretext for accelerated logging in the Sierra Nevada." "Our forests are denoting like napalm bombs," Herger said. "We need to remove dead and dying bug-killed timber." "It has very little to do with forest health." Yasaa said. SACRAMENTO, Calif. — U.S. Rep. Wally Herger wants to save tinder-dry California forests by logging them. The California Republican demanded Monday that Congress declare a state of emergency in federal forests to permit quick removal of dead trees, fallen branches and other debris that fuels fires. The 3 million acres burned by all Western wildfires this year is double the amount that had burned by this time last year, the center said. The state of emergency would include the suspension of requirements for archaeological studies and environmental impact statements before logging. — Full containment was predicted for Thursday for an 8,000-acre fire that burned eight homes near Sams Valley, Ore., and threatened hundreds more. Futhran's lawyer said earlier the detective was having trouble doing Anonymous defense sources have said they considered portraying Fuhrman, who is white, as a racist who could have planted evidence to incriminate Simpson, who is black. his job due to the publicity surrounding his role in the case. — In California, firefighters expected to contain a 4,700-acre fire about 50 miles west of Fresno by tonight. The fire started Wednesday when a squirrel short-circited an electric company powerhouse. State of emergency may be declared in California forests In a motion suggesting both orders are unconstitutional, media attorney Kelli Sager cited other high-profile cases, including those of Charles Manson, Sirhan Sirhan and the Watergate conspirators, and said overwhelming publicity did not deny those defendants fair trials. Simpson, 47, is charged in the June 12 slashing murders of his ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ronald Goldman. He will be back in court today for a hearing on a proposed gag order and evidence discovery, including a mystery envelope turned over to another judge by the defense. The Associated Press In other states: discussed in open court. "Certainly there has been widespread media attention to this case," Sager said of the Simpson affair. "But it is hardly unprecedented." more blood than detectives thought existed in the vehicle. The report said use of a chemical which shows blood under a black light disclosed "more blood than someone would have left who just cut their finger unless they bled like a pig." Ito has agreed to hear from the media and other interested parties before imposing the gag order, which would stop participants from talking to reporters. He has already ordered that all filings be sealed until they are — CNN also reported that the interior light bulb from the Bronco had been removed and was found under a front seat. The network said sources quoted detectives wondering if Simpson removed the bulb so no one would see him when he opened the door near his ex-wife's condominium. Ito also plans to hear defense complaints today that prosecutors are not being as forthcoming as they should be in disclosing the evidence they have against Simpson. — The network also reported that an employee of the parking garage where the Bronco was towed was fired for rifling the vehicle for souvenirs and stealing Simpson's gas receipts. In other developments yesterday: CNN reported that chemical treatment of the Bronco revealed H-bomb pilot approves of exhibit change The Associated Press WASHINGTON — The man who piloted the plane that dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima says he approves of the Smithsonian institution's decision to redesign a controversial exhibit on the bombing. But like some critics, he's still not fully satisfied. "There has been, at least, an admission on the part of the Smithsonian that they really lacked balance and context' in the exhibit, said retired Brig. Gen. Paul W. Tibets. Responding to pressure from members of Congress and veterans' groups, the Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum announced Monday it will expand the exhibit on the American bombing of Japan in World War II. The expanded exhibit will detail events in the Pacific War leading to the dropping of the atomic bomb on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the museum said in a statement. But Tibbets, 79, said he was unhappy that the exhibit still will include only a part, the front fuselage, of the Enola Gay, the B-29 that dropped the world's first A-bomb, on Hiroshima on Aug. 6, 1945. By displaying the bomber without its wings or other parts, the museum will "disgrace" it, he said in a telephone interview. "I think there should be a modification made there." Veterans' groups and military historians lack the atomic bomb exhibit lacked balance because it failed to provide adequate explanation of the events leading up to the bombing. "We felt that their concerns were valid, and we think this new exhibit — coupled with changes within the original exhibition — addresses those concerns," said Martin Harwit, the museum's director. One scene in Dallas represents scenes played out in urban areas across nation The Associated Press DALLAS—Her eyes are the color of dirt, and as vacant as the lot next door. She's sitting on a concrete step holding a baby that's not hers. Her 16-year-old friend is lying face down on the sizzling sidewalk beside her, his arms arched awkwardly behind him, his hands cuffed in plastic police ties. A girlfriend is similarly contorted at her feet. “What’s your name?” a policewoman asks this hot August day in Dallas. In a low, slow whisper, she answers, “I atasha.” "La-what?" "La-Tasha," the thin, moon-faced 19-year-old says with slightly more effort, her blank gaze never looking higher than the holster holding the officer's 9 mm semiautomatic. Minutes ago, eight muscular members of the Dallas drug enforcement squad, wearing black boots and bulletproof vests, had stormed the faded yellow bungalow behind her. It took two heaves of "the slammer" to break down the door, blocked by a bookcase that held no books. "Police! Police!" they yelled, leaping one-by-one over the splintered wooden door that had given way two-thirds down. Shreks from inside, then blurs of motion as the young man bolted out the rear and the woman ran toward the back fence. Latasha Smith never said a word, and the baby didn't cry. Lying on a rumpled bed with the baby in her arms, she didn't move until told. She has the dull look of someone who had seen this rerun too many times. Her look of despair, so deep it turns everything gray, is the same look that flattens the faces of the young and hopeless in poor, violent American neighborhoods everywhere. Neighborhoods where crack heads fear their friends and neighbors more than the cops. Where homes are so filthy detectives can't pick up evidence without something crawling on it. Where neighbors scatter when someone screams for help. For Americans who say crime is their gravest concern, these calloused Latashas and their criminal friends stir angry fear. But for Latasha, it's just another day, just another messed-up day. Barefoot from bed, Latasha has slouched her way around errant splinters from the door, across the lawn with no grass, to perch on the concrete step at the sidewalk, her feet spread wide and an orange knit skirt sagging between her knees. The baby with cocoa skin and wavy brown hair spits up on Latasha's chest as she rocks negligibly back and forth. Indifferently, she wipes his face with her droopy white tank top. Scratching her face with her long, rainbow-painted nails, Latasha leaves a trail of creamy baby vomit on her cheek. "Who's payin' for that baby?" the policewoman asks. "It ain't MY babv." she retorts. "It's my baby," says the 16-year-old boy, squirring awkwardly on the sidewalk. As he strains to lift his head to speak, the pebbles clinging to his cheek dribble to the ground. The waist of his knee-length shorts, usually hip-hanging low, now are shimmled down to his thighs, fully exposing his boxer shorts, flasy with a red diamond pattern on white. His undershrift is pulled up around his chest, revealing a scar just below his left ribs. The police think it's an old gunshot wound. No, he says, just an operation. Latasha tells the officer she has three children of her own and she's on welfare. She quit the last job she had washing dishes because she didn't like it. Her children are scattered with relatives and friends today. "Did you grow up like this baby is growing up?" the reporter asks. "My dady shot my momma dead when1w2." S. she speaks flatly, like a kid bored with homework. She was raised by her grandfather. She She doesn't explain why she is at this house that isn't hers holding somebody else's baby. An undercover officer recently bought drugs at this house. The police had come back to clean it up and close it down — one of nearly 400 Dallas doe houses stormed this year. It is the third bust for the team on this 98-degree Dallas day. Sweat crawls down their backs like insects under their heavy flak jackets. One officer emerges with a $10 rock of cocaine and a snapshot found inside on a coffee table, of a teen-ager pointing a gun at the camera. The gun barrel is huge in perspective and partially obscures his face, but he looks tough. Where is he? the officer asks the three teens. In jail for murder, they say, but he didn't do it. After running background checks on the three, the sergeant in charge decides to arrest the handcuffed youths on drug charges and ticket Latasha for failing to appear in court after being cited for driving without insurance. She shrugs. "Do you ever dream of a better life?" the reporter asks. She doesn't watch the van carry her two friends away. She just sits in front of the house with the For Rent sign and the broken door, holding someone else's baby, and stares blankly at the vacant next door. Sports Combination Ticket Distribution Read this before picking up your tickets. YOUR ASSIGNED PICK-UP DATE IS AS FOLLOWS: Where: Memorial Stadium, South End, Underneath the scoreboard. Time: 8:30 am - 4:00 pm Dates: (see schedule below) A-E Monday, August 29 F-K Tuesday, August 30 L-R Wednesday, August 31 S-Z Thursday, September 1 (Make-Up) Friday, September 2 - If you miss your assigned pick-up date you may pick-up your tickets at the Athletic Ticket Office in the East lobby of Allen Fieldhouse. - You may pick up only your own ticket. - You must bring your KUID with a current FALL 1994 fee sticker to receive your tickets. - You will receive your football tickets only at this time. You will receive the Men's Basketball and Kansas Relays portion of your sports combo at a later date. More detailed information will be available at pick-up. Home Opener, Saturday Night, September 10, 7:00 pm - Jayhawks vs. Michigan State $200 OFF AN AT&T COMPUTER! Get $200 back by mail - when your mor停车安 one of 12 regions AT&T Computers by 12/31/94 AT&T New Products AT&T Communicator Multi-Media System 486SX, 33MHz 4Mb, 210Mb Sound Card Mouse FaxModem CD-ROM DOS, Windows Multimedia Software Stereo Speakers *Monitor not included* only $1,097 surcharge ConnectingPoint COMPUTER CENTER 813 Mass • Downtown Lawrence • PRE-MED CLUB Information meeting with Advisors Thursday, September 1st Watkins Health Center Conference Room 7:00pm DOCTOR --- 10B Wednesday, August 31, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Slattery backs referendums The Associated Press WICHTA — A joint appearance before oil and gas producers revealed at least one difference between the Democratic and Republican candidates for governor. While they agreed on many issues, U.S. Rep. Jim Slattery and Secretary of State Bill Graves split Monday on whether Kansas should adopt the initiative and referendum process. The process would allow voters to put questions on the ballot for statewide votes. "We have an elected group of legislators who ought to be dealing with those tough kinds of questions," said the Republican secretary of state, arguing that it would be wrong to give citizens complicated questions on taxes and public policy. "People have a difficult time on those kinds of issues." Slattery, a Democrat, said he supported a limited initiative process with safeguards that would prevent crowded proposition ballots such as those frequently faced by California voters. "I trust the people," he said. "But I think the people's decisions have to be based on good information." Slattery and Graves spoke at the Kansas Oil and Gas Association's annual state convention. They each made brief opening remarks, then fielded questions from participants for an hour. Several times Slattery touted his congression- Several times Slattery touted his congressional record on energy issues. After six terms in Congress, Slattery said, he would be able to just pick up the phone and call key players in the federal government when Kansas' interests were at stake. "Sen. Dole promised he'd leave me his phone number," Graves responded. TOPEKA - Private, nonprofit social agencies that provide "governmental services" are subject to the Kansas Open Records Act, Attorney General Bob Stephan said yesterday. Governmental services subject to sunshine laws Stephan issued an opinion stating that if an agency is supported by tax dollars, either in whole or in part, then it is subject to both the records act and the Kansas Open Meetings Act. The opinion was sought by Finney County Attorney John Wheeler after The Garden City Telegram sought to examine the records of the Southwest Developmental Services Inc. SDSI provides services to developmentally and physically disabled individuals in southwest Kansas. The newspaper's editor and publisher, Jim Bloom, filed two complaints against SDSI with the county attorney's office alleging violations of the Kansas Open Meetings Act and Kansas Open Records Act. bibi's 925 IOWA 841-7226 Lunch & Dinner Great Food the total look! 842-5921 9th & Mississippi BEDS DESKS BOOKCASES Everything But Ice 936 Mass. MOVING? Let Shurdy boxes for moving and storage Boxes with handles for easier moving Large quantities at discount prices Small quantities at walks welcome Solve your moving hassles. Call 843-8111 Ask for Sales/Service Dept. Lawrence Paper Company Crown Cinema KMS Jurassic Park PG-13 5:30, 7:20,8:45 Wolf R 5:30, 7:20,8:45 NEXUS KMS JOICO NEXUS BEAUTY WAREHOUSE & HARDWARE 520 West 23rd 841-5885 FULL MTO-HEL REDKEN JOICO V. BEFORE 6 PM ADULTS $3.00 (UNLIMITED TO SEATING) SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00 VARSITY 1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841-5197 Camp Nowhere P6 5:00, 8:30, In The Army Now P6 6:15, 7:30, 9:30 Milk Money P13-13 7:15, 8:30 The Mask P13-13 8:45 The Client P13-13 8:50, 7:15, 9:30 Clear & Present Danger P13-13 8:45 CINEMA TWIN $110.00 IOWA 41-51-01 $1.25 WagonsEast PG-13 The Biggest... Wildest... Selection of Party Supplies! • Party Favors • Balloons • Gifts • Cards & much more! 1601 W.23rd 749-3455 820-822 Mass. Lawrence, KS 66044 841-0100 It's your PARTY HILLCREST 925 IDWA --or VIEWING TECHNOLOGY SHOW TIMES FOR TODAY ONLY STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUAC FILMS FAREWELL MY CONCUBINE THURS. 9:30 PM FILMS FOR AUG.31-SEPT.1 BELLE EPOQUE CO SPONSORED BY HALO 7:00PM Natural Organic Clothing THURS. ALL SHOWS IN WOODRUFF AUD. TICKETS $2.50, MIDNIGHTS $3.00 FREE WITH SUA MOVIE CARD. CALL 864-SHOW FOR MORE INFO. 7:00 PM NATURALWAY Have you waited more than 30 days for your landlord to return your 148Burge • 864-5665 Legal Services for Students Quitwaiting. STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE Escape Purchase one of our coffee blends, dark roasts, flavored or decaffeinated varieties now through September 15 and receive 10% off the daily grind the BayLeaf 725 Massachusetts 842-4544 KANSAS WATER POLO CLUB MEETING WEDNESDAY AUG.31 7:45 P.M. ROBINSON NATATORIUM PYRAMID PIZZA "We Pile It On!" No water polo experience required Some swimming ability recommended BRING YOUR SWIMMING SUITS WE WILL PRACTICE FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL: Nick Pivonka: 749-3804 David Reynolds: 749-1873 Wednesdays Only! Buy a small, get a second of equal value for $1! As Easy as 1-2-3! Buy a large, get a second of equal value for $3! NOBODY KNOWS THE ATHLETE'S FOOT LIKE... VISA MasterCard Athlete's The Foot. DIICOVER AMERICAN EXPRESS Hours: Mon-Sat. 9-5:30 Thurs. 9-8:30 Sun. 12-5:30 914 MASS. 841-6966 VISA MasterCard DICOVER AMERICAN EXPRESS Classified Directory MasterCard 100s Announcements 105 Personal 110 Business Personal 120 Announcements 130 Entertainment 140 Lost and Found Athlete's The Foot. Hours: Mon-Sat. 9-5:30 Thurs. 9-8:30 Sun. 12-5:30 AMERICAN EXPRESS 200s Employment Help Wanted 229 Professional Services 238 Training Services 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 law. 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- T Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are not eligible for these benefits. Classified Policy 400s Real Estate 405 Real Estate 430 Roommate Wanted 105.Personals 235 Typing Services 308 For Sale 340 Auto Sales 360 Miscellaneous 390 Want to Buy Kansan Classified: 864-4358 300s Merchandise 100s Announcements THE ETC. SHOP 928 Mass. STERLING SILVER JEWELRY Rings, Hoops, Bracelets, & Pendants Backpacks, Belts, Jackets, & Purses SUBJECTS Bausen & Lombi, Raybon, Kloops, l's Reye, Serengetti, and Vuarnet Kul Professor will pay for ride from Lawrence to 12th and Quivera in O. P. on occasional thursday or Friday afternoons. Call Dr. Hawkins 864-3438 or 842-1731. RECYCLE your Dally Kansan Ruth and Kids Discount Floral. 963 East 23rd. 832, 704. Dozen roses arranged with vases, $19.50. Delivery extra. We accept all major credit cards and checks. 110 Bus. Personals 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 Hour Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm Friday 8am-6pm Saturday 8:30am-12:30pm Sunday 11am-3pm 120 Announcements CASH FOR COLLEGE 900,000 GRANTS AVAIL- ABLE QUALIFYING IMMEDIATELY. 1-800-423-3567 Pregnant-considering adoption? Loving families avail. You help select adoptive family. Confidential/legal/Call A Dream Fulfilled Adoption Inc tlp free 1-800-565-4529 463 needed Headquarters Center Caring people need to learn basic counseling. Information Meetings, 1419 Massachusetts Wed. Aug. 24 or 18, 9-9pm. 841-2345. ALVAMAR YOGA 0 GA For Stress Reduction 1 hr. classes 842-7766 130 Entertainment FREE POOL DAILY 3-8 pm Bottleneck 737 New Hampshire St 140 Lost & Found Looking to give away one year old puppy found one week ago in West Lawrence to good home. Potty trained and extremely loyal but we can't train them every day. Call Kim or Stephenay 748-7303. 男 女 200s Employment 205 Help Wanted $ BILLIONS OF DOLLARS have been earned in the environmental industry; We are setting the pace. Elite company seeks key individuals to staff our office. Please contact us. For information 913/873-2120 ext. 405 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 NOW HIRING IZZA DELIVERY DRIVERS For Little Caesars Pizza locations at 23rd and location at 15th or Kaeln ARD UP TO LOCATION or 16th for their own reliable transportation, proof of insurance and drivers license and be at least 18 years old. $100/hr possible mailing our circulars, for info @www.hamptonmail.com 30 Watters on wheels is hiring now. Delivery positiv insurance. Call today 825-769-4100 or be able to prove insurance. Call today 825-769-4100 or be able to prove Adams Alumni Center Need a.m. & p.m. dishwasher, cooks a.m. & p.m. flexible hours, desserts for person Tues., Thurs. & Sat. from 3-11 p.m. Positions available immediately. Apply in person 1266 Oread Ave. ATTENTION O.T. and P.P. students. Female attendant needed O.T. for disabled woman. Mon. Sunday to Friday, 8:45 a.m.-5:00 p.m. Some lifting works. Apply at Kansas Career Work Study, 119 Bedroom, 812-784-1924. SHIPPING AND DATA ENTRY ASSISTANTS NEEDED Lawrence-based, technical publishing company has several part-time (15-20 hours per week) positions including data entry orders; staffing and mail statements; copying computer disks for inventory; daily mail delivery to and pickup from the post office; inputting subscription orders into a computer, and sorting those orders by type, size, and with high volume and working as a team required. Ability to maneuver up to 50 pounds and type 50w preferred. These positions are part of the Office Software group which handles other areas of the job is needed. Babysitter needed for two delightful toddler girls daycare/weekend care,欢喜的 daycare, Flexible day/evenings/wednesday, weekend care and re'a required. Short drive from KU. Please note #50, University Daily Kansan 119 Stunfler Facility RAD Publications, inc. is an equal opportunity employer concerned with creating a pleasant work atmosphere. If you are looking for an enjoyable work environment with a reliable company, please come by and fill out an application at 1601 West 23rd Street, Suite 200, Lawrence, KS. RD Morning(s) 8:30-10:30 for friend, bright y year old. 8419, 3079. m. a. or f. a.m. at 7:39 p.m. Beautician/Barbe Looking for two part time hair stylists who want to earn great money on weekends. JOBS: 10, 20 or more days a week. Send resume to Hair Stylist Agency. CHEF PYRAMID PIZZA "We Pile It On!" Now Taking Applications Now Hiring: DRIVERS Looking for enthusiastic people who understand what great service is all about! Campus Manager: National Marketing firm seeks mature student to manage on-campus promotions for two companies this school year. Flexible hours with excellent earning potential. Must be organized, hardworking, and money motivated. Involvement in student activities a plus. Call Dan at (800) 952-2121 EXT 364 Children need for a 4 year old in home, Friday morning. Call Care and regards regard: 892-3060. 892-2000. RETAIL J. CREW FACTORYSTORE OPENING OCT. LAWRENCE, KS SALESASSOCIATES J. Crew will provide you with anexciting work environment, competitive salary and a great store discount. Our Factory Store captures all the color & spirit of our catalogues. J. Crew is looking for a few exceptional candidates to fill sales positions in our newwest Kansas store location. We will be We will be conducting interviews 8:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 6th and Wednesday, Sept. 7th. You must be able to provide J, Crew with an outstanding customerservice, a positive and enthusiastic attitude, a great work ethic and a commitment to be part of a successful team. ELDRIDGEHOTEL 701 massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas No appointments necessary No phone calls,please CITY OF LAWRENCE PARKS & RECREATION DEPT. Part-time position as Lifeguard and Aquatic Instructor at Carl Knox Natatorium. Certification applications are available at Admin. Room 210, City Hall, 6th & Mass. Lawrence, KS 60044. Deadline: Sept. 19, 1984 M/E/D. COLLEGE STUDENTS 45-21-15 LISTING Local brach of na'i co. Filling immediate entry level openings. Flex time schedule. 3 days, eyes. Weekends opt. all majors accepted. For info 81-688-3900. CRUISE SHIPS NOW HIRING Earn up $2,000+/month working on Cruise Ships or Land-Tour companies. World travel. Seasonal & Full-Time employment available. No experience necessary. For more information call 1-206-634-0468 ext.C7581 Preschool Sub Prefer 1. 11:30-3:30 or all day any weekday. Jekyll is related. Related experience in relationship school. School years 9 to 12. Raintree Montessori School located on thirteen acres with horses and a pot-bellied pig named Wilbur is looking for 2 classroom assistants. Hours 11:30 - 1:30 and 3:15 - 5:30. Must love children. Will train. Transportation required. call 843-6800. Professor college needles students local college student. Keep on the job on the payroll. Must be available during vacations. R.S Raymond 2515 Arkansas, 841-8534. Work in Perry. If you have transportation, can drive 15 minutes to work, and need a flexible scheduler job is for you. This work involves light assembly of equipment. You must complete a 4 to 8 hours a night 1 to 5 days a week. If your schedule permits and you are needing extra $4, you should contact immediately. Manpower 121 e. H. 849-7200. WORK STUDY! The School of Business has many work study positions available now. Please come to the Business Placement Center in 125 Summerfield to apply. Secretary, 1-6 p.m. weekdays. General office duties include accurate record keeping, computer training for new teachers and young children. Word Perfect for Windows 95. Children's Learning Center, 205 N Michigan, EOE. CUSTODIAL WORKER: Two (2) positions open for student hourly custodial workers at Watkins Health Center. Approximately 15-20 hours a week (M)-F with an occasional Saturday morning. Must be an enrolled K.U. student. Work schedules will be according to hours the facility is open. Must apply in person to Personnel Office, Walkins Center, 230 East 45th Street, August 8- September 4 between 4:05-6:00. Director, Junior & Senior High Jewish Youth Group. Supervises by 25 enthusiastic Lawrence teens. About 30 hr/month. Start ASAP - May 1995. $250/room per month/permission on qualifications. Enrollment based on grade level ground preferred but not required. Previous experience in Jewish Youth Groups desired. If you are experienced, dedicated, 21 & over, have our own car and enjoy this type of work send letter of applICATION to 917 highland drive Lawrence KS 6004. Job share possible. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, August 31, 1994 11B molly mcgees grill & bar Now Hiring! Cooks and Dishwashers A.M. and P.M., Full and Part Time Apply between 2 and 4 p.m. 2429 IOWA SIRIOIN STOCKADE Now hiring all restaurant positions. No experience required. Anyin in person-Mon-Fri. 105-184 **SPRING BREEZE** 95- SELL TRIPS, EARN CASH **GO BREAK!!** **Guest Travel Services in now hiring campus representatives. Lowest rates to **Campus** and Panama City Beach. Call 1-800-484-4849. STUDENT CLERICAL ASSISTANT I. Deadline: 9/24%. Salary: $43.5/hr. Duties include typing, filing, photocopying, distributing mail, and performing all assigned clerical duties with System Administration for this position. Documentation for this position. Required: must be enrolled in 6 hours at the University of Kansas. To apply, complete a job application available in the Computer Center. EO/AEMployER. Domino's Pizza is hiring. 10 delivery positions available, two inside positions available. Apply after 4 pm any day at Domino's Pizza, 9th & Iowa. Benefits include free meals, flexible schedule, drivers take home cash night, discounted menu items, pay based on hours available. Should be DOORMEN NEEDED Must be friendly, but able to handle confrontation. Call 749-5639 - Ask for ZAC Baby Babycenter for 2 girls & 5 & 9. Afternoons Weekends. Non-smoking. Must have transportation $3.50/hr Call Becky evenings 841-8909. Gofather's Pizza is now hiring day care. Goddfather's Pizza is now hiring day & night cooks and evening drivers. Apply in person at 71 N. 238. *Graduate Student Assistant.* Half-time position available in the Student Assistance Center. Position for ongoing attention to the concerns of gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender students. Bachelor's degree and graduate student status for Fall 1994 and Spring 1995; demonstrated ability to work with a variety of publics and constituencies and to articulate the concerns of gay, lesbian and bisexual students. Acquire education and availability Thursday days. Required Application Form, available in the Student Assistance Center, must be completed and received by 12:00 p.m. (noon), September 9, 1994, in 133 Strong Building, 151 North Houston Street, 913-864-0044, 913-864-0044. The University of Kansas is an Graduate student with a reliable able to pick me up at the airport and move me once a week to a hotel or a dormitory. Wanted - Palmer - Maintenance assistant part- time, required to perform job resume and re- ferences to Morning Star 817 Theater. Valley View Care Home is currently seeking moti- cal care assistants for our Valley CNA shift and evening positions. We offer flex- ible scheduling, competitive hourly wages and a work environment in an 163th Ridge Court, Lawrence, KS. WILLIE C'S CAFE & BAR This Ain't Your Ordinary Ho-Hum Company! Vista Restaurant is now taking applications for full and part time. Apply now at 137 W. th. 8th. I look forward to hearing from you Dawn Benson 1320 E. Kellogg Drive Wichita KS 67211 If you're looking for a fun and challenging position with opportunity for career development within and entrepreneurial company, come join our team. You'll have the opportunity to unconventional restaurant management team. Prior restaurant experience NOT necessary. Prefer individuals with a solid background in people management, ability to communicate good communication, attention to detail, high energy level, positive attitude, and the ability to manage multiple projects and people while running high sales. If this comes true, the careers for you will be available. Hiring students to contact Alumni 5:48 - 6:45 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays $4.90/hr, startage: September 13 to December 6. Please call Mary 612-796-4011, 9-11 or 2-4 Months through Friday. Internship Opportunities INTERNATIONAL EMPLOYMENT. Make up to $2,000.00/$4,000.00 / mo, teach basic conversational English in Japan, Taiwan, et al. or Korea. No teach english in the US. Contact info: phone: 260 832-1146 or J5785. Kansas Technology Enterprise Corporation c/o Internship Coordinator 112 W. 8th, Suite 400 Toronto, KS6600 Jon's Notes of Lawrence is anxious to hire quality note takers for the Fall semester. Preferred GPA of above 3.5. Pick an application at Jon's Notes office at the Kansas Union. KU Adams Alumni Center is now hiring for nighttime banquet server and host positions. Looking for responsible, hard working applicants with some daytime availability. Apply at 1268 Ered, GCC. Mass Street Deli is now hiring: Wait staff, bartenders, line cooks, pre-cookers, waitresses, kitchen staff and all positions. Please apply between 5 am and 4 pm at the Schumm Food Company business office, 712 Upslats above Buffalo Bob S Smithhouse) Need graphic artist for "fair" shirt design. Rage Images, Carl Jarrod Townsend, 841-788-7888. NEEP $BENDING CAMF1 B-BF1 Building Ser- vement per pertinent time-counted position. per permanent time-counted position. 842-6264 Ask for Jeannie. Part time, evenings and Sal - sell home construct- ment up to Lawrence $ 5.00m. (681-315-811) John Part time help needed for delivery work: Afternames and need to apply. Apply in person. Hanna's address: 12345 Street, San Francisco, CA 94108. Part-time cleaning person for property management references and resumes Morning Star, 917 Tenn. Fart-time群 The Kansas and Burge Union's, Food Service, Bookskeeper, Catering, Wescoe, and Custodian of departments are hired by Level 5, Kansas University. See Job baird Level 5, Kansas University Personnel Office. EOE Part-time sales opportunity. Mark Shale at Country Club Plaza has day, evening and weekend available. Hourly plus bonus. Generous discount. Call Eva at (812) 765-5888. STUDENTS Need extra money? Job hunt going nowhere? Company need help and part time motivated people to meet the expoling demand for our product. Professional training available. Call K.C. Hoffman 1-800-324-7956. Teacher's Aide 1:05-3:30 pm weekdays. Classroom experience with preschool children preferred but not required. Apply at Children's Learning Center, 205 N. Michigan EOE 225 Professional Services < Driver School > offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driving's license obtainable, transportation provided. 411-7749. Be healthier and happier! Relieve pain and stress with massage therapy! Student discounts available 291/2 Massachusetts Suite 216. 804-753-1100. Call Anna Lumaria and Laura Pace at 841-1587. Cardtard card reading. As featured in the U.D.K. and 105 The Lazer. Call Anna Lunaria at 841-1857. RESUMES *Professional Writing* *Cover Letters* *Consultation* Linda Marten, GBP W TRANSCRIPTIONS 842-4619 1012 Mass, Suite 201 A Member of PAW Professional Association of Reprint Writers BRAXTON B. COPLEY Attorney at Law General Practice Traffic Tickets, Misdemeanors, Landlord/Tenant 719 Massachusetts 749-5333 DUI/TRAFFIC TICKETS OVERLAND PARK-KANSAS CITY AREA CHARLES R.GREEN ATTORNEY-LAW Call for a free consultation (816) 391-0944. ENGLISH TUTOR English courses, writing, proofreading, literature, ESL classes. Highly qualified and experienced. Calif. Arthur 841-3133. TRAFFIC-DUI'S Fake DUI's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of Donald G. Sroble Sally G. Kelsey 16 East 13th 842-1133 Female care care provider for individual who is mentally handicapped. Mon./Thurs., overnight starting at 5PM and two Sat. per week. Must have prior experience working with disabled individuals. Reference required. Send reply to Carol Kopres P.O. 730 Topeka, KS 6697-6487 or (call 913) 275-5888. OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense Dorm. Fridge: 602, 51F. tall. w/. freezer ormanty: roommate.rooms 723, 1858. SUNFLOWER BIKE SHOP Rick Frydman, Attorney 701 Tennessee 843-4023 For free consultation call We carry Bianci, Specialized and Trek. Plus Layaway available 343 Manushchinika 343-5000. available 343 Manushchinika 343-5000. Tune-ups, overhauls, upgrades, free air. 304 Massachusetts 843-5000 SUNFLOWER OUTDOOR SALBARO CLOSE- HOLD BREN. Bren. On get cheap. 684 Massachusetts 843-900-0 Work Study! The School of Business has many work study positions available now. Please come to the business placement center in 125 Summer-field to apply. SUNFLOWER BIKE SHOP 235 Typing Services For Sale 1980 Chevy Malibu 4-door, automatic, air conditioning, 105,000 miles. $789. Call Us at 864- 234-2180. Quality typing/word processing/indexing. Free estimate. Call 843-7271. Quality Word Processing Dissertations, Thesis, Booklet, Business letters, et. Lazer printing. 865-0025 1-der Women Word Processing. Former editor transforms scribbles into accurate pages of letter quality type. Also transcriptions 843-2083 305 For Sale X For Sale: 1980 Honda Civic $200.941.3991 78 Toyota Celica. Good condition. Only 92K miles. 1965 Kia Optima with 4 speakers. Asking for $2300. Oakland Kia at KIA of Oakland, CA. Fra Sale: Mac Bc je, loads of loaded software, printer, carrying case, call 818-325-1249 with best offer Giant Mountain Bike in excellent condition. Make offer. 749-9230. WANT YOUR WORK TO LOOK IT BEAUTY. Put my back in the pocket. For nothing you need at all, MAKIN' THE GRATE is the one to call. date: 2024 1992 Stump Jumper FS. Fall FU, Specialized Sports low, miles. Call 643-2009. 300s Merchandise Centurion Clrum, Shimano comp, gel seat, great condition, $170.74 - 769.39, ask for Susan. 2 and 3 way speakers for sale. Will also custom blows. Blowers worm "Tornill" grille will repair. Cust. Price: $80. Amerec $10 rowing machine $100-$43-175] Beds, Desks, Bookscases Everything But Ice QUALITY GOODS FOR HOME BREWING LAWRENCE BREWER'S SUPPLY 305 L.7TH LAWRENCE, KANSAS 68044 PH.(0131)74-74257 Amererec 610 rowing machine $100 842-1731 Honda 1898 Eitei 50 red scooter, with 2 baskets, 60 miles with new battery and tune-up for $100. Ask Honda Arena bce locator. Low miles excellent moped tug (campus access). 7751-3484-3485 eeb Great carpet for dorm room! One year old, cream dressing. 12x12.18 Call 832-9212 - Equipment kits starting at $32.00 5 gallon batches for .30 $ a beer King Waterbed mirrored, headboard $150, 17500TU AC $200, Nintendo and iPod stock $50, Wood Hutch $50, Antique Round Coffee Table $150. Call 865-0899 4:00 p.m. Macintosh Pin with metro 301D and Image writer ∏ printer in condition. 680 # best offer 191- 452 # Nikon F 3 High Eye point, in box. Cost $1200. Sell $850 or buy best offer. N137-921-851. Macintosh computer and printer 800 w/ rp- tocoland. Loand keyboard synthesizer 900. Matt 641-9400. STUDENTS! Rent a computer, software, and INDEX! 1 a semester. Call 1-800-800-6049 for information. 340 Auto Sales 1979 Dodge Aspen station wagon- runs well. Make offer 841-3440. 91 WJ Veta GL 5,1K *speed*, surcoat, UF, great shape, $800 (negotiable), 137-424 MK 6,300 1999 Ponte Grande Grand AMt. V6, Loaded 14,500. Day: 7498 Evening: 1-838-3507. 360 Miscellaneous Need a Break from Classes? Get credit having fun riding horses. Enrol in HPER 108 HORSEMANSHIP. Call Joy I am796 for more info. ORCHARD CORNERS COMPLETELY FURNISHED ABPESSO - On KU Bus Route * Close to Campus * SwimmingPool * Stop By Today! Buxal 749-4226 M-F9-5 Opportunity 15th & Kasold Sat10-4 4BEDROOM MIRACLE VIDEO FALL ADULT VIDEO CLEARANCE $7.88 910 N. 2nd • 841-8903 109 F. Henkel • 841-7504 * RECYCLE 400s Real Estate For Rent: MORNING STAR for rooms and apartments and well housed in MORNING STAR (USP) - Great campus location your Daily Kansan Available now in Lawrence: 1 to 4 BDRM Home. 842-238 - Laundry Facilities - A few steps from Allen Fieldhouse Check out these housing options... NAISMITH Hall - 2 bedroom with study Apartments Heatherwood Valley - 3 bedroom apartments - Available for fall. - Directly on bus route More information at 843-8559 Call Naismith Hall for *Call 843-4754 "Don't get left out in the cold." Duplex Coke to KU Stadium, large two bedroom, off street parking, DW, no pets. $500 a month. Lee 832-3134 or Kathy 603-3136. Fabulous 4 bdm. house for rent, clean and new. Alvamar Place $965/mon. No Pets. Call 942-7459 available immediately. FREEDOM APARTMENT Great Friends Place, ROAD NO. 105. PETS AVAILABLE NOW. Call 748-7692. Looking for a place to live? Check out these housing options... - Front door bus service - Dine anytime meals - Fitness room - Weekly maid service - Private parking NAISMITH Hall Call naismith Hall for more information at 843-8559 House for rent: 3 or 8 km², convenient to down- sizing. Applicant must be 150 per m². Call 749-788-6000 leave message. PETS WELCOME South Point Adventures No Sublease Fee 2166 W. 26th St. 843-6446 - Swimming Pool - Close to KU Bus Route - Sand Volleyball Court - Ample Private Parking - Water & Trash Paid Outstanding New Staff!!! 1. 2 BDDR apt, off campus, Avail. immed. Lower level garden; new kitchen overlooking lgi- living room. Full carpet, working fireplace, wash/dry, A/C. Very clean $490 + utilities. Looking for a place to live? - By phone: 864-4358 How to schedule an ad: Quiet, comfortable, furnished rooms and apartments. Two short blocks from campus. Some utilities paid. Off-street parking. No pets. Call 841-5500. One bedroom available immediately, Gas, water and trash paid. 843.7333 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Apple Macintosh and IBM Computers 430 Roommate Wanted Check out these housing options... - Fullyfurnished Grad. student teaching roommat for 2-bdm $30/mo + electricity, N/S/ preferred; 4b-3dvm; 5b-6dvm. 1 roommate need immediately. Beautiful 3 bdm ap1 block from campus $255, price nego- bility. and carpeted ROOMMATE FINDER - Free Utilities ROOMMATE WANTED! #E! FE n./ House w/ own room. Please call 841-9618. allowed, quiet neigh. Please call 841-9618. A & S MANAGEMENT SERVICES NEED A ROOMMATE? 841-5454 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. Ads phone in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made. All $100 First Fee Non-smoking female. $250/month plus utilities. 3 Lily at 749-134-138 - Computer room with Call Naismith Hall for More Information at 843-8559 Wanted: Two nest, responsible, 0/4 rooms to share new house, 3 baths, 2 baths. Quit hotel- room. Grad students preferred. $225 + 1'/2 units. Please call 843-8478 NAISMITH HALL Two females looking for a third to share three cages immediately. Cable paid £2850. Call 842-8357 - Quiet Study Areas Classified Information and order form by MAY 19, 2018 Slater First Lawrence, KS 65043 You may print your classification on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas 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 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. When canceled a classified account that was charged on MasterCard or VISA, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds on cancelled ads, who warn nax-enabled by check or with cash are not available. DAN BURTON The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00. Cost per line per day IX 2-3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 30+X 2.10 1.60 1.10 .90 .75 .50 1.95 1.20 .80 .70 .65 .45 1.90 1.10 .75 .65 .60 .40 1.80 .95 .65 .60 .55 .35 Example: 3 lines for 5 days — 3 lines X 5 days X $1.10=$16.50 Please print your ad one word per box 105 personal 110 business personals 120 announcements 120 entertainment ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print: 140 law & fund 265 help wanted 225 professional services 225 payite services Address:_ 1 | | | | | | 2 | | | | | | 3 | | | | | | 4 | | | | | | 5 | | | | | | 370 want to buy 405 for rent 430 roommate wanted Phone: Date ad begins: Total days in paper Total ad cost: Classification: Account number. **VISA** Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □ Visa (Please make checks payable to the University Dalkan Kansan) Firmish the following if you are charming your ad: Print exact name appearing on credit card: _Expiration Date: MasterCard Signature: The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66445 THE FAR SIDE By GARY LARSON BERLIN 50 KM In the longest hour of his life, Morty takes the dare of his sloth buddies and crosses the autobahn. 12B Wednesday, August 31, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WE CAN'T HELP YOU WIN THE RAT RACE BUT WE CAN HELP YOU FINISH. 图2-13 It's a busy world and it's sometimes hard to know what activity to pursue.And when we need medical attention it can be frustrating trying to find the best place to go for help. HAPPY MOTION At times like these, it's comforting to know that the profes- and the most experienced therapists and specialists in Douglas County: Lawrence Occupational Health Services 865-0700 Lawrence Occupational Health Services offers a full range of industrial medicine options, including injury management, drug screening, physical therapy, occupational therapy and work hardening. Prompt evaluations, courteous and timely service, flexible hours and plenty of convenient, accessible Lawrence PromptCare is a full service urgent care center and a fast, economical way to seek medical attention. Staffed by experienced and Lawrence PromptCare. 865-3997 sionals at the new Mt. Oread Medical Arts Centre are there to lend a hand with expanded services. certified emergency medical physicians. Open 9 am-11pm, M-F and 12 noon-11pm weekends, no appointment is neces sary-you'll be greeted by a nurse immediately and treated fast some visits can cost you as little as $45. Lawrence PromptCare is an excellent alternative to long waits in the emergency room or when you can't see your regular physician. Mt. Oread Rehabilitation Services 832-1900 Mt. Oread Rehabilitation Services offers comprehensive rehab services, including physical therapy and occupational therapy with specialization in sports medicine. Under the direction of Medical Director, Michael Geist, M.D. the program offers the broadest range of rehabilitation services M.T. OREAD MEDICAL ARTS CENTRE A parking make Mt. Oread Medical Arts Centre an agreeable health care alternative. KASOLD & CLINTON PARKWAY ---